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1.
Equilibrium of the actin-tropomyosin interaction   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The actin-tropornyosin interaction was studied by means of light-scattering. The experimental data were analysed on the basis of the model of co-operative binding of large ligands to a one-dimensional lattice with overlapping binding sites. The affinity of tropomyosin for actin filaments was dependent on the magnesium concentration. A fivefold increase of the magnesium concentration (from 0·5 mm to 2·5 mm) enhanced the equilibrium constant twofold (from 700 to 1600 m?1) for the isolated binding of tropomyosin molecules to actin filaments. At low magnesium concentrations (0·5 mm), tropomyosin molecules were bound to isolated binding sites on an actin filament about 600 times more weakly than to contiguous binding sites. At increased magnesium concentrations (2·5 mm), the tendency of tropomyosin to bind contiguously increased twofold. Due to the co-operative nature of the actin-tropomyosin interaction, a small change in the magnesium concentration may cause a great change of the structural organisation of the complex. A small enhancement of the magnesium concentration (from 1 mm to 1·5 mm) caused bare filaments to be covered almost completely with tropomyosin. The length of tropomyosin clusters and the number of gaps on actin filaments depended strongly on the magnesium concentration. From the values of the experimentally determined equilibrium constants, it was concluded that the end-to-end interaction of tropomyosin was not strong enough to bring about all-or-none behaviour, where actin filaments of physiological length (~1000 nm) are either completely covered with or completely free of tropomyosin.  相似文献   

2.
Rate of binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A Wegner  K Ruhnau 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):6994-7000
The decrease of the rate of actin polymerization by tropomyosin molecules which bind near the ends of actin filaments was analyzed in terms of the rate of binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments. Monomeric actin was polymerized onto actin filaments in the presence of various concentrations of tropomyosin. At high concentrations of monomeric actin (c1) and low tropomyosin concentrations (ct) (c1/ct greater than 10), actin polymerization was not retarded by tropomyosin because actin polymerization was faster than binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments. At low actin concentrations and high tropomyosin concentrations (c1/ct less than 5), the rate of elongation of actin filaments was decreased because actin polymerization was slower than binding of tropomyosin at the ends of actin filaments. The results were quantitatively analyzed by a model in which it was assumed that actin-bound tropomyosin molecules which extend beyond the ends of actin filaments retard association of actin monomers with filament ends. Under the experimental conditions (100 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, pH 7.5, 25 degrees C), the rate constant for binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments turned out to be about 2.5 X 10(6) to 4 X 10(6) M-1 S-1.  相似文献   

3.
Interaction of tropomyosin-troponin with actin filaments   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A Wegner  T P Walsh 《Biochemistry》1981,20(19):5633-5642
The assembly of actin filaments with tropomyosin-troponin was investigated by means of light scattering. Binding curves of tropomyosin-troponin [consisting of all three subunits (holotroponin)] and of tropomyosin-troponin-T-I to actin filaments were analyzed by separating the affinity of tropomyosin-troponin for actin filaments and the affinity for the end-to-end contact of tropomyosin molecules. Under the experimental conditions (42.4 degrees C, 300 mM KCl), tropomyosin-holotroponin in the absence of calcium and tropomyosin-troponin-T-I had similar affinities for actin filaments whereas tropomyosin-holotroponin in the presence of calcium was found to bind more weakly. Tropomyosin-holotroponin and tropomyosin-troponin-T-I bound about 200-300-fold more strongly to binding sites with adjacent tropomyosin-troponin units than to isolated sites on actin filaments. The equilibrium constant for isolated association with actin filaments was more than 2-fold higher for tropomyosin-holotroponin in the absence of calcium (15 400 M-1) and tropomyosin-troponin-T-I (17 500 M-1) than for tropomyosin-holotroponin in the presence of calcium (6600 M-1). Binding curves of mixtures of tropomyosin-holotroponin in the presence of calcium and of tropomyosin-troponin-T-I were measured and analyzed on the basis of a model of cooperative binding of two types of large ligands to a one-dimensional homogeneous lattice. The results provided information on the strength of the end-to-end contacts of tropomyosin-troponin units in different positions on an actin filament. It was found that a tropomyosin-troponin unit binds adjacently to another unit in a different position on an actin filament about 2-fold more weakly than adjacent to a unit in the same position. With the aid of these results, it was possible to obtain information of the equilibrium distribution of tropomyosin-troponin in the two positions on actin filaments. Generation of a sequence of tropomyosin-troponin units in a different position on actin filaments was found to be 4-fold less favored than elongation of an existing sequence (cooperativity parameter sigma = 1/4). Shifting of tropomyosin-troponin on actin filaments appears to be accompanied by small free-energy changes in the various interactions of the components of actin-tropomyosin-troponin filaments and not to be an all-or-none reaction  相似文献   

