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1.
Regulation in striated muscles primarily involves the effect of changes in the free calcium concentration on the interaction of subfragment-1 (S-1) with the actin-tropomyosin-troponin complex (henceforth referred to as [acto]R). At low concentrations of free Ca++ the rate of ATP hydrolysis by (acto)R S-1 can be as much as 20-fold lower than that in the presence of high free Ca++, even though the binding of S-1 to (actin)R in the presence of ATP is virtually independent of the calcium concentration. This implies that the mechanism of regulation involves a kinetic transition between actin-bound states, rather than the result of changes in actin binding. In the current work, we have investigated the fluorescence transient that occurs with the binding and hydrolysis of ATP both at low and high free [Ca++]. The magnitude of this transition at low free [Ca++] is higher than at high free [Ca++]. At low free [Ca++], the rate of the fluorescence transient either stays constant or decreases slightly with increasing free actin concentrations, but at high free [Ca++] the rate increases slightly with increasing free actin concentration. The observed changes in rate are not great enough to be of regulatory importance. The results of the fluorescence transient experiments together with the binding studies performed at steady state also show that neither the binding of M.ATP or M.ADP.Pi to (actin)R is appreciably Ca++ sensitive. These data imply that an additional step (or steps) in the ATPase cycle, i.e., other than the burst transition, must be regulated by calcium.  相似文献   

2.
We previously determined the binding constants of ADP, adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP), and inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) to acto . myosin subfragment 1 (acto X S-1) by measuring the dissociation of acto X S-1 as a function of ATP analog concentration (Greene, L.E., and Eisenberg, E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 543-548). In the present study, we reinvestigated this question by measuring the extent to which these ATP analogs inhibit the acto X S-1 ATPase activity using both cross-linked actin X S-1 and non-cross-linked proteins. No significant difference was found between the cross-linked and non-cross-linked acto X S-1 complexes in their affinity for either ADP or AMP-PNP. The binding constant of ADP to acto X S-1 determined by the inhibition method was in excellent agreement with that obtained previously by the dissociation method, both techniques giving values of about 7 X 10(3) M-1. However, this was not the case for AMP-PNP and PPi, with the inhibition method giving about 10-fold weaker binding constants than those determined previously by the dissociation method. Upon redoing our dissociation experiments over a wider range of actin concentrations than we used previously, we now find that the dissociation method gives much weaker values for the binding constants of PPi and AMP-PNP to acto X S-1, i.e. values on the order of 4 X 10(2) M-1. The very weak binding of these ATP analogs to acto X S-1 makes it difficult to obtain these values with great accuracy. Nevertheless, they seem to be in good agreement with the binding constants determined by the inhibition method. The weak binding of AMP-PNP and PPi to acto X S-1 is consistent with the recent fiber studies of Pate and Cooke (Pate, E., and Cooke, R. (1985) Biophys. J. 47, 773-780) and Schoenberg and Eisenberg (Schoenberg, M., and Eisenberg, E. (1986) Biophys. J. 48, 863-872).  相似文献   

3.
J A Evans  E Eisenberg 《Biochemistry》1989,28(19):7741-7747
Considerable effort has been devoted to understanding the mechanism of 18O exchange in skinned skeletal and insect muscle fibers. However, a full understanding of the mechanism of 18O exchange in muscle fibers requires an understanding of the mechanism of 18O exchange in the simpler in vitro systems employing myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) and heavy meromyosin (HMM). In the present study, using both S-1 and S-1 covalently cross-linked to actin, we show first that over a wide range of temperature, ionic strength, and actin concentration there is only one pathway of 18O exchange with S-1. This is also the case with HMM except at very low ionic strength and low actin concentration, and even here, the data can be explained if 20% of the HMM is denatured in such a way that it shows no 18O exchange. Our results also show that actin markedly decreases the rate of 18O exchange. If it is assumed that Pi release is rate limiting, the four-state kinetic model of the actomyosin ATPase cannot fit these 18O exchange data. However, if it is assumed that the ATP hydrolysis step is rate limiting and Pi release is very fast, the four-state kinetic model can qualitatively fit these data although the fit is not perfect. A better fit to the 18O exchange data can be obtained with the six-state kinetic model of the actomyosin ATPase, but this fit requires the assumption that, at saturating actin concentration, the rate of Pi rotation is about 9-fold slower than the rate of reversal of the ATP hydrolysis step.  相似文献   

