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1.
The myosin crossbridge problem   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
T D Pollard 《Cell》1987,48(6):909-910
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2.
Ca(2+) signaling in striated muscle cells is critically dependent upon thin filament proteins tropomyosin (Tm) and troponin (Tn) to regulate mechanical output. Using in vitro measurements of contractility, we demonstrate that even in the absence of actin and Tm, human cardiac Tn (cTn) enhances heavy meromyosin MgATPase activity by up to 2.5-fold in solution. In addition, cTn without Tm significantly increases, or superactivates sliding speed of filamentous actin (F-actin) in skeletal motility assays by at least 12%, depending upon [cTn]. cTn alone enhances skeletal heavy meromyosin's MgATPase in a concentration-dependent manner and with sub-micromolar affinity. cTn-mediated increases in myosin ATPase may be the cause of superactivation of maximum Ca(2+)-activated regulated thin filament sliding speed in motility assays relative to unregulated skeletal F-actin. To specifically relate this classical superactivation to cardiac muscle, we demonstrate the same response using motility assays where only cardiac proteins were used, where regulated cardiac thin filament sliding speeds with cardiac myosin are >50% faster than unregulated cardiac F-actin. We additionally demonstrate that the COOH-terminal mobile domain of cTnI is not required for this interaction or functional enhancement of myosin activity. Our results provide strong evidence that the interaction between cTn and myosin is responsible for enhancement of cross-bridge kinetics when myosin binds in the vicinity of Tn on thin filaments. These data imply a novel and functionally significant molecular interaction that may provide new insights into Ca(2+) activation in cardiac muscle cells.  相似文献   

3.
L Silberstein  S Lowey 《Biochemistry》1977,16(20):4403-4408
Two classes of myosin light chains can be distinguished functionally: those that restore calcium regulation to "desensitized" scallop myofibrils, and those that do not (Kendrick-Jones, J., et al. (1976), J. Mol. Biol. 104, 747--775). Despite this functional classification, chemical analyses reveal few patterns unique to regulatory light chains, and, indeed, sequence comparisons suggest structural similarities between both classes of myosin subunits (Collins, J. H. (1977), Nature (London) 259, 699--700; Kendrick-Jones, J., and Jakes, R. (1977), in International Symposium on Myocardial Failure at Tegernsee, Riecker, G., and Boehringer, Ed., Munich, West Germany, Springer-Verlag, pp. 28--40). Immunological assays using antisera to regulatory and to nonregulatory light chains showed no correlation between antigenic activity and the presence or absence of regulatory function. Weak cross-reactivity was observed, however, among myosin light chains and troponin C, consistent with the suggestion made on the basis of sequence homologies that these subunits contain similar structural domains (Weeds, A. G., and McLachlan, A. D. (1974), Nature (London) 252, 646--649). Unexpectedly, the strongest cross-reactivity observed was that between the vertebrate myosin alkali 1 and DTNB light chains.  相似文献   

4.
Zhou X  Morris EP  Lehrer SS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(5):1128-1132
Troponin I (TnI) is the component of the troponin complex, TnI, TnC, TnT, that is responsible for inhibition of actomyosin ATPase activity. Using the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled tropomyosin (Tm), we probed the interaction of TnI and TnIC with Tm on the reconstituted muscle thin filament. The results indicate that TnI and TnIC(-Ca(2+)) bind specifically and strongly to actin-Tm with a stoichiometry of 1 TnI or 1 TnIC/1 Tm/7 actin, in agreement with previous results. The binding of myosin heads (S1) to actin-Tm at low levels of saturation caused TnI and TnIC to dissociate from actin-Tm. These results are interpreted in terms of the S1-binding state allosteric-cooperative model of the actin-Tm thin filament, closed/open. Thus, TnI and TnIC(-Ca(2+)) bind to the closed state of actin-Tm and their binding is greatly weakened in the S1-induced open state, indicating that they act as allosteric inhibitors. The fluorescence change and the stoichiometry indicate that the TnI-binding site is composed of regions from both actin and Tm probably in the vicinity of Cys 190.  相似文献   