4.
The interactions of vascular smooth muscle caldesmon with actin, tropomyosin, and calmodulin were determined under conditions in which the four proteins can form reconstituted Ca2+-sensitive smooth muscle thin filaments. Caldesmon bound to actin in a complex fashion with high affinity sites (K = 10(7) M-1) saturating at a stoichiometry of 1 per 28 actins, and lower affinity sites at 1 per 7 actins. The affinity of binding was increased in the presence of tropomyosin, and this could be attributed to a direct interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin which was demonstrated using caldesmon cross-linked to Sepharose. In the presence of tropomyosin, occupancy of the high affinity sites was associated with inhibition of actin-activated myosin MgATPase activity. Caldesmon was found to bind to calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+, with an affinity of 10(6) M-1. The binding of Ca2+ X calmodulin to caldesmon was associated with the neutralization of inhibition of actin-tropomyosin. Ca2+ X calmodulin binding reduced but did not abolish the binding of caldesmon to actin-tropomyosin. From this data we have proposed a model for smooth muscle thin filaments in which Ca2+ regulates activity by converting the inhibited actin-tropomyosin-caldesmon complex to the active complexes, actin-tropomyosin-caldesmon-calmodulin X Ca2+ and actin-tropomyosin.  相似文献   

5.
Different calcium dependence of the capping and cutting activities of villin   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
The concentration of ionized calcium required for the capping of barbed filament ends by villin is about 4 orders of magnitude lower than that required for the cutting activity of villin. Capping was 50% complete at about 10-30 nM Ca2+, a level expected in resting cells, whereas the cutting rate was half-maximal at about 200 microM, making it possible to completely separate filament capping from filament cutting. Analysis of capping in terms of coupled equilibria between calcium binding to villin and calcium-villin binding to the barbed ends of actin filaments gives a value of 10(16)-10(17) M-2 for the product of the two binding constants. By comparison the binding constant reported for the rapidly exchanging calcium sites on villin is 2 X 10(5) M-1 and that for binding of calcium-saturated villin to barbed ends has a minimum value of 10(11) M-1 giving a product of 2 X 10(16) M-1. The close similarity of the two sets of values suggests that capping is regulated by the rapidly exchanging calcium sites on villin. In terms of coupled equilibria the calcium requirement for filament capping decreases with increasing concentrations of free villin. The scant information on the mechanism of cutting allows only an estimate of the maximal value for the calcium-binding constant of the site regulating cutting which is about 2-5 X 10(3) M-1. Cutting is followed by rapid capping of the newly released barbed ends.  相似文献   

6.
《Biophysical journal》2019,116(12):2275-2284
The initial binding of tropomyosin onto actin filaments and then its polymerization into continuous cables on the filament surface must be precisely tuned to overall thin-filament structure, function, and performance. Low-affinity interaction of tropomyosin with actin has to be sufficiently strong to localize the tropomyosin on actin, yet not so tight that regulatory movement on filaments is curtailed. Likewise, head-to-tail association of tropomyosin molecules must be favorable enough to promote tropomyosin cable formation but not so tenacious that polymerization precedes filament binding. Arguably, little molecular detail on early tropomyosin binding steps has been revealed since Wegner’s seminal studies on filament assembly almost 40 years ago. Thus, interpretation of mutation-based actin-tropomyosin binding anomalies leading to cardiomyopathies cannot be described fully. In vitro, tropomyosin binding is masked by explosive tropomyosin polymerization once cable formation is initiated on actin filaments. In contrast, in silico analysis, characterizing molecular dynamics simulations of single wild-type and mutant tropomyosin molecules on F-actin, is not complicated by tropomyosin polymerization at all. In fact, molecular dynamics performed here demonstrates that a midpiece tropomyosin domain is essential for normal actin-tropomyosin interaction and that this interaction is strictly conserved in a number of tropomyosin mutant species. Elsewhere along these mutant molecules, twisting and bending corrupts the tropomyosin superhelices as they “lose their grip” on F-actin. We propose that residual interactions displayed by these mutant tropomyosin structures with actin mimic ones that occur in early stages of thin-filament generation, as if the mutants are recapitulating the assembly process but in reverse. We conclude therefore that an initial binding step in tropomyosin assembly onto actin involves interaction of the essential centrally located domain.  相似文献   

