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1.
Polymerization of vertebrate non-muscle and smooth muscle myosins   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
We investigated how light chain phosphorylation controls the stability of filaments of vertebrate non-muscle myosins (from bovine thymocytes and chicken intestine epithelial brush border cells) and smooth muscle myosin (from chicken gizzard) in vitro. Using a sedimentation assay, the solubilities of the myosins were determined by measuring the amounts of myosin monomers (Cm) and filaments (Cp) present under a given set of conditions as a function of the total myosin concentration (Ct). Below 200 mM-NaCl, each myosin displayed distinct "critical monomer concentrations" (Cc) for polymerization, which were dependent on the salt concentration, the state of light chain phosphorylation and the presence of MgATP. At 150 mM-NaCl, MgATP increased the Cc of non-phosphorylated brush border myosin approximately five to tenfold, thymus myosin approximately 10 to 15-fold, and gizzard myosin approximately 25 to 50-fold. When these myosins were phosphorylated, MgATP had little effect on their solubilities, and their Cc values remained low. Analytical ultracentrifugation and electron microscopy demonstrated that the myosins were present in three different conformational states under the conditions used in the sedimentation assays, i.e. filaments, extended monomer (6 S) and folded monomer (10 S). Since at equilibrium only filaments and monomers were observed, we suggest that the polymerization pathway for these myosins can be analysed in terms of a dynamic monomer-polymer equilibrium (polymer in equilibrium 6 S monomer in equilibrium 10 S monomer). At roughly physiological ionic strength, light chain dephosphorylation (in the presence of MgATP) promotes the folded state (10 S), whereas phosphorylation promotes the extended state (6 S), and thereby favours filament assembly. The relevance of the monomer-polymer equilibrium to the state of organization of the myosin in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Regulation in vitro of brush border myosin by light chain phosphorylation   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Myosin was purified from chicken brush border cells to greater than 95% homogeneity and in a predominantly non-phosphorylated state. The effects of light chain phosphorylation by a Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase on the conformational, enzymatic and filament assembly properties of this myosin were investigated. The actin-activated MgATPase activity of the non-phosphorylated myosin was low, and upon light chain phosphorylation an eight- to ninefold increase in this activity was observed, which was further potentiated by tropomyosin. Light chain phosphorylation was shown to control the assembly and disassembly of brush border myosin filaments. For example, turbidity measurements and electron microscopy demonstrated that MgATP disassembled non-phosphorylated myosin filaments; the disassembled myosin could reassemble when the light chains were phosphorylated, and could be disassembled again by dephosphorylating the light chains with phosphatase. In the electron microscope, the disassembled non-phosphorylated myosin molecules appeared in a folded conformation, and they were extended when phosphorylated. Proteolytic digestion was used to probe further the conformation of these folded and extended molecules, and their subunit organizations were characterized by a gel overlay technique. Quantitative analysis further demonstrated that light chain phosphorylation alters dramatically the monomer/polymer equilibrium of brush border myosin, shifting it towards filament formation. Comparison of analogous data for myosin from gizzard and thymus shows that each myosin has distinct solubility properties.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(5):1195-1200
Regulatory light chain phosphorylation is required for assembly of smooth and non-muscle myosins in vitro, but its effect on polymerization within the cell is not understood. Relaxed smooth muscle cells contain dephosphorylated thick filaments, but this does not exclude the presence of a pool of folded myosin monomers which could be recruited to assemble when phosphorylated, thus forming part of smooth muscle's activation pathway. To test this hypothesis, relaxed and contracted avian gizzard cryosections were labeled with a fluorescently conjugated monoclonal antibody specific for the folded monomeric conformation, or with an antibody against the tip of the tail whose epitope is accessible in the monomeric but not the filamentous state. Fluorescence intensity observed in the two physiological states was quantitated by digital imaging microscopy. Only trace amounts of folded monomeric myosin were detected in both the relaxed and contracted states. The amount of monomer also did not increase when alpha-toxin permeabilized gizzard was equilibrated in a solvent that disassembles filaments in vitro. Assembly/disassembly is therefore unlikely to play a major role in regulating the contraction/relaxation cycle in smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

