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.
The kinetics of displacement of a fluorescent nucleotide, 2'(3')-O-[N[2-[[Cy3]amido]ethyl]carbamoyl]-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (Cy3-EDA-ATP), bound to rabbit soleus muscle myofibrils were studied using flash photolysis of caged ATP. Use of myofibrils from this slow twitch muscle allowed better resolution of the kinetics of nucleotide exchange than previous studies with psoas muscle myofibrils (, Biophys. J. 73:2033-2042). Soleus myofibrils in the presence of Cy3-EDA-nucleotides (Cy3-EDA-ATP or Cy3-EDA-ADP) showed selective fluorescence staining of the A-band. The K(m) for Cy3-EDA-ATP and the K(d) for Cy3-EDA-ADP binding to the myofibril A-band were 1.9 microM and 3.8 microM, respectively, indicating stronger binding of nucleotide to soleus cross-bridges compared to psoas cross-bridges (2.6 microM and 50 microM, respectively). After flash photolysis of caged ATP, the A-band fluorescence of the myofibril in the Cy3-EDA-ATP solution under isometric conditions decayed exponentially with a rate constant of 0.045 +/- 0.007 s(-1) (n = 32) at 10 degrees C, which was about seven times slower than that for psoas myofibrils. When a myofibril was allowed to shorten with a constant velocity, the nucleotide displacement rate constant increased from 0.066 s(-1) (isometric) to 0.14 s(-1) at 20 degrees C with increasing shortening velocity up to 0.1 myofibril length/s (V(max), the shortening velocity under no load was approximately 0. 2 myofibril lengths/s). The rate constant was not significantly affected by an isovelocity stretch of up to 0.1 myofibril lengths/s. These results suggest that the cross-bridge kinetics are not significantly affected at higher strain during lengthening but depend on the lower strain during shortening. These data also indicate that the interaction distance between a cross-bridge and the actin filament is at least 16 nm for a single cycle of the ATPase.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of temperature on the activation energies of mitochondrial enzymes of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was examined. Non-linear Arrhenius plots with discontinuities in the temperature range 14-19 degrees C and 19-22 degrees C were observed for the respiratory enzymes and mitochondrial ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) respectively. A straight-line Arrhenius plot was observed for the matrix enzyme, malate dehydrogenase. The activation energies of the enzymes associated with succinate oxidation, namely, succinate oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase and succinate-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, were in the range 60-85kJ/mol above the transition temperature and 90-160kJ/mol below the transition temperature. In contrast, the corresponding enzymes associated with NADH oxidation showed significantly lower activation energies, 20-35kJ/mol above and 40-85kJ/mol below the transition temperature. The discontinuities in the Arrhenius plots were still observed after sonication, treatment with non-ionic detergents or freezing and thawing of the mitochondrial membranes. Discontinuities for cytochrome c oxidase activity were only observed in freshly isolated mitochondria, and no distinct breaks were observed after storage at -20 degrees C. Mitochondrial ATPase activity still showed discontinuities after sonication and freezing and thawing, but a linear plot was observed after treatment with non-ionic detergents. The results indicate that the various enzymes of the respiratory chain are located in a similar lipid macroenvironment within the mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Isolated rat and mouse extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscles were studied under isometric and isotonic conditions at temperatures from approximately 8 degrees -38 degrees C. The rate constant for the exponential rise of tension during an isometric tetanus had a Q10 of approximately 2.5 for all muscles (corresponding to an enthalpy of activation, delta H = 66 kJ/mol, if the rate was determined by a single chemical reaction). The half-contraction time, contraction time, and maximum rate of rise for tension in an isometric twitch and the maximum shortening velocity in an isotonic contraction all had a similar temperature dependence (i.e., delta H approximately 66 kJ/mol). The Mg++ ATPase rates of myofibrils prepared from rat EDL and soleus muscles had a steeper temperature dependence (delta H = 130 kJ/mol), but absolute rates at 20 degrees C were lower than the rate of rise of tension. This suggests that the Mg++ ATPase cycle rate is not limiting for force generation. A substantial fraction of cross-bridges may exist in a resting state that converts to the force-producing state at a rate faster than required to complete the cycle and repopulate the resting state. The temperature dependence for the rate constant of the exponential decay of tension during an isometric twitch or short tetanus (and the half-fall time of a twitch) had a break point at approximately 20 degrees C, with apparent enthalpy values of delta H = 117 kJ/mol below 20 degrees C and delta H = 70 kJ/mol above 20 degrees C. The break point and the values of delta H at high and low temperatures agree closely with published values for the delta H of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca++ ATPase. Thus, the temperature dependence for the relaxation rate of a twitch or a short tetanus is consistent with that for the reabsorption rate of Ca++ into the SR.  相似文献   

4.