4.
L A Stein  J A Evans  E Eisenberg 《Biochemistry》1989,28(19):7747-7752
Recent studies have shown that the KATPase of porcine cardiac S-1 is severalfold stronger than Kbinding. As with skeletal S-1, the four-state model can only explain this observation with the assumption that the release of the products of hydrolysis is rapid and not rate limiting. However, if the release of products is fast, the four-state model predicts that the extent of oxygen exchange with porcine cardiac S-1 should fall toward zero at high actin concentrations, as previously observed with skeletal acto-S-1. In the current work, we show that, in fact, the extent of oxygen exchange for porcine cardiac S-1 remains significant even at infinite actin concentration (i.e., with cross-linked actin-S-1) and that, therefore, the four-state model cannot adequately account for the oxygen exchange data and the ratio of Kbinding to KATPase simultaneously. As in the skeletal case, in order for the six-state model to account for these data, it is necessary to assume that Pi rotation in the acto-S-1.ADP.Pi state is rate limiting for oxygen exchange.  相似文献   

5.
The rate-limiting step in the actomyosin adenosinetriphosphatase cycle   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have previously shown that myosin does not have to detach from actin during each cycle of ATP hydrolysis. In the present study, using the A-1 isoenzyme of myosin subfragment 1, we have investigated the nature of the rate-limiting steps in the ATPase cycle. Our results show that, at 15 degrees C, at very low ionic strength, KATPase determined from the double-reciprocal plot of ATPase activity vs. actin concentration is more than 6-fold stronger than KBINDING determined by directly measuring the binding of A-1 myosin subfragment 1 to actin during steady-state ATP hydrolysis. Computer modeling shows that this large difference between KATPase and KBINDING is not compatible with Pi release being the rate-limiting step in the ATPase cycle. If Pi release is not rate limiting, it is possible that the ATP hydrolysis step, itself, is rate limiting. However, this predicts that, at high actin concentration, the value of the initial Pi burst should be close to zero. Therefore, we measured the magnitude of the initial Pi burst in the presence of actin, using both direct measurement and measurement of relative fluorescence magnitude. Our results suggest that the magnitude of the initial Pi burst in the presence of actin is considerably higher than would be expected if the ATP hydrolysis step were the rate-limiting step in the ATPase cycle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
R T King  L E Greene 《Biochemistry》1985,24(24):7009-7014
Chalovich and Eisenberg [Chalovich, J. M., & Eisenberg, E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 2432-2437] have suggested that at low ionic strength, troponin-tropomyosin regulates the actomyosin ATPase activity by inhibiting a kinetic step in the actomyosin ATPase cycle rather than by blocking the binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) to actin. This leads to the prediction that troponin-tropomyosin should inhibit the ATPase activity of the complex of actin and S-1 (acto . S-1) even when S-1 is cross-linked to actin. We now find that the ATPase activity of cross-linked actin . S-1 prepared under milder conditions than those used by Mornet et al. [Mornet, D., Bertrand, R., Pantel, P., Audemard, E., & Kassab, R. (1981) Nature (London) 292, 301-306] is inhibited 90% by troponin-tropomyosin in the absence of Ca2+. At mu = 18 mM, 25 degrees C, the ATPase activity of this cross-linked preparation is only about 2-fold greater than the maximal actin-activated ATPase activity of S-1 obtained with regulated actin in the absence of Ca2+. At physiological ionic strength, the ATPase activity of this cross-linked actin . S-1 preparation is inhibited about 95% by troponin-tropomyosin. Since cross-linked S-1 behaves kinetically like S-1 in the presence of infinite actin concentration, it is very unlikely that inhibition of the ATPase activity of cross-linked actin . S-1 is due to blocking of the binding of S-1 to actin. Therefore, these results are in agreement with the suggestion that troponin-tropomyosin regulates primarily by inhibiting a kinetic step in the ATPase cycle.  相似文献   

