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1.
The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) of sarcoplasmic reticulum contains a cysteine residue at position 12 of its sequence. This sulfhydryl group was 1 out of a total of 10-11 that were labeled by treatment of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles with N-[3H]ethylmaleimide under saturating conditions. This was shown by isolating a 31-residue NH2-terminal peptide from a tryptic digest of the succinylated ATPase, prepared from N-[3H]ethylmaleimide-labeled vesicles. Reaction of the vesicles with glutathione maleimide, parachloromercuribenzoic acid, or parachloromercuriphenyl sulfonic acid, membrane-impermeant reagents, prevented further reaction of sulfhydryl groups with N-ethylmaleimide. This result indicates that all sulfhydryl groups that are reactive with N-ethylmaleimide are on the outside of the vesicles. Since Cys12 is located in a hydrophilic NH2-terminal portion of the ATPase, the labeling results suggest that the NH2 terminus of the ATPase is on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. These results are consistent with earlier observations (Reithmeier, R. A. F., de Leon, S., and MacLennan, D. H. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 11839-11846) that the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase is synthesized without an NH2-terminal signal sequence.  相似文献   

2.
Preincubation of human erythrocyte membranes with calcium in the submillimolar to millimolar concentration range resulted in an increase of the Ca2+ affinity and apparent maximum velocity of the Ca2(+)-stimulated Mg2(+)-dependent ATPase (Ca2(+)-ATPase). The activation was persistent, as it was not reversed when the Ca2(+)-preincubated membranes were washed with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether) N,N'-tetraacetic acid-containing buffers. Magnesium was not required for the activation, whereas greater than 2 mM Mg2+ partially antagonized the activation by Ca2+. In some membrane preparations ATP was required in addition to Ca2+ for activation of the Ca2(+)-ATPase, but nonhydrolyzable analogs of ATP had the same effect. Calmodulin prevented the activation by Ca2+ over the same concentration range in which it interacts with the Ca2(+)-ATPase. Taken together the results obtained provided strong evidence that the Ca2+ activation of the enzyme was not due to proteolytic cleavage by endogenous calpain. Thus, activation by Ca2+ was not blocked by leupeptin (100-200 microM), did not require dithiothreitol, and occurred at Ca2+ concentrations greater than those required for activation of calpain I. Furthermore, Ca2+ activation did not result in change in the mobility the native 136-kDa species of the Ca2(+)-ATPase on SDS-gel electrophoresis. Moreover, solubilization of the Ca2(+)-pretreated membranes with Triton X-100 reversed the Ca2+ activation of the Ca2(+)-ATPase. On the other hand, Ca2(+)-pretreatment of the membranes modified the susceptibility of the Ca2(+)-ATPase to both cleavage and activation by exogenously added calpain I. We conclude that pretreatment of Ca2(+)-ATPase in erythrocyte membranes with millimolar Ca2+ activates the enzyme by inducing a persistent conformational change of the enzyme which is, however, subsequently reversed by detergent solubilization.  相似文献   

3.
The actin-dependent ATPase activity of myosin is retained in the separated heads (S1) which contain the NH2-terminal 95-kDa heavy chain fragment and one or two light chains. The S1 heavy chain can be degraded further by limited trypsin treatment into characteristic 25-, 50-, and 20-kDa peptides, in this order from the NH2-terminal end. The 20-kDa peptide contains an actin-binding site and SH1 and SH2, two thiols whose modification dramatically affects ATPase activity. By treating myosin filaments with trypsin at 4 degrees C in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2, we have now obtained preferential cleavage at the 50-20-kDa heavy chain site without any cleavage at the head-rod junction and hinge region in the rod. Incubation of these trypsinized filaments at 37 degrees C in the presence of MgATP released a new S1 fraction which lacked the COOH-terminal 20-kDa heavy chain peptide region. This fraction, termed S1'(75K), has more than 50% of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of S1 and the characteristic Ca2+-ATPase and K+-EDTA ATPase activities of myosin. These results show that SH1 and SH2 are not essential for ATPase activity and that binding of actin to the 20-kDa region is not essential for the enhancement of the Mg2+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

