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1.
R J Heaslip  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1985,24(11):2731-2736
There are conflicting reports on the effect of Ca2+ on actin activation of myosin adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) once the light chain is fully phosphorylated by a calcium calmodulin dependent kinase. Using thiophosphorylated gizzard myosin, Sherry et al. [Sherry, J. M. F., Gorecka, A., Aksoy, M. O., Dabrowska, R., & Hartshorne, D. J. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 4417-4418] observed that the actin activation of ATPase was not inhibited by the removal of Ca2+. Hence, it was suggested that the regulation of actomyosin ATPase activity of gizzard myosin by calcium occurs only via phosphorylation. In the present study, phosphorylated and thiophosphorylated myosins were prepared free of kinase and phosphatase activity; hence, the ATPase activity could be measured at various concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ without affecting the level of phosphorylation. The ATPase activity of myosin was activated either by skeletal muscle or by gizzard actin at various concentrations of Mg2+ and either at pCa 5 or at pCa 8. The activation was sensitive to Ca2+ at low Mg2+ concentrations with both actins. Tropomyosin potentiated the actin-activated ATPase activity at all Mg2+ and Ca2+ concentrations. The calcium sensitivity of phosphorylated and thiophosphorylated myosin reconstituted with actin and tropomyosin was most pronounced at a free Mg2+ concentration of about 3 mM. The binding of 125I-tropomyosin to actin showed that the calcium sensitivity of ATPase observed at low Mg2+ concentration is not due to a calcium-mediated binding of tropomyosin to F-actin. The actin activation of both myosins was insensitive to Ca2+ when the Mg2+ concentration was increased above 5 mM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
H Miyata  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1986,25(9):2725-2729
The binding of gizzard tropomyosin to gizzard F-actin is highly dependent on free Mg2+ concentration. At 2 mM free Mg2+, a concentration at which actin-activated ATPase activity was shown to be Ca2+ sensitive, a molar ratio of 1:3 (tropomyosin:actin monomer) is required to saturate the F-actin with tropomyosin to the stoichiometric ratio of 1 mol of tropomyosin to 7 mol of actin monomer. Increasing the Mg2+ could decrease the amount of tropomyosin required for saturating the F-actin filament to the stoichiometric level. Analysis of the binding of smooth muscle tropomyosin to smooth muscle actin by the use of Scatchard plots indicates that the binding exhibits strong positive cooperativity at all Mg2+ concentrations. Calcium has no effect on the binding of tropomyosin to actin, irrespective of the free Mg2+ concentration. However, maximal activation of the smooth muscle actomyosin ATPase in low free Mg2+ requires the presence of Ca2+ and stoichiometric binding of tropomyosin to actin. The lack of effect of Ca2+ on the binding of tropomyosin to actin shows that the activation of actomyosin ATPase by Ca2+ in the presence of tropomyosin is not due to a calcium-mediated binding of tropomyosin to actin.  相似文献   

3.
Calcium ions produce a 3-4-fold stimulation of the actin-activated ATPase activities of phosphorylated myosin from bovine pulmonary artery or chicken gizzard at 37 degrees C and at physiological ionic strengths, 0.12-0.16 M. Actins from either chicken gizzard or rabbit skeletal muscle stimulate the activity of phosphorylated myosin in a Ca2+-dependent manner, indicating that the Ca2+ sensitivity involves myosin or a protein associated with it. Partial loss of Ca2+ sensitivity upon treatment of phosphorylated gizzard myosin with low concentrations of chymotrypsin and the lack of any change on similar treatment of actin supports the above conclusion. Although both actins enhance ATPase activity, activation by gizzard actin exhibits Ca2+ dependence at higher temperatures or lower ionic strengths than does activation by skeletal muscle actin. The Ca2+ dependence of the activity of phosphorylated heavy meromyosin is about half that of myosin and is affected differently by temperature, ionic strength and Mg2+, being independent of temperature and optimal at lower concentrations of NaCl. Raising the concentration of Mg2+ above 2-3 mM inhibits the activity of heavy meromyosin but stimulates that of myosin, indicating that Mg2+ and Ca2+ activate myosin at different binding sites.  相似文献   

