首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Terminal webs prepared from mouse intestinal epithelial cells were examined by the quick-freeze, deep-etch, and rotary-replication method. The microvilli of these cells contain actin filaments that extend into the terminal web in compact bundles. Within the terminal web these bundles remain compact; few filaments are separated from the bundles and fewer still bend towards the lateral margins of the cell. Decoration with subfragment 1 (S1) of myosin confirmed that relatively few actin filaments travel horizontally in the web. Instead, between actin bundles there are complicated networks of the fibrils. Here we present two lines of evidence which suggest that myosin is one of the major cross-linkers in the terminal web. First, when brush borders are exposed to 1 mM ATP in 0.3 M KCl, they lose their normal ability to bind antimyosin antibodies as judged by immunofluorescence, and they lose the thin fibrils normally found in deep-etch replicas. Correspondingly, myosin is released into the supernatant as judged by SDS gel electrophoresis. Second, electron microscope immunocytochemistry with antimyosin antibodies followed by ferritin- conjugated second antibodies leads to ferritin deposition mainly on the fibrils at the basal part of rootlets. Deep-etching also reveals that the actin filament bundles are connected to intermediate filaments by another population of cross-linkers that are not extracted by ATP in 0.3 M KCl. From these results we conclude that myosin in the intestinal cell may not only be involved in a short range sliding-filament type of motility, but may also play a purely structural role as a long range cross-linker between microvillar rootlets.  相似文献   

2.
Cytoplasmic myosin from Drosophila melanogaster   总被引:20,自引:6,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
Myosin is identified and purified from three different established Drosophila melanogaster cell lines (Schneider's lines 2 and 3 and Kc). Purification entails lysis in a low salt, sucrose buffer that contains ATP, chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, precipitation with actin in the absence of ATP, gel filtration in a discontinuous KI-KCl buffer system, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. Yield of pure cytoplasmic myosin is 5-10%. This protein is identified as myosin by its cross-reactivity with two monoclonal antibodies against human platelet myosin, the molecular weight of its heavy chain, its two light chains, its behavior on gel filtration, its ATP-dependent affinity for actin, its characteristic ATPase activity, its molecular morphology as demonstrated by platinum shadowing, and its ability to form bipolar filaments. The molecular weight of the cytoplasmic myosin's light chains and peptide mapping and immunochemical analysis of its heavy chains demonstrate that this myosin, purified from Drosophila cell lines, is distinct from Drosophila muscle myosin. Two-dimensional thin layer maps of complete proteolytic digests of iodinated muscle and cytoplasmic myosin heavy chains demonstrate that, while the two myosins have some tryptic and alpha-chymotryptic peptides in common, most peptides migrate with unique mobility. One-dimensional peptide maps of SDS PAGE purified myosin heavy chain confirm these structural data. Polyclonal antiserum raised and reacted against Drosophila myosin isolated from cell lines cross-reacts only weakly with Drosophila muscle myosin isolated from the thoraces of adult Drosophila. Polyclonal antiserum raised against Drosophila muscle myosin behaves in a reciprocal fashion. Taken together our data suggest that the myosin purified from Drosophila cell lines is a bona fide cytoplasmic myosin and is very likely the product of a different myosin gene than the muscle myosin heavy chain gene that has been previously identified and characterized.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Myosin VIIA was cloned from rat kidney, and the construct (M7IQ5) containing the motor domain, IQ domain, and the coiled-coil domain as well as the full-length myosin VIIA (M7full) was expressed. The M7IQ5 contained five calmodulins. Based upon native gel electrophoresis and gel filtration, it was found that M7IQ5 was single-headed, whereas M7full was two-headed, suggesting that the tail domain contributes to form the two-headed structure. M7IQ5 had Mg(2+)-ATPase activity that was markedly activated by actin with K(actin) of 33 microm and V(max) of 0.53 s(-1) head(-1). Myosin VIIA required an extremely high ATP concentration for ATPase activity, ATP-induced dissociation from actin, and in vitro actin-translocating activity. ADP markedly inhibited the actin-activated ATPase activity. ADP also significantly inhibited the ATP-induced dissociation of myosin VIIA from actin. Consistently, ADP decreased K(actin) of the actin-activated ATPase. ADP decreased the actin gliding velocity, although ADP did not stop the actin gliding even at high concentration. These results suggest that myosin VIIA has slow ATP binding or low affinity for ATP and relatively high affinity for ADP. The directionality of myosin VIIA was determined by using the polarity-marked dual fluorescence-labeled actin filaments. It was found that myosin VIIA is a plus-directed motor.  相似文献   