4.
Regulation of myosin filament assembly by light-chain phosphorylation   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Myosins isolated from vertebrate smooth muscles and non-muscle cells such as lymphocytes and platelets contain regulatory light chains (Mr = 20000), which are phosphorylated by a Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent kinase and dephosphorylated by a Ca2+-insensitive phosphatase. Phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains of these myosins in vitro regulates not only their interactions with actin but also their assembly into filaments. Under approximately physiological conditions (0.15 M NaCl, pH 7.0) stoichiometric levels of Mg-ATP disassemble these non-phosphorylated myosin filaments into species with sedimentation coefficients (So20,w) of approximately 11S. Hydrodynamic and electron microscope observations have indicated that this 11S species is a monomer with a folded conformation (Trybus et al., Proc. natn. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 6151 (1982)). Rotary shadowing reveals that the tails of disassembled gizzard and thymus myosins are folded twice at two hinge points to form a folded three-segment structure. Phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains of these myosins causes these folded 11S molecules to unfold into the conventional extended monomeric form (6S), which is able to assemble into filaments. Thus in vitro these myosin filaments can be assembled or disassembled by phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of their light chains. Whether these results have any relevance to the situation within living non-muscle and smooth muscle cells remains to be established.  相似文献   

5.
The heavy chains and the 19-kDa and 20-kDa light chains of bovine brain myosin can by phosphorylated. To localise the site of heavy-chain phosphorylation, the myosin was initially subjected to digestion with chymotrypsin and papain under a variety of conditions and the fragments thus produced were identified. Irrespective of the ionic strength, i.e. whether the myosin was monomeric or filamentous, chymotryptic digestion produced two major fragments of 68 kDa and 140 kDa; the 140-kDa fragment was further digested by papain to yield a 120-kDa and a 23-kDa fragment. These fragments were characterised by (a) a gel overlay technique using 125I-labelled light chains, which showed that the 140-kDa and 23-kDa polypeptides contain the light-chain-binding sites; (b) using myosin photoaffinity labelled at the active site with [3H]UTP, which showed that the 68-kDa fragment contained the catalytic site, and (c) electron microscopy, using rotary shadowing and negative-staining techniques, which demonstrated that after chymotryptic digestion the myosin head remains attached to the tail whereas on papain digestion isolated heads and tails were observed. Thus the 120-kDa polypeptide derived from the 140-kDa fragment is the tail of the myosin, and the 68-kDa fragment containing the catalytic site and the 23-kDa fragment, with the light-chain-binding sites, form the head (S1) portion of the myosin. When [32P]-phosphorylated brain myosin was digested with chymotrypsin and papain it was shown that the heavy-chain phosphorylation site is located in a 5-kDa peptide at the C-terminal end of the heavy chain, i.e. the end of the myosin tail. Using hydrodynamic and electron microscopic techniques, no significant effect of either light-chain or heavy-chain phosphorylation on the stability of brain myosin filaments was observed, even in the presence of MgATP. Brain myosin filaments appear to be more stable than those of other non-muscle myosins. Light-chain phosphorylation did, however, have an effect on the conformation of brain myosin, for example in the presence of MgATP non-phosphorylated myosin molecules were induced to fold into a very compact folded state.  相似文献   

6.
Regulatory light chains, located on the 'motor' head domains of myosin, belong to the family of Ca2+ binding proteins that consist of four 'EF-hand' subdomains. Vertebrate regulatory light chains can be divided into two functional classes: (i) in smooth/non-muscle myosins, phosphorylation of the light chains by a calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase regulates both interaction of the myosin head with actin and assembly of the myosin into filaments, (ii) the light chains of skeletal muscle myosins are similarly phosphorylated, but they play no apparent role in regulation. To discover the basis for the difference in regulatory properties of these two classes of light chains, we have synthesized in Escherichia coli, chimeric mutants composed of subdomains derived from the regulatory light chains of chicken skeletal and smooth muscle myosins. The regulatory capability of these mutants was analysed by their ability to regulate molluscan myosin. Using this test system, we identified the third subdomain of the regulatory light chain as being responsible for controlling not only the actin-myosin interaction, but also myosin filament assembly.  相似文献   

7.
Regulation of non-muscle myosin structure and function   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
In vertebrate and invertebrate nonmuscle myosins, light- and heavy-chain phosphorylation regulate myosin assembly into filaments, and interaction with actin. Vertebrate non-muscle myosins can exist in vitro in three main states, either ‘folded’ (assembly-blocked) or ‘extended’ (assembly-competent) monomers, and filaments. Light-chain phosphorylation regulates the ‘dynamic equilibrium’ between these states. The ability of the myosin to undergo changes in conformation and state of assembly may be an important mechanism in regulating the organization of the cytoskeleton and cell motility.  相似文献   