4.
Coagulation factor X is a multidomain proenzyme of a serine protease. Calcium ions bind to the vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) residues and to a site in the NH2-terminal of two epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domains. To study structure-function relationships in the NH2-terminal part of factor X and to determine the structure of isolated domains, we have developed methods that allow the subsequent isolation of the first or both EGF-like domains with or without an attached Gla domain from controlled proteolytic digests of the protein. The Ca2(+)-induced changes of the intrinsic protein fluorescence were measured to elucidate whether the isolated fragments retain their native conformation. Changes in the fluorescence caused by Ca2+ binding were found to result from perturbations of the environment of the Trp residue in position 41. Calcium ion binding to the Gla-containing region linked to the NH2-terminal EGF-like domain was identical with that to intact factor X, indicating a native orientation of the ligand binding groups in the fragment. In contrast, the isolated Gla peptide had a lower affinity for Ca2+, suggesting that the NH2-terminal EGF-like domain serves as a scaffold for the folding of the Gla region. Similarly, the presence of the Gla region was found to increase the affinity of the Gla-independent site in the first EGF-like domain for Ca2+. The metal ion-induced resistance against chymotryptic cleavage COOH-terminal of Tyr-44 in intact factor X is similar in the isolated fragment that contains the Gla region linked to one EGF-like domain, indicating a native conformation of the fragment in the presence of Ca2+. Furthermore, the Gla-independent metal ion binding site binds Ca2+ but does not appear to bind Mg2+.  相似文献   

5.
We analyzed the interaction of 14 monoclonal and 5 polyclonal anti-ATPase antibodies with the Ca2(+)-ATPase of rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum and correlated the location of their epitopes with their effects on ATPase-ATPase interactions and Ca2+ transport activity. All antibodies were found to bind with high affinity to the denatured Ca2(+)-ATPase, but the binding to the native enzyme showed significant differences, depending on the location of antigenic sites within the ATPase molecule. Of the seven monoclonal antibodies directed against epitopes on the B tryptic fragment of the Ca2(+)-ATPase, all except one (VIE8) reacted with the enzyme in native sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles in both the E1 and E2V conformations. Therefore these regions of the Ca2(+)-ATPase molecule are freely accessible in the native enzyme. The monoclonal antibody VIE8 bound with high affinity to the Ca2(+)-ATPase only in the E1 conformation stabilized by 0.5 mM Ca2+ but not in the E2V conformation stabilized by 0.5 mM EGTA and 5 mM vanadate. Several antibodies that reacted with the B fragment interfered with the crystallization of Ca2(+)-ATPase in the presence of EGTA and vanadate and at least two of them destabilized preformed Ca2(+)-ATPase crystals, suggesting inhibition of interactions between ATPase molecules. Of five monoclonal antibodies with epitopes on the A1 tryptic fragment of the Ca2(+)-ATPase only one gave strong reaction with the native enzyme, and none interfered with ATPase-ATPase interactions as measured by the polarization of fluorescence of FITC-labeled Ca2(+)-ATPase. Therefore the regions of the molecule containing these epitopes are relatively inaccessible in the native structure. Partial tryptic cleavage of the Ca2(+)-ATPase into the A1, A2 and B fragments did not promote the reaction of anti-A1 antibodies with sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles, but solubilization of the membrane with C12E8 rendered the antigenic site fully accessible to several of them, suggesting that their epitopes are located in areas of contacts between ATPase molecules. Two monoclonal anti-B antibodies that interfered with ATPase-ATPase interactions, produced close to 50% inhibition of the rate of ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport, with significant inhibition of ATPase; this may suggest a role for ATPase oligomers in the regulation of Ca2+ transport. The other antibodies that interact with the native Ca2(+)-ATPase produced no significant inhibition of ATPase activity even at saturating concentrations; therefore their antigenic sites do not undergo major movements during Ca2+ transport.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Vanadate-sensitized photocleavage of the Ca2(+)-ATPase of rabbit sarcoplasmic reticulum was observed upon illumination of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles or the purified Ca2(+)-ATPase by ultraviolet light in the presence of 1 mM monovanadate or decavanadate. The site of the photocleavage is influenced by the Ca2+ concentration of the medium. When the [Ca2+] is maintained below 10 nM by EGTA, the vanadate-catalyzed photocleavage yields fragments of approximately equal to 87 and approximately equal to 22 kDa, while in the presence of 2-20 mM Ca, polypeptides of 71 and 38 kDa are obtained as the principal cleavage products. These observations indicate that the site of the vanadate-catalyzed photocleavage is altered by changes in the conformation of Ca2(+)-ATPase. Selective tryptic proteolysis, at Arg-505-Ala-506, combined with covalent labeling of Lys-515 by fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate and with the use of anti-ATPase antibodies of defined specificity, permitted the tentative allocation of the sites of photocleavage to the A fragment near the T2 cleavage site in the absence of Ca2+, and to the B fragment between Lys-515 and Asp-659 in the presence of 2-20 mM Ca2+. The loss of ATPase activity during illumination is accelerated by calcium in the presence of vanadate. The vanadate-catalyzed photocleavage in the presence of Ca2+ is consistent with the existence of an ATPase-Ca2(+)-vanadate complex (Markus et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 793-799).  相似文献   

