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1.
The main purpose of this study was to determine whether potentiation of acto-S-1 ATPase activity (activity higher than that obtained with tropomyosin-free actin) could be caused by nucleotide-containing acto-S-1 complexes. In addition, we wanted to know whether these complexes also have a positive cooperative effect on their own apparent binding constant under conditions where nucleotide-free acto-S-1 complexes cause potentiation of ATPase activity. Using calcium-saturated troponin-tropomyosin actin filaments, we observed potentiation of ATPase activity in the presence of 5.0 mM magnesium 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (MgAMPPNP) and calculated that the ability of acto-S-1-AMPPNP complexes to cause potentiation must have been very similar to that of nucleotide-free acto-S-1 complexes. In extension of earlier studies, potentiated acto-S-1 ATPase activity was characterized by an increase in Vmax and, as observed before, a lowering of the apparent Km for subfragment 1 (S-1). Under conditions similar to those that produce the potentiation of acto-S-1 ATPase activity, the apparent actin binding constant of nucleotide-free S-1 was increased about 3-5 fold while the apparent binding constant of AMPPNP to actin-bound S-1 was reduced to (2.5-10) x 10(2) M-1 compared to that of about (1-5) x 10(3) M-1 for S-1 bound to tropomyosin-free actin. Under the same conditions, the apparent binding constant of S-1-AMPPNP to actin was not increased. We suggest that a potentiated state of the tropomyosin actin filament is produced by the cooperative action of acto-S-1 or acto-S-1-AMPPNP complexes. The potentiated state is characterized by an increase in the Vmax of the acto-S-1 ATPase activity, increased binding constants for S-1 and S-1-ADP, and increased binding of tropomyosin to actin.  相似文献   

2.
G DasGupta  E Reisler 《Biochemistry》1992,31(6):1836-1841
The binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) to actin in the presence of ATP and the acto-S-1 ATPase activities of acto-S-1 complexes were determined at 5 degrees C under conditions of partial saturation of actin, up to 90%, by antibodies against the first seven N-terminal residues on actin. The antibodies [Fab(1-7)] inhibited strongly the acto-S-1 ATPase and the binding of S-1 to actin in the presence of ATP at low concentrations of S-1, up to 25 microM. Further increases in S-1 concentration resulted in a partial and cooperative recovery of both the binding of S-1 to actin and the acto-S-1 ATPase while causing only limited displacement of Fab(1-7) from actin. The extent to which the binding and the ATPase activity were recovered depended on the saturation of actin by Fab(1-7). The combined amounts of S-1 and Fab binding to actin suggested that the activation of the myosin ATPase activity was due to actin free of Fab. Examination of the acto-S-1 ATPase activities as a function of S-1 bound to actin at different levels of actin saturation by Fab(1-7) revealed that the antibodies inhibited the activation of the bound myosin. Thus, the binding of antibodies to the N-terminal segment of actin can act to inhibit both the binding of S-1 to actin in the presence of ATP and a catalytic step in ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin. The implications of these results to the regulation of actomyosin interaction are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Bundling of myosin subfragment-1-decorated actin filaments   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have reported previously that rabbit skeletal myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) assembles actin filaments into bundles. The rate of this reaction can be estimated roughly from the initial rate (Vo) of the accompanying turbidity increase ("super-opalescence") of the acto-S-1 solution. Vo is a function of the molar ratio (r) of S-1 to actin, with a peak at r = 1/6 to 1/7 and minimum around r = 1. In the present paper we report a different type of opalescence (we call it "hyper-opalescence") of acto-S-1 solutions, which also resulted from bundle formation. Adjacent filaments in the bundles had a distance of approximately 180 A. Hyper-opalescence occurred at r approximately equal to 1 when KCOOCH3 was used instead of KCl. By comparing the effects of ADP, epsilon-ADP, tropomyosin or ionic strength upon the super- and hyper-opalescence, we concluded that the two types of S-1-induced actin bundling had different molecular mechanisms. The hyper-opalescence type of bundling seemed to be induced by S-1, which was not complexed with actin in the manner of conventional rigor binding. The presence of the regulatory light chain did not affect hyper-opalescence (or super-opalescence), since there were no significant differences between papain S-1 and chymotryptic S-1 with respect to these phenomena.  相似文献   

