首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
1. Phenylglyoxal reacts rapidly with isolated myosin heads (subfragment 1) and induces two successive and distinguishable effects on their enzymic properties: first, a twofold activation of the Ca2+ and Mg2+-dependent ATPases with no effect onthe K+-ATPase followed by inhibition of the K+, Ca2+ and actin-activated Mg2+-ATPases. A specific protein-reagent reagent complex is formed during the second phase of the modification reaction (Ki approximately 5 x 10(-3) M). 2. ADP and ATP with or without cations provide efficient protection only against the loss of ATPase activities, suggesting that the second inhibitory process is occurring at or close to the active site. 3. On the basis of [14C]phenylglyoxal-labelling experiments and the composition of modified subfragment-1 derivatives, it is demonstrated that the sequential modification of two reactive arginyl residues is responsible for the observed activation-inhibition phenomena. Blocking of the first reactive residue produces a shift in the pH/activity curves related to the Ca2+ and Mg2+-dependent ATPases with an apparent activation effect. Modification of the second guanidino group does not destroy the affinity of the protein for the nucleotide substrates but does alter the nucleotide binding site as reflected in the inability of Mg2+. ATP to dissociate the modified subfragment-1--actin complex. It is concluded that electrostatic interactions between this positively charged group and the negatively charged ATP and ADP molecules may be critical for the hydrolytic efficiency of myosin heads. 4. After dissociation and separation of the polypeptide constituents of the protein in acetic acid medium, both labelled sites are found to reside in the heavy chain.  相似文献   

2.
From transient kinetic studies of the Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase of myosin subfragment 1, prepared from rabbit skeletal muscle, a seven-step mechanism has been proposed. Features of this mechanism include two-step processes for ATP and ADP binding in which the binary complex isomerizes in addition to a rapid nucleotide association step. In the case of ATP a large negative standard free energy change is associated with the isomerization. An overall rate-limiting isomerization of the myosin-product complex prior to product release has been identified. Studies on the mechanism of cleavage of ATP bound to the active site indicate the process is readily reversible and can account for the observation that more than one oxygen of the product phosphate arises from water. This proposal has been substantiated by the finding that the oxygen atoms of the γ-phosphoryl group of bound ATP also undergo extensive exchange with water.  相似文献   

3.
To elucidate the difference between subfragment-1 and heavy meromyosin in their interaction with F-actin, we used limited tryptic digestion and cross-linking with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide. The binding of actin to subfragment-1 lowers the susceptibility of the 50K-20K junction of its heavy chain to tryptic digestion. At a molar ratio of one actin to one subfragment-1, all the sites were gradually cleaved by trypsin whereas the sites were completely protected in the presence of a 2-fold molar excess of actin over subfragment-1. In the case of heavy meromyosin, nearly half of the sites were protected completely by the presence of an equimolar amount of actin to its heads suggesting that the two heads of heavy meromyosin bound actin in a different manner. The rate of the cross-linking reaction between subfragment-1 heavy chain and actin with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino) propyl]carbodiimide also depended on the molar ratio of actin to subfragment-1. The rate was maximum at a molar ratio of about 5 actin to 1 subfragment-1. When heavy meromyosin was cross-linked to actin, the maximum rate was observed at a molar ratio of about 3 actin to 1 heavy meromyosin head, the level being about 60% that for subfragment-1 and actin. It was suggested that the presence of the subfragment-2 portion of heavy meromyosin caused these differences by restricting the motion of the two heads.  相似文献   

