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1.
The effects of temperature, Mg2+, ATP, and actin on the conformation of the neck region of the myosin head were studied by limited proteolysis of heavy meromyosin (HMM) and subfragment 1 (S1) preparations obtained by papain digestion of myosin in the presence of Mg2+ (Mg-S1) or EDTA (EDTA-S1). The preparations were fluorescently labelled at the SH1 thiol group to enable identification of the COOH-terminal fragments of the head portion of the heavy chain where this group is located. The results indicate that the head-rod junctional region of the myosin heavy chain contains at least three different sites readily susceptible to trypsin at 25 degrees C if the light chain LC2 or its LC2' fragment are absent. The susceptibility of one of these sites dramatically decreases when the temperature is lowered to 0 degree C, indicating a temperature-dependent conformational transition in the head-rod junction. With the method used, this transition is detectable only in LC2/LC'2-deficient preparations since all three sites are protected, although to different extents, by LC2 and its LC'2 derivative. It is, however, most probable that the effect of the light chain is confined to steric hindrance of trypsin access and that the temperature-dependent structural transition in the head-rod junction can occur in the presence of intact LC2 as well and may contribute to the temperature sensitivity of force generation in muscle.  相似文献   

2.
Probing myosin head structure with monoclonal antibodies   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Monoclonal antibodies that react with defined regions of the heavy and light chains of chicken skeletal muscle myosin have been used to provide a correlation between the primary and the tertiary structures of the head. Electron microscopy of rotary shadowed antibody-myosin complexes shows that the sites for three epitopes in the 25,000 Mr tryptic fragment (25k) of subfragment-1, including one within 4000 Mr of the amino terminus of the myosin heavy chain, are clustered 145(+/- 20) A from the head-rod junction. An epitope in the 50,000 Mr fragment maps even further out on the head. These antibodies bind to the head in several orientations, suggesting that each of the heads can rotate can rotate 180 degrees about the head-rod junction. The epitopes are accessible on subfragment-1 bound to actin when they were probed with Fab fragments; therefore, none of these heavy chain sites is is on the contact surface between the head and actin. Two of the anti-25k antibodies affect the K+-EDTA-and Ca2+-ATPase activities of myosin in a manner that mimics the effect on activity of the modification of the reactive thiol, SH-1. These two antibodies also inhibit the actin-activated ATPase non-competitively with respect to actin. None of the other eight antibodies tested had any marked effect on activity. A monoclonal antibody that reacts with an epitope in the amino-terminal third of myosin light chain 2 maps close to the head-rod junction. A polyclonal antibody specific for the amino terminus of light chain 3 binds further up in the "neck region" of the head, indicating that these portions of the two classes of light chains are located at different sites.  相似文献   

3.
Localisation of light chain and actin binding sites on myosin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A gel overlay technique has been used to identify a region of the myosin S-1 heavy chain that binds myosin light chains (regulatory and essential) and actin. The 125I-labelled myosin light chains and actin bound to intact vertebrate skeletal or smooth muscle myosin, S-1 prepared from these myosins and the C-terminal tryptic fragments from them (i.e. the 20-kDa or 24-kDa fragments of skeletal muscle myosin chymotryptic or Mg2+/papain S-1 respectively). MgATP abolished actin binding to myosin and to S-1 but had no effect on binding to the C-terminal tryptic fragments of S-1. The light chains and actin appeared to bind to specific and distinct regions on the S-1 heavy chain, as there was no marked competition in gel overlay experiments in the presence of 50-100 molar excess of unlabelled competing protein. The skeletal muscle C-terminal 24-kDa fragment was isolated from a tryptic digest of Mg2+/papain S-1 by CM-cellulose chromatography, in the presence of 8 M urea. This fragment was characterised by retention of the specific label (1,5-I-AEDANS) on the SH1 thiol residue, by its amino acid composition, and by N-terminal and C-terminal sequence analyses. Electron microscopical examination of this S-1 C-terminal fragment revealed that: it had a strong tendency to form aggregates with itself, appearing as small 'segment-like' structures that formed larger aggregates, and it bound actin, apparently bundling and severing actin filaments. Further digestion of this 24-kDa fragment with Staphylococcus aureus V-8 protease produced a 10-12-kDa peptide, which retained the ability to bind light chains and actin in gel overlay experiments. This 10-12-kDa peptide was derived from the region between the SH1 thiol residue and the C-terminus of S-1. It was further shown that the C-terminal portion, but not the N-terminal portion, of the DTNB regulatory light chain bound this heavy chain region. Although at present nothing can be said about the three-dimensional arrangement of the binding sites for the two kinds of light chain (regulatory and essential) and actin in S-1, it appears that these sites are all located within a length of the S-1 heavy chain of about 100 amino acid residues.  相似文献   

