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1.
It is shown that short treatment of a single skinned rigor fibre from rabbit m X psoas with 0.05% glutaraldehyde in the absence of Ca ions leads to a modified state of the contractile apparatus. After the addition of 5 mM MgATP in the absence of Ca ions to the fibre a sharp rise and subsequent slow decay of tension were observed in contrast to the tension drop in case of the control (unmodified) specimen. The tension transients following quick stretch (L 0.5%) were similar to those for Ca-activated tension. In case of the modified relaxed fibre such a phenomenon was not observed. These results can be explained by "freezing" with glutaraldehyde the thin filament structure either in the "on" or "off" states. The relation of these results to the cooperativity in the regulation mechanism of contraction is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Reaction of F-actin and the F-actin-tropomyosin complex with 20 mM glutaraldehyde for 19-22 h at 0 degrees C and 25 degrees C results in extensively cross-linked filaments, as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Electron micrographs show shorter, more irregular filaments for glutaraldehyde-treated F-actin in the absence of tropomyosin as compared to the presence of tropomyosin or untreated controls. There was a 40% drop in viscosity of glutaraldehyde-treated F-actin solutions but a 90% increase in viscosity for the glutaraldehyde-treated F-actin-tropomyosin complex in solution, as compared to the untreated controls, indicating different effects of cross-linking. SDS gels indicate that intrasubunit cross- links are introduced into F-actin and that when tropomyosin is present, intramolecular cross-link formation is inhibited. Inhibition of the salt-induced G leads to F polymerization results when intramolecular cross-links are introduced into G-actin under similar or milder reaction conditions. These data indicate that, under conditions for which extensive F-actin filament cross-linking (fixing) occurs, the filaments become damaged due to the concurrent formation of intrasubunit cross-links that cause local depolymerization and distortion and that tropomyosin protects against this damage.  相似文献   

3.
Extraction of troponin C (TnC) from skinned muscle fibers reduces maximum Ca2+ and rigor cross-bridge (RXB)-activated tensions and reduces cooperativity between neighboring regulatory units (one troponin-tropomyosin complex and the seven associated actins) of thin filaments. This suggests that TnC has a determining role in RXB, as well as in Ca(2+)-dependent activation processes. To investigate this possibility further, we replaced fast TnC (fTnC) of rabbit psoas fibers with either CaM[3,4TnC] or cardiac TnC (cTnC) and compared the effects of these substitutions on Ca2+ and RXB activation of tension. CaM[3,4TnC] substitution has the same effect on Ca(2+)- and RXB-activated tensions; they are reduced 50%, and cooperativity between regulatory units is reduced 40%. cTnC substitution also reduces the maximum Ca(2+)-activated tension and cooperativity. But with RXB activation the effects on tension and cooperativity are opposite; cTnC substitution potentiates tension but reduces cooperativity. We considered whether tension potentiation could be explained by increased activation by cycling cross-bridges (CXBs), but the concerted transition formalism predicts fibers will fail to relax in high substrate and high pCa when CXBs are activator ligands. It predicts resting tension, which is not observed in either control or cTnC-substituted fibers. Rather, it appears that cTnC facilitates RXB activation of fast fibers more effectively than fTnC. The order of RXB-activated tension facilitation is cTnC > fTnC > CaM[3,4TnC] > empty TnC-binding sites. Comparison of the structures of fTnC, CaM[3,4TnC], and cTnC indicates that the critical region for this property lies in the central helix or N-terminal domain, including EF hand motifs 1 and 2.  相似文献   

4.
Past attempts to detect tropomyosin in electron micrograph images of frozen-hydrated troponin-regulated thin filaments under relaxing conditions have not been successful. This raised the possibility that tropomyosin may be disordered on filaments in the off-state, a possibility at odds with the steric blocking model of muscle regulation. By using cryoelectron microscopy and helical image reconstruction we have now resolved the location of tropomyosin in both relaxing and activating conditions. In the off-state, tropomyosin adopts a position on the outer domain of actin with a binding site virtually identical to that determined previously by negative staining, although at a radius of 3.8 nm, slightly higher than found in stained filaments. Molecular fitting to the atomic model of F-actin shows that tropomyosin is localized over sites on actin subdomain 1 required for myosin binding. Restricting access to these sites would inhibit the myosin-cross-bridge cycle, and hence contraction. Under high Ca(2+) activating conditions, tropomyosin moved azimuthally, away from its blocking position to the same site on the inner domain of actin previously determined by negative staining, also at 3.8 nm radius. These results provide strong support for operation of the steric mechanism of muscle regulation under near-native solution conditions and also validate the use of negative staining in investigations of muscle thin filament structure.  相似文献   