Steady state measurements of the ATP turnover rate of myosin crossbridges in relaxed living mammalian muscle or in in vitro systems are complicated by other more rapid ATPase activities. To surmount these problems we have developed a technique to measure the nucleotide turnover rate of fully relaxed myosin heads in myofibrils using a fluorescent analogue of ATP (mant-ATP). Rabbit myofibrils, relaxed in 1.6 mM ATP, were rapidly mixed with an equal volume of solution containing 80 microM mant-ATP and injected into a fluorimeter. As bound ADP is released, a fraction of the myosin active sites bind mant-ATP and fluorescence emission rises exponentially, defining a rate of nucleotide turnover of 0.03 +/- 0.001 s-1 at 25 degrees C (n = 17). This rate was approximately equal to one half that of purified myosin. The turnover rates for myosin and myofibrils increased between 5 degrees and 42 degrees C, reaching 0.16 +/- 0.04 s-1 and 0.06 +/- 0.005 s-1, respectively, at 39 degrees C, the body temperature of the rabbit. If the rate observed for purified myosin occurred in vivo, it would generate more heat than is observed for resting living muscle. When myosin is incorporated into the myofilament lattice, its ATPase activity is inhibited, providing at least a partial explanation for the low rate of heat production by living resting muscle.  相似文献   

5.
Shortening and ATPase rates were measured in Ca2+-activated myofibrils from frog fast muscles in unloaded conditions at 4 degrees C. ATPase rates were determined using the phosphate-binding protein method (free phosphate) and quench flow (total phosphate). Shortening rates at near zero load (V0) were estimated by quenching reaction mixtures 50 ms to 10 s old at pH 3.5 and measuring sarcomere lengths under the optical microscope. As with the rabbit psoas myofibrils (C. Lionne, F. Travers, and T. Barman, 1996, Biophys. J. 70:887-895), the ATPase progress curves had three phases: a transient Pi burst, a fast linear phase (kF), and a deceleration to a slow phase (kS). Evidence is given that kF is the ATPase rate of shortening myofibrils. V0 is in good agreement with mechanical measurements in myofibrils and fibers. Under the same conditions and at saturation in ATP, V0 and kF are 2.4 microm half-sarcomere(-1) s(-1) and 4.6 s(-1), and their Km values are 33 and 200 microM, respectively. These parameters are higher than found with rabbit psoas myofibrils. The myofibrillar kF is higher than the fiber ATPase rates obtained previously in frog fast muscles but considerably lower than obtained in skinned fibers by the phosphate-binding protein method (Z. H. He, R. K. Chillingworth, M. Brune, J. E. T. Corrie, D. R. Trentham, M. R. Webb, and M. R. Ferenczi, 1997, J. Physiol. 50:125-148). We show that, with frog as with rabbit myofibrillar ATPase, phosphate release is the rate-limiting step.  相似文献   

6.