4.
Recent studies with myosin heavy chain mutants in the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum and the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae indicate that the myosin heavy chain gene is not essential for cell survival under laboratory growth conditions. However, cells lacking a normal myosin heavy chain gene demonstrate substantial alterations in growth and cell division. In this study, we report that a disruption mutant in the rod portion of the yeast myosin heavy chain gene, MYO1, produces abnormal chitin distribution and cell wall organization at the mother-bud neck in a high proportion of dividing cells. It is suggested that this phenotype is the cause of the cell division defect and the osmotic sensitivity of yeast MYO1 mutants. In the absence of a normal MYO1 polypeptide, yeast cells alter their cell type specific budding pattern. It is concluded that an intact myosin heavy chain gene is required to maintain the cell type specific budding pattern and the correct localization and deposition of chitin and cell wall components during cell growth and division.  相似文献   

5.
Interchain disulfide crosslinks between the heavy-chain fragment in heavy meromyosin and myosin light chain 2, generated by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid (Nbs2), are formed under appropriate ionic conditions at neutral pH as revealed by liberation of the chromogenic 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid. The presence of the original or of a slightly digested light chain 2 reduces the rate of the reaction of heavy meromyosin with Nbs2-modified light chain 2 by 32 - 39%, if Ca2+ is present. Dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in absence of reducing agents shows that Nbs2-modified light chain 2 attaches to the heavy chain in the region of the 21-kDa fragment of heavy meromyosin, which contains the essential thiol groups and which has been located at the subfragment 1/subfragment 2 junction of myosin [Balint, M., Wolf, I., Tarcsafalvi, A., Gergely, J. and Sreter, F. A. (1978) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 190, 793-799]. Modification of thiol-1 groups with iodoacetamide as well as crosslinking the thiol-1 and thiol-2 groups by the bifunctional reagent p-N,N'-phenylenedimaleimide prior to incubation with Nbs2-modified light chain 2 has no substantial effect on the crosslinking reaction. This indicates that other thiol groups are involved in the binding of Nbs2-modified light chain 2 to the heavy chain. An examination of K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ and actin-activated Mg2+ ATPase activities of heavy meromyosin that had been crosslinked with Nbs2-modified light chain 2 shows only a slight change in comparison with intact heavy meromyosin, indicating that crosslinking had not altered significantly the hydrolytic site. Crosslinking of Nbs2-modified light chain 2 to light-chain-2-deficient heavy meromyosin restored the original light-chain-2-dependent Ca2+ sensitivity of the tryptic fragmentation of heavy meromyosin, suggesting that crosslinking takes place at the proper binding site for light 2.  相似文献   

6.
Acanthamoeba myosin II contains two heavy chains of Mr 185,000 and two pairs of light chains of Mr 17,500 and 17,000. We now report the purification of a globular proteolytic 103-kDa subfragment of myosin II which contained a 68-kDa NH2-terminal segment of the heavy chain and one pair of intact light chains. The myosin II head fragment expressed full Ca2+-ATPase activity but its actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity had a Vmax of only 0.07 s-1 compared to 1.9 s-1 (per head) for filaments of native unphosphorylated myosin II. The head fragment had a similar KATPase to that of filaments (5 versus 4 microM) and about 75% of the head fraction could bind to F-actin in the presence of ATP with a Kbinding of 5.6 microM. The Kbinding of the head fragment may be similar to that of individual heads in the native myosin II filaments although the experimentally determined apparent Kbinding for filaments is much lower, 0.3 microM. The head fragment was covalently cross-linked to F-actin in the absence of nucleotide using the zero length cross-linker 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide. The cross-linked actin-myosin head complex hydrolyzed MgATP at a rate equivalent to Vmax for the active dephosphorylated native myosin II. These data indicate that the isolated head fragment had intact catalytic and actin-binding domains but that it bound to F-actin in the presence of ATP in a relatively inactive conformation. When covalently cross-linked to F-actin the head fragment was apparently locked into a catalytically fully active conformation.  相似文献   