4.
The synthetic heptapeptide, Ile-Arg-Ile-Cys-Arg-Lsy-Gly-ethoxy, an analog of one of the actin binding sites on myosin head (S-site) (Suzuki, R., Nishi, N., Tokura, S., and Morita, F. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11410-11412) was found to completely inhibit the acto-S-1 (myosin subfragment 1) ATPase activity. The effect of the heptapeptide on the binding ability of S-1 for F-actin was determined by an ultracentrifugal separation. Results indicated that the heptapeptide scarcely dissociated the acto-S-1 complex during the ATPase reaction. Consistent results were obtained from the acto-S-1 ATPase activities determined as a function of S-1 concentrations in the absence or presence of the heptapeptide at a fixed F-actin concentration. The heptapeptide reduced the maximum acto-S-1 ATPase activity without affecting the apparent dissociation constant of the acto-S-1 complex. The heptapeptide bound by a site on actin complementary to the S-site probably inhibits the activation of S-1 ATPase by F-actin. These results suggest that S-1 ATPase is necessary to rebind transiently with F-actin at the S-site in order to be activated by F-actin. This is consistent with the activation mechanism proposed assuming the two actin-binding sites on S-1 ATPase (Katoh, T., and Morita F. (1984) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 96, 1223-1230).  相似文献   

5.
A synthetic peptide corresponding to a sequence 632-642 (S632-642) on the myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) heavy chain and spanning the 50/20 kDa junction of S-1 binds to actin in the presence and absence of S-1. The binding of 1.0 mole of peptide per actin causes almost complete inhibition of actomyosin ATPase activity and only partial inhibition of S-1 binding to actin. The binding of S632-642 to the N-terminal segment of actin is supported by competitive carbodiimide cross-linking of S-1 and S632-642 to actin and the catalytic properties of cross-linked acto-S-1 and actin-peptide complexes. These results show that the sequence 632-642 on S-1 is an autonomous binding site for actin and confirm the catalytic importance of its interactions with the N-terminal segment of actin.  相似文献   

6.
F-Actin bindings to subfragment-1 (S-1) and S-1 after limited proteolysis by trypsin (S-1t) were studied in the absence and presence of ATP by means of ultracentrifugation. No significant difference in the affinities for F-actin was observed between S-1 and S-1t in the absence of ATP. In contrast, the affinity for F-actin in the presence of ATP was decreased about 50 times by the limited proteolysis of the S-1 heavy chain. The S-1 whose SH1 and SH2 groups were cross-linked by N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide bound F-actin weakly. The affinity for F-actin was similar to that of unmodified S-1 in the presence of ATP and was also decreased markedly by limited proteolysis of the cross-linked S-1. Reciprocals of the dissociation constant of acto-S-1 complex decreased markedly with increase of ionic strength in the presence of ATP, but decreased only slightly at the rigor state. All these results are consistent with our proposal that S-1 has two different actin binding sites, as reported previously (Katoh, T., Imae, S., & Morita, F. (1984) J. Biochem. 95, 447-454). The mechanism of activation of S-1 ATPase by F-actin is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The negatively charged residues in the N-terminus of actin and the 697-707 region on myosin subfragment 1 (S-1), containing the reactive cysteines SH1 and SH2, are known to be important for actin-activated myosin ATPase activity. The relationship between these two sites was first examined by monitoring the rates of SH1 and SH2 modification with N-ethylmaleimide in the presence of actin and, secondly, by testing for direct binding of SH1 peptides to the N-terminal segment on actin. While actin alone protected SH1 from N-ethylmaleimide modification, this effect was abolished by an antibody against the seven N-terminal amino acids on actin, F(ab)(1-7), and was greatly reduced when the charge of acidic residues at actin's N-terminus was altered by carbodiimide coupling of ethylenediamine. Neither F(ab)(1-7) nor ethylenediamine treatment reversed the effect of F-actin on SH2 reactivity in SH1-modified S-1. These results show a communication between the SH1 region on S-1 and actin's N-terminus in the acto-S-1 complex. To test whether such a communication involves the binding of the SH1 site on S-1 to the N-terminal segment of actin, the SH1 peptide IRICRKG-NH2(4+) was used. Cosedimentation experiments revealed the binding of three to six peptides per actin monomer. Peptide binding to actin was affected slightly, if at all, by F(ab)(1-7). The antibody also did not change the polymerization of G-actin by the peptides. The peptides caused a small reduction in the binding of S-1 to actin and did not change the binding of F(ab)(1-7).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(6):1761-1765
Tomato activation inhibiting protein (AIP) is a molecule of an apparent molecular weight of 72,000 that co-purifies with tomato actin. In an assay system containing rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin and rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 (myosin S-1), tomato AIP dissociated the acto-S-1 complex in the absence of Mg+2ATP and inhibited the ability of F-actin to activate the low ionic strength Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1. At a molar ratio of 5 actin to 1 AIP, a 50% inhibition of the actin-activated Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1 was observed. The inhibition can be reversed by raising the calcium ion concentration to 1 X 10(-5) M. The AIP had no effect on the basal low ionic strength Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1 in the absence of actin. The protein did not bind directly to actin nor did it cause depolymerization or aggregation of F-actin but appeared, instead, to interact with the actin binding site on myosin S-1. Since AIP is a potent, reversible inhibitor of the rabbit acto-S-1 ATPase activity, it is postulated that it may be responsible for the low levels of actin activation exhibited by tomato F-actin fractions containing the AIP.  相似文献   