7.
Tropomyosin has been shown to cause annealing of gelsolin-capped actin filaments. Here we show that tropomyosin is highly efficient in transforming even the smallest gelsolin-actin complexes into long actin filaments. At low concentrations of tropomyosin, the effect of tropomyosin depends on the length of the actin oligomer, and the cooperative nature of the process is a direct indication that tropomyosin induces a conformational change in the gelsolin-actin complexes, altering the structure at the actin (+) end such that capping by gelsolin is abolished. At increased concentrations of tropomyosin, heterodimers, trimers, and tetramers are converted to actin filaments. In addition, evidence is presented demonstrating that gelsolin, once removed from the (+) end of the actin, can reassociate with the newly formed tropomyosin-decorated actin filaments. Interestingly, the binding of gelsolin to the tropomyosin-actin filament complexes saturates at 2 gelsolin molecules per 14 actin and 2 tropomyosins, i.e. two gelsolins per tropomyosin-regulatory unit along the filament. These observations support the view that both tropomyosin and gelsolin are likely to have important functions in addition to those proposed earlier.  相似文献   

8.
Analysis of two recombinant variants of chicken striated muscle alpha-tropomyosin has shown that the structure of the amino terminus is crucial for most aspects of tropomyosin function: affinity to actin, promotion of binding to actin by troponin, and regulation of the actomyosin MgATPase. Initial characterization of variants expressed and isolated from Escherichia coli has been published (Hitchcock-DeGregori, S. E., and Heald, R. W. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 9730-9735). Fusion tropomyosin contains 80 amino acids of a nonstructural influenza virus protein (NS1) on the amino terminus. Nonfusion tropomyosin is a variant because the amino-terminal methionine is not acetylated (unacetylated tropomyosin). The affinity of tropomyosin labeled at Cys190 with N-[14C]ethylmaleimide for actin was measured by cosedimentation in a Beckman Airfuge. Fusion tropomyosin binds to actin with an affinity slightly greater than that of chicken striated muscle alpha-tropomyosin (Kapp = 1-2 X 10(7) versus 0.5-1 X 10(7) M-1) and more strongly than unacetylated tropomyosin (Kapp = 3 X 10(5) M-1). Both variants bind cooperatively to actin. Troponin increases the affinity of unacetylated tropomyosin for actin (+Ca2+, Kapp = 6 X 10(6) M-1; +EGTA, Kapp = 2 X 10(7) M-1), but the affinity is still lower than that of muscle tropomyosin for actin in the presence of troponin (Kapp much greater than 10(8) M-1). Troponin has no effect on the affinity of fusion tropomyosin for actin indicating that binding of troponin T to the over-lap region of the adjacent tropomyosin, presumably sterically prevented by the fusion peptide in fusion tropomyosin, is required for troponin to promote the binding of tropomyosin to actin. The role of troponin T in regulation and the mechanisms of cooperative binding of tropomyosin to actin have been discussed in relation to this work.  相似文献   

9.
Drosophila bristle cells are shaped during growth by longitudinal bundles of cross-linked actin filaments attached to the plasma membrane. We used confocal and electron microscopy to examine actin bundle structure and found that during bristle elongation, snarls of uncross-linked actin filaments and small internal bundles also form in the shaft cytoplasm only to disappear within 4 min. Thus, formation and later removal of actin filaments are prominent features of growing bristles. These transient snarls and internal bundles can be stabilized by culturing elongating bristles with jasplakinolide, a membrane-permeant inhibitor of actin filament depolymerization, resulting in enormous numbers of internal bundles and uncross-linked filaments. Examination of bundle disassembly in mutant bristles shows that plasma membrane association and cross-bridging adjacent actin filaments together inhibits depolymerization. Thus, highly cross-bridged and membrane-bound actin filaments turn over slowly and persist, whereas poorly cross-linked filaments turnover more rapidly. We argue that the selection of stable bundles relative to poorly cross-bridged filaments can account for the size, shape, number, and location of the longitudinal actin bundles in bristles. As a result, filament turnover plays an important role in regulating cytoskeleton assembly and consequently cell shape.  相似文献   

10.
Troponin extracted from rabbit skeletal muscle directly binds to an actin filament in a molar ratio of 1:1 even in the absence of tropomyosin. An actin filament decorated with troponin did not exhibit significant difference from pure actin filaments in the maximum rate of actomyosin ATP hydrolysis and the sliding velocity of the filament examined by means of an in vitro motility assay. However, the relative number of troponin-bound actin filaments moving in the absence of calcium ions decreased to half that in their presence. The amount of HMM bound to the filaments was less than 4% of actin monomers in the presence of TNs. In addition, actin filaments could not move when Tn molecules were bound in the molar ratio of about 1:1 although they sufficiently bind to myosin heads. These results indicate that troponin can transform an actin monomer within a filament into an Off-state without sterically blocking of the myosin-binding sites with tropomyosin molecules.  相似文献   