4.
The initial rates of tryptic digestion at the 50/20-kDa junction in myosin and myosin subfragment 1 were determined for the free proteins and their complexes with actin in the presence and absence of MgATP. The proteolytic reactions were carried out at 24 degrees C and under ionic strength conditions (mu) adjusted to 35, 60, and 130 mM. The percentages of myosin heads and myosin subfragment 1 bound to actin in the presence of MgATP were calculated from the rates of proteolysis for each set of digestion experiments. In all cases, the myosin heads in the synthetic filaments showed greater binding to actin than myosin subfragment 1. This binding difference was most prominent (3-fold) at mu = 130 mM. The binding of heavy meromyosin (HMM) to actin in the presence of MgADP was measured at 4 degrees C by ultracentrifugation and the proteolytic rates methods. Ultracentrifugation experiments determined the fraction of HMM molecules bound to actin in the presence of MgADP, whereas the proteolytic measurements yielded the information on the fraction of HMM heads bound to actin. Taken together, these measurements show that a significant fraction of HMM is bound to actin with only one head in the presence of MgADP under ionic conditions of 180 and 280 mM.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of the Mg2+-dependent myosin subfragment 1 catalyzed hydrolysis of GTP and 2-amino-6-mercapto-9-beta-ribofuranosylpurine 5'-triphosphate (thioGTP) has been investigated by rapid-reaction techniques. The myosin was isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle. The steady-state intermediate of these reactions consists pre-dominantly of a protein-substrate complex unlike the myosin subfragment 1 ATPase reaction which has a protein-products complex as the principal steady-state component. The mechanism of GTP hydrolysis catalyzed by subfragment 1 has other marked differences from the ATPase mechanism. The second-order rate constant of binding of GTP to subfragment 1 is tenfold greater than that for GDP binding. The dissociation rate constant of GDP from subfragment 1 is 0.06 s-1 compared with the subfragment 1 catalytic center activity for GTP hydrolysis of 0.5 s-1 at pH 8.0 and 20 degrees C. This shows that GDP bound to subfragment 1 forms a complex which is not kinetically competent to be an intermediate of the GTPase mechanism. GDP is hydrolyzed in the presence of subfragment 1 to GMP and Pi. The subfragment 1 GTPase mechanism has a nuber if features in common with that of the elongation factor Tu GTPase of the protein biosynthetic system of Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

6.
The initial rates of tryptic digestion at the 50/20-kDa junction in myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) were determined for free S-1, acto-S-1, and acto-S-1 in the presence of magnesium adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Mg AMP-PNP) and MgATP under ionic strength conditions ranging from 30 to 124 mM. The percentage of S-1 bound to actin in the presence of Mg AMP-PNP and MgATP was calculated from these rates for each set of digestion experiments. Parallel experiments carried out in an Airfuge centrifuge on identical acto-S-1 solutions yielded independent information on the binding of S-1 to actin. The results of binding measurements by these two methods were in excellent agreement in all cases tested, covering the range from 15 to 95% binding of S-1 to actin. Tryptic digestions of synthetic mixtures of S-1 and p-phenylenedimaleimide S-1 in the presence of actin demonstrated that a two-component system of myosin heads with different affinities for actin can be resolved into its constituents by the proteolytic rates method. The results of this work justify applications of the proteolytic rates method to actomyosin binding studies in more complex systems.  相似文献   

7.
M Walker  H White  B Belknap    J Trinick 《Biophysical journal》1994,66(5):1563-1572
The structure of the complex of actin and myosin subfragment-1 (S1) during steady-state ATP hydrolysis has been examined by electron microscopy. This complex is normally dissociated by ATP in vitro but was stabilized here by low ionic strength. Optimal conditions for attachment were established by light-scattering experiments that showed that approximately 70% of S1 could be bound in the presence of ATP. Micrographs of the unstained complex in vitreous water suggest that S1 attaches to actin in a variety of configurations in ATP; this contrasts with the single attached configuration seen in the presence of ADP. The data are therefore compatible with the idea that a change in attached configuration of the myosin cross-bridge is the origin of muscle force. In control experiments where ATP was allowed to hydrolyze completely the binding of the S1 seemed cooperative.  相似文献   