5.
Muscle contraction results from an attachment–detachment cycle between the myosin heads extending from myosin filaments and the sites on actin filaments. The myosin head first attaches to actin together with the products of ATP hydrolysis, performs a power stroke associated with release of hydrolysis products, and detaches from actin upon binding with new ATP. The detached myosin head then hydrolyses ATP, and performs a recovery stroke to restore its initial position. The strokes have been suggested to result from rotation of the lever arm domain around the converter domain, while the catalytic domain remains rigid. To ascertain the validity of the lever arm hypothesis in muscle, we recorded ATP-induced movement at different regions within individual myosin heads in hydrated myosin filaments, using the gas environmental chamber attached to the electron microscope. The myosin head were position-marked with gold particles using three different site-directed antibodies. The amplitude of ATP-induced movement at the actin binding site in the catalytic domain was similar to that at the boundary between the catalytic and converter domains, but was definitely larger than that at the regulatory light chain in the lever arm domain. These results are consistent with the myosin head lever arm mechanism in muscle contraction if some assumptions are made.  相似文献   

6.
We present microinjection data in support of an indirect approach by which cytoplasmic protein interactions important in the processes of bone resorption can be elucidated. Three polyclonal antibodies (M1, M3, M5) raised against myosin II from perfused rat liver differently affected the actin-activated Mg ATPase of myosin II. These antibodies microinjected into isolated rat osteoclasts affected osteoclast morphology and activity in bone resorption. M1, which completely inhibited myosin ATPase activity at a antibody:myosin ratio of 10:1, initially promoted the extension/retraction motility of lamellipodia but eventually reduced the spread area of osteoclasts along the substrate after 20 hr. M3, which inhibited ATPase activity by 70%, had similar effects; however, M5, which weakly inhibited ATPase activity, neither promoted extension/retraction nor reduced spread area of osteoclasts. Immunofluorescence showed that these antibodies removed myosin II from the majority of actin filaments in injected osteoclasts. Because antibodies that did not bind to a myosin II column had little effect on the extension/retraction of lamellipodia or the osteoclast spread area, these data suggest that myosin II participates in the stabilization of osteoclast lamellipodia along the substrate. M1 injection strongly inhibited injected osteoclasts from excavating resorption lacunae in bone slices, compared to control antibody. M3 and M5 were less effective but also inhibited bone resorption. These data show that myosin II is functionally important in bone resorption and that the osteoclast-differentiated activity of bone resorption is a more sensitive assay for myosin activity than lamellipodia motility or cell morphology.  相似文献   

7.
Hooft AM  Maki EJ  Cox KK  Baker JE 《Biochemistry》2007,46(11):3513-3520
We use an in vitro motility assay to determine the biochemical basis for a hypermotile state of myosin-based actin sliding. It is widely assumed that the sole biochemical determinant of actin-sliding velocities, V, is actin-myosin detachment kinetics (1/tauon), yet we recently reported that, above a critical ATP concentration of approximately 100 microM, V exceeds the detachment limit by more than 2-fold. To determine the biochemical basis for this hypermotile state, we measure the effects of ATP and inorganic phosphate, Pi, on V and observe that at low [ATP] V decreases as ln [Pi], whereas above 100 microM ATP the hypermotile V is independent of Pi. The ln [Pi] dependence of V at low [ATP] is consistent with a macroscopic model of muscle shortening, similar to Hill's contractile component, which predicts that V varies linearly with an internal force (Hill's active state) that drives actin movement against the viscous drag of myosin heads strongly bound to actin (Hill's dashpot). At high [ATP], we suggest that the hypermotile V is caused by shear thinning of the resistive population of strongly bound myosin heads. Our data and analysis indicate that, in addition to contributions from tauon and myosin's step size, d, V is influenced by the biochemistry of myosin's working step as well as resistive properties of actin and myosin.  相似文献   