7.
Ten monoclonal antibodies (My1-10) against Dictyostelium discoideum myosin were prepared and characterized. Nine bound to the 210-kD heavy chain and one (My8) bound to the 18-kD light chain. They defined six topographically distinct antigenic sites of the heavy chain. Five binding sites (the My1, My5, My10 site, and the My2, My3, My4, and My9 sites) are located on the rod portion of the myosin molecule. The position of the sixth site (the My6 and My7 site) is less certain, but it appears to be near the junction of the globular heads and the rod. Three of the antibodies (My2, My3, and My6) bound to myosin filaments in solution and could be sedimented in stoichiometric amounts with the filamentous myosin. In contrast, My4, which recognized a site on the rod, inhibited the polymerization of monomeric myosin into filaments. A single antibody (My6) affected the actin-activated ATPase of myosin. The nature of the effect depended on the valency of the antibody and the myosin. Bivalent IgG and F(ab')2 fragments of My6 inhibited the actin-activated ATPase of filamentous myosin by 50% whereas univalent Fab' fragments increased the activity by 50%. The actin-activated ATPase activity of the soluble chymotryptic fragment of myosin was increased 80-90% by both F(ab')2 and Fab' of My6.  相似文献   

8.
We have produced and characterized monoclonal antibodies that label antigenic determinants distributed among three distinct, nonoverlapping peptide domains of the 200-kD heavy chain of avian smooth muscle myosin. Mice were immunized with a partially phosphorylated chymotryptic digest of adult turkey gizzard myosin. Hybridoma antibody specificities were determined by solid-phase indirect radioimmunoassay and immunoreplica techniques. Electron microscopy of rotary-shadowed samples was used to directly visualize the topography of individual [antibody.antigen] complexes. Antibody TGM-1 bound to a 50-kD peptide of subfragment-1 (S-1) previously found to be associated with actin binding and was localized by immunoelectron microscopy to the distal aspect of the myosin head. However, there was no antibody-dependent inhibition of the actin-activated heavy meromyosin ATPase, nor was antibody TGM-1 binding to actin-S-1 complexes inhibited. Antibody TGM-2 detected an epitope of the subfragment-2 (S-2) domain of heavy meromyosin but not the S-2 domain of intact myosin or rod, consistent with recognition of a site exposed by chymotryptic cleavage of the S-2:light meromyosin junction. Localization of TGM-2 to the carboxy-terminus of S-2 was substantiated by immunoelectron microscopy. Antibody TGM-3 recognized an epitope found in the light meromyosin portion of myosin. All three antibodies were specific for avian smooth muscle myosin. Of particular interest is that antibody TGM-1, unlike TGM-3, bound poorly to homogenates of 19-d embryonic smooth muscles. This indicates the expression of different myosin heavy chain epitopes during smooth muscle development.  相似文献   

9.
R Bertrand  J Derancourt  R Kassab 《FEBS letters》1989,246(1-2):171-176
The reaction of endoproteinase Arg-C on the skeletal myosin head heavy chain was investigated through characterization of peptides and amino acid sequence analysis. The protease splits exclusively the 50 kDa-20 kDa junction at the lysine cluster spanning residues 639-641 and does not affect any other protease-sensitive region of the entire myosin heavy chain. The sensitivity of the cleavage to actin and nucleotide binding makes this protease a very specific conformational probe of S-1. The nicked S-1 derivative, containing an intact NH2-terminal 75 kDa fragment, may serve as a tool for gaining further insights into the domain structure and function of the myosin head.  相似文献   