8.
Kovács M  Tóth J  Nyitray L  Sellers JR 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4219-4226
The enzymatic and motor function of smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin II is activated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains located in the head portion of myosin. Dimerization of the heads, which is brought about by the coiled-coil tail region, is essential for regulation since single-headed fragments are active regardless of the state of phosphorylation. Utilizing the fluorescence signal on binding of myosin to pyrene-labeled actin filaments, we investigated the interplay of actin and nucleotide binding to thiophosphorylated and unphosphorylated recombinant nonmuscle IIA heavy meromyosin constructs. We show that both heads of either thiophosphorylated or unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin bind very strongly to actin (K(d) < 10 nM) in the presence or absence of ADP. The heads have high and indistinguishable affinities for ADP (K(d) around 1 microM) when bound to actin. These findings are in line with the previously observed unusually loose coupling between nucleotide and actin binding to nonmuscle myosin IIA subfragment-1 (Kovács et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 38132.). Furthermore, they imply that the structure of the two heads in the ternary actomyosin-ADP complex is symmetrical and that the asymmetrical structure observed in the presence of ATP and the absence of actin in previous investigations (Wendt et al. (2001) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 98, 4361) is likely to represent an ATPase intermediate that precedes the actomyosin-ADP state.  相似文献   

9.
The binding of ADP to subfragment-1 was investigated by the gel filtration method. The amount of bound ADP was determined as a function of free ADP concentration. Linear Scatchard plots were obtained. The maximum binding number, 0.55 mole of ADP per 10(5) g of protein, and the dissociation constant, 1.6 x 10(-6) M, were obtained, using subfragment-1 prepared by tryptic digestion, in the presence of 0.083 M KCl-10 mM MgCl2-0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8), at 25 degrees. Similar maximum numbers, about 0.5 mole per 10(5) g of protein, were obtained with subfragment-1 prepared by chymotryptic digestion of myosin or papain digestion of myofibrils. The maximum number did not depend on the KCl concentration or the temperature, while the dissociation constant decreased on decreasing either the KCl concentration or the temperature. Adenylyl imidodiphosphate binding to subfragment-1 prepared by chymotryptic digestion was also measured by the gel filtration method. The maximum binding number, 0.41 mole per 10(5) g of subfragment-1, and the dissociation constant, less than 10(-7) M, were obtained in the presence of 0.7 M KCl-10 mM MgCl2-0.02 M Tris-HCl (pH 8), at 8 degrees. The difference absorbance at 288 nm of the difference absorption spectrum induced by ADP of subfragment-1 prepared by tryptic digestion was proportional to the amount of bound ADP. The steady-state ATPase rate of subfragment-1 prepared by tryptic digestion was inhibited competitively by ADP in the presence of MgCl2. The extent of the initial burst of ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] decreased from 0.46 +/- 0.06 to 0.30 +/- 0.09 mole of Pi per 10(5) g of subfragment-1 on adding ADP to a level of 0.6 mM. Subfragment-1 prepared by tryptic digestion bound F-actin with a mole ratio of 1/0.96 of actin monomer. The binding was depressed by the addition of ADP. On the basis of these results, subfragment-1 preparations were assumed to be a half-and-half mixture of two kinds of protein, and properties of each protein are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Effects of subtilisin cleavage of actin between residues 47 and 48 on the conformation of F-actin and on its changes occurring upon binding of myosin subfragment-1 (S1) were investigated by measuring polarized fluorescence from rhodamine-phalloidin- or 1, 5-IAEDANS-labeled actin filaments reconstructed from intact or subtilisin-cleaved actin in myosin-free muscle fibers (ghost fibers). In separate experiments, polarized fluorescence from 1, 5-IAEDANS-labeled S1 bound to non-labeled actin filaments in ghost fibers was measured. The measurements revealed differences between the filaments of cleaved and intact actin in the orientation of rhodamine probe on the rhodamine-phalloidin-labeled filaments, orientation and mobility of the C-terminus of actin, filament flexibility, and orientation and mobility of the myosin heads bound to F-actin. The changes in the filament flexibility and orientation of the actin-bound fluorophores produced by S1 binding to actin in the absence of ATP were substantially diminished by subtilisin cleavage of actin. The results suggest that loop 38-52 plays an important role, not only in maintaining the F-actin structure, but also in the conformational transitions in actin accompanying the strong binding of the myosin heads that may be essential for the generation of force and movement during actin-myosin interaction.  相似文献   