The intensity of light scattered by chemically skinned rabbit psoas fibers in relaxed, rigor, and activated states was monitored at 90 degrees to the incident beam. In the relaxed state, scattering varied in proportion to the volume of muscle in the beam. Scattering increased to 2.3 times the resting value when rigor was induced by withdrawal of MgATP or when the myofibrils were activated by the caffeine-induced release of Ca from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The rigor-induced increase in scattering decreased monotonically when MgATP was reintroduced stepwise (0-100 microM). This decrease in scattering was accompanied by an increase in tension up to an optimum MgATP level of approximately 10 microM, and then tension decreased at higher concentrations (10-100 microM). The increase in scattering during both rigor and activation was dependent upon fiber length. At lengths when thick-thin filament overlap was near zero, the light signal due to rigor and activation fell to within 10% of the signal for the relaxed fiber at that length. The signal during rigor increased only minimally (approximately 10%) when stretch (approximately 1%) was applied. This increase in signal was small despite a measured 5- to 10-fold increase in tension and an estimated twofold increase in stiffness. Thus, the increased light scattering caused by rigor and activation depends on filament overlap and not tension, stiffness, or substrate binding.  相似文献   

7.
The early steps of the Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of relaxed rabbit psoas myofibrils were studied in a buffer of near-physiological ionic strength at 4 degrees C by the rapid flow quench technique. The initial ATP binding steps were studied by the ATP chase, and the cleavage and release of product steps by the Pi burst method. The data obtained were interpreted by [formula: see text] where M represents the myosin heads with or without actin interaction. This work is a continuation of our study on Ca(2+)-activated myofibrils [Houadjeto, M., Travers, F., & Barman, T. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 1564-1569]. Here the constants obtained with relaxed myofibrils were compared with those with activated myofibrils and myosin subfragment 1 (S1). We find that whereas Ca2+ increases 80X the release of products (k4), it has little effect upon the kinetics of the initial binding and cleavage steps. As with activated myofibrils and S1, the second-order binding constant for ATP (k2/K1) was about 1 microM-1 s-1 and the ATP was bound very tightly. With activated myofibrils, it was difficult to obtain an estimate for the koff for ATP(k-2) but it is much less than kcat. Here with relaxed myofibrils we estimate k-2 less than 8 x 10(-4) s-1, which is considerably smaller than kcat (0.019 s-1) and also previous estimates for this constant. The overall Kd for ATP to relaxed myofibrils is less than 8 x 10(-10) M. With S1 this Kd is about 10(-11) M.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
In permeabilized single fibers of fast (psoas) and slow (soleus) muscle from the rabbit, the effect of pH on isometric myofibrillar ATPase activity and force was studied at 15 degrees C, in the pH range 6.4-7.9. ATPase activity was measured photometrically by enzymatic coupling of the regeneration of ATP to the oxidation of NADH, present in the bathing solution. NADH absorbance at 340 nm was determined inside a measuring chamber. To measure ATP turnover in single soleus fibers accurately, a new measuring chamber (volume 4 microliters) was developed that produced a sensitivity approximately 8 times higher than the system previously used. Under control conditions (pH 7.3), the isometric force was 136 and 115 kN/m2 and the ATP turnover was 0.43 and 0.056 mmol per liter fiber volume per second in psoas and soleus fibers, respectively. Over the pH range studied, isometric force increased monotonically by a factor 1.7 for psoas and 1.2 for soleus fibers. In psoas the isometric ATPase activity remained constant, whereas in soleus it slightly decreased with increasing pH. The pH dependency of relative tension cost (isometric ATPase activity divided by force) was practically identical for psoas and soleus fibers. In both cases it decreased by about a factor 0.57 as pH increased from 6.4 to 7.9. The implications of these findings are discussed in terms of cross-bridge kinetics. For both fiber types, estimates of the reaction rates and the distribution of cross-bridges and of their pH dependencies were obtained. A remarkable similarity was found between fast- and slow-twitch fibers in the effects of pH on the reaction rate constants.  相似文献   

9.