5.
Dong WJ  Jayasundar JJ  An J  Xing J  Cheung HC 《Biochemistry》2007,46(34):9752-9761
Regulation of cardiac muscle function is initiated by binding of Ca2+ to troponin C (cTnC) which induces a series of structural changes in cTnC and other thin filament proteins. These structural changes are further modulated by crossbridge formation and fine-tuned by phosphorylation of cTnI. The objective of the present study is to use a new F?rster resonance energy transfer-based structural marker to distinguish structural and kinetic effects of Ca2+ binding, crossbridge interaction, and protein kinase A phosphorylation of cTnI on the conformational changes of the cTnC N-domain. The FRET-based structural marker was generated by attaching AEDANS to one cysteine of a double-cysteine mutant cTnC(13C/51C) as a FRET donor and attaching DDPM to the other cysteine as the acceptor. The doubly labeled cTnC mutant was reconstituted into the thin filament by adding cTnI, cTnT, tropomyosin, and actin. Changes in the distance between Cys13 and Cys51 induced by Ca2+ binding/dissociation were determined by FRET-sensed Ca2+ titration and stopped-flow studies, and time-resolved fluorescence measurements. The results showed that the presence of both Ca2+ and strong binding of myosin head to actin was required to achieve a fully open structure of the cTnC N-domain in regulated thin filaments. Equilibrium and stopped-flow studies suggested that strongly bound myosin head significantly increased the Ca2+ sensitivity and changed the kinetics of the structural transition of the cTnC N-domain. PKA phosphorylation of cTnI impacted the Ca2+ sensitivity and kinetics of the structural transition of the cTnC N-domain but showed no global structural effect on cTnC opening. These results provide an insight into the modulation mechanism of strong crossbridge and cTnI phosphorylation in cardiac thin filament activation/relaxation processes.  相似文献   

6.
Recombinant DNA approaches have allowed us to probe the mechanisms by which the regulatory light chains (RLCs) regulate myosin function by identifying the functional importance of specific regions of the RLC molecule. For example, we have demonstrated that the presence of high-affinity Ca2+/Mg(2+)-binding site in the N-terminal domain of the RLC is essential for the regulation of myosin-actin interaction [Reinach, F. C., Nagai, K. & Kendrick-Jones, J. (1986) Nature 322, 80-83]. To explore further the role of this metal-binding site in the RLC and generate an RLC with a Ca(2+)-specific site, we constructed four chicken skeletal muscle myosin regulatory light chain hybrid 'genes'. In these, the first domain containing the high-affinity Ca2+/Mg(2+)-binding site in the RLC was replaced with that containing the lower-affinity, Ca(2+)-specific, regulatory site from troponin C (TnC). In two of these hybrids, we replaced only the Ca(2+)-binding EF hand, while in the other two the EF hand and the N-terminal helix of TnC were transplanted. These hybrids were expressed in Escherichia coli in high yields and the purified proteins were used in calcium-binding experiments to assay the affinity and specificity of the sites and incorporated into scallop myosin to assay their regulatory behaviour. The results obtained show that the calcium-binding site from TnC, when transplanted into the RLC backbone, had a low affinity although most of its specificity appeared to be retained. As a result, although the TnC/RLC hybrids bound to scallop myosin and were able to activate the MgATPase activity of scallop acto-myosin, they were unable to regulate it. These results are in agreement with our previous findings that occupancy of the Ca2+/Mg2+ site in the RLC is essential for regulation. Our results suggest that the specificity and affinity of the calcium-binding site in troponin C is dependent on both intra- and inter-domain interactions within troponin C and that these latter interactions appear to be missing when this binding site is transplanted into the light chain backbone.  相似文献   