8.
Acanthamoeba myosin IB contains a 125-kDa heavy chain that has high actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when 1 serine residue is phosphorylated. The heavy chain contains two F-actin-binding sites, one associated with the catalytic site and a second which allows myosin IB to cross-link actin filaments but has no direct effect on catalytic activity. Tryptic digestion of the heavy chain initially produces an NH2-terminal 62-kDa peptide that contains the ATP-binding site and the regulatory phosphorylation site, and a COOH-terminal 68-kDa peptide. F-actin, in the absence of ATP, protects this site and tryptic cleavage then produces an NH2-terminal 80-kDa peptide. Both the 62- and the 80-kDa peptides retain the (NH+4,EDTA)-ATPase activity of native myosin IB and both bind to F-actin in an ATP-sensitive manner. However, only the 80-kDa peptide retains a major portion of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity. This activity requires phosphorylation of the 80-kDa peptide by myosin I heavy chain kinase but, in contrast to the activity of intact myosin IB, it has a simple, hyperbolic dependence on the concentration of F-actin. Also unlike myosin IB, the 80-kDa peptide cannot cross-link F-actin filaments indicating the presence of only a single actin-binding site. These results allow the assignment of the actin-binding site involved in catalytic activity to the region near, and possibly on both sides of, the tryptic cleavage site 62 kDa from the NH2 terminus, and the second actin-binding site to the COOH-terminal 45-kDa domain. Thus, the NH2-terminal 80 kDa of the myosin IB heavy chain is functionally similar to the 93-kDa subfragment 1 of muscle myosin and most likely has a similar organization of functional domains.  相似文献   

9.
The inhibitory effect of calmodulin on the assembly of mature and immature rat brain microtubules was compared with that of the two major structural domains of this protein, the COOH-terminal fragment (amino acids 78-148) and the NH2-terminal fragment (amino acids 1-77), to determine the calmodulin structural domain responsible for the inhibitory effect on microtubule assembly. Microtubules prepared during the early stages of brain development, i.e., during intensive neurite outgrowth, are more sensitive to inhibition by the Ca2(+)-calmodulin complex than those obtained from adult brain. Significant inhibition of immature microtubule assembly was observed with both fragments in the absence of Ca2+, but the effects were more important when Ca2+ was present. With adult brain microtubules, the two fragments remained without effect on assembly in the absence of Ca2+, whereas some inhibition was seen in its presence but only with the COOH-terminal polypeptide. Under all these conditions, the COOH-terminal fragment was always more active than the NH2-terminal fragment on microtubule polymerization, albeit to a lesser extent than native calmodulin.  相似文献   

10.
Acanthamoeba myosin IA is a globular protein composed of a 140-kDa heavy chain and a 17-kDa light chain. It expresses high actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when one serine on the heavy chain is phosphorylated. We previously showed that chymotrypsin cleaves the heavy chain into a COOH-terminal 27-kDa peptide that can bind to F-actin but has no ATPase activity and a complex containing the NH2-terminal 112-kDa peptide and the light chain. The complex also binds F-actin and has full actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when the regulatory site is phosphorylated. We have now localized the ATP binding site to within 27 kDa of the NH2 terminus and the regulatory phosphorylatable serine to a 20-kDa region between 38 and 58 kDa of the NH2 terminus. Under controlled conditions, trypsin cleaves the heavy chain at two sites, 38 and 112 kDa from the NH2 terminus, producing a COOH-terminal 27-kDa peptide similar to that produced by chymotrypsin and a complex consisting of an NH2-terminal kDa peptide, a central 74-kDa peptide, and the light chain. This complex is similar to the chymotryptic complex but for the cleavage which separates the 38- and 74-kDa peptides. The tryptic complex has full (K+, EDTA)-ATPase activity (the catalytic site is functional) and normal ATP-sensitive actin-binding properties. However, the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity and the F-actin-binding characteristics of the tryptic complex are no longer sensitive to phosphorylation of the regulatory serine. Therefore, cleavage between the phosphorylation site and the ATP-binding site inhibits the effects of phosphorylation on actin binding and actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity without abolishing the interactions between the ATP- and actin-binding sites.  相似文献   