7.
In the field of muscle regulation, there is still controversy as to whether Ca2+, alone, is able to shift muscle from the relaxed to the fully active state or whether cross-bridge binding also contributes to turning on muscle contraction. Our previous studies on the binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) to the troponin-tropomyosin-actin complex (regulated actin) in the absence of ATP suggested that, even in Ca2+, the binding of rigor cross-bridges is necessary to turn on regulated actin fully. In the present study, we demonstrate that this is also the case for the turning on of the acto.S-1 ATPase activity. By itself, Ca2+ does not fully turn on the acto.S-1 ATPase activity; at low actin concentration, there is almost a 10-fold increase in ATPase activity when the regulated actin is fully turned on by the binding of rigor cross-bridges in the presence of Ca2+. This large increase in ATPase activity does not occur because the binding of S-1.ATP to actin is increased; the binding of S-1.ATP is almost the same to maximally turned-off and maximally turned-on regulated actin. The increase in ATPase activity occurs because of a marked increase in the rate of Pi release so that when the regulated actin is fully turned on, Pi release becomes so rapid that the rate-limiting step precedes the Pi release step. These results suggest that, while Ca2+, alone, does not fully turn on the regulated actin filament in solution, the binding of rigor cross-bridges can turn it on fully. If force-producing cross-bridges play the same role in vivo as rigor cross-bridges in vitro, there may be a synergistic effect of Ca2+ and cross-bridge binding in turning on muscle contraction which could greatly sharpen the response of the muscle fiber to Ca2+.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate and PPi with actomyosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We previously studied the equilibrium binding of ADP, adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP), and inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) to actomyosin-subfragment 1 (acto.S-1) and found that AMP-PNP and PPi bind considerably more weakly to acto.S-1 than does ADP. In this study, we investigated the pre-steady-state kinetics of the binding of AMP-PNP and PPi to acto.S-1 and of S-1.AMP-PNP and S-1.PPi to actin to determine if the pre-steady-state kinetic data are consistent with our previous equilibrium data. We find that the kinetic data are consistent with the equilibrium data and agree with a model in which acto.S-1 forms a collision intermediate with the ATP analog, followed by a slower conformational change to a ternary complex that rapidly dissociates into actin and the S-1.ATP analog. Although this scheme fits the AMP-PNP as well as the PPi data, we find that the isomerization of the collision intermediate to the ternary complex is approximately 10 times faster in the presence of PPi than in the presence of AMP-PNP, which is consistent with previous physiological studies (Schoenberg, M., and Eisenberg, E. (1985) Biophys. J. 48, 863-872).  相似文献   