7.
Coordinated expression of species-specific myosin heavy chain (MHC) and troponin (Tn) isoforms may bring about a dynamic complementarity to match muscle contraction speed with species-specific heart rates. Contractile system function and dynamic force-length measurements were made in muscle fibers from mouse and rat hearts and in muscle fibers after reconstitution with either recombinant homologous Tn or orthologous Tn. The rate constants of length-mediated cross-bridge (XB) recruitment (b) and tension redevelopment (k(tr)) of mouse fibers were significantly faster than those of rat fibers. Both the tension cost (ATPase/tension) and rate constant of length-mediated XB distortion (c) were higher in the mouse than in the rat. Thus the mouse fiber was faster in all dynamic and functional aspects than the rat fiber. Mouse Tn significantly increased b and k(tr) in rat fibers; conversely, rat Tn significantly decreased b and k(tr) in mouse fibers. Thus the length-mediated recruitment of force-bearing XB occurs much more rapidly in the presence of mouse Tn than in the presence of rat Tn, demonstrating that the speed of XB recruitment is regulated by Tn. There was a significant interaction between Tn and MHC such that changes in either Tn or MHC affected the speed of XB recruitment. Our data demonstrate that the dynamics of myocardial contraction are different in the mouse and rat hearts because of sequence heterogeneity in MHC and Tn. At the myofilament level, coordinated expression of complementary regulatory contractile proteins produces a functional dynamic phenotype that allows the cardiovascular systems to function effectively at different heart rates.  相似文献   

8.
We have determined six molecular distances among four sites in the binary complex formed between troponin C (TnC) and troponin I (TnI) by fluorescence resonance energy transfer between donor and acceptor probes that were either an intrinsic fluorophore (Trp158 of TnI) or extrinsic probes attached to the sites. The three extrinsic probes were dansylaziridine (DNZ), N'-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(8-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine (IAEDANS) and 5-(iodoacetamido)eosin (IAE). The four fluorophores provided four donor-acceptor pairs: DNZ----IAE, Trp----IAEDANS, IAEDANS----IAE, and Trp----DNZ. They allowed determinations of separations between specific sites from measurements of energy transfer from (1) Met25 (DNZ) to Cys98 (IAE) in TnC, (2) Trp158 to Cys133 (IAEDANS) in TnI, (3) Cys98 (IAEDANS) of TnC to Cys133(IAE) of TnI, (4) Trp158 of TnI to Cys98(IAEDANS) of TnC, and (6) Met25(DNZ) of TnC to Cys133(IAE) of TnI. Distance (1) in TnC was little affected when the isolated protein was complexed with TnI, whereas distance (2) in TnI increased by 6A (29%) when TnI was incorporated into the binary complex. In the presence of EGTA, the six donor-acceptor separations (R) in the complex were in the range 28 to 57 A based on kappa 2 = 2/3. Mg2+ had only small effects on R, but Ca2+ induced substantial increases or decreases of R in five of the six distances. These changes were not accompanied by significant changes in the axial depolarization of the fluorophores. The results indicate global structural perturbations of regions of the two proteins in the complex by Ca2+ binding to the TnC, and suggest that large-scale movements of domains of troponin subunits may be the initial molecular events that occur in the transmission of the Ca2+ signal in the regulation of contraction by calcium.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of myosin crossbridges with actin under equilibrium conditions is reviewed. Similarities and differences between the weakly- and strongly-binding interactions of myosin crossbridges with actin filaments are discussed. A precise, narrow definition of weakly- binding crossbridges is given. It is postulated that the fundamental interaction of crossbridges with actin is that the crossbridge heads are mobile after attachment in the first case but not in the second. It is argued that because the weakly-binding crossbridge heads are mobile after attachment, the heads appear to function independently of each other. The lack of head mobility in attached strongly-binding crossbridges makes the strongly-binding crossbridge heads appear to act cooperatively. This model of the strongly-binding crossbridge gives an explanation for two important and otherwise unexplained observations. It explains why the rate constant of force decay after a small stretch is a sigmoidal function of nucleotide analogue concentration, and why, in the presence of analogues or in rigor, the rate constant of force decay after a small stretch is often significantly slower than the rate constant for myosin subfragment-1 detachment from actin in solution. The model of the weakly-binding crossbridge accurately describes the behavior of the myosin·ATP crossbridge.  相似文献   