11.
Use of the nonphosphorylating beta,gamma-bidentate chromium(III) complex of ATP to induce a stable Ca(2+)-occluded form of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase was combined with molecular sieve high performance liquid chromatography of detergent-solubilized protein to examine the ability of the Ca(2+)-ATPase mutants Gly-233-->Glu, Gly-233-->Val, Glu-309-->Gln, Gly-310-->Pro, Pro-312-->Ala, Ile-315-->Arg, Leu-319-->Arg, Asp-703-->Ala, Gly-770-->Ala, Glu-771-->Gln, Asp-800-->Asn, and Gly-801-->Val to occlude Ca2+. This provided a new approach to identification of amino acid residues involved in Ca2+ binding and in the closure of the gates to the Ca2+ binding pocket of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. The "phosphorylation-negative" mutant Asp-703-->Ala and mutants of ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate type were fully capable of occluding Ca2+, as was the mutant Gly-770-->Ala. Mutants in which carboxylic acid-containing residues in the putative transmembrane segments had been substituted ("Ca(2+)-site mutants") and mutant Gly-801-->Val were unable to occlude either of the two calcium ions. In addition, the mutant Gly-310-->Pro, previously classified as ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate type (Andersen, J.P., Vilsen, B., and MacLennan, D.H. (1992). J. Biol. Chem. 267, 2767-2774), was unable to occlude Ca2+, even though Ca(2+)-activated phosphorylation from MgATP took place in this mutant.  相似文献   

12.
Blood coagulation factor IX is composed of discrete domains with an NH2-terminal vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-containing region, followed by two domains that are homologous with the epidermal growth factor (EGF) precursor and a COOH-terminal serine protease part. Calcium ions bind to the Gla-containing region and to the NH2-terminal EGF-like domain. To be able to determine the structure and function of the Gla- and EGF-like domains, we have devised a method for cleaving factor IX under controlled conditions and isolating the intact domains in high yield, either separately or linked together. The Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding properties of these fragments were examined by monitoring the metal ion-induced changes in intrinsic protein fluorescence. A fragment, consisting of the Gla region linked to the two EGF-like domains, bound Ca2+ in a manner that was indistinguishable from that of the intact molecule, indicating a native conformation. The Ca2+ affinity of the isolated Gla region was lower, suggesting that the EGF-like domains function as a scaffold for the folding of the Gla region. The Gla-independent high affinity metal ion binding site in the NH2-terminal EGF-like domain was shown to bind Ca2+ but not Mg2+. A comparison with similar studies of factor X (Persson, E., Bj?rk, I., and Stenflo, J. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 2444-2452) suggests that the Ca2(+)-induced fluorescence quenching is due to an altered environment primarily around the tryptophan residue in position 42.  相似文献   