10.
The myosin SH2-50-kilodalton fragment cross-link: location and consequences   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Some of us recently described a new interthiol cross-link which occurs in the skeletal myosin subfragment 1-MgADP complex between the reactive sulfhydryl group "SH2" (Cys-697) and a thiol (named SH chi) of the 50-kilodalton (kDa) central domain of the heavy chain; this link leads to the entrapment of the nucleotide at the active site [Chaussepied, P., Mornet, D., & Kassab, R. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 2037-2041]. In the present study, we identify SH chi as Cys-540 of the 50-kDa fragment. The portion of the heavy chain including this residue and also extending to Cys-522 that is cross-linkable to the "SH1" thiol [Ue, K. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 1889-1894] is near the SH2-SH1 region. Furthermore, various spectral and enzymatic properties of the (Cys697-Cys540)-N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM)-cross-linked myosin chymotryptic subfragment 1 (S-1) were established and compared to those for the well-known (SH1-SH2)-pPDM-cross-linked S-1. The circular dichroism spectra of the new derivative were similar to those of native S-1 complexed to MgADP. At 15 mM ionic strength, (Cys697-Cys540)-S-1 binds very strongly to unregulated actin (Ka = 7 X 10(6) M-1), and the actin binding is very weakly affected by ionic strength. Joining actin with the (Cys697-Cys540)-S-1 heavy chain, using 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide, produces different species than does joining unmodified S-1 with actin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
To probe the molecular properties of the actin recognition site on the smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, the rigor complexes between skeletal F-actin and chicken gizzard myosin subfragments 1 (S1) were investigated by limited proteolysis and by chemical cross-linking with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethyl-amino)propyl]carbodiimide. Earlier, these approaches were used to analyze the actin site on the skeletal muscle myosin heads [Mornet, D., Bertrand, R., Pantel, P., Audemard, E., & Kassab, R. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 2110-2120; Labbé, J.P., Mornet, D., Roseau, G., & Kassab, R. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 6897-6902]. In contrast to the case of the skeletal S1, the cleavage with trypsin or papain of the sensitive COOH-terminal 50K-26K junction of the head heavy chain had no effect on the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase activity of the smooth S1. Moreover, actin binding had no significant influence on the proteolysis at this site whereas it abolished the scission of the skeletal S1 heavy chain. The COOH-terminal 26K segment of the smooth papain S1 heavy chain was converted by trypsin into a 25K peptide derivative, but it remained intact in the actin-S1 complex. A single actin monomer was cross-linked with the carbodiimide reagent to the intact 97K heavy chain of the smooth papain S1. Experiments performed on the complexes between F-actin and the fragmented S1 indicated that the site of cross-linking resides within the COOH-terminal 25K fragment of the S1 heavy chain. Thus, for both the striated and smooth muscle myosins, this region appears to be in contact with F-actin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The S-1/S-2 swivel in myosin provides a flexible link between the head and tail portions of the molecule. We have investigated the properties of the swivel by employing limited proteolysis methods. Our results indicate that the binding of actin to heavy meromyosin inhibits both the chymotryptic and papain cleavage of the S-1/S-2 swivel, and that this effect is dependent on the presence of intact LC-2 light chains. Actin did not slow digestions carried out using heavy meromyosin previously treated with proteases to nick the LC-2 chains to 17,000 or 14,000 Mr fragments. Although the integrity of the LC-2 light chain appears to be required to transmit the effects of actin binding from the myosin head to the S-1/S-2 swivel, the binding of Ca2+ to the 17,000 Mr LC-2 fragment can still affect the chemical reactivity of SH1 thiol groups. Both chymotryptic and papain digestions of heavy meromyosin containing intact or fragmented LC-2 light chain show substantial temperature sensitivity between 5 degrees C and 35 degrees C. Calculated apparent activation energies for this process indicate that the S-1/S-2 swivel in myosin can undergo temperature-dependent structural changes independently of the state of the LC-2 light chain. Thus, both actin binding and temperature variations can induce structural transitions in the S-1/S-2 swivel.  相似文献   

13.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(6):2879-2886
Antibodies with epitopes near the heavy meromyosin/light meromyosin junction distinguish the folded from the extended conformational states of smooth muscle myosin. Antibody 10S.1 has 100-fold higher avidity for folded than for extended myosin, while antibody S2.2 binds preferentially to the extended state. The properties of these antibodies provide direct evidence that the conformation of the rod is different in the folded than the extended monomeric state, and suggest that this perturbation may extend into the subfragment 2 region of the rod. Two antihead antibodies with epitopes on the heavy chain map at or near the head/rod junction. Magnesium greatly enhances the binding of these antibodies to myosin, showing that the conformation of the heavy chain in the neck region changes upon divalent cation binding to the regulatory light chain. Myosin assembly is also altered by antibody binding. Antibodies that bind to the central region of the rod block disassembly of filaments upon MgATP addition. Antibodies with epitopes near the COOH terminus of the rod, in contrast, promote filament depolymerization, suggesting that this region of the tail is important for assembly. The monoclonal antibodies described here are therefore useful both for detecting and altering conformational states of smooth muscle myosin.  相似文献   