10.
Luo Y  Leszyk J  Li B  Gergely J  Tao T 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15306-15315
Skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) adopts an extended conformation when crystallized alone and a compact one when crystallized with an N-terminal troponin I (TnI) peptide, TnI(1-47) [Vassylyev et al. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 4847-4852]. The N-terminal region of TnI (residues 1-40) was suggested to play a functional role of facilitating the movement of TnI's inhibitory region between TnC and actin [Tripet et al. (1997) J. Mol. Biol. 271, 728-750]. To test this hypothesis and to investigate the conformation of TnC in the intact troponin complex and in solution, we attached fluorescence and photo-cross-linking probes to a mutant TnI with a single cysteine at residue 6. Distances from this residue to residues of TnC were measured by the fluorescence resonance energy transfer technique, and the sites of photo-cross-linking in TnC were determined by microsequencing and mass spectrometry following enzymatic digestions. Our results show that in the troponin complex neither the distance between TnI residue 6 and TnC residue 89 nor the photo-cross-linking site in TnC, Ser133, changes with Ca(2+), in support of the notion that this region plays mainly a structural rather than a regulatory role. The distances to residues 12 and 41 in TnC's N-domain are both considerably longer than those predicted by the crystal structure of TnC.TnI(1-47), supporting an extended rather than a compact conformation of TnC. In the binary TnC.TnI complex and the presence of Ca(2+), Met43 in TnC's N-domain was identified as the photo-cross-linking site, and multiple distances between TnI residue 6 and TnC residue 41 were detected. This was taken to indicate increased flexibility in TnC's central helix and that TnC dynamically changes between a compact and an extended conformation when troponin T (TnT) is absent. Our results further emphasize the difference between the binary TnC.TnI and the ternary troponin complexes and the importance of using intact proteins in the study of structure-function relationships of troponin.  相似文献   

11.
We have quantitated the interactions of two rabbit skeletal troponin C fragments with troponin I and the troponin I inhibitory peptide. The calcium binding properties of the fragments and the ability of the fragments to exert control in the regulated actomyosin ATPase assay have also been studied. The N- and C-terminal divalent metal binding domains of rabbit skeletal troponin C, residues 1-97 and residues 98-159, respectively, were prepared by specific cleavage at cysteine-98 and separation by gel exclusion chromatography. Both of the troponin C fragments bind calcium. The calcium affinity of the weak sites within the N-terminal fragment is about an order of magnitude greater than is reported for these sites in troponin C, suggesting interaction between the calcium-saturated strong sites and the weak sites. Stoichiometric binding (1:1) of the troponin I inhibitory peptide to each fragment and to troponin C increased the calcium affinities of the fragments and troponin C. Complex formation was detected by fluorescence quenching or enhancement using dansyl-labeled troponin C (and fragments) or tryptophan-labeled troponin I inhibitory peptide. The troponin C fragments bind to troponin I with 1:1 stoichiometry and approximately equal affinities (1.6 x 10(6) M-1) which are decreased 4-fold in the presence of magnesium versus calcium. These calcium effects are much smaller than is observed for troponin C. The summed free energies for the binding of the troponin C fragments to troponin I are much larger than the free energy of binding troponin C. This suggests a large positive interaction free energy for troponin C binding to troponin I relative to the fragments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
13.
We measured EPR spectra from a spin label on the Cys133 residue of troponin I (TnI) to identify Ca(2+)-induced structural states, based on sensitivity of spin-label mobility to flexibility and tertiary contact of a polypeptide. Spectrum from Tn complexes in the -Ca(2+) state showed that Cys133 was located at a flexible polypeptide segment (rotational correlation time tau=1.9ns) that was free from TnC. Spectra of both Tn complexes alone and those reconstituted into the thin filaments in the +Ca(2+) state showed that Cys133 existed on a stable segment (tau=4.8ns) held by TnC. Spectra of reconstituted thin filaments (-Ca(2+) state) revealed that slow mobility (tau=45ns) was due to tertiary contact of Cys133 with actin, because the same slow mobility was found for TnI-actin and TnI-tropomyosin-actin filaments lacking TnC, T or tropomyosin. We propose that the Cys133 region dissociates from TnC and attaches to the actin surface on the thin filaments, causing muscle relaxation at low Ca(2+) concentrations.  相似文献   