5.
Cross-linked complex of gizzard myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and calmodulin (CM) was produced by glutaraldehyde treatment of a mixture of these proteins in a high Ca2+ (0.1 mM) solution. Although the specific activity was reduced, this complex showed MLCK activity in a Ca2+-independent manner, different from the original MLCK whose activity was Ca2+-dependent. Chlorpromazine, one of the CM antagonists, was no longer able to inhibit the MLCK activity of this complex. These observations support the previously proposed hypothesis on the regulatory mechanism of MLCK activity via Ca2+. This complex could be regarded as another kind of Ca2+-independent MLCK different from that obtained by chymotryptic digestion of MLCK (Walsh, M.P., Dabrowska, R., Hinkins, S., & Hartshorne, D.J. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 1919-1925). This complex caused superprecipitation of gizzard actomyosin and enhanced actin-activated ATPase of myosin Ca2+-independently.  相似文献   

6.
Muscle needs an elastic framework to maintain its mechanical stability. Removal of thin filaments in rabbit skeletal muscle with plasma gelsolin has revealed the essential features of elastic filaments. The selective removal of thin filaments was confirmed by staining with phalloidin-rhodamine for fluorescence microscopy, examination of arrowhead formation with myosin subfragment 1 by electron microscopy, and analysis by SDS-PAGE. Thin section electron microscopy revealed the elastic fine filaments (approximately 4 nm in diameter) connecting thick filaments and the Z line. After removal of thin filaments, both rigor stiffness and active tension generation were lost, but the resting tension remained. These observations indicate that the thin filament-free fibers maintain a framework composed of the serial connections of thick filaments, the elastic filaments, and the Z line, which gives passive elasticity to the contractile system of skeletal muscle. The resting tension that remained in the thin filament-free fibers was decreased by mild trypsin treatment. The only protein component that was digested in parallel with the decrease in the resting tension and the disappearance of the elastic filaments was alpha-connectin (also called titin 1), which was transformed from the alpha to the beta form (from titin 1 to 2, respectively). Thus, we conclude that the main protein component of the elastic filaments is alpha-connectin (titin 1).  相似文献   

7.
Initial studies on molluscan muscle regulation indicated that thin filaments do not confer Ca2+-dependence on vertebrate myosin ATPase, and hence that molluscan muscles do not possess thin filament-linked regulatory systems. Subsequently it was shown that molluscan thin filaments do, in fact, impart Ca2+-sensitivity but only at Mg2+ concentrations greater than those used in the earlier studies. In the present study it is shown that Mg2+ prevents significant dissociation of tropomyosin and troponin subunits from thin filaments at the low monovalent ion concentrations typically employed to assay actomyosin ATPase; as a result Mg2+ allows expression of the molluscan thin filament regulatory system under these conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Antibody against the intermediate-sized filaments from gizzard smooth muscle was used to determine the presence or absence of reacting 10-nm filaments in different cell types. The antibody against gizzard 10-nm filaments reacted with filaments in cultured smooth muscle cells, skeletal myotubes and postmitotic skeletal myoblasts. It did not bind to the 10-nm filaments present in replicating presumptive myoblasts and fibroblasts, or the 10-nm filaments in spinal ganglion cells.  相似文献   

9.
Low angle X-ray diffraction patterns were recorded from crab leg muscle in living resting state and in rigor (glycerol-extracted). Both resting and rigor patterns showed a series of layer-lines arising from a helical arrangement of actin subunits in the thin filaments. In the resting state, the crossover repeat of the long-pitch actin helices was 36.6 nm, and the symmetry of the genetic actin helix was an intermediate between 2612 and 2813. When the muscle went into rigor, the crossover repeat changed to 38.3 nm and the helical symmetry to 2813.In the living resting pattern, six other reflections were observed on the meridian and in the near-meridional region. These were indexed as orders of 2 × 38.2 nm and could be assigned to troponin molecules; the spacings and the intensity distributions of these reflections could be explained by the model proposed by Ohtsuki (1974) for the arrangement of troponin molecules in the thin filaments.The muscle in rigor gave meridional and near-meridional reflections at orders of 2 × 38.3 nm. These were identified as the same series of reflections as was assigned to troponin in the living resting pattern, but were more intense and could be seen up to higher orders. We consider that the myosin heads attached to the thin filament at regular intervals along its axis also contribute to these reflections in the rigor pattern.  相似文献   