8.
The binding of caldesmon and its actin-binding fragments to actin was studied by using peptide antibodies directed against two actin sites implicated in actomyosin interactions. Antibodies against residues 1-7 on skeletal alpha-actin strongly inhibited the binding of caldesmon to actin and perturbed to a smaller extent the interaction between actin and the actin binding fragments. Carbodiimide coupling of ethylenediamine to the NH2-terminal acidic residues on actin inhibited the binding of caldesmon and its fragments to actin to a similar extent as the (residues 1-7) antibodies. Antibodies against residues 18-28 showed only limited competition with caldesmon for the binding to actin. These results lead to the following conclusions. (i) The NH2-terminal residues on actin play an important role in the binding of caldesmon to actin, (ii) residues 18-28 on actin do not form a major caldesmon interaction site, and (iii) the actin-binding fragments do not contain the full actin-binding interface. These conclusions and other literature data suggest that caldesmon regulates the actomyosin ATPase by competing with myosin.ATP for the NH2-terminal segment on actin.  相似文献   

9.
Yeast actin-binding proteins: evidence for a role in morphogenesis   总被引:20,自引:8,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1988,107(6):2551-2561
Three yeast actin-binding proteins were identified using yeast actin filaments as an affinity matrix. One protein appears to be a yeast myosin heavy chain; it is dissociated from actin filaments by ATP, it is similar in size (200 kD) to other myosins, and antibodies directed against Dictyostelium myosin heavy chain bind to it. Immunofluorescence experiments show that a second actin-binding protein (67 kD) colocalizes in vivo with both cytoplasmic actin cables and cortical actin patches, the only identifiable actin structures in yeast. The cortical actin patches are concentrated at growing surfaces of the yeast cell where they might play a role in membrane and cell wall insertion, and the third actin-binding protein (85 kD) is only detected in association with these structures. This 85-kD protein is therefore a candidate for a determinant of growth sites. The in vivo role of this protein was tested by overproduction; this overproduction causes a reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton which in turn dramatically affects the budding pattern and spatial growth organization of the yeast cell.  相似文献   

10.
Sea urchin coelomocytes represent an excellent experimental model system for studying retrograde flow. Their extreme flatness allows for excellent microscopic visualization. Their discoid shape provides a radially symmetric geometry, which simplifies analysis of the flow pattern. Finally, the nonmotile nature of the cells allows for the retrograde flow to be analyzed in the absence of cell translocation. In this study we have begun an analysis of the retrograde flow mechanism by characterizing its kinetic and structural properties. The supramolecular organization of actin and myosin II was investigated using light and electron microscopic methods. Light microscopic immunolocalization was performed with anti-actin and anti-sea urchin egg myosin II antibodies, whereas transmission electron microscopy was performed on platinum replicas of critical point-dried and rotary-shadowed cytoskeletons. Coelomocytes contain a dense cortical actin network, which feeds into an extensive array of radial bundles in the interior. These actin bundles terminate in a perinuclear region, which contains a ring of myosin II bipolar minifilaments. Retrograde flow was arrested either by interfering with actin polymerization or by inhibiting myosin II function, but the pathway by which the flow was blocked was different for the two kinds of inhibitory treatments. Inhibition of actin polymerization with cytochalasin D caused the actin cytoskeleton to separate from the cell margin and undergo a finite retrograde retraction. In contrast, inhibition of myosin II function either with the wide-spectrum protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine or the myosin light chain kinase-specific inhibitor KT5926 stopped flow in the cell center, whereas normal retrograde flow continued at the cell periphery. These differential results suggest that the mechanism of retrograde flow has two, spatially segregated components. We propose a "push-pull" mechanism in which actin polymerization drives flow at the cell periphery, whereas myosin II provides the tension on the actin cytoskeleton necessary for flow in the cell interior.  相似文献   