14.
Thick filaments in relaxed, quick-frozen and freeze-etched psoas myofibrils display a prominent helical pattern of projections repeating at 43 +/- 1 nm. These helices are right-handed, and measurement of the pitch angle indicates that the thick filaments are three-stranded. Each half-turn of a helix is composed of three to five projections, 11 to 12 nm in diameter. These projections probably represent individual myosin crossbridges. This is the first direct visualization of the crossbridge helices in vertebrate striated muscle filaments whose three-dimensional structure is preserved without chemical fixation.  相似文献   

15.
Interactions between troponin C (TnC) and troponin I (TnI) play an important role in the Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction. Previous attempts to elucidate the molecular details of TnC-TnI interactions, mainly involving chemically modified proteins or fragments thereof, have led to the widely accepted idea that the "inhibitory region" (residues 96-116) of TnI binds to an alpha-helical segment of TnC comprising residues 89-100 in the nonregulatory, COOH-terminal domain. In an attempt to identify other possible physiologically important interactions between these proteins, 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide (EDC) was used to produce zero-length cross-links in the complex of rabbit skeletal muscle TnC and TnI. TnC was activated with EDC and N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) and then mixed with an equimolar amount of TnI [Grabarek, Z., & Gergely, J. (1988) Biophys. J. 53, 392a]. The resulting cross-linked TnCXI was cleaved with cyanogen bromide, trypsin, and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease (SAP). Cross-linked peptides were purified by reverse-phase HPLC and characterized by sequence analysis. The results indicated that residues from the regulatory Ca2(+)-binding site II in the NH2-terminal domain of TnC (residues 46-78) formed cross-links with TnI segments spanning residues 92-167. The most highly cross-linked residues in TnI were Lys-105 and Lys-107, located in the inhibitory region. These results yield the first evidence for an interaction between the N-terminal domain of TnC and the inhibitory region of TnI.  相似文献   

16.
The N-terminal extension of cardiac troponin I (TnI) is bisphosphorylated by protein kinase A in response to beta-adrenergic stimulation. How this signal is transmitted between TnI and troponin C (TnC), resulting in accelerated Ca(2+) release, remains unclear. We recently proposed that the unphosphorylated extension interacts with the N-terminal domain of TnC stabilizing Ca(2+) binding and that phosphorylation prevents this interaction. We now use (1)H NMR to study the interactions between several N-terminal fragments of TnI, residues 1-18 (I1-18), residues 1-29 (I1-29), and residues 1-64 (I1-64), and TnC. The shorter fragments provide unambiguous information on the N-terminal regions of TnI that interact with TnC: I1-18 does not bind to TnC whereas the C-terminal region of unphosphorylated I1-29 does bind. Bisphosphorylation greatly weakens this interaction. I1-64 contains the phosphorylatable N-terminal extension and a region that anchors I1-64 to the C-terminal domain of TnC. I1-64 binding to TnC influences NMR signals arising from both domains of TnC, providing evidence that the N-terminal extension of TnI interacts with the N-terminal domain of TnC. TnC binding to I1-64 broadens NMR signals from the side chains of residues immediately C-terminal to the phosphorylation sites. Binding of TnC to bisphosphorylated I1-64 does not broaden these NMR signals to the same extent. Circular dichroism spectra of I1-64 indicate that bisphosphorylation does not produce major secondary structure changes in I1-64. We conclude that bisphosphorylation of cardiac TnI elicits its effects by weakening the interaction between the region of TnI immediately C-terminal to the phosphorylation sites and TnC either directly, due to electrostatic repulsion, or via localized conformational changes.  相似文献   

