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1.
At pathophysiological concentrations of Ca2+, the heavy chain of dystrophic myosin was degraded by an endogenous protease. This was not the case for normal myosin. However, normal myosin was a substrate of Ca2+-activated neutral protease (CAF) from platelets. This indicated that the endogenous protease in preps of dystrophic myosin was CAF. The pathophysiological effect of heavy chain degradation was restricted to the actin site. Under Vmax conditions hydrolytic activities remained within the normal range, whereas the Kapp of actin for myosin increased 3-fold following extensive heavy chain degradation of dystrophic myosin. Removal of those heavy chain fragments which were soluble at low inoic strength restored Kapp to normal levels.  相似文献   

2.
Protein kinase C phosphorylates different sites on the 20,000-Da light chain of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) than did myosin light chain kinase (Nishikawa, M., Hidaka, H., and Adelstein, R. S. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14069-14072). Although protein kinase C incorporates 1 mol of phosphate into 1 mol of 20,000-Da light chain when either HMM or the whole myosin molecule is used as a substrate, it catalyzes the incorporation of up to 3 mol of phosphate/mol of 20,000-Da light chain when the isolated light chains are used as a substrate. Threonine is the major phosphoamino acid resulting from phosphorylation of HMM by protein kinase C. Prephosphorylation of HMM by protein kinase C decreases the rate of phosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase due to a 9-fold increase of the Km for prephosphorylated HMM compared to that of unphosphorylated HMM. Prephosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase also results in a decrease of the rate of phosphorylation by protein kinase C due to a 2-fold increase of the Km for HMM. Both prephosphorylations have little or no effect on the maximum rate of phosphorylation. The sequential phosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase and protein kinase C results in a decrease in actin-activated MgATPase activity due to a 7-fold increase of the Km for actin over that observed with phosphorylated HMM by myosin light chain kinase but has little effect on the maximum rate of the actin-activated MgATPase activity. The decrease of the actin-activated MgATPase activity correlates well with the extent of the additional phosphorylation of HMM by protein kinase C following initial phosphorylation by myosin light chain kinase.  相似文献   

3.
O Assulin  M M Werber  A Muhlrad 《FEBS letters》1986,197(1-2):328-334
Limited proteolysis has been used to study the influence of actin, in the absence or presence of regulatory proteins of the thin filament (tropomyosin and troponin), as well as that of the myofibrillar structure on the tryptic cleavage of the heavy meromyosin (HMM)/light meromyosin (LMM) hinge region in myosin heavy chain. Cleavage at the HMM/LMM hinge is almost absent in myofibrils, whereas this hinge is accessible to tryptic digestion in actomyosin, in native thin filaments attached to myosin and in myosin heavy chain alone. This observation indicates that it is the myofibrillar structure which profoundly affects the tryptic accessibility of this specific hinge region of myosin. This provides a good example of the manner by which a highly organized supramolecular structure might affect the chemical properties of a specific site in a macromolecule.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Phosphorylation of the 20,000 Mr light chain (L20) of gizzard myosin reversibly increased the mobility of myosin in pyrophosphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PP1 PAGE). Gizzard heavy meromyosin (HMM) with phosphorylated L20 also moved faster than that with unphosphorylated L20. This mobility increase of HMM is large enough to account for that of intact myosin. Scallop myosin, desensitized by removing its regulatory light chain, was combined with L20 and subjected to PPi PAGE. Hybrid myosin with the phosphorylated light chain moved faster than that with the unphosphorylated light chain. No such effect of light chain phosphorylation was observed with phosphorylatable light chain from breast or ventricular myosin. Thus, gizzard, but not breast or ventricular phosphorylatable light chain is furnished with the 'regulatory' property that is phosphorylation increases myosin mobility in PPi PAGE.  相似文献   

6.
P D Wagner 《Biochemistry》1984,23(25):5950-5956
A low-speed centrifugation assay has been used to examine the binding of myosin filaments to F-action and to regulated actin in the presence of MgATP. While the cross-linking of F-actin by myosin was Ca2+ insensitive, much less regulated actin was cross-linked by myosin in the absence of Ca2+ than in its presence. Removal of the 19000-dalton, phosphorylatable light chain from myosin resulted in the loss of this Ca2+ sensitivity. Readdition of this light chain partially restored the Ca2+-sensitive cross-linking of regulated actin by myosin. Urea gel electrophoresis has been used to distinguish that fraction of heavy meromyosin which contains intact phosphorylatable light chain from that which contains a 17000-dalton fragment of this light chain. In the absence of Ca2+, heavy meromyosin which contained digested light chain bound to regulated actin in MgATP about 10-fold more tightly than did heavy meromyosin which contained intact light chain. The regulated actin-activated ATPases of heavy meromyosin also showed that cleavage of this light chain causes a substantial increase in the affinity of heavy meromyosin for regulated actin in the absence of Ca2+. Thus, the binding of both myosin and heavy meromyosin to regulated actin is Ca2+ sensitive, and this sensitivity is dependent on the phosphorylatable light chain.  相似文献   