11.
Xu S  Gu J  Belknap B  White H  Yu LC 《Biophysical journal》2006,91(9):3370-3382
When myosin is attached to actin in a muscle cell, various structures in the filaments are formed. The two strongly bound states (A*M*ADP and A*M) and the weakly bound A*M*ATP states are reasonably well understood. The orientation of the strongly bound myosin heads is uniform ("stereospecific" attachment), and the attached heads exhibit little spatial fluctuation. In the prehydrolysis weakly bound A*M*ATP state, the orientations of the attached myosin heads assume a wide range of azimuthal and axial angles, indicating considerable flexibility in the myosin head. The structure of the other weakly bound state, A*M*ADP*P(i), however, is poorly understood. This state is thought to be the critical pre-power-stroke state, poised to make the transition to the strongly binding, force-generating states, and hence it is of particular interest for understanding the mechanism of contraction. However, because of the low affinity between myosin and actin in the A*M*ADP*P(i) state, the structure of this state has eluded determination both in isolated form and in muscle cells. With the knowledge recently gained in the structures of the weakly binding M*ATP, M*ADP*P(i) states and the weakly attached A*M*ATP state in muscle fibers, it is now feasible to delineate the in vivo structure of the attached state of A*M*ADP*P(i). The series of experiments presented in this article were carried out under relaxing conditions at 25 degrees C, where approximately 95% of the myosin heads in the skinned rabbit psoas muscle contain the hydrolysis products. The affinity for actin is enhanced by adding polyethylene glycol (PEG) or by lowering the ionic strength in the bathing solution. Solution kinetics and binding constants were determined in the presence and in the absence of PEG. When the binding between actin and myosin was increased, both the myosin layer lines and the actin layer lines increased in intensity, but the intensity profiles did not change. The configuration (mode) of attachment in the A*M*ADP*P(i) state is thus unique among the intermediate attached states of the cross-bridge ATP hydrolysis cycle. One of the simplest explanations is that both myosin filaments and actin filaments are stabilized (e.g., undergo reduced spatial fluctuations) by the attachment. The alignment of the myosin heads in the thick filaments and the alignment of the actin monomers in the thin filaments are improved as a result. The compact atomic structure of M*ADP*P(i) with strongly coupled domains may contribute to the unique attachment configuration: the "primed" myosin heads may function as "transient struts" when attached to the thin filaments.  相似文献   

12.
To better understand how skeletal muscle myosin molecules move actin filaments, we determine the motion-generating biochemistry of a single myosin molecule and study how it scales with the motion-generating biochemistry of an ensemble of myosin molecules. First, by measuring the effects of various ligands (ATP, ADP, and P(i)) on event lifetimes, tau(on), in a laser trap, we determine the biochemical kinetics underlying the stepwise movement of an actin filament generated by a single myosin molecule. Next, by measuring the effects of these same ligands on actin velocities, V, in an in vitro motility assay, we determine the biochemistry underlying the continuous movement of an actin filament generated by an ensemble of myosin molecules. The observed effects of P(i) on single molecule mechanochemistry indicate that motion generation by a single myosin molecule is closely associated with actin-induced P(i) dissociation. We obtain additional evidence for this relationship by measuring changes in single molecule mechanochemistry caused by a smooth muscle HMM mutation that results in a reduced P(i)-release rate. In contrast, we observe that motion generation by an ensemble of myosin molecules is limited by ATP-induced actin dissociation (i.e., V varies as 1/tau(on)) at low [ATP], but deviates from this relationship at high [ATP]. The single-molecule data uniquely provide a direct measure of the fundamental mechanochemistry of the actomyosin ATPase reaction under a minimal load and serve as a clear basis for a model of ensemble motility in which actin-attached myosin molecules impose a load.  相似文献   