11.
TRITC-phalloidin or FITC-labeled F-actin of ghost muscle fibers was bound to tropomyosin and C-terminal recombinant fragments of caldesmon CaDH1 (residues 506-793) or CaDH2 (residues 683-767). After that the fibers were decorated with myosin subfragment 1. In the absence of caldesmon fragments, subfragment 1 interaction with F-actin caused changes in parameters of polarized fluorescence, that were typical of "strong" binding of myosin heads to F-actin and of the "switched on" conformational state of actin. CaDH1 inhibited, whereas CaDH2 activated the effect of subfragment 1. It is suggested that C-terminal part of caldesmon may modulate the transition of F-actin subunits from the "switched on" to the "switched off" state.  相似文献   

12.
We have used actin labelled in Cys-374 with N-(1-pyrenyl)iodoacetamide to monitor the dynamics and equilibria of the interaction between myosin subfragment 1 and the actin-troponin-tropomyosin complex in the presence of calcium. These results are compared with those obtained for pure actin and myosin subfragment 1. The sensitivity of this fluorescent label allowed us to measure the binding affinity of myosin subfragment 1 for actin directly by fluorescence titration. The affinity of subfragment 1 for actin is increased sixfold by troponin-tropomyosin in the presence of calcium. Kinetic studies of the interaction of subfragment 1 and actin have revealed an isomerization of the actin-subfragment 1 complex from a state in which actin is weakly bound (Ka = 5.9 X 10(4) M-1) to a more tightly bound complex (Ka = 1.7 X 10(7) M-1) (Coates, Criddle & Geeves (1985) Biochem. J. 232, 351). Results in the presence of troponin-tropomyosin show the same isomerization. The sixfold increase in affinity of subfragment 1 for actin is shown to be due to a decrease in the rate of dissociation of actin from the weakly bound complex.  相似文献   

13.
Mechanism of blebbistatin inhibition of myosin II   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Blebbistatin is a recently discovered small molecule inhibitor showing high affinity and selectivity toward myosin II. Here we report a detailed investigation of its mechanism of inhibition. Blebbistatin does not compete with nucleotide binding to the skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1. The inhibitor preferentially binds to the ATPase intermediate with ADP and phosphate bound at the active site, and it slows down phosphate release. Blebbistatin interferes neither with binding of myosin to actin nor with ATP-induced actomyosin dissociation. Instead, it blocks the myosin heads in a products complex with low actin affinity. Blind docking molecular simulations indicate that the productive blebbistatin-binding site of the myosin head is within the aqueous cavity between the nucleotide pocket and the cleft of the actin-binding interface. The property that blebbistatin blocks myosin II in an actin-detached state makes the compound useful both in muscle physiology and in exploring the cellular function of cytoplasmic myosin II isoforms, whereas the stabilization of a specific myosin intermediate confers a great potential in structural studies.  相似文献   