4.
Tropomyosins from bovine aorta and pulmonary artery exhibit identical electrophoretic patterns in sodium dodecyl sulfate but differ from tropomyosins of either chicken gizzard or rabbit skeletal muscle. Each of the four tropomyosins binds readily to skeletal muscle F-actin as indicated by their sedimentation with actin and by their ability to maximally stimulate or inhibit actin-activated ATPase activity at a molar ratio of one tropomyosin per seven actin monomers. Smooth and skeletal muscle tropomyosins differ in their effects on activity of skeletal myosin or heavy meromyosin (HMM); the former can enhance activity under conditions in which the latter inhibits. Gizzard and arterial tropomyosins are usually equally effective in stimulating ATPase activity of skeletal acto-HMM, but at high concentrations of Mg2+ gizzard tropomyosin is more effective, a result that cannot be attributed to differences in the binding of the two tropomyosins to F-actin. The effects of tropomyosin also depend on the type of myosin; tropomyosin enhances activity of gizzard myosin under conditions in which it inhibits that of skeletal myosin. Increasing the pH or the Mg2+ concentration can reverse the effect of tropomyosin on actin-stimulated ATPase activity of skeletal HMM from activation to inhibition, but this reversal is not found with gizzard myosin. Activity in the absence of tropomyosin is independent of pH, and the loss of activation with increasing pH is not accompanied by loss of binding of tropomyosin to actin.  相似文献   

5.
Actin, myosin, and "native" tropomyosin (NTM) were separately isolated from chicken gizzard muscle and rabbit skeletal muscle. With various combinations of the isolated contractile proteins, Mg-ATPase activity and superprecipitation activity were measured. It was thus found that gizzard myosin and gizzard NTM behaved differently from skeletal myosin and skeletal NTM, whereas gizzard actin functioned in the same wasy as skeletal actin. It was also found that gizzard myosin preparations were often Ca-sensitive, that is, that the two activities of gizzard myosin plus actin without NTM were activated by low concentrations of Ca2+. The Mg-ATPase activity of a Ca-insensitive preparation of gizzard myosin was not activated by actin even in the presence of Ca2+. When Ca-sensitive gizzard myosin was incubated with ATP (and Mg2+) in the presence of Ca2+, a light-chain component of gizzard myosin was phosphorylated. The light-chain phosphorylation also occurred when Ca-insensitive myosin was incubated with gizzard NTM and ATP (plus Mg2+) in the presence of Ca2+. In either case, the light-chain phosphorylation required Ca2+. Phosphorylated gizzard myosin in combination with actin was able to exhibit superprecipitation, and Mg-ATPase of the phosphorylated gizzard myosin was activated by actin; the actin activation and superprecipitation were found to occur even in the absence of Ca2+ and NTM or tropomyosin. The phosphorylated light-chain component was found to be dephosphorylated by a partially purified preparation of gizzard myosin light-chain phosphatase. Gizzard myosin thus dephosphorylated behaved exactly like untreated Ca-insensitive gizzard myosin; in combination with actin, it did not superprecipitate either in the presence of Ca2+ or in its absence, but did superprecipitated in the presence of NTM and Ca2+. Ca-activated hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by gizzard myosin B proceeded at a reduced rate after removal of Ca2+ (by adding EGTA), whereas that catalyzed by a combination of actin, gizzard myosin, and gizzard NTM proceeded at the same rate even after removal of Ca2+. However, addition of a partially purified preparation of gizzard myosin light-chain phosphatase was found to make the recombined system behave like myosin B. Based on these findings, it appears that myosin light-chain kinase and myosin light-chain phosphatase can function as regulatory proteins for contraction and relaxation, respectively, of gizzard muscle.  相似文献   

6.
The contractile system of smooth muscle exhibits distinctive responses to varying Mg2+ concentrations in that maximum adenosine-5'-triphosphatase (ATPase) activity of actomyosin requires relatively high concentrations of Mg2+ and also that tension in skinned smooth muscle fibers can be induced in the absence of Ca2+ by high Mg2+ concentrations. We have examined the effects of MgCl2 on actomyosin ATPase activity and on tension development in skinned gizzard fibers and suggest that the MgCl2-induced changes may be correlated to shifts in myosin conformation. At low concentrations of free Mg2+ (less than or equal to 1 mM) the actin-activated ATPase activity of phosphorylated turkey gizzard myosin is reduced and is increased as the Mg2+ concentration is raised. The increase in Mg2+ (over a range of 1-10 mM added MgCl2) induces the conversion of 10S phosphorylated myosin to the 6S form, and it was found that the proportion of myosin as 10S is inversely related to the level of actin-activated ATPase activity. Activation of the actin-activated ATPase activity also occurs with dephosphorylated myosin but at higher MgCl2 concentrations, between 10 and 40 mM added MgCl2. Viscosity and fluorescence measurements indicate that increasing Mg2+ levels over this concentration range favor the formation of the 6S conformation of dephosphorylated myosin, and it is proposed that the 10S to 6S transition is a prerequisite for the observed activation of ATPase activity. With glycerinated chicken gizzard fibers high MgCl2 concentrations (6-20 mM) promote tension in the absence of Ca2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Tropomyosin, one of the proteins regulating the sarcomere, was prepared from pig heart and rabbit skeletal muscles. The effect of these two different tropomyosins was studied between 0.5 and 10 mM of Mg2+ at a constant ATP concentration (1 mM) on reconstituted actomyosin prepared from pig heart myosin and rabbit skeletal actin. Cardiac and skeletal tropomyosin both activated the ATPase at low Mg2+ concentrations and inhibited it above 3 mM. The pig heart and rabbit skeletal tropomyosins which contain two isomers, alpha alpha and alpha beta, respectively has very similar effects on actomyosin ATPase.  相似文献   

