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1.
To better characterize the conformational differences of G- and F-actin, we have compared the interaction between G- and F-actin with myosin subfragment 1 (S1) which had part of its F-actin binding site (residues 633-642) blocked by a complementary peptide or "antipeptide" (Chaussepied, P., and Morales, M. F. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 7471-7475). Light scattering, sedimentation, and electron microscopy measurements showed that, with the antipeptide covalently attached to the S1 heavy chain, S1 was not capable of inducing G-actin polymerization in the absence of salt. Moreover, the antipeptide-carrying S1 did not change the fluorescence polarization of 5-[2-(iodoacetyl)-aminoethyl]aminonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (1,5-IAEDANS)-labeled G-actin or of 1,5-IAEDANS-labeled actin dimer, compared to the control S1. This result, interpreted as a lack of interaction between G-actin and antipeptide-carrying S1, was confirmed further by the following experiments: in the presence of G-actin, antipeptide.S1 heavy chain was not protected against trypsin and papain proteolysis, and G-actin could not be cross-linked to antipeptide.S1 by 1-ethyl-3[-3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide. In contrast, similar experiments showed that antipeptide.S1 was able to interact with nascent F-actin and with F-actin. Thus, blocking the stretch 633-642 of S1 heavy chain by the antipeptide strongly inhibits G-actin-S1 interaction but only slightly alters F-actin-S1 contact. We, therefore postulate that this stretch of skeletal S1 heavy chain is essential for G-actin-S1 interaction and that the G-F transformation generates new S1 binding site(s) on the actin molecule.  相似文献   

2.
Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), we measured distances from chromophores located at or near the actin-binding stretch of amino acids 633-642 of myosin subfragment 1 (S1), to five points in the acto-S1 complex. Specific labeling of this site was achieved by first attaching the desired chromophore to an "antipeptide" that by means of its charge complementarity specifically binds to this segment of S1 [Chaussepied & Morales (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 7471] and then cross-linking the fluorescent peptide to the protein. According to this technique, antipeptides containing three different labels, viz., N-dansylaziridine, (iodoacetamido)fluorescein, and monobromobimane, were purified and covalently bound to S1. A second chromophoric group, required for FRET measurements, was selected in such a way as to provide a good spectral overlap with the corresponding peptide chromophore. Cys-707 (SH1) and Cys-697 (SH2) on S1 were modified by using iodoacetamido and maleimido derivatives of rhodamine, 1,N6-ethenoadenosine 5'-diphosphate was trapped at the S1 active site with orthovanadate, Cys-374 on actin was modified with either N-[4-[4-(dimethylamino)phenyl]azo]phenyl]maleimide or N-[(iodoacetyl)-amino]ethyl]-5-naphthylamine-1-sulfonate, and ADP bound to F-actin was exchanged with the fluorescent etheno analogue. By use of excited-state lifetime fluorometry, the following distances from the stretch 633-642 of S1 to other points on S1 or actin have been measured: Cys-707 (S1), 50.3 A; Cys-697 (S1), 49.4 A; active site of S1, greater than or equal to 44 A; nucleotide binding site (actin), 41.1 A; and Cys-374 (actin), approximately 53 A.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
3'(2')-O-(4-Benzoyl)benzoyl-ATP (Bz2ATP) was used as a photoaffinity label of the ATP binding site of unphosphorylated chicken gizzard myosin. Specific photolabeling of the active site of 6 S myosin was assured by forming a stable myosin.Co(II)Bz2ADP.orthovanadate complex (termed trapping) prior to irradiation. Co2+ was used in place of Mg2+ to prevent the known photoreaction of vanadate with myosin which destabilizes the trapped complex. [3H] Bz2ADP.Pi was also stably trapped on gizzard myosin by forming the 10 S folded conformation of the protein in the presence of [3H]Bz2ATP and Mg2+. Irradiation of 6 S myosin containing orthovanadate trapped [3H] Bz2ADP or 10 S trapped [3H]Bz2ADP.Pi gave 32 and 30% covalent incorporation, respectively. The 50-kDa and precursor 68-kDa tryptic peptides of the subfragment-1 heavy chain derived from both forms of myosin were found to contain essentially all of the covalently attached [3H]Bz2ADP. Parallel experiments with untrapped [3H]Bz2ADP showed extensive nonspecific labeling of all of the major tryptic peptides and the light chains. Eight labeled peptides, isolated from 6 and 10 S photolabeled myosin, contained the sequence G319-H-V-P-I-X-A-Q326, where X corresponds to labeled proline 324. [14C]Bz2ADP was previously shown to label serine 324 in skeletal subfragment-1 (Mahmood, R., Elzinga, M., and Yount, R. G. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 3989-3995), which corresponds to alanine 325 in the gizzard sequence. Thus, this region of the 50-kDa tryptic fragment, near the nucleotide binding site, in both skeletal and smooth muscle myosins, must fold in essentially the same manner.  相似文献   