8.
The regulatory light chain is required for folding of smooth muscle myosin   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Light chain phosphorylation causes the folded monomeric form of myosin to extend and assemble into filaments. This observation established the involvement of the 20-kDa regulatory light chain (LC20) in conformational transitions of smooth muscle myosin. To further assess the role of this subunit in the intramolecular folding of myosin, LC20 was removed from turkey gizzard myosin at elevated temperatures in the presence of EDTA through the use of an antibody affinity column. Metal-shadowed images showed that LC20-deficient myosin had a tendency to aggregate through the neck region. When MgATP was added to filaments formed from this myosin, less than 10% of the myosin was solubilized, indicating that myosin could not fold in the absence of light chain. Readdition of native regulatory light chain restored the myosin to its original solubility properties, thus establishing reversibility. Addition of foreign light chains from skeletal muscle myosin or a chymotryptic-cleaved gizzard light chain produced the same amount of monomeric myosin in high salt that was obtained by recombination with the homologous light chain. However, the ability of the hybrid myosins to assume the folded conformation was impaired, and only a partially folded species was obtained. Single-headed myosin, like rod and light chain-deficient myosin, remained filamentous in the presence of MgATP. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the regulatory light chain in the neck region of myosin contributes to a binding site for the myosin tail.  相似文献   

9.
P D Wagner  N D Vu 《Biochemistry》1988,27(17):6236-6242
The effects of light chain phosphorylation on the actin-activated ATPase activity and filament assembly of calf thymus cytoplasmic myosin were examined under a variety of conditions. When unphosphorylated and phosphorylated thymus myosins were monomeric, their MgATPase activities were not activated or only very slightly activated by actin, but when they were filamentous, their MgATPase activities were stimulated by actin. The phosphorylated myosin remained filamentous at lower Mg2+ concentrations and higher KC1 concentrations than did the unphosphorylated myosin, and the myosin concentration required for filament assembly was lower for phosphorylated myosin than for unphosphorylated myosin. By varying the myosin concentration, it was possible to have under the same assay conditions mostly monomeric myosin or mostly filamentous myosin; under these conditions, the actin-activated ATPase activities of the filamentous myosins were much greater than those of the monomeric myosins. The addition of phosphorylated myosin to unphosphorylated myosin promoted the assembly of unphosphorylated myosin into filaments. These results suggest that phosphorylation may regulate the actomyosin-based motile activities in vertebrate nonmuscle cells by regulating myosin filament assembly.  相似文献   

10.
The appearances in the electron microscope of rat and rabbit skeletal muscle myosin filaments and rod aggregates, formed in the presence of variable amounts of MgATP, were compared at different pH values. It is shown that small amounts of MgATP, similar to those sufficient to trigger the dissociation of the actomyosin complex, were able to modify the geometry of myosin filaments profoundly in the physiological pH range, whereas the conformation of rod aggregates remained unchanged even in the presence of high concentrations of MgATP. Myosin filaments formed in the absence of MgATP displayed the classical spindle-shaped conformation and variable diameters at all pH values, whereas myosin filaments formed in the presence of MgATP in the physiological pH range had constant diameters, similar to those of natural thick filaments. These filaments of constant diameter frayed, rapidly and reversibly, into two types of subfilaments with respective diameters of 4 to 5 nm and 9 to 10 nm, when the pH of the medium was raised above 7.2. Spindle-shaped myosin filaments and rod aggregates remained unchanged by such small changes in pH. It was possible to change the conformation of preformed spindle-shaped filaments by simply adding MgATP to the medium, but this reaction was slow and took several hours to be completed. Relatively high concentrations of MgATP, similar to those in the living cell, increased the solubility of both myosin filaments and rod aggregates in the alkaline pH range (pH greater than or equal to 7.0). Low pH values (less than or equal to 6.5) and excess free Mg2+ (greater than or equal to 6 to 7 mM) abolished both the specific effect of MgATP on myosin filament conformation and its solubilizing effect on both myosin filaments and rod aggregates. The degree of purity of the myosin preparations and the level of phosphorylation of the LC-2 light chains did not influence filament behaviour noticeably and rat and rabbit myosins behaved similarly.  相似文献   