8.
Bovine aortic tropomyosin has been isolated by DEAE-Sepharose chromatography following isoelectric precipitation and ammonium sulfate fractionation. A single polypeptide [Mr 36 000 on a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel] was obtained under different electrophoretic conditions. The amino acid composition of bovine tropomyosin was very similar to that of rabbit skeletal muscle; the amino-terminal residue is blocked. The molecular weight of the native tropomyosin (76 000), which is twice that calculated from the SDS-polyacrylamide gel, suggests that the molecule is a dimer. The diffusion coefficient of 3.4 X 10(-7) cm2 s-1 and the frictional coefficient of 1.7 indicate that the molecule is asymmetric. Comparative high-pressure liquid chromatography peptide mapping of rabbit skeletal and bovine aortic tropomyosins shows primary structure variation. Bovine aortic tropomyosin binds calcium under physiological conditions of pH and ionic strength (22 mol of Ca2+/mol of tropomyosin with a Kd of 1.4 mM). Such a property is not shared by skeletal tropomyosin. In low Mg2+ concentration, both skeletal and aortic actin activations of the skeletal myosin ATPase activity are calcium independent. Addition of aortic tropomyosin to a hybrid actomyosin (aortic actin, skeletal myosin) yields an enhancement of the actin activation of the myosin ATPase activity, but the addition of skeletal tropomyosin yields a decrease of this activity. However, both the enhancement and decrease are calcium dependent. Addition of skeletal or aortic tropomyosin to an actomyosin system, where both actin and myosin come from skeletal muscle, yields only an enhancement of the actin activation of the myosin ATPase activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Approximately 8-10 mg of highly actin-activatable, CA2+-sensitive Acanthamoeba myosin II can be isolated in greater than 98% purity from 100 g of amoeba by the new procedure described in detail in this paper. The enzyme isolated by this procedure can be activated by actin because its heavy chains are not fully phosphorylated (Collins, J. H., and Korn, E. D. (1980) J. Biol Chem. 255, 8011-8014). We now show that Acanthamoeba myosin II Mg2+-ATPase activity is more highly activated by Acanthamoeba actin than by muscle actin. Also, actomyosin II ATPase is inactive at concentrations of free Mg2+ lower than about 3 mM and fully active at Mg2+ concentrations greater than 4 mM. Actomyosin II Mg2+-ATPase activity is stimulated by micromolar Ca2+ when assayed over the narrow range of about 3-4 mM Mg2+ but is not affected by Ca2+ at either lower or higher concentrations of Mg2+. The specific activity of te actomyosin II Mg2+-ATPase also increases with increasing concentrations of myosin II when the free Mg2+ concentration is in the range of 3-4 mM but is independent of the myosin II concentration at lower or higher concentrations of Mg2+ . This marked effect of the Mg2+ concentration on the Ca2+-sensitivity and myosin concentration-dependence of th specific activity of actomyosin II ATPase activity does not seem to be related to the formation of myosin filaments, and to be related to the formation of myosin filaments, and myosin II is insoluble only at high concentrations of free Mg2+ (6-7 mM) were neither of these effects is observed. Also, the Mg2+ requirements for actomyosin II ATPase activity and myosin II insolubility can be differentially modified by EDTA and sucrose.  相似文献   