4.
1. Phenylglyoxal reacts rapidly with isolated myosin heads (subfragment 1) and induces two successive and distinguishable effects on their enzymic properties: first, a twofold activation of the Ca2+ and Mg2+-dependent ATPases with no effect onthe K+-ATPase followed by inhibition of the K+, Ca2+ and actin-activated Mg2+-ATPases. A specific protein-reagent reagent complex is formed during the second phase of the modification reaction (Ki approximately 5 x 10(-3) M). 2. ADP and ATP with or without cations provide efficient protection only against the loss of ATPase activities, suggesting that the second inhibitory process is occurring at or close to the active site. 3. On the basis of [14C]phenylglyoxal-labelling experiments and the composition of modified subfragment-1 derivatives, it is demonstrated that the sequential modification of two reactive arginyl residues is responsible for the observed activation-inhibition phenomena. Blocking of the first reactive residue produces a shift in the pH/activity curves related to the Ca2+ and Mg2+-dependent ATPases with an apparent activation effect. Modification of the second guanidino group does not destroy the affinity of the protein for the nucleotide substrates but does alter the nucleotide binding site as reflected in the inability of Mg2+. ATP to dissociate the modified subfragment-1--actin complex. It is concluded that electrostatic interactions between this positively charged group and the negatively charged ATP and ADP molecules may be critical for the hydrolytic efficiency of myosin heads. 4. After dissociation and separation of the polypeptide constituents of the protein in acetic acid medium, both labelled sites are found to reside in the heavy chain.  相似文献   

5.
Comprehensive binding studies using direct and indirect methods yield stoichiometry and affinities for the binding of Mg X ADP and uncomplexed ADP to the active site of myosin subfragment-1. Additionally, the binding parameters for Mg2+ in the ternary complex protein X Mg X ADP are presented for the first time. The indirect method makes use of reactivity changes of the critical thiol-1 and thiol-2 groups, which occur upon the binding of the ligand at the active site. The affinity constants derived by this method are corroborated by two independent direct methods, equilibrium dialysis and centrifugation transport. For Mg2+, ADP and Mg X ADP just one mole of ligand binds/mole subfragment-1. The affinity of Mg X ADP at low ionic strength is 2.1 X 10(6) M-1 and only five-times lower in the absence of Mg2+. In the ternary complex Mg2+ has a low affinity of 4.1 X 10(4) M-1. At high ionic strength the uncomplexed ADP binds with a 43-times-lower affinity than Mg X ADP, whose affinity is 6.9 X 10(5) M-1. In this case Mg2+ interacts in the ternary complex with the higher affinity of 3.2 X 10(5) M-1, implying that at high salt concentration it plays a more prominent role in anchoring ADP at the active site.  相似文献   

6.
Kinetics of the nucleotide binding to the strong (S) and weak (W) nucleotide-binding site of the Escherichia coli PriA helicase have been studied using the fluorescence stopped-flow technique. Experiments were performed with TNP-ADP and TNP-ATP analogues. Binding of the ADP analogue to the strong binding site is a four-step sequential reaction: (PriA)S + D (k1)<-->(k(-1)) + (S)1 (k2)<-->(k(-2)) (S)2 (k3)<-->(k(-3)) (S)3 (k4)<-->(k(-4)) (S)4. Association of TNP-ATP proceeds through an analogous three-step mechanism. The first two steps and intermediates are similar for both cofactors. However, the (S)3 intermediate is dramatically different for ADP and ATP analogues. Its emission is close to the emission of the free TNP-ADP, while it is by a factor of approximately 16 larger than the free TNP-ATP fluorescence. Thus, only the ADP analogue passes through an intermediate where it leaves the hydrophobic cleft of the site. This behavior corroborates with the fact that ADP leaves the ATPase site without undergoing a chemical change. The fast bimolecular step and the sequential mechanism indicate that the site is easily accessible to the cofactor, and it does not undergo an adjustment prior to binding. The subsequent step is also fast and stabilizes the complex. Magnesium profoundly affects the population of intermediates. The data indicate that the dominant (S)2 species is a part of the ATP catalytic cycle. ADP analogue binding to the weak nucleotide-binding site proceeds in a simpler two-step mechanism: (PriA)W + D (k1)<-->(k(-1)) (W)1 (k2)<-->(k(-2)) (W)2 with (W)1 being a dominant intermediate both in the presence and in the absence of Mg2+. The results indicate that the weak site is an allosteric control site in the functioning of the PriA helicase.  相似文献   