9.
In our previous study [Chalovich, J. M., Greene, L. E., & Eisenberg, E. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 4909-4913], myosin subfragment 1 that was modified by having its two reactive thiol groups cross-linked by N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM) was found to resemble the myosin subfragment 1-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (S-1.ATP) complex in its interaction with actin. In the present study, we examined the effect of actin on adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) trapped at the active site of pPDM.S-1. Our results indicate first that, in the presence of actin, ADP is no longer trapped at the active site but exchanges rapidly with free nucleotide. Different pPDM.S-1.nucleotide complexes were then formed by exchanging nucleotide into the active site of pPDM.S-1 in the presence of actin. The binding of pPDM.S-1.ATP or pPDM.S-1.PPi to actin is virtually identical with that of unmodified S-1 in the presence of ATP. Specifically, at mu = 18 mM, 25 degrees C, pPDM.S-1.ATP or pPDM.S-1.PPi binds to unregulated actin with the same affinity as does S-1.ATP, and this binding does not appear to be affected by troponin-tropomyosin. On the other hand, pPDM.S-1.ADP and pPDM.S-1 with no bound nucleotide both show a small, but significant, difference between their binding to actin and the binding of S-1.ATP; pPDM.S-1 and pPDM.S-1.ADP both bind about 2- to 3-fold more strongly to unregulated actin than does S-1.ATP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Relaxation of both smooth and skeletal muscles appears to be caused primarily by inhibition of the step associated with Pi release in the actomyosin ATPase cycle, rather than by a block in the binding of the myosin X ATP and myosin X ADP X Pi complexes to actin. In skeletal muscle, troponin-tropomyosin not only causes marked inhibition of Pi release, but it also markedly inhibits the binding of myosin subfragment-1 X ADP to actin, raising the possibility that the two phenomena are coupled in some way. In the present study we determined whether phosphorylation of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) also affects both the binding of HMM X ADP to actin and the Pi release step. This was done by having phosphorylated and unphosphorylated HMM X ADP compete for sites on F-actin. At mu = 30 mM, phosphorylation increased the affinity of the HMM molecule for actin about 12-fold and at mu = 170 mM, there was less than a 3-fold increase in the affinity of HMM. If phosphorylation affects the binding of each head of HMM to the same extent, then phosphorylation caused about a 4- and 2-fold increase in the affinity of each head of HMM for actin at mu = 30 and 170 mM, respectively. In contrast, at both ionic strengths, phosphorylation caused more than 100-fold actin activation of the ATPase activity of smooth muscle HMM. Therefore, the marked activation of Pi release in the acto X HMM ATPase cycle upon phosphorylation of HMM is not accompanied by a comparable increase in the affinity of HMM X ADP for actin. We have also found that phosphorylation increases by only 4-fold the rate of Pi release from HMM alone. These results suggest that in smooth muscle, phosphorylation accelerates the step associated with the release of Pi both in the forward and the reverse direction without correspondingly affecting the binding of myosin X ADP to actin.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the steps in the actomyosin ATPase cycle that determine the maximum ATPase rate (Vmax) and the binding between myosin subfragment one (S-1) and actin which occurs when the ATPase activity is close to Vmax. We find that the forward rate constant of the initial ATP hydrolysis (initial Pi burst) is about 5 times faster than the maximum turnover rate of the actin S-1 ATPase. Thus, another step in the cycle must be considerably slower than the forward rate of the initial Pi burst. If this slower step occurs only when S-1 is complexed with actin, as originally predicted by the Lymn-Taylor model, the ATPase activity and the fraction of S-1 bound to actin in the steady state should increase almost in parallel as the actin concentration is increased. As measured by turbidity determined in the stopped-flow apparatus, the fraction of S-1 bound to actin, like the ATPase activity, shows a hyperbolic dependence on actin concentration, approaching 100% asymptotically. However, the actin concentration required so that 50% of the S-1 is bound to actin is about 4 times greater than the actin concentration required for half-maximal ATPase activity. Thus, as previously found at 0 degrees C, at 15 degrees C much of the S-1 is dissociated from actin when the ATPase is close to Vmax, showing that a slow first-order transition which follows the initial Pi burst (the transition from the refractory to the nonrefractory state) must be the slowest step in the ATPase cycle. Stopped-flow studies also reveal that the steady-state turbidity level is reached almost instantaneously after the S-1, actin, and ATP are mixed, regardless of the order of mixing. Thus, the binding between S-1 and actin which is observed in the steady state is due to a rapid equilibrium between S-1--ATP and acto--S-1--ATP which is shifted toward acto-S-1--ATP at high actin concentration. Furthermore, both S-1--ATP and S-1--ADP.Pi (the state occurring immediately after the initial Pi burst) appear to have the same binding constant to actin. Thus, at high actin concentration both S-1--ATP and S-1--ADP.Pi are in rapid equilibrium with their respective actin complexes. Although at very high actin concentration almost complete binding of S-1--ATP and S-1--ADP.Pi to actin occurs, there is no inhibition of the ATPase activity at high actin concentration. This strongly suggests that both the initial Pi burst and the slow rate-limiting transition which follows (the transition from the refractory to the nonrefractory state) occur at about the same rates whether the S-1 is bound to or dissociated from actin. We, therefore, conclude that S-1 does not have to dissociate from actin each time an ATP molecule is hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