10.
Beta2-Microglobulin (beta2-m) is a major structural component of dialysis-related amyloid fibrils. Kozhukh et al. [J. Biol. Chem. 277 (2002) 1310] prepared a series of peptide fragments of beta2-m by the protease digestion and examined their ability to form amyloid fibrils in citrate buffer at pH 2.5. Among various peptides, a 22-residue K3 peptide corresponding to Ser20-Lys41 spontaneously formed amyloid fibrils in aqueous solution. This peptide also formed amyloid protofibrils in 20% (v/v) 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE). To investigate the influence of solvent conditions on fibril formation, we studied their structures by atomic force microscopy. In aqueous solution, fibrils had a diameter of 4 or 8 nm and tended to cluster each other. On the other hand, protofibrils in 20% (v/v) TFE had a diameter of 2 nm with no tendency of clustering. Intriguingly, when the K3 protofibrils were transferred from 20% (v/v) TFE to aqueous solution, some of them associated to form thicker fibrils with a diameter of 4-15 nm and a left-handed helical twist. TFE is a hydrophobic solvent, so that hydrophobic interactions between molecules may be weakened. The results suggest that the fibrils in aqueous conditions are formed by the cooperative association of protofibrils at the growing ends of the fibrils, in which hydrophobic interactions play a major role.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction is associated with structural changes of the thin filament-based proteins, troponin consisting of three subunits (TnC, TnI, and TnT), tropomyosin, and actin, triggered by Ca2+-binding to TnC. Knowledge of in situ structures of these proteins is indispensable for elucidating the molecular mechanism of this Ca2+-sensitive regulation. Here, the in situ structure of TnC within the thin filaments was investigated with neutron scattering, combined with selective deuteration and the contrast matching technique. Deuterated TnC (dTnC) was first prepared, this dTnC was then reconstituted into the native thin filaments, and finally neutron scattering patterns of these reconstituted thin filaments containing dTnC were measured under the condition where non-deuterated components were rendered "invisible" to neutrons. The obtained scattering curves arising only from dTnC showed distinct difference in the absence and presence of Ca2+. These curves were analyzed by model calculations using the Monte Carlo method, in which inter-dTnC interference was explicitly taken into consideration. The model calculation showed that in situ radius of gyration of TnC was 23 A (99% confidence limits between 22 A and 23 A) and 24 A (99% confidence limits between 23 A and 25 A) in the absence and presence of Ca2+, respectively, indicating that TnC within the thin filaments assumes a conformation consistent with the extended dumbbell structure, which is different from the structures found in the crystals of various Tn complexes. Elongation of TnC by binding of Ca2+ was also suggested. Furthermore, the radial position of TnC within the thin filament was estimated to be 53 A (99% confidence limits between 49 A and 57 A) and 49 A (99% confidence limits between 44 A and 53 A) in the absence and presence of Ca2+, respectively, suggesting that this radial movement of TnC by 4A is associated with large conformational changes of the entire Tn molecule by binding of Ca2+.  相似文献   

12.
13.
In striated muscles contraction is regulated by the thin filament-based proteins, troponin consisting of three subunits (TnC, TnI, and TnT), and tropomyosin. Knowledge of in situ structures of these proteins is indispensable for elucidating this Ca(2+)-sensitive regulatory mechanism. We employed neutron scattering to investigate the structure of TnC within the thin filament, and found that TnC assumes extended dumbbell-like structures and moves toward the filament axis by binding of Ca(2+). Here, in order to obtain more detailed in situ structural information of TnC, neutron fiber diffraction measurements were performed. Sols of native thin filaments and the thin filaments containing deuterated TnC were prepared in (2)H(2)O. The oriented samples were obtained by placing these sols sealed in quartz capillaries with a diameter of 3 mm in a magnetic field of 18 Tesla. Neutron fiber diffraction patterns were obtained from these oriented samples in the absence and presence of Ca(2+). The patterns obtained showed strong equatorial diffraction due to the thin filaments, 59 A and 51 A layer-lines due to actin, and meridional reflections due to Tn-complex. Analysis of the meridional reflections due to Tn-complex with aid of model calculation showed that the angle between the thin filament axis and the long axis of TnC was estimated to be 67(+/-7) degrees and 49(+/-17) degrees , in the absence and presence of Ca(2+), respectively, suggesting that TnC, which assumes orientations rather perpendicular to the filament axis in the absence of Ca(2+), tilts toward the filament axis and the orientational and positional disorder increases by binding Ca(2+). It also showed that the relative position of the TnC moved by about 22 A by binding Ca(2+), and this apparent movement was concomitant with the movements of other Tn-subunits. This implies that by binding Ca(2+), significant structural rearrangements of Tn-subunits occur.  相似文献   