14.
Myosin subfragment 1 (S1) can be specifically modified at Lys-553 with the fluorescent probe FHS (6-[fluorescein-5(and 6)-carboxamido]hexanoic acid succinimidyl ester) (Bertrand, R., J. Derancourt, and R. Kassab. 1995. Biochemistry. 34:9500-9507), and solvent quenching of FHS-S1 with iodide has been shown to be sensitive to actin binding at low ionic strength (MacLean, Chrin, and Berger, 2000. Biophys. J. 000-000). In order to extend these results and examine the fraction of actin-bound myosin heads within the myofilament lattice during calcium activation, we have modified skeletal muscle myofibrils, mildly cross-linked with EDC (1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide) to prevent shortening, with FHS. The myosin heavy chain appears to be the predominant site of labeling, and the iodide quenching patterns are consistent with those obtained for myosin S1 in solution, suggesting that Lys-553 is indeed the primary site of FHS incorporation in skeletal muscle myofibrils. The iodide quenching results from calcium-activated FHS-myofibrils indicate that during isometric contraction 29% of the myosin heads are strongly bound to actin within the myofilament lattice at low ionic strength. These results suggest that myosin can be specifically modified with FHS in more complex and physiologically relevant preparations, allowing the real time examination of cross-bridge interactions with actin in in vitro motility assays and during isometric and isotonic contractions within single muscle fibers.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of actin to myosin subfragment 1 (S1) has been shown to occur as a two-step reaction. In the first step actin is weakly bound and then the complex isomerizes to the "rigor type" acto-S1 complex (Coates, J. H., A. H. Criddle, and M. A. Geeves, 1985 Biochem. J., 232:351-356). We propose here a model in which troponin/tropomyosin (Tn/Tm) controls the actin-S1 interaction by inhibiting the isomerization step. In this model the (actin)7 Tn/Tm unit is assumed to exist in two states: open and closed. S1 can bind to either of the two states but only the open form allows the isomerization reaction to take place. We demonstrate that this model can account for the cooperative binding of S1 and S1 nucleotide complexes to actin. The model provides a way of integrating both the effects of calcium and nucleotide on actin-S1 interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Muscle contraction can be activated by the binding of myosin heads to the thin filament, which appears to result in thin filament structural changes. In vitro studies of reconstituted muscle thin filaments have shown changes in tropomyosin-actin geometry associated with the binding of myosin subfragment 1 to actin. Further information about these structural changes was obtained with fluorescence-detected linear dichroism of tropomyosin, which was labeled at Cys 190 with acrylodan and incorporated into oriented ghost myofibrils. The fluorescence from three sarcomeres of the fibril was collected with the high numerical aperture objective of a microscope and the dichroic ratio, R (0/90 degrees), for excitation parallel/perpendicular to the fibril, was obtained, which gave the average probe dipole polar angle, Theta. For both acrylodan-labeled tropomyosin bound to actin in fibrils and in Mg2+ paracrystals, Theta congruent to 52 degrees +/- 1.0 degrees, allowing for a small degree of orientational disorder. Binding of myosin subfragment 1 to actin in fibrils did not change Theta; i.e., the orientation of the rigidly bound probe on tropomyosin did not change relative to the actin axis. These data indicate that myosin subfragment 1 binding to actin does not appreciably perturb the structure of tropomyosin near the probe and suggest that the geometry changes are such as to maintain the parallel orientation of the tropomyosin and actin axes, a finding consistent with models of muscle regulation. Data are also presented for effects of MgADP on the orientation of labeled myosin subfragment 1 bound to actin in myofibrils.  相似文献   

17.
We have examined the kinetics of nucleotide binding to actomyosin VI by monitoring the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled actin filaments. ATP binds single-headed myosin VI following a two-step reaction mechanism with formation of a low affinity collision complex (1/K(1)' = 5.6 mm) followed by isomerization (k(+2)' = 176 s-1) to a state with weak actin affinity. The rates and affinity for ADP binding were measured by kinetic competition with ATP. This approach allows a broader range of ADP concentrations to be examined than with fluorescent nucleotide analogs, permitting the identification and characterization of transiently populated intermediates in the pathway. ADP binding to actomyosin VI, as with ATP binding, occurs via a two-step mechanism. The association rate constant for ADP binding is approximately five times greater than for ATP binding because of a higher affinity in the collision complex (1/K(5b)' = 2.2 mm) and faster isomerization rate constant (k(+5a)' = 366 s(-1)). By equilibrium titration, both heads of a myosin VI dimer bind actin strongly in rigor and with bound ADP. In the presence of ATP, conditions that favor processive stepping, myosin VI does not dwell with both heads strongly bound to actin, indicating that the second head inhibits strong binding of the lead head to actin. With both heads bound strongly, ATP binding is accelerated 2.5-fold, and ADP binding is accelerated >10-fold without affecting the rate of ADP release. We conclude that the heads of myosin VI communicate allosterically and accelerate nucleotide binding, but not dissociation, when both are bound strongly to actin.  相似文献   