14.
The 1979 amino acid sequence of embryonic chicken gizzard smooth muscle myosin heavy chain (MHC) have been determined by cloning and sequencing its cDNA. Genomic Southern analysis and Northern analysis with the cDNA sequence show that gizzard MHC is encoded by a single-copy gene, and this gene is expressed in the gizzard and aorta. The encoded protein has a calculated Mr of 229 X 10(3), and can be divided into a long alpha-helical rod and a globular head. Only 32 to 33% of the amino acid residues in the rod and 48 to 49% in the head are conserved when compared with nematode or vertebrate sarcomeric MHC sequences. However, the seven residue hydrophobic periodicity, together with the 28 and 196 residue repeat of charge distribution previously described in nematode myosin rod, are all present in the gizzard myosin rod. Two of the trypsin-sensitive sites in gizzard light meromyosin have been mapped by partial peptide sequencing to 99 nm and 60 nm from the tip of the myosin tail, where these sites coincide with the two "hinges" for the 6 S/10 S transition. In the head sequence, several polypeptide segments, including the regions around the putative ATP-binding site and the reactive thiol groups, are highly conserved. These areas presumably reflect conserved structural elements important for the function of myosin. A multi-domain folding model of myosin head is proposed on the basis of the conserved sequences, information on the topography of myosin in the literature, and the predicted secondary structures. In this model, Mg2+ ATP is bound to a pocket between two opposing alpha/beta domains, while actin undergoes electrostatic interactions with lysine-rich surface loops on two other domains. The actin-myosin interactions are thought to be modulated through relative movements of the domains induced by the binding of ATP.  相似文献   

15.
The heavy chains and the 19-kDa and 20-kDa light chains of bovine brain myosin can by phosphorylated. To localise the site of heavy-chain phosphorylation, the myosin was initially subjected to digestion with chymotrypsin and papain under a variety of conditions and the fragments thus produced were identified. Irrespective of the ionic strength, i.e. whether the myosin was monomeric or filamentous, chymotryptic digestion produced two major fragments of 68 kDa and 140 kDa; the 140-kDa fragment was further digested by papain to yield a 120-kDa and a 23-kDa fragment. These fragments were characterised by (a) a gel overlay technique using 125I-labelled light chains, which showed that the 140-kDa and 23-kDa polypeptides contain the light-chain-binding sites; (b) using myosin photoaffinity labelled at the active site with [3H]UTP, which showed that the 68-kDa fragment contained the catalytic site, and (c) electron microscopy, using rotary shadowing and negative-staining techniques, which demonstrated that after chymotryptic digestion the myosin head remains attached to the tail whereas on papain digestion isolated heads and tails were observed. Thus the 120-kDa polypeptide derived from the 140-kDa fragment is the tail of the myosin, and the 68-kDa fragment containing the catalytic site and the 23-kDa fragment, with the light-chain-binding sites, form the head (S1) portion of the myosin. When [32P]-phosphorylated brain myosin was digested with chymotrypsin and papain it was shown that the heavy-chain phosphorylation site is located in a 5-kDa peptide at the C-terminal end of the heavy chain, i.e. the end of the myosin tail. Using hydrodynamic and electron microscopic techniques, no significant effect of either light-chain or heavy-chain phosphorylation on the stability of brain myosin filaments was observed, even in the presence of MgATP. Brain myosin filaments appear to be more stable than those of other non-muscle myosins. Light-chain phosphorylation did, however, have an effect on the conformation of brain myosin, for example in the presence of MgATP non-phosphorylated myosin molecules were induced to fold into a very compact folded state.  相似文献   

16.
Wagner W  Fodor E  Ginsburg A  Hammer JA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(38):11564-11577
The myosin Va light chain DYNLL2 has been proposed to function as an adaptor to link the myosin to certain cargo. Here, we mapped the binding site for DYNLL2 within the myosin Va heavy chain. Copurification and pull-down experiments showed that the heavy chain contains a single DYNLL2 binding site and that this site resides within a discontinuity in the myosin's central coiled-coil domain. Importantly, exon B, an alternatively spliced, three-amino acid exon, is a part of this binding site, and we show in the context of full-length myosin Va that this exon is required for DYNLL2-myosin Va interaction. We investigated the effect of DYNLL2 binding on the structure of a myosin Va heavy chain fragment that contains the DYNLL2 binding site and flanking sequence, only parts of which are strongly predicted to form a coiled coil. Circular dichroism measurements revealed a DYNLL2-induced change in the secondary structure of this dimeric myosin fragment that is consistent with an increase in alpha-helical coiled-coil content. Moreover, the binding of DYNLL2 considerably stabilizes this heavy chain fragment against thermal denaturation. Analytical ultracentrifugation yielded an apparent association constant of approximately 3 x 10(6) M(-1) for the interaction of DYNLL2 with the dimeric myosin fragment. Together, these data show that alternative splicing of the myosin Va heavy chain controls DYNLL2-myosin Va interaction and that DYNLL2 binding alters the structure of a portion of the myosin's coiled-coil domain. These results suggest that exon B could have a significant impact on the conformation and regulatory folding of native myosin Va, as well as on its interaction with certain cargos.  相似文献   