7.
Adenine nucleotide binding sites on the coupling factor ATPase of thermophilic bacterium PS3 (TF1) were investigated by UV spectroscopy and by equilibrium dialysis. When ADP was mixed with TF1 in the presence and in the absence of Mg2+, an UV absorbance change was induced (t1/2 approximately 1 min) with a peak at about 278 nm and a trough at about 250 nm. Similar spectral changes were induced by ADP with the isolated beta subunits in the presence and in the absence of Mg2+, and with the isolated alpha subunits in the presence of Mg2+ although the magnitudes of the changes were different. From equilibrium dialysis measurement we identified two classes of nucleotide binding sites in TF1 in the presence of Mg2+, three high-affinity sites (Kd = 61 nM) and three low-affinity sites (Kd = 87 microM). In the absence of Mg2+, TF1 has one high-affinity site (Kd less than 10 nM) and five low-affinity sites (Kd = 100 microM). Moreover, we found a single Mg2+-dependent ADP binding site on the isolated alpha subunit and a single Mg2+-independent ADP binding site on the isolated beta subunit. From the above observations, we concluded that the three Mg2+-dependent high-affinity sites for ADP are located on the alpha subunit in TF1 and that the single high-affinity site is located on one of the beta subunits in TF1 in the absence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

8.
Four tight nucleotide binding sites of chloroplast coupling factor 1.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have examined the properties of the four tight nucleotide binding sites of reductively activated chloroplast coupling factor 1. Tight sites are here defined as those which retain bound nucleotides after passage of the chloroplast coupling factor 1 through Sephadex gel filtration centrifuge columns. Two of the sites, here called sites 4 and 5, have not been characterized in detail before. Site 4 has properties similar to those of site 1. It binds to ADP, ATP, and adenylyl-beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) tightly in the presence or absence of Mg2+. Bound ADP exchanges rapidly with medium ADP, but rapid exchange with ATP or AMP-PNP requires Mg2+. Site 4 may slowly hydrolyze bound ATP in the absence of medium nucleotides. Site 5 has properties similar to those of site 2. Tight binding of ATP and AMP-PNP requires Mg2+, but Mg29+)-ADP is not tightly bound. Site 5 does not hydrolyze bound ATP in the absence of medium nucleotides. Complete filling of all four tight nucleotide binding sites requires about one millimolar nucleotide, suggesting that low affinity binding sites are converted to tight binding via a nucleotide binding-induced conformational change.  相似文献   

9.
Mg2+ is known to be a potent inhibitor of F1 ATPases from various sources. Such inhibition requires the presence of a tightly bound ADP at a catalytic site. Results with the spinach chloroplast F1 ATPase (CF1) show that the time delays of up to 1 min or more in the induction or the relief of the inhibition are best explained by a slow binding and slow release of Mg2+ rather than by slow enzyme conformational changes. CF1 is known to have multiple Mg2+ binding sites with Kd values in the micromolar range. The inhibitory Mg2+ and ADP can bind independently to CF1. When Mg2+ and ATP are added to the uninhibited enzyme, a relatively fast rate of hydrolysis attained soon after the addition is followed by a much slower steady-state rate. The inhibited steady-state rate results from a slowly attained equilibrium of binding of medium Mg2+. The Kd for the binding of the inhibitory Mg2+ is in the range of 1-8 microM, in the presence or absence of added ATP, as based on the extent of rate inhibition induced by Mg2+. Assessments from 18O exchange experiments show that the binding of Mg2+ is accompanied by a relatively rapid change to an enzyme form that is incapable of hydrolyzing MgATP. When ATP is added to the Mg2+- and ADP-inhibited enzyme, the resulting reactivation can be explained by MgATP binding to an alternate catalytic site which results in a displacement of the tightly bound ADP after a slow release of Mg2+. Both an increase in temperature (to 50 degrees C) and the presence of activating anions such as bicarbonate or sulfite reduce the extent of the Mg2+ inhibition markedly. The activating anions may bind to CF1 in place of Pi near the ADP. Whether the inhibitory Mg2+ binds at catalytic or noncatalytic nucleotide binding sites or at another location is not known. The Mg2(+)- and ADP-induced inhibition appears to be a general property of F1 ATPases, which show considerable differences in affinity for ADP, Mg2+, and Pi. These differences may reflect physiological control functions.  相似文献   