11.
Covalent cross-linking reaction between SH1 and SH2 groups in myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) by N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM) was followed by the degree of inactivation of NH4+-EDTA ATPase activity. The rate of the cross-linking reaction decreased to less than a 20th in the presence of F-actin. The inhibitory effect of F-actin was not observed in the presence of MgATP. Binding of F-actin to S-1 was measured using ultracentrifugation. S-1 whose SH1 and SH2 were covalently cross-linked by pPDM or 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) did not bind F-actin. After the DTNB-cross-linked S-1 is reduced by dithiothreitol, the ability to bind F-actin is recovered. These results suggest that S-1 has a binding site for F-actin in the region between SH1 and SH2. This site appears to determine the high affinity of acto-S-1 complex at the rigor while decreasing the affinity more than 10(2) times in the presence of MgATP.  相似文献   

12.
We have synthesized the mixed disulfide, S-(2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid) cysteaminyl-EDTA, using a rapid procedure and water-soluble chemistry. Its disulfide-thiol exchange reaction with rabbit myosin subfragment-1 (S-1), analyzed by spectrophotometry, ATPase assays, and peptide mapping, led to the incorporation of the cysteaminyl-EDTA group into only Cys 540 on the heavy chain and into the unique cysteine on the alkali light chains. The former thiol, residing in the strong actin binding site, reacted at a much faster rate with a concomitant 3-fold decrease in the V(max) for acto-S-1 ATPase but without change in the essential enzymatic functions of S-1. Upon chelation of Fe(3+) ions to the Cys 540-bound EDTA and incubation of the S-1 derivative-Fe complex with ascorbic acid at pH 7.5, the 95 kDa heavy chain underwent a conformation-dependent, single-cut oxidative fragmentation within 5-15 A of Cys 540. Three pairs of fragments were formed which, after specific fluorescent labeling and SDS-PAGE, could be positioned along the heavy chain sequence as 68 kDa-26 kDa, 62 kDa-32 kDa, and 54 kDa-40 kDa. Densitometric measurements revealed that the yield of the 54 kDa-40 kDa pair of bands, but not that for the two other pairs, was very sensitive to S-1 binding to nucleotides or phosphate analogues as well as to F-actin. In binary complexes, all the former ligands specifically lowered the yield to 40% of S-1 alone, roughly in the following order: ADP = AMP-PNP > ATP = ADP.AlF(4) > ADP.BeF(x)() > PP(i). By contrast, rigor binding to F-actin increased the yield to 130%. In the ternary acto-S-1-ADP complex, the yield was again reduced to 80%, and it fell to 25% in acto-S-1-ADP.AlF(4), the putative transition state analogue complex of the acto-S-1 ATPase. These different quantitative changes reflect distinct ligand-induced conformations of the secondary structure element whose scission generates the 54 kDa-40 kDa species. According to the S-1 crystal structure, this element could be unambiguously assigned to the switch II helix (residues 475-507) whose N-terminus lies 14.2 A from Cys 540 and would include the ligand-responsive cleavage site. This motif is thought to be crucial for the transmission of sub-nanometer structural changes at the ATPase site to both the actin site and the lever arm domain during energy transduction. Our study illustrates this novel, actin site-specific chemical proteolysis of S-1 as a direct probe of the switch II helix conformational transitions in solution most likely associated with the skeletal cross-bridge cycle.  相似文献   