7.
The heavy chain of myosin from rabbit skeletal muscle can be cleaved at three sites by irradiation with near-ultraviolet light in the presence of 0.1-1.0 mM vanadate. The sigmoidal dependence upon vanadate concentration, with half-maximal rate occurring at about 0.5 mM vanadate and a sigmoidicity of 2.7, is consistent with the chromophore responsible for cleavage being oligomeric vanadate. Cleavage occurs at two sites located within the head region of the molecule, 23 kDa and 75 kDa from the NH2-terminus; these sites are cleaved equally well in heavy meromyosin and subfragment 1. In the presence of 1 mM vanadate, the half-times for cleavage of the 23-kDa and 75-kDa sites are about 15 and 10 min, respectively. The rate of cleavage at both these sites is retarded 2-3-fold by the presence of greater than 10 microM MgATP. The third photocleavage site is located about 5-10 kDa from the COOH terminus of the intact heavy chain, and cleaves equally well in the isolated rod and in light meromyosin. Cleavage at this site occurs with a half-time of 138 min, and its rate is unaffected by the presence of MgATP. The vanadate-mediated cleavage of the heavy chains is accompanied by characteristic changes in the myosin ATPase properties, with the Ca2+, Mg2+ and actin-activated Mg2+ ATPases becoming elevated, whereas the K+/EDTA ATPase becomes inactivated. The sites of photocleavage in the myosin heavy chain might be associated with sites of phosphate binding.  相似文献   

8.
The reaction of trypsin on the heavy chain of gizzard myosin and chymotryptic HMM was investigated under restricted fragmentation conditions. The three fragments of the head part with 29 kDa, 50 kDa and 26 kDa were isolated and identified. The 66 K heavy chain segment containing the S1-S2 junction was slowly but extensively degraded liberating a S1-like entity which lacked an intact COOH-terminal 26 kDa region; this isolated species displayed full intrinsic ATPase activities but little actin-binding ability. Tryptic HMM was also formed bearing a fragmented heavy chain and lacking the 20 kDa light chain. Its actin-activated ATPase was derepressed upon cleavage of the 66 kDa segment by papain. We propose that the integral 66 kDa heavy chain component is directly involved in the regulation of the gizzard actomyosin ATPase.  相似文献   

9.
T Chen  E Reisler 《Biochemistry》1984,23(11):2400-2407
Tryptic digestion of rabbit skeletal myofibrils under physiological ionic strength and pH conditions was used as a probe of cross-bridge interaction with actin in the presence of nucleotides and pyrophosphate. Under rigor conditions, digestion of myofibrils at 24 degrees C results in the formation of 25K, 110K [heavy meromyosin (HMM)], and light meromyosin (LMM) fragments as the main reaction products. Very little if any 50K peptide is generated in such digestions. In the presence of magnesium pyrophosphate, magnesium 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (MgAMPPNP), and MgATP, the main cleavage proceeds at two positions, 25K and 75K from the N-terminal portion of myosin, yielding the 25K, 50K, and 150K species. The relative amounts of the 50K, 110K, and 150K peptides and the rates of myosin heavy-chain digestion in the presence of pyrophosphate and AMPPNP indicate partial dissociation of myosin from actin. Direct centrifugation measurements of the binding of HMM and subfragment 1 (S-1) to actin in myofibrils confirm that cross-bridges partition between attached and detached states in the presence of these ligands. In the presence of MgADP, HMM and S-1 remain attached to actin at 24 degrees C. However, tryptic digestion of myofibrils containing MgADP is consistent with the existence of a mixed population of attached and detached cross-bridges, suggesting that only one head on each myosin molecule is attached to actin. As shown by tryptic digestion of myofibrils and the measurements of HMM and S-1 binding to actin, nucleotide- and pyrophosphate-induced dissociation of cross-bridges is more pronounced at 4 than at 24 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Li XD  Saito J  Ikebe R  Mabuchi K  Ikebe M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(9):2254-2260
Recent findings have suggested that the interaction between the two heads is critical for phosphorylation-dependent regulation of smooth muscle myosin. We hypothesized that the interaction between the two regulatory light chains on two heads of myosin dictates the regulation of myosin motor function. To evaluate this notion, we engineered and characterized smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM), which is composed of one entire HMM heavy chain and one motor domain truncated heavy chain containing the S2 rod and regulatory light chain (RLC) binding site, as well as the bound RLC (SMDHMM). SMDHMM was inactive for both actin-translocating activity and actin-activated ATPase activity in the dephosphorylated state, demonstrating that the interaction between the two RLC domains on the two heads and/or a motor domain and a RLC domain in a distinct head is sufficient for the inhibition of smooth muscle myosin motor activity. When phosphorylated, SMDHMM was activated for both actin-translocating activity and actin-activated ATPase activity; however, these activities were lower than those of double-headed HMM, implying partial release of inhibition by phosphorylation in SMDHMM and/or cooperativity between the two heads of smooth muscle myosin. The present results indicate that the RLC domain is critical for phosphorylation-dependent regulation of smooth muscle myosin motor activity. On the other hand, similar to double-headed HMM, SMDHMM showed both "folded" and "extended" conformations, and the ratio of those conformations is dependent on ionic strength, suggesting that the RLC domain is sufficient to regulate the conformational transition in myosin.  相似文献   