10.
Two adenine nucleotide binding sites of chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) were shown previously to switch their properties after exposure of the enzyme to Mg2(+)-ATP or Ca2(+)-ATP (Shapiro, A. B., and McCarty, R. E. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14160-14165). The change in binding properties was monitored by fluorescence resonance energy transfer between Lucifer Yellow vinyl sulfone covalently bound to one alpha subunit and trinitrophenyl-ATP (TNP-ATP) tightly bound to nucleotide binding site 1. When the nucleotide binding properties of sites 1 and 3 switch during catalysis, site 3, which is nearer Lucifer Yellow than site 1, switches its nucleotide binding properties with site 1, allowing TNP-ATP to become tightly bound near Lucifer Yellow. The smaller separation allows energy transfer to occur, resulting in decreased Lucifer Yellow fluorescence. In this paper, we show that adenylyl-beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) bound to CF1 and caused nucleotide binding sites 1 and 3 to switch properties, but was not hydrolyzed. Using AMP-PNP, we also found that relaxation of the properties of the sites to the precatalysis state after removal of substrate occurred in the absence of hydrolysis of the last bound nucleotide. When Mg2+ was omitted during exposure of CF1 to ATP, there was very little hydrolysis or nucleotide site switching. When Mg2+ was added to a very low concentration which was more than stoichiometric with CF1, however, site switching occurred at its maximal level with virtually no increase in ATP hydrolysis. These results support a model in which binding of substrate Mg2(+)-ATP, not hydrolysis, causes the putative catalytic sites to switch properties, in agreement with the alternating site catalytic cooperativity hypothesis (Boyer, P. D. (1989) FASEB J. 3, 2164-2178). TNP-ATP, the fluorescence acceptor, did not cause nucleotide site switching when incubated with CF1 in the presence of EDTA to eliminate free Mg2+. Two possible additional nucleotide binding sites were detected, in addition to the three well characterized sites. At least one of these sites was close to the Lucifer Yellow site, judging by the amount of energy transfer caused by partial occupancy with TNP-ATP.  相似文献   

11.
A myosin II is thought to be the driving force of the fast cytoplasmic streaming in the plasmodium of Physarum polycephalum. This regulated myosin, unique among conventional myosins, is inhibited by direct Ca2+ binding. Here we report that Ca2+ binds to the first EF-hand of the essential light chain (ELC) subunit of Physarum myosin. Flow dialysis experiments of wild-type and mutant light chains and the regulatory domain revealed a single binding site that shows moderate specificity for Ca2+. The regulatory light chain, in contrast to regulatory light chains of higher eukaryotes, is unable to bind divalent cations. Although the Ca2+-binding loop of ELC has a canonical sequence, replacement of glutamic acid to alanine in the -z coordinating position only slightly decreased the Ca2+ affinity of the site, suggesting that the Ca2+ coordination is different from classical EF-hands; namely, the specific "closed-to-open" conformational transition does not occur in the ELC in response to Ca2+. Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent conformational changes in the microenvironment of the binding site were detected by fluorescence experiments. Transient kinetic experiments showed that the displacement of Mg2+ by Ca2+ is faster than the change in direction of cytoplasmic streaming; therefore, we conclude that Ca2+ inhibition could operate in physiological conditions. By comparing the Physarum Ca2+ site with the well studied Ca2+ switch of scallop myosin, we surmise that despite the opposite effect of Ca2+ binding on the motor activity, the two conventional myosins could have a common structural basis for Ca2+ regulation.  相似文献   