13.
T Chen  D Applegate  E Reisler 《Biochemistry》1985,24(20):5620-5625
Chemical cross-linking of actin to the 20K and 50K fragments of tryptically cleaved myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) by the zero-length cross-linking reagent 1-ethyl-3-[3-dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide (EDC) was used as a probe of the acto-S-1 interface in the presence of nucleotides. The course of the two reactions was monitored by measuring on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels the time-dependent formation of the 20K-actin and 50K-actin cross-linked products. Both reactions were inhibited somewhat in the presence of MgADP, were slowed 3-4-fold in the presence of magnesium 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (MgAMPPNP), and proceeded at least 7-fold slower with N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM) modified S-1, as compared to the respective rates in the absence of nucleotides. However, neither the binding of the nucleotides MgADP and MgAMPPNP to S-1 nor the modification of S-1 by pPDM significantly changed the ratio of the cross-linking rates of actin to the 20K and 50K fragments. Similar to what was previously observed in the absence of nucleotides [Chen, T., Applegate, D., & Reisler, E. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 137-144], actin was cross-linked at an approximately 3-fold faster rate to the 20K fragment than to the 50K fragment under all reaction conditions tested. Thus, irrespective of the extent of acto-S-1 dissociation or the binding of nucleotides to acto-S-1, the 20K fragment remains the preferred cross-linking site for actin. These results show that the interaction of actin with each of the cross-linking sites on S-1 is not under selective or preferential control by nucleotides.  相似文献   

14.
The cross-linking of actin to myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethyl-amino)propyl]carbodiimide was reexamined by using two cross-linking procedures [Mornet, D., Bertrand, R., Pantel, P., Audemard, E., & Kassab, R. (1981) Nature (London) 292, 301-306; Sutoh, K. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 1579-1585] and two independent methods for quantitating the reaction products. In the first approach, the cross-linked acto-S-1 complexes were cleaved with elastase at the 25K/50K and 50K/22K junctions in S-1. This enabled direct measurements of the cross-linked and un-cross-linked fractions of the 50K and 22K fragments of S-1. We found that in all cases actin was preferentially cross-linked to the 22K fragment and that the overall stoichiometry of the main cross-linked products was that of a 1:1 complex of actin and S-1. In the second approach, actin was cross-linked to tryptically cleaved S-1, and the course of these reactions was monitored by measuring the decay of the free 50K and 20K fragments and the formation of cross-linked products. After selecting the optimal cross-linking procedure and conditions, we determined that the rate of actin cross-linking to the 20K fragment of S-1 was 3-fold faster than the reaction with the 50K peptide. The overall rate of cross-linking actin to S-1 corresponded to the sum of the individual reactions of the 50K and 20K fragments, indicating their mutually exclusive cross-linking to actin. Thus, the reactions with tryptically cleaved S-1 were consistent with the 1:1 stoichiometry of actin and S-1 in the main cross-linked products and verified the preferential cross-linking of actin to the 20K fragment of S-1. These results are discussed in the context of the binding of actin to S-1.  相似文献   

15.
As is well known, the light scattering intensity of F-actin solutions increases immediately upon formation of the rigor complex with subfragment-1 (S-1). We have found that after the initial rise in scattering, there is a further gradual increase in scattering (we call it "super-opalescence"). Fluorescence and electron microscopic observations of acto-S-1 solutions showed that super-opalescence results from formation of actin filament bundles once S-1 binds to F-actin. The actin bundles possessed transverse stripes with a periodicity of about 350 A, which suggested that in the bundles actin filaments are arranged in parallel register. The rate of the initial process of bundle formation (i.e. side-by-side dimerization) could be approximately estimated by measuring the initial rate of super-opalescence (V0). V0 had a maximum (V0m) at a molar ratio of S-1 to actin of 1;6-1;7, regardless of the actin concentration, pH (6-8.5), Mg2+ concentration (up to 5 mM), or ionic strength (up to 0.3 M KC1). Lower pH, higher Mg2+ concentration, and higher ionic strength increased V0m; V0 was proportional to the square of the actin concentration, regardless of the solution conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Nucleotide-induced states of myosin subfragment 1 cross-linked to actin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A M Duong  E Reisler 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3502-3509
Actomyosin interactions and the properties of weakly bound states in carbodiimide-cross-linked complexes of actin and myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) were probed in tryptic digestion, fluorescence, and thiol modification experiments. Limited proteolysis showed that the 50/20K junction on S-1 was protected in cross-linked acto-S-1 from trypsin even under high-salt conditions in the presence of MgADP, MgAMPPNP, and MgPPi (mu = 0.5 M). The same junction was exposed to trypsin by MgATP and MgATP gamma S but mainly on S-1 cross-linked via its 50K fragment to actin. p-Phenylenedimaleimide-bridged S-1, when cross-linked to actin, yielded similar tryptic cleavage patterns to those of cross-linked S-1 in the presence of MgATP. By using p-nitrophenylenemaleimide, it was found that the essential thiols of cross-linked S-1 were exposed to labeling in the presence of MgATP and MgATP gamma S in a state-specific manner. In contrast to this, the reactive thiols were protected from modification in the presence of MgADP, MgAMPPNP, and MgPPi at mu = 0.5 M. These modifications were compared with similar reactions on isolated S-1. Experiments with pyrene-actin cross-linked to S-1 showed enhancement of fluorescence intensity upon additions of MgATP and MgATP gamma S, indicating the release of the pyrene probe on actin from the sphere of S-1 influence. The results of this study contrast the "open" structure of weakly bound actomyosin states to the "tight" conformation of rigor complexes.  相似文献   