Inorganic phosphate (Pi) release was determined by means of a fluorescent Pi-probe in single permeabilized rabbit soleus and psoas muscle fibers. Measurements of Pi release followed photoliberation of approximately 1.5 mM ATP by flash photolysis of NPE-caged ATP in the absence and presence of Ca2+ at 15 degrees C. In the absence of Ca2+, Pi release occurred with a slow rate of 11 +/- 3 microM . s-1 (n = 3) in soleus fibers and 23 +/- 1 microM . s-1 (n = 10) in psoas fibers. At saturating Ca2+ concentrations (pCa 4.5), photoliberation of ATP was followed by rapid force development. The initial rate of Pi release was 0.57 +/- 0.05 mM . s-1 in soleus (n = 13) and 4.7 +/- 0.2 mM . s-1 in psoas (n = 23), corresponding to a rate of Pi release per myosin head of 3.8 s-1 in soleus and 31.5 s-1 in psoas. Pi release declined at a rate of 0.48 s-1 in soleus and of 5.2 s-1 in psoas. Pi release in soleus was slightly faster in the presence of an ATP regenerating system but slower when 0.5 mM ADP was added. The reduction in the rate of Pi release results from an initial redistribution of cross-bridges over different states and a subsequent ADP-sensitive slowing of cross-bridge detachment.  相似文献   

10.
The activation of docosahexaenoic acid by rat brain microsomes was studied using an assay method based on the extraction of unreacted [1-14C]docosahexaenoic acid and the insolubility of [1-14C]docosahexaenoyl-CoA in heptane. This reaction showed a requirement for ATP, CoA, and MgCl2 and exhibited optimal activity at pH 8.0 in the presence of dithiothreitol and when incubated at 45 degrees C. The apparent Km values for ATP (185 microM), CoA (4.88 microM), MgCl2 (555 microM) and [1-14C]docosahexaenoic acid (26 microM) were determined. The presence of bovine serum albumin or Triton X-100 in the incubation medium caused a significant decrease in the Km and Vm values for [1-14C]docosahexaenoic acid. The enzyme was labile at 45 degrees C (t1/2:3.3 min) and 37 degrees C (t1/2:26.5 min) and lost 36% of its activity after freezing and thawing. The transition temperature (Tc) obtained from Arrhenius plot was 27 degrees C with the activation energies of 74 kJ/mol between 0 degrees C and 27 degrees C and 30 kJ/mol between 27 degrees C and 45 degrees C. [1-14C]Palmitic acid activation in rat brain and liver microsomes showed apparent Km values of 25 microM and 29 microM respectively, with V values of 13 and 46 nmol X min-1 X mg protein-1. The presence of Triton X-100 (0.05%) in the incubation medium enhanced the V value of the liver enzyme fourfold without affecting the Km value. Brain palmitoyl-CoA synthetase, on the other hand, showed a decreased Km value in the presence of Triton X-100 with unchanged V. The Tc obtained were 25 degrees C and 28 degrees C for brain and liver enzyme with an apparent activation energy of 109 and 24 kJ/mol below and above Tc for brain enzyme and 86 and 3.3 kJ/mol for liver enzyme. The similar results obtained for the activation of docosahexaenoate and palmitate in brain microsomes suggest the possible existence of a single long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase. The differences observed in the activation of palmitate between brain and liver microsomes may be due to organ differences. Fatty acid competition studies showed a greater inhibition of labeled docosahexaenoic and palmitic acid activation in the presence of unlabeled unsaturated fatty acids. The Ki values for unlabeled docosahexaenoate and arachidonate were 38 microM and 19 microM respectively for the activation of [1-14C]docosahexaenoate. In contrast, the competition of unlabeled saturated fatty acids for activation of labeled docosahexaenoate is much less than that for activation of labeled palmitate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Sheetz and Spudich (1983, Nature (Lond.), 303:31-35) showed that ATP- dependent movement of myosin along actin filaments can be measured in vitro using myosin-coated beads and oriented actin cables from Nitella. To establish this in vitro movement as a quantitative assay and to understand better the basis for the movement, we have defined the factors that affect the myosin-bead velocity. Beads coated with skeletal muscle myosin move at a rate of 2-6 micron/s, depending on the myosin preparation. This velocity is independent of myosin concentration on the bead surface for concentrations above a critical value (approximately 20 micrograms myosin/2.5 X 10(9) beads of 1 micron in diameter). Movement is optimal between pH 6.8 and 7.5, at KCl concentrations less than 70 mM, at ATP concentrations greater than 0.1 mM, and at Mg2+ concentrations between 2 and 6 mM. From the temperature dependence of bead velocity, we calculate activation energies of 90 kJ/mol below 22 degrees C and 40 kJ/mol above 22 degrees C. Different myosin species move at their own characteristic velocities, and these velocities are proportional to their actin-activated ATPase activities. Further, the velocities of beads coated with smooth or skeletal muscle myosin correlate well with the known in vivo rates of myosin movement along actin filaments in these muscles. This in vitro assay, therefore, provides a rapid, reproducible method for quantitating the ATP- dependent movement of myosin molecules on actin.  相似文献   

12.