11.
The relationship between the light-chain phosphorylation and the actin-activated ATPase activity of pig urinary bladder myosin was either linear or nonlinear depending on the free Mg2+ concentration. Varying the free [Mg2+] in the presence of 50 mM ionic strength (I) had a biphasic effect on the actin-activated ATPase. In 100 mM I, the activity increased on raising the free [Mg2+]. The activity of the phosphorylated myosin was 3-23-fold higher than that of the unphosphorylated myosin at all concentrations of free Mg2+, pH, and temperature used in this study. The increase in the turbidity and sedimentability of both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated myosins on raising the free [Mg2+] was associated with a rise in the actin-activated ATPase activity. However, myosin light-chain phosphorylation still had a remarkable effect on the actin activation. The myosin polymers formed under these conditions were sedimented by centrifugation. Experiments performed with myosin polymers formed in mixtures of unphosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins showed that the presence of phosphorylated myosin in these mixtures had a slight effect on the sedimentation of the unphosphorylated myosin but it had no effect on the actin-activated ATP hydrolysis. Electron microscopy showed that the unphosphorylated myosin formed unorganized aggregates while phosphorylated myosin molecules assembled into bipolar filaments with tapered ends. These data show that although the unphosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins have the same level of sedimentability and turbidity, the filament assembly present only with the phosphorylated myosin can be associated with the maximal actin activation of Mg-ATPase.  相似文献   

12.
It has been established that the liver cell possesses its own myosin which resembles other non-muscle myosins in subunit composition and in its dependence of actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity on light chain phosphorylation (Ueno T, Sekine T: Biochem Int, 1987;15:1205). We have raised a specific antibody against rabbit liver cell myosin. Immunoblot analysis has shown that the purified antibody reacts only with the heavy chain of liver cell myosin. The antibody did not react with rabbit skeletal muscle myosin or with smooth muscle myosin extracted from rabbit intestinal wall. Cryostat liver sections analyzed by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy showed a characteristic polygonal staining pattern, indicating that myosin is concentrated close to the plasma membrane, particularly in the region of bile canaliculi. Myosin therefore appears to be localized in the area where actin filaments are also abundant.  相似文献   

13.
The developmental relationship of myosin binding proteins (myomesin, connectin and C-protein) to myosin was studied in chicken cervical somites by immunofluorescence microscopy. Muscle and non-muscle myosins initially appeared as slender rods at the same sites, and then, fused to form non-striated fibrils. As muscle myosin formed striated structures (A bands), non-muscle myosin disappeared from this structure. Myomesin (reactive with monoclonal antibodies MyB4 and MyBB78) and connectin (carboxy terminal region, reactive with monoclonal antibody T51) were seen as dots in the center of these myosin rods. These proteins then formed characteristic mature striations on non-striated fibrils of myosin. Earlier alignment of these myosin binding proteins rather than myosin indicates that the correct assembly of these proteins seems to be related to the formation of initial myosin rods as well as subsequent linear and periodic alignment of myosin molecules to form early A bands. Connectin spots reactive with 9D10 were scattered around myosin rods/myomesin dots/connectin T51 dots. These spots may represent radiating connectin filaments from these rods/dots to link myosin rods to the I-Z-I structures of myofibrils to be incorporated. Since the slow isoform of C-protein formed its characteristic bands ("doublets") prior to H zone formation within A bands by myosin, this isoform may help to precisely align myosin filaments within the A band region. The presence of the slow, then the slow and the cardiac, and finally the co-existence of the slow and the fast isoforms of C-protein may interfere with the incorporation and co-polymerization of non-adult isoforms into myofibrils.  相似文献   