13.
In Paramecium, no Ca2(+)-ATPases with the properties of Ca2+ pumps have been identified. Here we report a pellicle associated Ca2(+)-ATPase activity and a corresponding phosphoprotein intermediate characteristic of a pump. The Ca2(+)-ATPase activity requires 3 mM Mg for optimal Ca2+ stimulation (KCa = 90 nM) and is specific for ATP as substrate (Km = 75 microM). Vanadate and calmidazolium inhibit Ca2(+)-stimulated activity with an EC50 of about 2 microM and 0.5 microM, respectively. Likewise, 10 microM trifluoperazine inhibits 80% of Ca2(+)-ATPase activity, but bovine calmodulin fails to stimulate. The Ca2(+)-ATPase is not inhibited by sodium azide (10 mM), oligomycin (10 micrograms/ml) or ouabain (0.2 mM). Incubation of pellicles with [gamma-32P]ATP specifically labels a 133 kDa protein in a Ca2(+)-dependent, hydroxylamine-sensitive manner, and the level of phosphorylation is increased by 100 microM La3+. Phosphorylation of an endoplasmic reticulum-enriched fraction labels a Ca2(+)-dependent protein different from the pellicle protein, being lower in molecular mass and unaffected by La3+. Ca2+ uptake by the alveolar sacs, integral components of the pellicle membrane complex, is poorly coupled to Ca2(+)-stimulated ATP hydrolysis (Ca2+ transported/ATP hydrolysed less than 0.2) and is much less sensitive to vanadate inhibition (EC50 approx. 20 microM) compared to the total Ca2(+)-ATPase activity. Therefore, the majority of the Ca2(+)-ATPase activity is likely to be plasma membrane associated.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of ruthenium red, [(NH3)5Ru-O-Ru(NH3)4-O-Ru(NH3)5]Cl6.4H2O, with various Ca2(+)-binding proteins was studied. Ruthenium red inhibited Ca2+ binding to the sarcoplasmic reticulum protein, calsequestrin, immobilized on Sepharose 4B. Furthermore, ruthenium red bound to calsequestrin with high affinity (Kd = 0.7 microM; Bmax = 218 nmol/mg protein). The dye stained calsequestrin in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels or on nitrocellulose paper and was displaced by Ca2+ (Ki = 1.4 mM). The specificity of ruthenium red staining of several Ca2(+)-binding proteins was investigated by comparison with two other detection methods, 45Ca2+ autoradiography and the Stains-all reaction. Ruthenium red bound to the same proteins detected by the 45Ca2+ overlay technique. Ruthenium red stained both the erythrocyte Band 3 anion transporter and the Ca2(+)-ATPase of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. Ruthenium red also stained the EF hand conformation Ca2(+)-binding proteins, calmodulin, troponin C, and S-100. This inorganic dye provides a simple, rapid method for detecting various types of Ca2(+)-binding proteins following electrophoresis.  相似文献   

15.
Highly purified tryptic peptides of calmodulin have been obtained by high-performance liquid chromatography. Tryptic cleavage of calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ results in two main fragments which have been identified by analysis of the amino acid composition as 1-77 and 78-148. In the absence of Ca2+, trypsin cleavage yields fragments 1-106, 1-90, and 107-148. Only fragments 78-148 and 1-106 are still able to stimulate the purified Ca2+-ATPase of erythrocytes, albeit much less efficiently on a molar basis, than intact calmodulin. On the other hand, the same fragments were unable to stimulate the calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase, even at 1000-fold molar excess (shown also by Newton, D.L., Oldewurtel, M.D., Krinks, M.H., Shiloach, J., and Klee, C.B. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4419-4426). This points to the importance of the carboxyl-terminal half of calmodulin and especially of Ca2+-binding region III in the interaction of calmodulin with the Ca2+-ATPase and provides clear evidence that calmodulin interacts differently with different targets. Oxidation of methionine(s) of fragment 78-148 with N-chlorosuccinimide removes the ability of this fragment to stimulate the ATPase.  相似文献   

16.
The actin filament-severing domain of plasma gelsolin   总被引:20,自引:10,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
Gelsolin, a multifunctional actin-modulating protein, has two actin-binding sites which may interact cooperatively. Native gelsolin requires micromolar Ca2+ for optimal binding of actin to both sites, and for expression of its actin filament-severing function. Recent work has shown that an NH2-terminal chymotryptic 17-kD fragment of human plasma gelsolin contains one of the actin-binding sites, and that this fragment binds to and severs actin filaments weakly irrespective of whether Ca2+ is present. The other binding site is Ca2+ sensitive, and is found in a chymotryptic peptide derived from the COOH-terminal two-thirds of plasma gelsolin; this fragment does not sever F-actin or accelerate the polymerization of actin. This paper documents that larger thermolysin-derived fragments encompassing the NH2-terminal half of gelsolin sever actin filaments as effectively as native plasma gelsolin, although in a Ca2+-insensitive manner. This result indicates that the NH2-terminal half of gelsolin is the actin-severing domain. The stringent Ca2+ requirement for actin severing found in intact gelsolin is not due to a direct effect of Ca2+ on the severing domain, but indirectly through an effect on domains in the COOH-terminal half of the molecule to allow exposure of both actin-binding sites.  相似文献   