The temperature- and solvent-induced denaturation of both the SCP2 wild-type and the mutated protein c71s were studied by CD measurements at 222 nm. The temperature-induced transition curves were deconvoluted according to a two-state mechanism resulting in a transition temperature of 70.5 degrees C and 59.9 degrees C for the wild-type and the c71s, respectively, with corresponding values of the van't Hoff enthalpies of 183 and 164 kJ/mol. Stability parameters characterizing the guanidine hydrochloride denaturation curves were also calculated on the basis of a two-state transition. The transitions of the wild-type occurs at 0.82 M GdnHCl and that of the c71s mutant at 0.55 M GdnHCl. These differences in the half denaturation concentration of GdnHCl reflect already the significant stability differences between the two proteins. A quantitative measure are the Gibbs energies DeltaG(0)(D)(buffer) at 25 degrees C of 15.5 kJ/mol for the wild-type and 8.0 kJ/mol for the mutant. We characterized also the alkyl chain binding properties of the two proteins by measuring the interaction parameters for the complex formation with 1-O-Decanyl-beta-D-glucoside using isothermal titration microcalorimetry. The dissociation constants, K(d), for wild-type SCP2 are 335 microM at 25 degrees C and 1.3 mM at 35 degrees C. The corresponding binding enthalpies, DeltaH(b), are -21. 5 kJ/mol at 25 degrees C and 72.2 kJ/mol at 35 degrees C. The parameters for the c71s mutant at 25 degrees C are K(d)=413 microM and DeltaH(b)=16.6 kJ/mol. These results suggest that both SCP2 wild-type and the c71s mutant bind the hydrophobic compound with moderate affinity.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of acute and long-term changes in temperature upon catalytic and calcium regulatory function of red (slow oxidative) and white (fast glycolytic) muscle from striped bass (Morone saxatilis) were determined. Acclimation to 5 degrees C or 25 degrees C had no significant effect on catalytic function (ATPase activity) or regulatory sensitivity (Ca++-activation) of myofibrils from either muscle type. Substantial differences between red and white muscle were found in the intrinsic thermal sensitivity of maximally-activated Mg++-Ca++ myofibrillar ATPase. Arrhenius plots of myofibrillar ATPase from white muscle show one significant breakpoint at 29 degrees C, with activation energies (Ea) of 2.3 and 23.4 kcal mole-1 at temperatures above and below this transition, respectively. Arrhenius plots of myofibrillar ATPase from red muscle show two transitions occurring at 22 and 9 degrees C, with Ea of 7.6 kcal mole-1 above 22 degrees C and 18.3 kcal mole-1 between 9 and 22 degrees C. Activation energies for myofibrils from red muscle increase substantially to approximately 107.3 kcal mole-1 below the 9 degrees C breakpoint. Differences in the intrinsic thermal sensitivity of red and white muscle catalytic function are apparently due to interaction of actomyosins and calcium regulatory proteins which are specific to each muscle type. The results suggest that capacity for sustained swimming in striped bass, which is powered exclusively by red muscle, will be severely impaired at cold temperature unless compensations occur above the level of contractile proteins.  相似文献   

14.