14.
We have previously demonstrated that vasopressin increases the water permeability of the inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) by inducing trafficking of aquaporin-2 to the apical plasma membrane and that this response is dependent on intracellular calcium mobilization and calmodulin activation. Here, we address the hypothesis that this water permeability response is mediated in part through activation of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and regulation of non-muscle myosin II. Immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry demonstrated the presence of MLCK, the myosin regulatory light chain (MLC), and the IIA and IIB isoforms of the non-muscle myosin heavy chain in rat IMCD cells. Two-dimensional electrophoresis and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry identified two isoforms of MLC, both of which also exist in phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated forms. 32P incubation of the inner medulla followed by autoradiography of two-dimensional gels demonstrated increased 32P labeling of both isoforms in response to the V2 receptor agonist [deamino-Cys1,D-Arg8]vasopressin (DDAVP). Time course studies of MLC phosphorylation in IMCD suspensions (using immunoblotting with anti-phospho-MLC antibodies) showed that the increase in phosphorylation could be detected as early as 30 s after exposure to vasopressin. The MLCK inhibitor ML-7 blocked the DDAVP-induced MLC phosphorylation and substantially reduced [Arg8]vasopressin (AVP)-stimulated water permeability. AVP-induced MLC phosphorylation was associated with a rearrangement of actin filaments (Alexa Fluor 568-phalloidin) in primary cultures of IMCD cells. These results demonstrate that MLC phosphorylation by MLCK represents a downstream effect of AVP-activated calcium/calmodulin signaling in IMCD cells and point to a role for non-muscle myosin II in regulation of water permeability by vasopressin.  相似文献   

15.
Previous studies had led to the conclusion that the globular, single-headed myosins IA and IB from Acanthamoeba castellanii contain two actin-binding sites: one associated with the catalytic site and whose binding to F-actin activates the Mg2+-ATPase activity and a second site whose binding results in the cross-linking of actin filaments and makes the actin-activated ATPase activity positively cooperative with respect to myosin I concentration. We have now prepared a 100,000-Da NH2-terminal peptide and a 30,000-Da COOH-terminal peptide by alpha-chymotryptic digestion of the myosin IA heavy chain. The intact 17,000-Da light chain remained associated with the 100,000-Da fragment, which also contained the serine residue that must be phosphorylated for expression of actin-activated ATPase activity by native myosin IA. The 30,000-Da peptide, which contained 34% glycine and 21% proline, bound to F-actin with a KD less than 0.5 microM in the presence or absence of ATP but had no ATPase activity. The 100,000-Da peptide bound to F-actin with KD = 0.4-0.8 microM in the presence of 2 mM MgATP and KD less than 0.01 microM in the absence of MgATP. In contrast to native myosin IA, neither peptide cross-linked actin filaments. The phosphorylated 100,000-Da peptide had actin-activated ATPase activity with the same Vmax as that of native phosphorylated myosin IA but this activity displayed simple, noncooperative hyperbolic dependence on the actin concentration in contrast to the complex cooperative kinetics observed with native myosin IA. These results provide direct experimental evidence for the presence of two actin-binding sites on myosin IA, as was suggested by enzyme kinetic and filament cross-linking data, and also for the previously proposed mechanism by which monomeric myosins I could support contractile activities.  相似文献   

16.
To identify regulatory mechanisms potentially involved in formation of actomyosin structures in smooth muscle cells, the influence of F-actin on smooth muscle myosin assembly was examined. In physiologically relevant buffers, AMPPNP binding to myosin caused transition to the soluble 10S myosin conformation due to trapping of nucleotide at the active sites. The resulting 10S myosin-AMPPNP complex was highly stable and thick filament assembly was suppressed. However, upon addition to F-actin, myosin readily assembled to form thick filaments. Furthermore, myosin assembly caused rearrangement of actin filament networks into actomyosin fibers composed of coaligned F-actin and myosin thick filaments. Severin-induced fragmentation of actin in actomyosin fibers resulted in immediate disassembly of myosin thick filaments, demonstrating that actin filaments were indispensable for mediating myosin assembly in the presence of AMPPNP. Actomyosin fibers also formed after addition of F-actin to nonphosphorylated 10S myosin monomers containing the products of ATP hydrolysis trapped at the active site. The resulting fibers were rapidly disassembled after addition of millimolar MgATP and consequent transition of myosin to the soluble 10S state. However, reassembly of myosin filaments in the presence of MgATP and F-actin could be induced by phosphorylation of myosin P-light chains, causing regeneration of actomyosin fiber bundles. The results indicate that actomyosin fibers can be spontaneously formed by F-actin-mediated assembly of smooth muscle myosin. Moreover, induction of actomyosin fibers by myosin light chain phosphorylation in the presence of actin filament networks provides a plausible hypothesis for contractile fiber assembly in situ.  相似文献   