18.
We have used electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to investigate the orientation, rotational motion, and actin-binding properties of rabbit psoas muscle cross-bridges in the presence of the nonhydrolyzable nucleotide analogue, 5'-adenylylimido-diphosphate (AMPPNP). This analogue is known to decrease muscle tension without affecting its stiffness, suggesting an attached cross-bridge state different from rigor. We spin-labeled the SH1 groups on myosin heads and performed conventional EPR to obtain high-resolution information about the orientational distribution, and saturation transfer EPR to measure microsecond rotational motion. At 4 degrees C and 100 mM ionic strength, we find that AMPPNP increases both the orientational disorder and the microsecond rotational motion of myosin heads. However, computer analysis of digitized spectra shows that no new population of probes is observed that does not match either rigor or relaxation in both orientation and motion. At 4 degrees C, under nearly saturating conditions of 16 mM AMPPNP (Kd = 3.0 mM, determined from competition between AMPPNP and an ADP spin label), 47.5 +/- 2.5% of myosin heads are dynamically disoriented (as in relaxation) without a significant decrease in rigor stiffness, whereas the remainder are rigidly oriented as in rigor. The oriented heads correspond to actin-attached heads in a ternary complex, and the disoriented heads correspond to detached heads, as indicated by EPR experiments with spin-labeled subfragment 1 (S1) that provide independent measurements of orientation and binding. We take these findings as evidence for a single-headed cross-bridge that is as stiff as the double-headed rigor cross-bridge. The data are consistent with a model in which, in the presence of saturating AMPPNP, one head of each cross-bridge binds actin about 10 times more weakly, whereas the remaining head binds at least 10 times more strongly, than extrinsic S1. Thus, although there is no evidence for heads being attached at nonrigor angles, the attached cross-bridge differs from that of rigor. The heterogeneous behavior of heads is probably due to steric effects of the filament lattice.  相似文献   

19.
To examine the spatial relationship between SH1 thiol and actin binding site on subfragment-1 surface, we studied the interaction with actin of subfragment-1 whose SH1 was labeled with an iodoacetate derivative of biotin and covered with avidin. Subfragment-1--avidin complex bound F-actin and its Mg2+ ATPase activity was activated by actin. Considering the size and the location of biotin binding site on avidin, our results suggest that SH1 is separated from the actin binding site on subfragment-1 surface by at least 17-20 A.  相似文献   

20.
The enzymic activity of several single-headed subfragments of myosin (HMM S-1 and single-headed HMM) has been compared to the double-headed derivative of myosin (HMM) both in the presence and absence of aetin. Under the assay conditions of our experiments, we find that HMM hydrolyses ATP at approximately twice the rate of any single-headed species. These results suggest a relatively independent functional role for each of the two heads of the myosin molecule.An attempt has been made to determine the stoichiometry of association between subfragments and actin, either in the absence of nucleotide or during the hydrolysis of ATP. It was originally thought that a comparison of the maximum turnover rate of HMM at infinite concentrations of actin with the maximum rate at infinite concentrations of enzyme (but with a fixed amount of actin) would yield the combining ratio of actin to HMM. However, the considerable variation of ATP turnover rates with the conditions of the experiment has made it impossible to reach any firm conclusions regarding stoichiometry. A more direct approach to the question of stoichiometry is possible in the absence of ATP. By reacting varying amounts of F-actin with a given concentration of subfragment and centrifuging the resulting complex, it is possible to determine the unbound concentration of subfragment in the supernatant. These data provide sufficient information to construct a Scatchard plot and show that twice as many moles of actin are bound by HMM as by HMM S-1. Furthermore, the association constant of actin for HMM is several orders of magnitude higher than that for the single-headed species.In connection with the question of why myosin has two “heads”, we have examined the ability of single-headed molecules to undergo the phenomenon of “superprecipitation”. We find that single-headed myosin (the preparation of which was discussed in the preceding paper) is able to superprecipitate in much the same manner as native myosin.We conclude from these studies that each head of the myosin molecule is able to function in a relatively independent fashion. These studies do not, of course, exclude the possibility of more subtle interactions between the heads of myosin which our techniques are not able to detect.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号