10.
Application of the myosin competition test (Lehman, W., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1975) J. Gen. Physiol. 66, 1-30) to chicken gizzard actomyosin indicated that this smooth muscle contains a thin filament-linked regulatory mechanism. Chicken gizzard thin filaments, isolated as described previously (Marston, S. B., and Lehman, W. (1985) Biochem. J. 231, 517-522), consisted almost exclusively of actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon, and an unidentified 32-kilodalton polypeptide in molar ratios of 1:1/6:1/26:1/17, respectively. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, these thin filaments conferred Ca2+ sensitivity (67.8 +/- 2.1%; n = 5) on the myosin Mg2+-ATPase. On the other hand, no Ca2+ sensitivity of the myosin Mg2+-ATPase was observed when purified gizzard actin or actin plus tropomyosin was reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin. Native thin filaments were rendered essentially free of caldesmon and the 32-kilodalton polypeptide by extraction with 25 mM MgCl2. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, caldesmon-free thin filaments and native thin filaments exhibited approximately the same Ca2+ sensitivity (45.1 and 42.7%, respectively). The observed Ca2+ sensitivity appears, therefore, not to be due to caldesmon. Only trace amounts of two Ca2+-binding proteins could be detected in native thin filaments. These were identified as calmodulin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:733) and the 20-kilodalton light chain of myosin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:270). The Ca2+ sensitivity observed in an in vitro system reconstituted from gizzard thin filaments and either skeletal myosin or phosphorylated gizzard myosin is due, therefore, to calmodulin and/or an unidentified minor protein component of the thin filaments which may be an actin-binding protein involved in regulating actin filament structure in a Ca2+-dependent manner.  相似文献   

11.
The interactions were analyzed between actin, myosin, and a recently discovered high molecular weight actin-binding protein (Hartwig, J. H., and Stossel, T. P. (1975) J. Biol Chem.250,5696-5705) of rabbit alveolar macrophages. Purified rabbit alveolar macrophage or rabbit skeletal muscle F-actins did not activate the Mg2+ATPase activity of purified rabbit alveolar macrophage myosin unless an additional cofactor, partially purified from macrophage extracts, was added. The Mg2+ATPase activity of cofactor-activated macrophage actomyosin was as high as 0.6 mumol of Pi/mg of myosin protein/min at 37 degrees. The macrophage cofactor increased the Mg2+ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin, and calcium regulated the Mg2+ATPase activity of cofactor-activited muscle actomyosin in the presence of muscle troponins and tropomyosin. However, the Mg2+ATPase activity of macrophage actomyosin in the presence of the cofactor was inhibited by muscle control proteins, both in the presence and absence of calcium. The Mg2+ATPase activity of the macrophage actomyosin plus cofactor, whether assembled from purified components or studied in a complex collected from crude macrophage extracts, was not influenced by the presence of absence of calcium ions. Therefore, as described for Acanthamoeba castellanii myosin (Pollard, T. D., and Korn, E. D. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 4691-4697), rabbit alveolar macrophage myosin requires a cofactor for activation of its Mg2+ATPase activity by F-actin; and no evidence was found for participation of calcium ions in the regulation of this activity.In macrophage extracts containing 0.34 M sucrose, 0.5 mM ATP, and 0.05 M KCl at pH 7.0,the actin-binding protein bound F-actin into bundles with interconnecting bridges. Purified macrophage actin-binding protein in 0.1 M KCl at pH 7.0 also bound purified macrophage F-actin into filament bundles. Macrophage myosin bound to F-actin in the absence but not the presence of Mg2+ATP, but the actin-binding protein did not bind to macrophage myosin in either the presence or absence of Mg2+ATP.  相似文献   

12.
Chicken gizzard caldesmon causes up to 40% inhibition of Mg2+-ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin. In the presence of chicken gizzard tropomyosin this inhibition is significantly increased, reaching a maximum (around 80%) at a molar ratio of caldesmon to actin monomer of 1 to 10-13. The inhibition of actomyosin ATPase takes place over a wide pH range (from 6.0 to 8.0) but is decreased with an increase in KCl and MgCl2 concentrations. Caldesmon, in the range of caldesmon/ actin ratios within which it inhibits actomyosin ATPase, forms bundles of parallelly aligned actin filaments. Calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ dissociates these bundles and restrains the inhibition of actomyosin ATPase, provided that it is used at a high molar excess over caldesmon.  相似文献   