17.
Dictyostelium myosin was associated into dimers and small oligomers at very low ionic strength, filamentous at intermediate ionic strength, and monomeric in solution conditions of high ionic strength. These different associations were probed by fragmenting myosin with chymotrypsin, trypsin, or V-8 protease. All three proteases digested monomeric myosin giving rise to multiple fragments with a wide range of molecular weights. Filamentous myosin was not digested by the V-8 protease, was preferentially cleaved at a single site in the middle of the heavy chain by chymotrypsin, and was cleaved at several sites by trypsin. If the reaction was carried out in very low ionic strength, however, two of these proteases generated stable fragments of high molecular weight. Electron microscopic analysis of these stable fragments showed that tails were shorter than in intact myosin, indicating that the cleavage sites were in the rod portion of the molecule. Under the same conditions of enzymatic digestion, myosin that had been radio labeled in vivo with 32P was analyzed by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography. By comparing the state of phosphorylation and the size of the stable fragments, it was determined that the heavy chain phosphorylation site was located between 55 and 70 kD from the tip of the myosin tail, near a region where the tail displayed sharp bends.  相似文献   

18.
Actin-binding site of pig cardiac myosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An actin-binding site is also present in the tryptic 20 kDa peptide fragment of the subfragment-1 heavy chain of pig cardiac myosin. As previously reported for skeletal myosin (Katoh, T., Katoh, H., and Morita, F. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 6723-6727), the site was further narrowed down to the 10 kDa peptide containing the reactive SH1 and SH2 groups. Thus it appears that the actin-binding site around the two thiols found in skeletal myosin is common to different types of myosin.  相似文献   

19.
Myosin contains reactive lysine residues which are trinitrophenylated by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonate much faster than the rest of the lysines. Here we find the location of these residues in the primary and spatial structure of myosin with the help of an anti-trinitrophenyl antibody. This antibody was raised against trinitrophenyl hemocyanin in rabbits. It reacted with trinitrophenylated myosin, and with some of the tryptic fragments of trinitrophenylated myosin. By analyzing the reaction with Western blots, it was found that the antibody preferentially reacts with the 27 kDa N-terminal fragment of the myosin head, and more weakly with the light meromyosin region of the myosin rod. The 27 kDa fragment contains the most reactive lysine residue, while the intermediate lysine residue is located in the light meromyosin region. The locations of the epitopes of the antibody were visualized on electron microscope images of rotary-shadowed trinitrophenylated myosin-antibody complexes. The distances of the epitopes to the head-rod junction of myosin were measured as 13 and 113 nm for the epitope on the head (reactive lysine residue) and for that on the rod (intermediary reactive lysine residue), respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Chymotrypsin cleaves Dictyostelium myosin in half, splitting the heavy chain (210,000 daltons) into two fragments of 105,000 daltons each. One of the two major fragments is soluble at low ionic strength and has a native molecular weight of 130,000. As judged by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, this soluble fragment consists of the two intact myosin light chains of 18,000 and 16,000 daltons and a 105,000-dalton polypeptide derived from the myosin heavy chain. The soluble fragment retains actin-activated ATPase activity and the ability to bind to actin in an ATP-dissociable fashion. The maximal velocity of the actin- activated ATPase activity of the soluble fragment is 80% of that of uncleaved myosin, although its apparent Km for actin is 12-fold greater than that of myosin. In addition to the major soluble 105,000-dalton fragment discussed above, chymotryptic cleavage of the Dictyostelium myosin also generates fragments that are insoluble at low ionic strength. The major insoluble fragment is 105,000 daltons on an SDS polyacrylamide gel and forms thick filaments that are devoid of myosin heads. A less prevalent insoluble fragment has a molecular weight of 83,000 and is probably a subfragment of the insoluble 105,000-dalton fragment. The heavy chain of myosin is phosphorylated in vivo and the phosphorylation site has been localized to the insoluble fragments, which derive from the tail portion of the myosin molecule.  相似文献   

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