17.
The N-terminal regulatory region of Troponin I, residues 1-40 (TnI 1-40, regulatory peptide) has been shown to have a biologically important function in the interactions of troponin I and troponin C. Truncated analogs corresponding to shorter versions of the N-terminal region (1-30, 1-28, 1-26) were synthesized by solid-phase methodology. Our results indicate that residues 1-30 of TnI comprises the minimum sequence to retain full biological activity as measured in the acto-S1-TM ATPase assay. Binding of the TnI N-terminal regulatory peptides (TnI 1-30 and the N-terminal regulatory peptide (residues 1-40) labeled with the photoprobe benzoylbenzoyl group, BBRp) were studied by gel electrophoresis and photochemical cross-linking experiments under various conditions. Fluorescence titrations of TnI 1-30 were carried out with TnC mutants that carry a single tryptophan fluorescence probe in either the N- or C-domain (F105W, F105W/C domain (88-162), F29W and F29W/N domain (1-90)) (Fig. 1). Low Kd values (Kd < 10(-7) M) were obtained for the interaction of F105W and F105W/C domain (88-162) with TnI 1-30. However, there was no observable change in fluorescence when the fluorescence probe was located at the N-domain of the TnC mutant (F29W and F29W/N domain (1-90)). These results show that the regulatory peptide binds strongly to the C-terminal domain of TnC.  相似文献   

18.
Cytoplasmic streaming in characean algae is thought to be driven by interaction between stationary subcortical actin bundles and motile endoplasmic myosin. Implicit in this mechanism is a requirement for some form of coupling to transfer motive force from the moving myosin to the endoplasm. Three models of viscous coupling between myosin and endoplasm are presented here, and the hydrodynamic feasibility of each model is analyzed. The results show that individual myosinlike molecules moving along the actin bundles at reasonable velocities cannot exert enough viscous pull on the endoplasm to account for the observed streaming. Attachment of myosin to small spherical organelles improves viscous coupling to the endoplasm, but results for this model show that streaming can be generated only if the myosin-spheres move along the actin bundles in a virtual solid line at about twice the streaming velocity. In the third model, myosin is incorporated into a fibrous or membranous network or gel extending into the endoplasm. This network is pulled forward as the attached myosin slides along the actin bundles. Using network dimensions estimated from published micrographs of characean endoplasm, the results show that this system can easily generate the observed cytoplasmic streaming.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction between troponin I and troponin C plays a critical role in the regulation of muscle contraction. In this study the interaction between troponin C (TnC) and the N-terminal region of TnI was investigated by the synthesis of three TnI peptides (residues 1-40/Rp, 10-40, and 20-40). The regulatory peptide (Rp) on binding to TnC prevents the ability of TnC to release the inhibition of the acto-S1-tropomyosin ATPase activity caused by TnI or the TnI inhibitory peptide (Ip), residues 104-115. A stable complex between TnC and Rp in the presence of Ca2+ was demonstrated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of 6 M urea. Rp was able to displace TnI from a preformed TnI.TnC complex. In the absence of Ca2+, Rp was unable to maintain a complex with TnC in benign conditions of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis which demonstrates the Ca(2+)-dependent nature of this interaction. Size-exclusion chromatography demonstrated that the TnC.Rp complex consisted of a 1:1 complex. The results of these studies have shown that the N-terminal region of TnI (1-40) plays a critical role in modulating the Ca(2+)-sensitive release of TnI inhibition by TnC.  相似文献   

20.
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