In previous papers we used estimates of the composition of frog muscle and calculations involving the likely fixed charge density in myofibrils to propose bathing solutions for skinned fibers, which best mimic the normal intracellular milieu of intact muscle fibers. We tested predictions of this calculation using measurements of the potential across the boundary of skinned frog muscle fibers bathed in this solution. The average potential was -3.1 mV, close to that predicted from a simple Donnan equilibrium. The contribution of ATP hydrolysis to a diffusion potential was probably small because addition of 1 mM vanadate to the solution decreased the fiber actomyosin ATPase rate (measured by high-performance liquid chromatography) by at least 73% but had little effect on the measured potential. Using these solutions, we obtained force-pCa curves from mechanically skinned fibers at three different temperatures, allowing the solution pH to change with temperature in the same fashion as the intracellular pH of intact fibers varies with temperature. The bath concentration of Ca2+ required for half-maximal activation of isometric force was 1.45 microM (22 degrees C, pH 7.18), 2.58 microM (16 degrees C, pH 7.25), and 3.36 microM (5 degrees C, pH 7.59). The [Ca2+] at the threshold of activation at 16 degrees C was approximately 1 microM, in good agreement with estimates of threshold [Ca2+] in intact frog muscle fibers.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of 2,3-butanedione 2-monoxime (BDM) on mechanical responses of glycerinated fibers and the ATPase activity of heavy meromyosin (HMM) and myofibrils have been studied using rabbit skeletal muscle. The mechanical responses and the ATPase activity were measured in similar conditions (ionic strength 0.06-0.2 M, 0.4-4 mM MgATP, 0-20 mM BDM, 2-20 degrees C and pH 7.0). BDM reversibly reduced the isometric tension, shortening speed, and instantaneous stiffness of the fibers. BDM also inhibited myofibrillar and HMM ATPase activities. The inhibitory effect on the relative ATPase activity of HMM was not influenced by the addition of actin or troponin-tropomyosin-actin. High temperature and low ionic strength weakened BDM's suppression of contraction of the fibers and the ATPase activity of contracting myofibrils, but not of the HMM, acto-HMM and relaxed myofibrillar ATPase activity. The size of the initial phosphate burst at 20 degrees C was independent of the concentration of BDM. These results suggest that the suppression of contraction of muscle fibers is due mainly to direct action of BDM on the myosin molecules.  相似文献   

16.
In order to examine the involvement of troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, in addition to well-known myosin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, in the contraction of molluscan striated muscle, myofibrils from Ezo-giant scallop striated muscle were desensitized to Ca(2+) by removing both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C by treatment with a strong divalent cation chelator, CDTA. The ATPase level in the desensitized myofibrils was about half the maximum level in intact myofibrils regardless of the Ca(2+)-concentration at 25 and 15 degrees C. In the absence of Ca(2+), the ATPase of the desensitized myofibrils was suppressed by myosin regulatory light chain but not affected by troponin C at either temperature. The ATPase was activated at higher Ca(2+)-concentrations by both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C, but the activating effects of these two proteins were affected differently by temperature. The activation of ATPase by myosin regulatory light chain was much greater than that by troponin C at 25 degrees C, whereas the activation by troponin C was much greater than that by myosin regulatory light chain at 15 degrees C. The maximum activation was only obtained in the presence of both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C at these temperatures. These findings strongly suggest that the contraction of scallop striated muscle is regulated through both myosin-linked and troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, and that the troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation is more significant at lower temperature.  相似文献   

17.
The water permeability of cuticles isolated from the leaves of 14 plant species was measured at temperatures from 10 degrees C to 55 degrees C at 5 K intervals. Permeances increased slightly with temperatures < or =35 degrees C and drastically in the higher temperature range. The data were analysed according to the Arrhenius formalism which led to distinct plots for the lower and higher temperature range, respectively. Activation energies of permeation for the lower temperature range were estimated to amount to 15.2-52.5 kJ mol(-1), at higher temperature activation energies ranged from 52.2-117.3 kJ mol(-1). This thermodynamics approach is used for further elucidating the pathway taken by water across the plant cuticle. Based on the results of this study it is hypothesized that the diffusion of water occurs along polysaccharide strands crossing the cuticle and that the transport properties of these polar pathways change with temperature.  相似文献   

18.