12.
M Ikebe  D J Hartshorne 《Biochemistry》1985,24(9):2380-2387
The proteolysis of gizzard myosin by Staphylococcus aureus protease produces both heavy meromyosin and subfragment 1 in which the 20 000-dalton light chains are intact, and conditions are suggested for the preparation of each. Cleavage of the myosin heavy chain to produce subfragment 1 is dependent on the myosin conformation. Proteolysis of myosin in the 10S conformation yields predominantly heavy meromyosin, and myosin in the 6S conformation yields mostly subfragment 1 and some heavy meromyosin. Two sites are influenced by myosin conformation, and these are located at approximately 68 000 and 94 000 daltons from the N-terminus of the myosin heavy chain. The latter site is thought to be located at the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 junction, and cleavage at this site results in the production of subfragment 1. The time courses of phosphorylation of both heavy meromyosin and subfragment 1 can be fit by a single exponential. The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of heavy meromyosin is markedly activated by phosphorylation of the 20 000-dalton light chains. From the actin dependence of Mg2+-ATPase activity the following values are obtained: for phosphorylated heavy meromyosin, Vmax approximately 5.6 s-1 and Ka (the apparent dissociation constant for actin) approximately 2 mg/mL; for dephosphorylated heavy meromyosin, Vmax approximately 0.2 s-1 and Ka approximately 7 mg/mL. The actin-activated ATPase activity of subfragment 1 is not influenced by phosphorylation, and Vmax and Ka for both the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms are 0.4 s-1 and 5 mg/mL, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
N D Vu  P D Wagner 《Biochemistry》1987,26(15):4847-4853
Limited proteolysis was used to identify regions on the heavy chains of calf thymus myosin which may be involved in ATP and actin binding. Assignments of the various proteolytic fragments to different parts of the myosin heavy chain were based on solubility, gel filtration, electron microscopy, and binding of 32P-labeled regulatory light chains. Chymotrypsin rapidly cleaved within the head of thymus myosin to give a 70,000-dalton N-terminal fragment and a 140,000-dalton C-terminal fragment. These two fragments did not dissociate under nondenaturing conditions. Cleavage within the myosin tail to give heavy meromyosin occurred more slowly. Cleavage at the site 70,000 daltons from the N-terminus of the heavy chain caused about a 30-fold decrease in the actin concentration required to achieve half-maximal stimulation of the magnesium-adenosinetriphosphatase (Mg-ATPase) activity of unphosphorylated thymus myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activity of this digested myosin was only slightly affected by light chain phosphorylation. Actin inhibited the cleavage at this site by chymotrypsin. In the presence of ATP, chymotrypsin rapidly cleaved the thymus myosin heavy chain at an additional site about 4000 daltons from the N-terminus. Cleavage at this site caused a 2-fold increase in the ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid-ATPase activity and 3-fold decreases in the Ca2+- and Mg-ATPase activities of thymus myosin. Thus, cleavage at the N-terminus of thymus myosin was affected by ATP, and this cleavage altered ATPase activity. Papain cleaved the thymus myosin heavy chain about 94,000 daltons from the N-terminus to give subfragment 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We successfully synthesized full-length and the mutant Physarum myosin and heavy meromyosin (HMM) constructs associated with Physarum regulatory light chain and essential light chain (PhELC) using Physarum myosin heavy chain in Sf-9 cells, and examined their Ca(2+)-mediated regulation. Ca(2+) inhibited the motility and ATPase activities of Physarum myosin and HMM. The Ca(2+) effect is also reversible at the in vitro motility of Physarum myosin. We demonstrated that full-length myosin increases the Ca(2+) inhibition more effectively than HMM. Furthermore, Ca(2+) did not affect the motility and ATPase activities of the mutant Physarum myosin with PhELC that lost Ca(2+)-binding ability. Therefore, we conclude that PhELC plays a critical role in Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of Physarum myosin.  相似文献   