13.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2451-2461
Isolated cell preparations from chicken gizzard smooth muscle typically contain a mixture of cell fragments and whole cells. Both species are spontaneously permeable and may be preloaded with externally applied phalloidin and antibodies and then induced to contract with Mg ATP. Labeling with antibodies revealed that the cell fragments specifically lacked certain cytoskeletal proteins (vinculin, filamin) and were depleted to various degrees in others (desmin, alpha-actinin). The cell fragments showed a unique mode of supercontraction that involved the protrusion of actin filaments through the cell surface during the terminal phase of shortening. In the presence of dextran, to minimize protein loss, the supercontracted products were star-like in form, comprising long actin bundles radiating in all directions from a central core containing myosin, desmin, and alpha-actinin. It is concluded that supercontraction is facilitated by an effective uncoupling of the contractile apparatus from the cytoskeleton, due to partial degradation of the latter, which allows unhindered sliding of actin over myosin. Homogenization of the cell fragments before or after supercontraction produced linear bipolar dimer structures composed of two oppositely polarized bundles of actin flanking a central bundle of myosin filaments. Actin filaments were shown to extend the whole length of the bundles and their length averaged integral to 4.5 microns. Myosin filaments in the supercontracted dimers averaged 1.6 microns in length. The results, showing for the first time the high actin to myosin filament length ratio in smooth muscle are readily consistent with the slow speed of shortening of this tissue. Other implications of the results are also discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Actomyosin interactions in the presence of ATP were examined by using site-specific antibodies directed against the first seven N-terminal residues on skeletal alpha-actin. Fab fragments of these antibodies (S alpha N Fab) inhibited effectively the actin-activated ATPase of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) at both 5 and 25 degrees C. Binding experiments carried out in the presence of ATP at 5 degrees C revealed that the catalytic inhibition was related to the inhibition of S-1 binding to actin by Fab. At equimolar ratios of Fab to actin, the binding of S-1 to actin and the activated ATPase were inhibited by 75 and 82%, respectively. These results, when contrasted with the small effect of Fab on rigor actomyosin binding, suggest ATP-induced changes at the interface of actin and myosin.  相似文献   

15.
We have used two in vitro motility assays to study the relative movement of actin and myosin from turkey gizzards (smooth muscle) and human platelets. In the Nitella-based in vitro motility assay, myosin-coated polymer beads move over a fixed substratum of actin bundles derived from dissection of the alga, Nitella, whereas in the sliding actin filament assay fluorescently labeled actin filaments slide over myosin molecules adhered to a glass surface. Both assay systems yielded similar relative velocities using smooth muscle myosin and actin under our standard conditions. We have studied the effects of ATP, ionic strength, magnesium, and tropomyosin on the velocity and found that with the exception of the dependence on MgCl2, the two assays gave very similar results. Calcium over a concentration of pCa 8 to 4 had no effect on the velocity of actin filaments. Phosphorylated smooth muscle myosin propelled filaments of smooth muscle and skeletal muscle actin at the same rate. Phosphorylated smooth muscle and cytoplasmic myosin monomers also moved actin filaments, demonstrating that filament formation is not required for movement.  相似文献   