12.
Recent studies have revealed that myosin IX is a single-headed processive myosin, yet it is unclear how myosin IX can achieve the processive movement. Here we studied the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis cycle of actomyosin IXb. We found that myosin IXb has a rate-limiting ATP hydrolysis step unlike other known myosins, thus populating the prehydrolysis intermediate (M.ATP). M.ATP has a high affinity for actin, and, unlike other myosins, the dissociation of M.ATP from actin was extremely slow, thus preventing myosin from dissociating away from actin. The ADP dissociation step was 10-fold faster than the overall ATP hydrolysis cycle rate and thus not rate-limiting. We propose the following model for single-headed processive myosin. Upon the formation of the M.ATP intermediate, the tight binding of actomyosin IX at the interface is weakened. However, the head is kept in close proximity to actin due to the tethering role of loop 2/large unique insertion of myosin IX. There is enough freedom for the myosin head to find the next location of the binding site along with the actin filament before complete dissociation from the filament. After ATP hydrolysis, Pi is quickly released to form a strong actin binding form, and a power stroke takes place.  相似文献   

13.
Xie L  Li WX  Rhodes T  White H  Schoenberg M 《Biochemistry》1999,38(18):5925-5931
Alkylation of myosin's Cys-707 (SH1) and Cys-697 (SH2) has profound consequences for myosin's ability to interact with actin and hydrolyze MgATP. Pre-steady-state measurements of myosin-S1 alkylated at SH1 and SH2 by N-phenylmaleimide (NPM) in the presence of ATP were taken to identify the steps of the reaction that are altered. It was found that the rate constant most affected by this modification is the apparent rate of the ATP hydrolysis step. This rate constant is reduced 20000-fold, an effect comparable in magnitude to the effect of the same modification on the binding of MgATP to S1 or acto-S1 [Xie, L., and Schoenberg, M. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8048]. In contrast, the rate constants of phosphate release and dissociation of acto-S1 by ATP were reduced <20-fold. For unmodified S1, the enhancement of fluorescence seen after addition of ATP had the same rate constant as the ATP hydrolysis step (S1.ATP if S1.ADP.Pi) measured by single-turnover experiments in a quench-flow experiment. This is consistent with results previously observed [Johnson, K. A., and Taylor, E. W. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 3432]. However, NPM-modified S1 exhibited virtually no fluorescence enhancement upon ATP binding. This provides further evidence that M.ATP is the predominant intermediate of NPM-S1-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

14.
New states of actomyosin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Unstained frozen hydrated samples of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) cross-linked to actin with the zero-length cross-linker 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide have been examined by electron microscopy in an effort to probe structural states of the attached cross-bridge. The cross-linked complex in the absence of ATP has a rigor-like appearance. In contrast, both in the presence of ATP and after the N, N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM) bridging of the reactive thiols of S-1, the covalently attached cross-bridges of the acto X S-1 complex appear more disordered and no longer assume the characteristic rigor 45 degrees angle with the actin filaments. The images both in the presence and absence of ATP bear a striking resemblance to those obtained by negative staining of the cross-linked acto X S-1 complex (Craig, R., Greene, L. E. & Eisenberg, E. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. A. 82, 3247-3251). The actin-bound pPDM S-1 complex, formed by treating the cross-linked complex with pPDM in the presence of ATP, is an expected analog of the weakly bound cross-bridge state. The disordered appearance of S-1 molecules of the cross-linked complex in the presence of ATP and after pPDM treatment may reflect the structural state of the weakly bound cross-bridge.  相似文献   