15.
The motor activity of smooth muscle myosin II is regulated by the regulatory light chain phosphorylation, but it is not understood how phosphorylation activates motor activity. To address this question, we produced asymmetric heavy meromyosin (HMM), which is composed of a wild-type (WT) heavy chain and a mutant heavy chain having no motor activity (i.e. S236T or G457A). The actin-activated ATPase activities (Vmax) of asymmetric HMMs were only 21.8 and 8.4% of the wild-type HMM for S236A/WT HMM and G456A/WT HMM, respectively. If the two heads of HMM are independent for their ATPase activities, asymmetric HMM should show 50% of the activity of wild-type HMM; however, the activity of asymmetric HMM was much lower than the expected value. The results suggest that the activity of the wild-type head is attenuated by the presence of inactive head. Consistently, the actin-gliding velocity of the asymmetric HMM (i.e. S236T/WT or G457A/WT) was less than one-fifth of the wild-type HMM. The present study supports an idea that the two heads of smooth muscle myosin II interact with each other and the presence of two active heads is required for full activation.  相似文献   

16.
Rovner AS  Fagnant PM  Trybus KM 《Biochemistry》2006,45(16):5280-5289
Regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation activates smooth and non-muscle myosin II, but it has not been established if phosphorylation of one head turns on the whole molecule. Baculovirus expression and affinity chromatography were used to isolate heavy meromyosin (HMM) containing one phosphorylated and one dephosphorylated RLC (1-P HMM). Motility and steady-state ATPase assays indicated that 1-P HMM is nearly as active as HMM with two phosphorylated heads (2-P HMM). Single-turnover experiments further showed that both the dephosphorylated and phosphorylated heads of 1-P HMM can be activated by actin. Singly phosphorylated full-length myosin was also an active species with two cycling heads. Our results suggest that phosphorylation of one RLC abolishes the asymmetric inhibited state formed by dephosphorylated myosin [Liu, J., et al. (2003) J. Mol. Biol. 329, 963-972], allowing activation of both the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated heads. These findings help explain how smooth muscles are able to generate high levels of stress with low phosphorylation levels.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of the DTNB light chain of myosin on its enzymatic activities was examined by studying the superprecipitation of actomyosin and the actin-activated ATPase of heavy meromyosin (HMM) [EC 3.6.1.3]. Although the Ca2+-, Mg2+-, and EDTA-ATPase activities of control and DTNB myosin were practically the same, the superprecipitation of actomyosin prepared from actin and DTNB myosin occurred more slowly than that of control myosin. The apparent binding constant obtained from double-reciprocal plots of actin-activated ATPase of DTNB HMM was lower than that of control HMM. Recombination of DTNB myosin and HMM with DTNB light chains restored the original properties of myosin and HMM. The removal of DTNB light chain from myosin had no effect on the formation of the rigor complex between actin and myosin. These results suggest that the DTNB light chain participates in the interaction of myosin with actin in the presence of ATP.  相似文献   

18.
Two different Dictyostelium discoideum cell lines that lack myosin heavy chain protein (MHC A) have been previously described. One cell line (mhcA) was created by antisense RNA inactivation of the endogenous mRNA and the other (HMM) by insertional mutagenesis of the endogenous myosin gene. The two cell lines show similar developmental defects; they are delayed in aggregation and become arrested at the mound stage. However, when cells that lack myosin heavy chain are mixed with wild-type cells, some of the mutant cells are capable of completing development to form mature spores. The pattern of expression of a number of developmentally regulated genes has been examined in both mutant cell lines. Although morphogenesis becomes aberrant before aggregation is completed, all of the markers that we have examined are expressed normally. These include genes expressed prior to aggregation as well as prespore genes expressed later in development. It appears that the signals necessary for cell-type differentiation are generated in the aborted structures formed by cells lacking MHC A. The mhcA cells have negligible amounts of MHC A protein while the HMM cells express normal amounts of a fragment of the myosin heavy chain protein similar to heavy meromyosin (HMM). The expression of myosin light chain was examined in these two cell lines. HMM cells accumulate normal amounts of the 18,000-D light chain, while the amount of light chain in mhcA cells is dramatically reduced. It is likely that the light chains assemble normally with the HMM fragment in HMM cells, while in cells lacking myosin heavy chain (mhcA) the light chains are unstable.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of calcium activated factor (CAF) on enzymatic properties of actin and myosin was investigated. SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that CAF did not degrade actin, but a slight degradation was found in myosin during CAF digestion, which might have been due to contaminated protease (s) in CAF preparation. No influence was found in EDTA ATPase of myosin and polymerization of G-actin during CAF digestion. However, heavy meromyosin (HMM) ATPase activating ability of actin was slightly decreased during CAF digestion. Although CAF digestion slightly decreased the biological activity of myofibrillar proteins, a single sarcomere prepared by CAF digestion is a useful model for studying muscle contraction because of its almost intact contractility.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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