13.
Smooth and non-muscle tropomyosins were found to produce a 2-3-fold Ca-insensitive stimulation of the ATPase activity of reconstituted skeletal muscles actomyosin at normal MgATP concentrations and physiological ratios of myosin to actin. Under the same conditions skeletal muscles tropomyosin had no effect. Similar effects of these three tropomyosins were observed for the low myosin/F-actin ratios necessary for kinetic measurements. Since it could be established that this actomyosin system, with or without tropomyosin, obeyed Michaelian kinetics, the tropomyosin effects could be interpreted in terms of their influence on maximal turnover (V) or on the affinity of myosin for actin (Kapp). Accordingly, gizzard tropomyosin had practically no effect on the affinity and reduced only slightly the value of V, compared to pure actin. In contrast to gizzard tropomyosin, brain tropomyosin produced an approximately twofold increase in both Kapp and V; i.e. it increased the turnover rate but decreased the affinity. It is apparent from the data that brain tropomyosin acts as an uncompetitive activator with respect to pure actin, while having the same V as the actin plus gizzard tropomyosin complex. Further studies on these tropomyosins show that only skeletal and smooth muscle tropomyosin have similar functional properties with respect to troponin inhibition and the activation of the ATPase at low ATP concentrations. It is suggested that the noted increases in V by tropomyosin are caused by the acceleration of the dissociation of the myosin head from actin at the end point of the cross bridge movement.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of Ca2+ on the enzymatic and physical properties of smooth muscle myosin was studied. The actin-activated ATPase activity of phosphorylated gizzard myosin and heavy meromyosin is higher in the presence of Ca2+ than in its absence, but this effect is found only at lower MgCl2 concentrations. As the MgCl2 concentration is increased, Ca2+ sensitivity is decreased. The concentration of Ca2+ necessary to activate ATPase activity is higher than that required to saturate calmodulin. The similarity of the pCa dependence of ATPase activity and of Ca2+ binding to myosin and the competition by Mg2+ indicate that these effects involved the Ca2+-Mg2+ binding sites of gizzard myosin. For the actin dependence of ATPase activity of phosphorylated myosin at low concentrations of MgCl2, both Vmax and Ka are influenced by Ca2+. The formation of small polymers by phosphorylated myosin in the presence of Ca2+ could account for the alteration in the affinity for actin. For the actin dependence of phosphorylated heavy meromyosin at low MgCl2 concentrations, Ca2+ induces only an increase in Vmax. To detect alterations in physical properties, two techniques were used: viscosity and limited papain hydrolysis. For dephosphorylated myosin, 6 S or 10 S, Ca2+-dependent effects are not detected using either technique. However, for phosphorylated myosin the decrease in viscosity corresponding to the 6 S to 10 S transition is shifted to lower KCl concentrations by the presence of Ca2+. In addition, a Ca2+ dependence of proteolysis rates is observed with phosphorylated myosin but only at low ionic strength, i.e. under conditions where myosin assumes the folded conformation.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in F-actin conformation in myosin-free single ghost fibers of rabbit skeletal muscle induced by the binding of skeletal and gizzard tropomyosin to F-actin were studied by measuring intrinsic tryptophan-polarized fluorescence of F-actin. It was found that skeletal and gizzard tropomyosin binding to F-actin initiate different conformational changes in actin filaments. Skeletal tropomyosin inhibits, while gizzard tropomyosin activates the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal actomyosin. It is supposed that in muscle fibers tropomyosin modulates the ATPase activity of actomyosin via conformational changes in F-actin.  相似文献   

16.
A contractile protein closely resembling natural actomyosin (myosin B) of rabbit skeletal muscle was extracted from plasmodia of the slime mold, Physarum polycephalum, by protecting the SH-groups with beta-mercaptoethanol or dithiothreitol. Superprecipitation of the protein induced by Mg2+-ATP at low ionic strength was observed only in the presence of very low concentrations of free Ca2+ ions, and the Mg2+-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reaction was activated 2- to 6-fold by 1 muM of free Ca2+ ions. Crude myosin and actin fractions were separated by centrifuging plasmodium myosin B in the presence of Mg2+-PPi at high ionic strength. The crude myosin showed both EDTA- and Ca2+-activated ATPase activities. The Mg2+-ATPase activity of crude myosin from plasmodia was markedly activated by the addition of pure F-actin from rabbit skeletal muscle. Addition of the F-action-regulatory protein complex prepared from rabbit skeletal muscle as well as the actin fraction of plasmodium caused the same degree of activation as the addition of pure F-actin only in the presence of very low concentrations of Ca2+ ion  相似文献   