16.
Human erythrocyte myosin: identification and purification   总被引:9,自引:4,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Human erythrocytes contain an Mr 200,000 polypeptide that cross-reacts specifically with affinity-purified antibodies to the Mr 200,000 heavy chain of human platelet myosin. Immunofluorescence staining of formaldehyde-fixed erythrocytes demonstrated that the immunoreactive myosin polypeptide is present in all cells and is localized in a punctate pattern throughout the cell. Between 20-40% of the immunoreactive myosin polypeptide remained associated with the membranes after hemolysis and preparation of ghosts, suggesting that it may be bound to the membrane cytoskeleton as well as being present in the cytosol. The immunoreactive myosin polypeptide was purified from the hemolysate to approximately 85% purity by DEAE-cellulose chromatography followed by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-400. The purified protein is an authentic vertebrate myosin with two globular heads at the end of a rod-like tail approximately 150-nm long, as visualized by rotary shadowing of individual molecules, and with two light chains (Mr 25,000 and 19,500) in association with the Mr 200,000 heavy chain. Peptide maps of the Mr 200,000 heavy chains of erythrocyte and platelet myosin were seen to be nearly identical, but the proteins are distinct since the platelet myosin light chains migrate differently on SDS gels (Mr 20,000 and 17,000). The erythrocyte myosin formed bipolar filaments 0.3-0.4-micron long at physiological salt concentrations and exhibited a characteristic pattern of myosin ATPase activities with EDTA, Ca++, and Mg++-ATPase activities in 0.5 M KCl of 0.38, 0.48, and less than 0.01 mumol/min per mg. The Mg++-ATPase activity of erythrocyte myosin in 0.06 M KCl (less than 0.01 mumol/min per mg) was not stimulated by the addition of rabbit muscle F-actin. The erythrocyte myosin was present in about 6,000 copies per cell, in a ratio of 80 actin monomers for every myosin molecule, which is an amount comparable to actin/myosin ratios in other nonmuscle cells. The erythrocyte myosin could function together with tropomyosin on the erythrocyte membrane (Fowler, V.M., and V. Bennett, 1984, J. Biol. Chem., 259:5978-5989) in an actomyosin contractile apparatus responsible for ATP-dependent changes in erythrocyte shape.  相似文献   

17.
Actin and myosin interact with one another to perform a variety of cellular functions. Central to understanding the processive motion of myosin on actin is the characterization of the individual states along the mechanochemical cycle. We present an all-atom molecular dynamics simulation of the myosin II S1 domain in the rigor state interacting with an actin filament. We also study actin-free myosin in both rigor and post-rigor conformations. Using all-atom level and coarse-grained analysis methods, we investigate the effects of myosin binding on actin, and of actin binding on myosin. In particular, we determine the domains of actin and myosin that interact strongly with one another at the actomyosin interface using a highly coarse-grained level of resolution, and we identify a number of salt bridges and hydrogen bonds at the interface of myosin and actin. Applying coarse-grained analysis, we identify differences in myosin states dependent on actin-binding, or ATP binding. Our simulations also indicate that the actin propeller twist-angle and nucleotide cleft-angles are influenced by myosin at the actomyosin interface. The torsional rigidity of the myosin-bound filament is also calculated, and is found to be increased compared to previous simulations of the free filament.  相似文献   

18.
A 110-kDa protein present in chicken intestinal brush-border microvilli is believed to laterally link the actin filament bundle that forms the structural core of the microvilli with the microvillar plasma membrane. We have purified a 110-kDa protein to greater than 95% homogeneity by extraction of brush borders with solution containing 0.6 M KCl and 5 mM ATP, followed by gel filtration chromatography, sedimentation as a complex with exogenous actin, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The 110-kDa protein-calmodulin complex bound F-actin in the absence but not the presence of ATP and had K+,EDTA-ATPase (0.2 mumol/min/mg) and Ca2+-ATPase (0.2 mumol/min/mg) activities and Mg2+-ATPase activity (0.03 mumol/min/mg) that was not activated by F-actin. The actin-binding and ATPase activities of the complex were similar to those of purified brush-border myosin. However, immunoblot analysis showed no reactivity between the 110-kDa protein and polyclonal antibody against purified chicken brush-border myosin. Also, peptide maps of 110-kDa protein and myosin obtained by limited proteolysis with chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease had few, if any, peptides in common. Immunoblot analysis also showed that myosin heavy chain was stable under the conditions of the preparation.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Actin and myosin were located in astrocytes, marginal glial and ependymal cells in rat diencephalon by using antibodies against highly purified chicken gizzard actin and myosin. On the basis of these findings it is suggested that glial cell motility in vivo and in vitro is due to the presence of an intracellular actin/myosin system.Supported by grants from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft  相似文献   

20.
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   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号