14.
15.
We have developed a technique by which muscle thin filaments are reconstituted from the recombinant troponin components and the native thin filaments. By this technique, the reconstituted troponin complex is exchanged into the native thin filaments in the presence of 20% glycerol and 0.3 M KCl at pH 6.2. More than 90% of endogenous troponin complex was replaced with the recombinant troponin complex. Structural integrity and Ca2+ sensitivity of the reconstituted thin filament prepared by this technique was confirmed by X-ray fiber diffraction measurements and the thin filament-activated myosin subfragment 1 ATPase measurements, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Cross-linking of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) with a molar excess of actin in vitro reveals the presence of an actin-S1-actin complex. It is absolutely essential that actin be present in molar excess over S1 so that the decoration of F-actin with S1 be incomplete. However, the excess of actin may not be available in the overlap zone of sarcomeres of skeletal muscle. We therefore found it necessary to test for the presence of the actin-S1-actin complex in vivo. Myofibrils from rabbit skeletal muscle were reacted with zero-length cross-linker, the products were resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and analyzed by Western blots using antibodies against actin and against heavy and light chains of myosin. The cross-linking produced the evidence of formation of actin-S1-actin complex.  相似文献   

17.
Inactivation of yellow fever virus by glutaraldehyde.   总被引:1,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

18.
Interactions of the components of reconstituted thin filaments were investigated using a tropomyosin internal deletion mutant, D234, in which actin-binding pseudo-repeats 2, 3, and 4 are missing. D234 retains regions of tropomyosin that bind troponin and form end-to-end tropomyosin bonds, but has a length to span only four instead of seven actin monomers. It inhibits acto-myosin subfragment 1 ATPase (acto-S-1 ATPase) and filament sliding in vitro in both the presence and absence of Ca(2+) (, J. Biol. Chem. 272:14051-14056) and lowers the affinity of S-1.ADP for actin while increasing its cooperative binding. Electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction of reconstituted thin filaments containing actin, troponin, and wild-type or D234 tropomyosin were carried out to determine if Ca(2+)-induced movement of D234 occurred in the filaments. In the presence and absence of Ca(2+), the D234 position was indistinguishable from that of the wild-type tropomyosin, demonstrating that the mutation did not affect normal tropomyosin movement induced by Ca(2+) and troponin. These results suggested that, in the presence of Ca(2+) and troponin, D234 tropomyosin was trapped on filaments in the Ca(2+)-induced position and was unable to undergo a transition to a completely activated position. By adding small amounts of rigor-bonded N-ethyl-maleimide-treated S-1 to mutant thin filaments, thus mimicking the myosin-induced "open" state, inhibition could be overcome and full activation restored. This myosin requirement for full activation provides support for the existence of three functionally distinct thin filament states (off, Ca(2+)-induced, myosin-induced; cf.;, J. Mol. Biol. 266:8-14). We propose a further refinement of the three-state model in which the binding of myosin to actin causes allosteric changes in actin that promote the binding of tropomyosin in an otherwise energetically unfavorable "open" state.  相似文献   

19.
Shitaka Y  Kimura C  Iio T  Miki M 《Biochemistry》2004,43(33):10739-10747
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer showed that troponin-I changes the position on an actin filament corresponding to three states (relaxed, closed, and open) of the thin filament (Hai et al. (2002) J. Biochem. 131, 407-418). In combination with the stopped-flow method, fluorescence resonance energy transfer between probes attached to position 1, 133, or 181 of troponin-I and Cys-374 of actin on reconstituted thin filaments was measured to follow the transition between three states of the thin filament. When the free Ca(2+) concentration was increased, the transition from relaxed to closed states occurred with a rate constant of approximately 500 s(-1). For the reverse transition, the rate constant was approximately 60 s(-1). When myosin subfragment-1 was dissociated from thin filaments in the presence of Ca(2+) by rapid mixing with ATP, the transition from open to closed states occurred with a single rate constant of approximately 300 s(-1). Light-scattering measurements showed that the ATP-induced myosin subfragment-1 dissociation occurred with a rate constant of approximately 900 s(-1). In the absence of Ca(2+), the transition from open to relaxed states occurred with two rate constants of approximately 400 and approximately 80 s(-1). These transition rates are fast enough to allow the spatial rearrangement of thin filaments to be involved in the regulation mechanism of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

20.
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