17.
Subunit exchange between smooth muscle myosin filaments   总被引:8,自引:6,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):3021-3030
Filaments formed from phosphorylated smooth muscle myosin are stable in the presence of MgATP, whereas dephosphorylated filaments are disassembled to a mixture of folded monomers and dimers. The stability of copolymers of phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin was, however, unknown. Gel filtration, sedimentation velocity, and pelleting assays were used to show that MgATP could dissociate dephosphorylated myosin from copolymers containing either rod and myosin or dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosin. Copolymers were typically formed by dialyzing monomeric mixtures into filament-forming buffer but, unexpectedly, could also be formed within minutes of mixing preformed rod and myosin minifilaments. This result suggested that molecules can rapidly and extensively exchange between filaments, presumably via the monomeric pool of myosin in equilibrium with polymer. An exchange of molecules between filaments was demonstrated directly by electron microscopy using gold-labeled streptavidin or antibody to detect the exchanged species. By this approach it was shown that smooth muscle myosin filaments, like other macromolecular assemblies, are dynamic structures that can readily alter their composition in response to changing solvent conditions. Moreover, because folded monomeric myosin is unable to polymerize, these experiments suggest a mechanism for the disassembly of the filament by MgATP.  相似文献   

18.
Acanthamoeba myosin II has three phosphorylation sites clustered near the end of the tail of each of its two heavy chains (six phosphorylation sites/molecule). Myosin II has little or no actin-activated ATPase activity when four to six of these sites are phosphorylated. Maximal actin-activated ATPase activity is obtained when all six sites are dephosphorylated. Under assay conditions, both phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin II form bipolar filaments. Filaments of dephosphorylated myosin II have larger sedimentation coefficients than filaments of phosphorylated myosin II but this difference does not explain the difference in their actin-activated ATPase activities. Heteropolymers, formed by mixing soluble dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins and then diluting the mixture into low ionic strength buffer containing MgCl2, have sedimentation coefficients close to those of the homopolymer of phosphorylated myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of heteropolymers are, under most conditions, lower than the equivalent mixtures of homopolymers of dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins. It is concluded, therefore, that the phosphorylation of myosin tails regulates the actin-activated ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosin II by affecting the myosin filament as a whole rather than specifically affecting the heads of the phosphorylated myosin molecules only.  相似文献   

19.
Actin-activation of unphosphorylated gizzard myosin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effect of light chain phosphorylation on the actin-activated ATPase activity and filament stability of gizzard smooth muscle myosin was examined under a variety of conditions. When unphosphorylated and phosphorylated gizzard myosins were monomeric, their MgATPase activities were not activated or only very slightly activated by actin, and when they were filamentous, their MgATPase activities could be stimulated by actin. At pH 7.0, the unphosphorylated myosin in the presence of ATP required 2-3 times as much Mg2+ for filament formation as did the phosphorylated myosin. The amount of stimulation of the unphosphorylated myosin filaments depended upon pH, temperature, and the presence of tropomyosin. At pH 7.0 and 37 degrees C and at pH 6.8 and 25 degrees C, the MgATPase activity of filamentous, unphosphorylated, gizzard myosin was stimulated 10-fold by actin complexed with gizzard tropomyosin. These tropomyosin-actin-activated ATPase activities were 40% of those of the phosphorylated myosin. Under other conditions, pH 7.5 and 37 degrees C and pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C, even though the unphosphorylated myosin was mostly filamentous, its MgATPase activity was stimulated only 4-fold by tropomyosin-actin. Thus, both unphosphorylated and phosphorylated gizzard myosin filaments appear to be active, but the cycling rate of the unphosphorylated myosin is less than that of the phosphorylated myosin. Active unphosphorylated myosin may help explain the ability of smooth muscles to maintain tension in the absence of myosin light chain phosphorylation.  相似文献   

20.
Monoclonal antibodies specific for the rod region can affect smooth muscle myosin's motor properties. Actin movement by phosphorylated myosin was inhibited by an antibody (LMM.4) which binds to the COOH-terminal end of the coiled-coil rod, a region thought to be involved in filament assembly. The actin-activated ATPase activity of the myosin-antibody LMM.4 complex was also reduced 10-fold at actin concentrations that gave maximal turnover rates with filamentous myosin. Metal-shadowing of the phosphorylated myosin-antibody complex at low ionic strength showed small bundles of parallel extended molecules, instead of filaments. Five other anti-rod antibodies had little or no effect on myosin's ability to act as a motor. This is the first demonstration that a muscle myosin's activity is affected by its state of assembly. A common theme that emerges from the studies on both muscle and non-muscle myosins is that assembly into a filamentous structure stimulates the activity of the individual myosin molecules.  相似文献   

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