C Lionne  R Stehle  F Travers  T Barman 《Biochemistry》1999,38(26):8512-8520
We have exploited cryoenzymology, first, to probe the product release steps of myofibrillar ATPase under relaxing conditions and, second, to define the conditions for studying the contractile process in slow motion. Cryoenzymology implies perturbation by temperature and by the antifreeze added to allow for work at subzero temperatures. Here, we studied myofibrillar shortening and ATPases by the rapid quench flow method over a wide temperature range (-15 to 30 degrees C) in two antifreezes, 40% ethylene glycol and 20% methanol. The choice of solvent and temperature was dictated by the purpose of the experiment. Ethylene glycol (40%) is suitable for investigating the kinetics of the products release steps which is difficult in water. In this cryosolvent, the myofibrillar ATPase is not activated by Ca2+ nor is there shortening, except under special conditions, i.e., Ca2+ plus strong rigor bridges [Stehle, R., Lionne, C., Travers, F., and Barman, T. (1998) J. Muscl. Res. Cell Motil. 19, 381-392]. By the use of the glycol, we show that at low Ca2+ the kinetics of the ADP release are much faster with myofibrils than with S1. On the other hand, the kinetics of the Pi release were very similar for the two materials. Therefore, we suggest that, upon Ca2+ activation, only the Pi release kinetics are accelerated. In 20% methanol, in the presence of Ca2+, myofibrils shortened at temperatures above -2 degrees C but not below. At a given temperature above -2 degrees C, both the shortening and ATPase rates were reduced by the methanol. The temperature dependences of the myofibrillar ATPases (+/-Ca2+) converged with a decrease in temperature: at 20 degrees C, Ca2+ activated 30-fold, but at -15 degrees C, only about 5-fold. We suggest that studies in methanol may open the way for an investigation of muscle contraction in slow motion and, further, to obtain thermodynamic information on the internal forces involved in the shortening process.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetic and thermodynamic effects of aspirin and diclofenac on the activity of adenosine deaminase (ADA) were studied in 50 mM phosphate buffer pH = 7.5 at 27 and 37 degrees C, using UV-Vis spectrophotometry and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Aspirin exhibits competitive inhibition at 27 and 37 degrees C and the inhibition constants are 42.8 and 96.8 microM respectively, using spectrophotometry. Diclofenac shows competitive behavior at 27 degrees C and uncompetitive at 37 degrees C with inhibition constants of 56.4 and 30.0 microM, at respectively. The binding constant and enthalpy of binding, at 27 degrees C are 45 microM, - 64.5 kJ/mol and 61 microM, - 34.5 kJ/mol for aspirin and diclofenac. Thermodynamic data revealed that the binding process for these ADA inhibitors is enthalpy driven. QSAR studies by principal component analysis implemented in SPSS show that the large, polar, planar, and aromatic nucleoside and small, aromatic and polar non-nucleoside molecules have lower inhibition constants.  相似文献   

20.
Thermal inactivation and reactivation of pantothenate hydrolase were studied in whole cells of Pseudomonas fluorescens. The enzyme is susceptible to thermal inactivation in whole cells at 37-40 degrees C, and is reactivated when the temperature is lowered again. Chloramphenicol does not prevent reactivation. The activation energy of enzyme inactivation in vivo is about 540kJ/mol. This activation energy is 220kJ/mol in vitro, but it is increased to 550-630kJ/mol by several metabolites, such as succinate, glyoxylate and oxalate. Generally, good carbon sources, causing rapid growth, protect the enzyme from thermal inactivation in vivo, and enable reactivation to occur at a fast rate. The enzyme is also inactivated below 35 degrees C, showing an activation energy of about 35kJ/mol. Good carbon sources prevent this inactivation as well, and cause slight reactivation. Glycine, although not utilized for growth, protects the enzyme well from this inactivation but not from inactivation at 37-40 degrees C, and prevents reactivation totally. From the activation energies of inactivation and the effects of the various carbon sources, it appears possible that changes in the concentrations of intracellular metabolites may be responsible for the changes in inactivation and reactivation.  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