17.
T Hozumi 《Biochemistry》1992,31(41):10070-10073
It is well known that the structural interactions between S-1 moieties of myosin molecules ("cross bridges") and actin molecules in polymerized ("F") form are thought to underlie muscle contraction. It is surmised that such interactions are unitary (actin:S-1 = 1:1), but actual demonstration thereof is handicapped by intrinsic properties of the proteins. Recently, it has been reported that chemically modified [with m-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (MBS)] actin maintains its monomeric ("G") form and makes a stable unitary complex with S-1 but does not activate the S-1 ATPase [Bettache, N., Bertrand, R., & Kassab, R. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 6028-6032]. However, we recently showed that when MBS-G-actin and S-1 are covalently cross-linked by 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]-carbodiimide (EDC), ATPase activity is restored [Hozumi, T. (1991) Biochem. Int. 23, 835-843]. Here we investigated the interface between MBS-G-actin and S-1 using the techniques of tryptic digestion and EDC-cross-linking. MBS-G-actin specifically protected the N-terminal region of S-1 heavy chain against tryptic cleavage at the 25 kDa/50 kDa junction, which is different from the effect that a protomer within F-actin has on the protection of the 25 kDa/50 kDa junction. In addition, the cross-linking pattern between MBS-G-actin and S-1 was different from that between F-actin and S-1. When MBS-G actin was cross-linked to trypsin-treated S-1, no cross-linked product was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The peptide pattern obtained after proteolysis of S-1 with trypsin was different in the absence or presence of anions. The affinity of tryptic and undigested S-1 for anions (CN-, SCN- or HCO3-) was different, as reflected by the altered values of Ki or Ka obtained from ATPase activity measurements. Anions CN-, SCN-, HCO3-, or PPi induced dissociation of actomyosin when added to acto-S-1 or acto-heavy-meromyosin. Among nucleoside di- and triphosphates, only triphosphates were effective with regard to the dissociation. The results suggest the existence of a regulatory site of cationic nature on S-1, which might be involved in the dissociation of actin from myosin.  相似文献   

19.
Limited tryptic proteolysis of S-1 (A1+A2) or S-1 (A1) and S-1 (A2) converts the heavy chain into 3 fragments of Mr = 27K-50K-20K. As a result the actin-stimulated ATPase activity of the fragmented heads is lost. When the digestion is performed using the complex F-actin-S-1, this ATPase activity is completely preserved and the heavy chain is split into only 2 fragments of Mr = 27K–70K. The specific protection by F-actin of the -COOH terminal region of the heavy chain at the joint 50K-20K against tryptic cleavage and loss of activity suggests that this part of the head can be involved in actin binding site and/or Mg2+ ATP hydrolysis by the acto-S-1 complex.  相似文献   

20.
The rate constant for the binding of myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) with F-actin in the absence of nucleotide, k1, and that for dissociation of the F-actin-myosin subfragment-1 complex (acto-S-1), k-1, were measured independently. The rate of S-1 binding with F-actin was measured from the time course of the change in the light scattering intensity after mixing S-1 with various concentrations of F-actin and k1 was found to be 2.55 X 10(6) M-1 X S-1 at 20 degrees C. The dissociation rate of acto-S-1 was determined using F-actin labeled with pyrenyl iodoacetamide (Pyr-FA). Pyr-FA, with its fluorescence decreased by binding with S-1, was mixed with acto-S-1 complex and the rate of displacement of F-actin by Pyr-FA was measured from the decrease in the Pyr-FA fluorescence intensity. The k-1 value was calculated to be 8.5 X 10(-3) S-1 (or 0.51 min-1). The value of the dissociation constant of S-1 from acto-S-1 complex, Kd, was calculated from Kd = k-1/k1 to be 3.3 X 10(-9) M at 20 degrees C. Kd was also measured at various temperatures (0-30 degrees C), and the thermodynamic parameters, delta G degree, delta H degree, and delta S degree, were estimated from the temperature dependence of Kd to be -11.3 kcal/mol, +2.5 kcal/mol, and +47 cal/deg . mol, respectively. Thus, the binding of the myosin head with F-actin was shown to be endothermic and entropy-driven.  相似文献   

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