12.
The actin-dependent ATPase activity of myosin is retained in the separated heads (S1) which contain the NH2-terminal 95-kDa heavy chain fragment and one or two light chains. The S1 heavy chain can be degraded further by limited trypsin treatment into characteristic 25-, 50-, and 20-kDa peptides, in this order from the NH2-terminal end. The 20-kDa peptide contains an actin-binding site and SH1 and SH2, two thiols whose modification dramatically affects ATPase activity. By treating myosin filaments with trypsin at 4 degrees C in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2, we have now obtained preferential cleavage at the 50-20-kDa heavy chain site without any cleavage at the head-rod junction and hinge region in the rod. Incubation of these trypsinized filaments at 37 degrees C in the presence of MgATP released a new S1 fraction which lacked the COOH-terminal 20-kDa heavy chain peptide region. This fraction, termed S1'(75K), has more than 50% of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of S1 and the characteristic Ca2+-ATPase and K+-EDTA ATPase activities of myosin. These results show that SH1 and SH2 are not essential for ATPase activity and that binding of actin to the 20-kDa region is not essential for the enhancement of the Mg2+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of divalent cations and nucleotide to bovine brain glutamine synthetase and their effects on the activity of the enzyme were investigated. In ADP-supported gamma-glutamyl transfer at pH 7.2, kinetic analyses of saturation functions gave [S]0.5 values of approximately 1 microM for Mn2+, approximately 2 mM for Mg2+, 19 nM for ADP.Mn, and 7.2 microM for ADP.Mg. The method of continuous variation applied to the Mn2+-supported reaction indicated that all subunits of the purified enzyme express activity when 1.0 equiv of ADP is bound per subunit. Measurements of equilibrium binding of Mn2+ to the enzyme in the absence and presence of ADP were consistent with each subunit binding free Mn2+ (KA approximately equal to 1.5 X 10(5) M-1) before binding the Mn.ADP complex (KA' approximately equal to 1.1 X 10(6) M-1). The binding of the first Mn2+ or Mg2+ to each subunit produces structural perturbations in the octameric enzyme, as evidenced by UV spectral and tryptophanyl residue fluorescence changes. The enzyme, therefore, has one structural site per subunit for Mn2+ or Mg2+ and a second site per subunit for the metal ion-nucleotide complex, both of which must be filled for activity expression. Chloride binding (KA' approximately equal to 10(4) M-1) to the enzyme was found to have a specific effect on the protein conformation, producing a substantial (30%) quench of tryptophanyl fluorescence and increasing the affinity of the enzyme 2-4-fold for Mg2+ or Mn2+. Arsenate, which activates the gamma-glutamyl transfer activity by binding to an allosteric site, and L-glutamate also cause conformational changes similar to those produced by Cl- binding. Anion binding to allosteric sites and divalent metal ion binding at active sites both produce tryptophanyl residue exposure and tyrosyl residue burial without changing the quaternary enzyme structure.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of Mg2+ ion to ATP, ADP, AMP, 2,3-bisphosphyoglycerate (DPG), and hemoglobin has been studied by 25Mg NMR spectroscopy at 9.4 T. Addition of any of these ligands to a solution of 2 mM 25MgCl2 at pH 7.2 caused a progressive increase in linewidth, with no discernible chemical shift. ATP and ADP, which form tight 1:1 complexes with Mg2+, did not cause maximal broadening until present in several-fold excess, implying that bis(nucleotide) complexes also form. The studies showed progressively weaker Mg2+ binding to ATP, ADP, DPG, and AMP, consistent with published binding constants. Hemoglobin cause fairly little broadening, consistent with its known weak affinity for Mg2+. Competition studies determined ATP affinities for Ca2+ and H+ that were also in good agreement with published values. 25Mg NMR spectra of 2 mM bound 25Mg2+ were obtained with good signal to noise in less than 1 hr. The technique may now be a practical means for studying the binding of Mg2+ within erythrocytes and other cells.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of Mg2+ X adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Mg2+ X AMP-PNP) to rabbit skeletal myofibrils has been measured in aqueous solution and in 50% ethylene glycol in the presence and absence of Ca2+. In water, the observed binding was weak with less than half the calculated myosin active sites filled even at 1 mM Mg2+ X AMP-PNP. In 50% ethylene glycol, the binding is at least 100-fold tighter and extrapolates to the expected number of binding sites. This is contrasted to the small change seen for Mg2+ X ADP binding between the same sets of conditions. This difference between Mg2+ X AMP-PNP and Mg2+ X ADP is attributed to the strong coupling of Mg2+ X AMP-PNP binding to dissociation of myosin cross-bridges. The Ca2+ sensitivity of Mg2+ X AMP-PNP binding in 50% ethylene glycol is taken as further evidence of the thermodynamic coupling of Mg2+ X AMP-PNP binding to cross-bridge dissociation. In addition, the binding of Mg2+ X AMP-PNP in 50% ethylene glycol is biphasic while Mg2+ X ADP binding under the same conditions is not. The biphasic Mg2+ X AMP-PNP binding could be caused by either the presence of two or more classes of cross-bridges or by negative cooperativity, but the presence of only a single class of Mg2+ X ADP-binding sites implies that if multiple classes of sites are involved, they do not simply differ in steric hindrance or accessibility of the binding site as a whole. The importance of using purified AMP-PNP in the study of actomyosin X AMP-PNP complexes is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Separation of heavy meromyosin subfragment-1 treated with N-ethyl maleimide (MalNEt) into native -SH1- and -(SH1, SH2)-blocked protein populations could be achieved by affinity chromatography on agarose-ATP columns in the presence of Mg2+ or Ca2+. Covalent bridging of the two -SH groups by p-phenylenedimaleimide gave a product which has the same affinity of binding to ATP columns as the doubly blocked MalNEt preparation. Treatment with p-phenylenedimaleimide abolished binding to immobilized F-actin columns, whereas modifications by MalNEt did not affect adsorption by this chromatographic medium. Affinity chromatography on immobilized nucleotide and actin columns is suggested as an analytical tool in the study of the involvement of thiol groups in the myosin active site and its conformation.  相似文献   