15.
Electron microscopy studies have shown that the structure of the complex of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) cross-linked to actin with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethyl-amino) propyl] carbodiimide is very different in the presence and absence of ATP (Craig, R., Greene, L. E., and Eisenberg, E. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 82, 3247-3251). More recent studies have found that the structure of the cross-linked complex between S-1 modified extensively with N-ethylmaleimide (NEM.S-1) and actin resembles that of the rigor complex both in the presence and absence of ATP, whereas the structure of the cross-linked complex between S-1 modified with N',N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM.S-1) and actin resembles that of the cross-linked actin.S-1 complex in the presence of ATP. In the present study, we have obtained biochemical evidence supporting these results. The conformation of the different cross-linked actin.S-1 complexes was determined by studying their effect on the troponin-tropomyosin-actin complex (regulated actin). The basis of this probe for conformation is that S-1.ATP, which is in the weak-binding conformation, interacts very differently with regulated actin than S-1 or S-1.ADP, which are in the strong-binding conformation. We find that both in the presence and absence of ATP, cross-linked NEM.S-1 appears to be in the strong-binding conformation, whereas cross-linked pPDM.S-1 appears to be shifted toward the weak-binding conformation. In contrast, cross-linked unmodified S-1 appears to be in the strong-binding conformation in the presence of ADP and the weak-binding conformation in the presence of ATP. Therefore, in agreement with electron microscopy studies, the cross-linked actin.S-1 complex appears to be able to alternate between the weak-binding and strong-binding conformation during the cross-bridge cycle.  相似文献   

16.
Steady-state ATP hydrolysis in the F1-ATPase of the F(O)F1 ATP synthase complex involves rotation of the central gamma subunit relative to the catalytic sites in the alpha3beta3 pseudo-hexamer. To understand the relationship between the catalytic mechanism and gamma subunit rotation, the pre-steady-state kinetics of Mg x ATP hydrolysis in the soluble F1-ATPase upon rapid filling of all three catalytic sites was determined. The experimentally accessible partial reactions leading up to the rate-limiting step and continuing through to the steady-state mode were obtained for the first time. The burst kinetics and steady-state hydrolysis for a range of Mg x ATP concentrations provide adequate constraints for a unique minimal kinetic model that can fit all the data and satisfy extensive sensitivity tests. Significantly, the fits show that the ratio of the rates of ATP hydrolysis and synthesis is close to unity even in the steady-state mode of hydrolysis. Furthermore, the rate of Pi binding in the absence of the membranous F(O) sector is insignificant; thus, productive Pi binding does not occur without the influence of a proton motive force. In addition to the minimal steps of ATP binding, reversible ATP hydrolysis/synthesis, and the release of product Pi and ADP, one additional rate-limiting step is required to fit the burst kinetics. On the basis of the testing of all possible minimal kinetic models, this step must follow hydrolysis and precede Pi release in order to explain burst kinetics. Consistent with the single molecule analysis of Yasuda et al. (Yasuda, R., Noji, H., Yoshida, M., Kinosita, K., and Itoh, H. (2001) Nature 410, 898-904), we propose that the rate-limiting step involves a partial rotation of the gamma subunit; hence, we name this step k(gamma). Moreover, the only model that is consistent with our data and many other observations in the literature suggests that reversible hydrolysis/synthesis can only occur in the active site of the beta(TP) conformer (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628).  相似文献   

17.
The ability of adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP), ADP, and PPi to dissociate the actin.myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) complex was studied using an analytical ultracentrifuge with UV optics, which enabled the direct determination of the dissociated S-1. At mu = 0.22 M, pH 7.0, 22 degrees C, with saturating nucleotide present, ADP weakens the binding of S-1 to actin about 40-fold (K congruent to 10(5) M-1), while both AMP-PNP and PPi weakens the binding about 400-fold (K congruent to 10(4) M-1). This 10-fold stronger dissociating effect of AMP-PNP and PPi compared to ADP correlates with our data showing that the binding of AMP-PNP and PPi to S-1 is about 10-fold stronger than the binding of ADP. In contrast, the binding constants of ADP, AMP-PNP, and PPi to acto.S-1 are nearly identical (K congruent to 5 x 10(3) M-1). At 4 degrees C, AMP-PNP has only a 3-fold stronger dissociating effect than ADP and, similarly, our data suggest that the binding of AMP-PNP and ADP to S-1 is quite similar at 4 degrees C. AMP-PNP and PPi are, therefore, somewhat better dissociating agents than ADP, but the difference among these three ligands is quite small. These data also show that actin and nucleotide bind to separate but interacting sites on S-1 and that the S-1 molecules bind independently along the F-actin filament with a binding constant of about 1 x 10(7) M-1 at 22 degrees C and physiological ionic strength.  相似文献   