17.
C Y Wang  P K Ngai  M P Walsh  J H Wang 《Biochemistry》1987,26(4):1110-1117
Fodrin, a spectrin-like actin and calmodulin binding protein, was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from a membrane fraction of bovine brain. The effect of fodrin on smooth muscle actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase activity was examined by using a system reconstituted from skeletal muscle actin and smooth muscle myosin and regulatory proteins. The simulation of actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase by fodrin showed a biphasic dependence on fodrin concentration and on the time of actin and myosin preincubation at 30 degrees C. Maximal stimulation (50-70%) was obtained at 3 nM fodrin following 10 min of preincubation of actin and myosin. This stimulation was also dependent on the presence of tropomyosin. In the absence of myosin light chain kinase, the fodrin stimulation of Mg2+-ATPase could not be demonstrated with normal actomyosin but could be demonstrated with acto-thiophosphorylated myosin, suggesting that fodrin stimulation depends on the phosphorylation of myosin. Fodrin stimulation was shown to require the presence of both Ca2+ and calmodulin when acto-thiophosphorylated myosin was used. These observations suggest a possible functional role of fodrin in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction and demonstrate an effect on Ca2+ and calmodulin on fodrin function.  相似文献   

18.
Myosin was purified from ovine uterine smooth muscle. The 20,000 dalton myosin light chain was phosphorylated to varying degrees by an endogenous Ca2+ dependent kinase. The kinase and endogenous phosphatases were then removed via column chromatography. In the absence of actin neither the size of the initial phosphate burst nor the steady state Mg2+-dependent ATPase activity were affected by phosphorylation. However, phosphorylation was required for actin to increase the Mg2+-dependent ATPase activity and for the myosin to superprecipitate with actin. Ca2+ did not affect the Mg2+-dependent ATPase activity in the presence or absence of action or the rate or extent of superprecipitation with actin once phosphorylation was obtained. These data indicate that: 1) phosphorylation of the 20,000 dalton myosin light chain controls the uterine smooth muscle actomyosin interaction, 2) in the absence of actin, phosphorylation does not affect either the ATPase of myosin or the size of the initial burst of phosphate and, 3) Ca2+ is important in controlling the light chain kinase but not the actomyosin interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Thin-filament preparations from four smooth muscle types (gizzard, stomach, trachea, aorta) all activate myosin MgATPase activity, are regulated by Ca2+, and contain actin, tropomyosin and a 120000-140000-Mr protein in the molar proportions 1:1/7:1/26. The 120000-140000-Mr protein from all sources is a potent inhibitor of actomyosin ATPase activity. Peptide-mapping and immunological evidence is presented showing that it is identical with caldesmon. Quantitative immunological data suggest that caldesmon is a component of all the thin filaments and that the thin-filament-bound caldesmon accounts for all the caldesmon in intact tissue. The myosin light-chain kinase content of thin-filament preparations was found to be negligible. We propose that caldesmon-based thin-filament Ca2+ regulation is a physiological mechanism in all smooth muscles.  相似文献   

20.
Comparison of two types of Ca2+-regulated thin filament, reconstructed in ghost fibers by incorporating either caldesmon-gizzard tropomyosin-calmodulin or skeletal muscle troponin-tropomyosin complex, was performed by polarized microphotometry. The changes in actin structure under the influence of these regulatory complexes, as well as those upon the binding of the myosin heads, were followed by measurements of F-actin intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and the fluorescence of phalloidin-rhodamine complex attached to F-actin. The results show that in the presence of smooth muscle tropomyosin and calmodulin, caldesmon causes Ca2+-dependent alterations of actin conformation and flexibility similar to those induced by skeletal muscle troponin-tropomyosin complex. In both cases, transferring of the fiber from '-Ca2+' to '+Ca2+' solution increases the number of turned-on actin monomers. However, whereas troponin in the absence of Ca2+ potentiates the effect of skeletal muscle tropomyosin, caldesmon-calmodulin complex inhibits the effect of smooth muscle tropomyosin. This difference seems to be due to the qualitatively different alterations in the structure and flexibility of F-actin in ghost fibers evoked by smooth and skeletal muscle tropomyosins. Troponin can bind to F-actin-smooth muscle tropomyosin-caldesmon complex and, in the presence of Ca2+, release the restraint by caldesmon for S-1-induced alterations of conformation, and reduce that for flexibility of actin in ghost fibers. This effect seems to be related to the abolishment by troponin of the potentiating effect of tropomyosin on caldesmon-induced inhibition of actomyosin ATPase activity.  相似文献   

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