17.
Ca2+ binding to pig cardiac myosin, subfragment-1 (S-1), and g2 light chain were investigated by the equilibrium dialysis method. Two different S-1s, one of which can bind Ca2+ and another which cannot, were prepared. In order to calculate the free Ca2+ concentrations adequately, the amounts of Ca2+ included in various chemicals and proteins were measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy. Ca2+ contamination was greatest in KCl among the chemicals tested. In addition, the Ca2+ strongly bound to myosin and S-1 was released in the presence of Mg2+. When Mg2+ was not added, the Ca2+-binding constant of myosin was 4 x 10(5) M-1 and the maximum binding number was 1.8 mol per mol of myosin. Cooperativity between the 2 Ca2+ bindings could not be demonstrated. Mg2+ strongly inhibited the Ca2+ binding: at a free Ca2+ concentration of 1 x 10(-5) M, 1.3 mol Ca2+ was bound to myosin in the absence of Mg2+, but 0.6 and 0.2 mol were bound in the presence of 0.3 and 4.5 mM Mg2+, respectively. The Ca2+-binding constant of S-1, which contained a 15,000 dalton component, was 8.6 x 10(5) M-1, and the maximum binding number was 0.7 mol per mol of S-1. The 15,000 dalton component could be exchanged with extraneous g2. S-1 which lacked the 15,000 component could not bind Ca2+ at free Ca2+ concentrations less than 0.1 mM. The Ca2+ binding to free g2 light chain was about 100 times weaker than the binding to myosin, as indicated previously for skeletal myosin (Okamoto, Y. & Yagi, K. (1976) J. Biochem. 80, 111--120). The Ca2+-binding constant was obtained as 4.1 x 10(3) M-1 in the absence of added Mg2+. Phosphorylation of g2 light chain did not affect the Ca2+ binding to the free g2 light chain or to myosin. Ca2+ binding to cardiac native tropomyosin was also measured.  相似文献   