17.
The Ca2(+)-ATPase in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is under regulation by phospholamban, an oligomeric proteolipid. To determine the molecular mechanism by which phospholamban regulates the Ca2(+)-ATPase, a reconstitution system was developed, using a freeze-thaw sonication procedure. The best rates of Ca2+ uptake (700 nmol/min/mg reconstituted vesicles compared with 800 nmol/min/mg SR vesicles) were observed when cholate and phosphatidylcholine were used at a ratio of cholate/phosphatidylcholine/Ca2(+)-ATPase of 2:80:1. The EC50 values for Ca2+ were 0.05 microM for both Ca2+ uptake and Ca2(+)-ATPase activity in the reconstituted vesicles compared with 0.63 microM Ca2+ in native SR vesicles. Inclusion of phospholamban in the reconstituted vesicles was associated with a significant inhibition of the initial rates of Ca2+ uptake at pCa 6.0. However, phosphorylation of phospholamban by the catalytic subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase reversed the inhibitory effect on the Ca2+ pump. Similar findings were observed when a peptide, corresponding to amino acids 1-25 of phospholamban, was used. These findings indicate that phospholamban is an inhibitor of the Ca2(+)-ATPase in cardiac SR and phosphorylation of phospholamban relieves this inhibition. The mechanism by which phospholamban inhibits the Ca2+ pump is unknown, but our findings with the synthetic peptide suggest that a direct interaction between the Ca2(+)-ATPase and the hydrophilic portion of phospholamban may be one of the mechanisms for regulation.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Three chymotryptic fragments accounting for almost the entire amino acid sequence of gizzard calponin (Takahashi, K., and Nadal-Ginard, B. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 13284-13288) were isolated and characterized. They encompass the segments of residues 7-144 (NH2-terminal 13-kDa peptide), 7-182 (NH2-terminal 22-kDa peptide), and 183-292 (COOH-terminal 13-kDa peptide). They arise from the sequential hydrolysis of the peptide bonds at Tyr182-Gly183 and Tyr144-Ala145 which were protected by the binding of F-actin to calponin. Only the NH2-terminal 13- and 22-kDa fragments were retained by immobilized Ca(2+)-calmodulin, but only the larger 22 kDa entity cosedimented with F-actin and inhibited, in the absence of Ca(2+)-calmodulin, the skeletal actomyosin subfragment-1 ATPase activity as the intact calponin. Since the latter peptide differs from the NH2-terminal 13-kDa fragment by a COOH-terminal 38-residue extension, this difference segment appears to contain the actin-binding domain of calponin. Zero-length cross-linked complexes of F-actin and either calponin or its 22-kDa peptide were produced. The total CNBr digest of the F-actin-calponin conjugate was fractionated over immobilized calmodulin. The EGTA-eluted pair of cross-linked actin-calponin peptides was composed of the COOH-terminal actin segment of residues 326-355 joined to the NH2-terminal calponin region of residues 52-168 which seems to contain the major determinants for F-actin and Ca(2+)-calmodulin binding.  相似文献   

20.
Reconstituted proteoliposomes containing Neurospora plasma membrane H+-ATPase molecules oriented predominantly with their cytoplasmic portion facing outward have been used to determine the location of the NH2 and COOH termini of the H+-ATPase relative to the lipid bilayer. Treatment of the proteoliposomes with trypsin in the presence of the H+-ATPase ligands Mg2+, ATP, and vanadate produces approximately 97-, 95-, and 88-kDa truncated forms of the H+-ATPase similar to those already known to result from cleavage at Lys24, Lys36, and Arg73 at the NH2-terminal end of the molecule. These results establish that the NH2-terminal end of the H+-ATPase polypeptide chain is located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. Treatment of the same proteoliposome preparation with trypsin in the absence of ligands releases approximately 50 water-soluble peptides from the proteoliposomes. Separation of the released peptides by high performance liquid chromatography and spectral analysis of the purified peptides identified only a few peptides with the properties expected of a COOH-terminal, tryptic undecapeptide with the sequence SLEDFVVSLQR, and NH2-terminal amino acid sequence analysis identified this peptide among the possible candidates. Quantitative considerations indicate that this peptide must have come from H+-ATPase molecules oriented with their cytoplasmic portion facing outward, and could not have originated from a minor population of H+-ATPase molecules of reverse orientation. These results directly establish that the COOH-terminal end of the H+-ATPase is also located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. These findings are important for elucidating the topography of the membrane-bound H+-ATPase and are possibly relevant to the topography of other aspartyl-phosphoryl-enzyme intermediate ATPases as well.  相似文献   

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