18.
S P Chock  P B Chock  E Eisenberg 《Biochemistry》1976,15(15):3244-3253
A single cycle of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis by a complex of actin and myosin subfragment one (acto-S-1) was studied in a stopped-flow apparatus at low temperature and low ionic strength, using light scattering to monitor the interaction of S-1 with actin and fluorescence to detect the formation of fluorescent intermediates. Our results show that the addition of a stoichiometric concentration of ATP to the acto-S-1 causes a cycle consisting of first, a rapid dissociation of the S-1 from actin by ATP; second, a slower fluorescence change in the S-1 that may be related to the initial phosphate burst; and third, a much slower rate limiting recombination of the S-1 with actin. This latter step equals the acto-S-1 steady-state adenosine 5'-triphosphatase (ATPase) rate at both low and high actin concentrations, and like the steady-state ATPase levels off at a V max of 0.9s-1 at high actin concentration. Therefore, the release of adenosine 5'-diphosphate and inorganic phosphate is not the rate-limiting step in the acto-S-1 ATPase. Rather, a slow first-order step corresponding to the previously postulated transition from the refractory to the nonrefractory state precedes the rebinding of the S-1 to the actin during each cycle of ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanism of ATP hydrolysis by myosin and actomyosin was investigated for the four major classes of vertebrate muscles: fast white (posterior latissimus dorsi), slow red (anterior latissimus dorsi), cardiac and smooth (gizzard). The kinetic behavior of all classes of muscle was consistent with the scheme developed previously for rabbit fast white muscle, but quantitative differences were observed for the rate constants of some of the steps in the hydrolysis cycle. The rate of the hydrolysis step of myosin subfragment-1 was similar for the striated muscles and two to three times smaller for smooth muscle. Two isomerizations of the enzyme occurred in the pathway leading to the formation of the myosin-products intermediate. The rate of dissociation of acto S–1 by ATP was slower for slow muscles and a maximum rate was observed at low temperature. The rate of association of the S-1-products intermediate with actin was equal to the turnover rate of acto S–1 ATPase at low concentrations of actin. The rate of dissociation of ADP from an acto S–1-ADP complex was also much slower for slow muscle. It was shown by Barany (1967) that the maximum turnover rate of actomyosin ATPase (VM) is proportional to the velocity of contraction of the muscle. The only step in the mechanism that is correlated with VM is the apparent second-order rate constant for the formation of a complex of the S-1-product state with actin. The evidence is discussed in terms of a mechanism in which the release of reaction products from actomyosin is the step that is of primary importance in determining the value of VM and the velocity of contraction.  相似文献   

20.
Myosin Va becomes a low duty ratio motor in the inhibited form   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Vertebrate myosin Va is a typical processive motor with high duty ratio. Recent studies have revealed that the actin-activated ATPase activity of the full-length myosin Va (M5aFull) is inhibited at a low [Ca(2+)], which is due to the formation of a folded conformation of M5aFull. To clarify the underlying inhibitory mechanism, we analyzed the actin-activated ATP hydrolysis mechanism of the M5aFull at the inhibited and the activated states, respectively. Marked differences were found in the hydrolysis, P(i) release, and ADP release steps between the activated and the inhibited states. The kinetic constants of these steps of the activated state were similar to those of the unregulated S1 construct, in which the rate-limiting step was the ADP release step. On the other hand, the P(i) release rate from acto-M5aFull was decreased in EGTA by >1,000-fold, which makes this step the rate-limiting step for the actin-activated ATP hydrolysis cycle of M5aFull. The ADP off rate from acto-M5aFull was decreased by approximately 10-fold, and the equilibrium between the prehydrolysis state and the post hydrolysis state was shifted toward the former state in the inhibited state of M5aFull. Because of these changes, M5aFull spends a majority of the ATP hydrolysis cycling time in the weak actin binding state. The present results indicate that M5aFull molecules at a low [Ca(2+)] is inhibited as a cargo transporter not only due to the decrease in the cross-bridge cycling rate but also due to the decrease in the duty ratio thus being dissociated from actin.  相似文献   

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