18.
The binding and conformational properties of the divalent cation site required for H+,K(+)-ATPase catalysis have been explored by using Ca2+ as a substitute for Mg2+. 45Ca2+ binding was measured with either a filtration assay or by passage over Dowex cation exchange columns on ice. In the absence of ATP, Ca2+ was bound in a saturating fashion with a stoichiometry of 0.9 mol of Ca2+ per active site and an apparent Kd for free Ca2+ of 332 +/- 39 microM. At ATP concentrations sufficient for maximal phosphorylation (10 microM), 1.2 mol of Ca2+ was bound per active site with an apparent Kd for free Ca2+ of 110 +/- 22 microM. At ATP concentrations greater than or equal to 100 microM, 2.2 mol of Ca2+ were bound per active site, suggesting that an additional mole of Ca2+ bound in association with low affinity nucleotide binding. At concentrations sufficient for maximal phosphorylation by ATP (less than or equal to 10 microM), APD, ADP + Pi, beta,gamma-methylene-ATP, CTP, and GTP were unable to substitute for ATP. Active site ligands such as acetyl phosphate, phosphate, and p-nitrophenyl phosphate were also ineffective at increasing the Ca2+ affinity. However, vanadate, a transition state analog of the phosphoenzyme, gave a binding capacity of 1.0 mol/active site and the apparent Kd for free Ca2+ was less than or equal to 18 microM. Mg2+ displaced bound Ca2+ in the absence and presence of ATP but Ca2+ was bound about 10-20 times more tightly than Mg2+. The free Mg2+ affinity, like Ca2+, increased in the presence of ATP. Monovalent cations had no effect on Ca2+ binding in the absence of ATP but dit reduce Ca2+ binding in the presence of ATP (K+ = Rb+ = NH4 + greater than Na+ greater than Li+ greater than Cs+ greater than TMA+, where TMA is tetramethylammonium chloride) by reducing phosphorylation. These results indicate that the Ca2+ and Mg2+ bound more tightly to the phosphoenzyme conformation. Eosin fluorescence changes showed that both Ca2+ and Mg2+ stabilized E1 conformations (i.e. cytosolic conformations of the monovalent cation site(s)) (Ca.E1 and Mg.E1). Addition of the substrate acetyl phosphate to either Ca.E1 or Mg.E1 produced identical eosin fluorescence showing that Ca2+ and Mg2+ gave similar E2 (extracytosolic) conformations at the eosin (nucleotide) site. In the presence of acetyl phosphate and K+, the conformations with Ca2+ or Mg2+ were also similar. Comparison of the kinetics of the phosphoenzyme and Ca2+ binding showed that Ca2+ bound prior to phosphorylation and dissociated after dephosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The interactions between ADP, Mg2+, and azide that result in the inhibition of the chloroplast F1 ATPase (CF1) have been explored further. The binding of the inhibitory Mg2+ with low Kd is shown to occur only when tightly bound ADP is present at a catalytic site. Either the tightly bound ADP forms part of the Mg(2+)-binding site or it induces conformational changes creating the high-affinity site for inhibitory Mg2+. Kinetic studies show that CF1 forms two catalytically inactive complexes with Mg2+. The first complex results from Mg2+ binding with a Kd for Mg2+ dissociation of about 10-15 microM, followed by a slow conversion to a complex with a Kd of about 4 microM. The rate-limiting step of the CF1 inactivation by Mg2+ is the initial Mg2+ binding. When medium Mg2+ is chelated with EDTA, the two complexes dissociate with half-times of about 1 and 7 min, respectively. Azide enhances the extent of Mg(2+)-dependent inactivation by increasing the affinity of the enzyme for Mg2+ 3-4 times and prevents the reactivation of both complexes of CF1 with ADP and Mg2+. This results from decreasing the rate of Mg2+ release; neither the rate of Mg2+ binding to CF1 nor the rate of isomerization of the first inactive complex to the more stable form is affected by azide. This suggests that the tight-binding site for the inhibitory azide requires prior binding of both ADP and Mg2+.  相似文献   

20.
Two different classes of gizzard heavy meromyosins (HMMs) were prepared from phosphorylated myosin by chymotryptic digestion in the presence and absence of ATP and were compared with respect to their actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase reactions. One class of HMM, named HMM(+), had a cleavage at site 1 in the N terminal portion of the heavy chain and the other class of HMM, named HMM(-), had no cleavage at this site. Maximum turnover rate (Vmax) of the skeletal acto-gizzard HMM Mg2+-ATPase reaction was obviously different between HMM(+) and HMM(-). The Vmax value of HMM(+) was 2.5-fold larger than that of HMM(-). On the other hand, the apparent association constants (Ka) of skeletal muscle actin for both HMMs which were deduced from double reciprocal plots (v-1 versus [actin]-1) seemed to be identical. The difference in Vmax value was attributed to the cleavage at site 1 since a following chymotryptic cleavage of HMM(-) at site 1 caused a 2.5-fold increase in the Vmax value. That site 1 in the N terminal portion of the gizzard myosin heavy chain was the key locus for the actin-myosin interaction was shown in addition to our previous finding of the effects of cleavage at site 1 on the ATPase activity and nucleotide binding ability of gizzard HMM (Okamoto, Y. & Sekine, T. (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 833-843; 843-949).  相似文献   

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