11.
K Y Horiuchi  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1988,27(22):8388-8393
Cysteine residues of caldesmon were labeled with the fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide. The number of sulfhydryl (SH) groups in caldesmon was around 3.5 on the basis of reactivity to 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate); 80% of the SH groups were labeled with pyrene. The fluorescence spectrum from pyrene-caldesmon showed the presence of excited monomer and dimer (excimer). As the ionic strength increased, excimer fluorescence decreased, disappearing at salt concentrations higher than around 50 mM. The labeling of caldesmon with pyrene did not affect its ability to inhibit actin activation of heavy meromyosin Mg-ATPase and the release of this inhibition in the presence of Ca2+-calmodulin. Tropomyosin induced a change in the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon, indicating a conformational change associated with the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin. The affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was dependent on ionic strength. The binding constant was 5 x 10(6) M-1 in low salt, and the affinity was 20-fold less at ionic strengths close to physiological conditions. In the presence of actin, the affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was increased 5-fold. The addition of tropomyosin also changed the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon bound to actin filaments. The change in the conformation of tropomyosin, caused by the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin, was studied with pyrene-labeled tropomyosin. Fluorescence change was evident when unlabeled caldesmon was added to pyrene-tropomyosin bound to actin. These data suggest that the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin on the actin filament is associated with conformational changes on these thin filament associated proteins. These conformational changes may modulate the ability of thin filament to interact with myosin heads.  相似文献   

12.
C Weigt  A Wegner  M H Koch 《Biochemistry》1991,30(44):10700-10707
The rate of assembly of tropomyosin with actin filaments was measured by stopped-flow experiments. Binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments was followed by the change of the fluorescence intensity of a (dimethylamino)naphthalene label covalently linked to tropomyosin and by synchrotron radiation X-ray solution scattering. Under the experimental conditions (2 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, pH 7.5, 25 degrees C) and at the protein concentrations used (2.5-24 microM actin, 0.2-3.4 microM tropomyosin) the half-life time of assembly of tropomyosin with actin filaments was found to be less than 1 s. The results were analyzed quantitatively by a model in which tropomyosin initially binds to isolated sites. Further tropomyosin molecules bind contiguously to bound tropomyosin along the actin filaments. Good agreement between the experimental and theoretical time course of assembly was obtained by assuming a fast preequilibrium between free and isolatedly bound tropomyosin.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Tropomyosin inhibition of the rate of spontaneous polymerization of actin is associated with binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments. Rate constants determined by using a direct electron microscopic assay of elongation showed that alpha alpha- and alpha beta-tropomyosin have a small or no effect on the rate of elongation at either end of the filaments. The most likely explanation for the inhibition of the rate of polymerization of actin in bulk samples is that tropomyosin reduces the number of filament ends by mechanical stabilization of the filaments.  相似文献   

15.
Actin filament cytoskeletal and muscle functions are regulated by actin binding proteins using a variety of mechanisms. A universal actin filament regulator is the protein tropomyosin, which binds end-to-end along the length of the filament. The actin-tropomyosin filament structure is unknown, but there are atomic models in different regulatory states based on electron microscopy reconstructions, computational modeling of actin-tropomyosin, and docking of atomic resolution structures of tropomyosin to actin filament models. Here, we have tested models of the actin-tropomyosin interface in the “closed state” where tropomyosin binds to actin in the absence of myosin or troponin. Using mutagenesis coupled with functional analyses, we determined residues of actin and tropomyosin required for complex formation. The sites of mutations in tropomyosin were based on an evolutionary analysis and revealed a pattern of basic and acidic residues in the first halves of the periodic repeats (periods) in tropomyosin. In periods P1, P4, and P6, basic residues are most important for actin affinity, in contrast to periods P2, P3, P5, and P7, where both basic and acidic residues or predominantly acidic residues contribute to actin affinity. Hydrophobic interactions were found to be relatively less important for actin binding. We mutated actin residues in subdomains 1 and 3 (Asp25-Glu334-Lys326-Lys328) that are poised to make electrostatic interactions with the residues in the repeating motif on tropomyosin in the models. Tropomyosin failed to bind mutant actin filaments. Our mutagenesis studies provide the first experimental support for the atomic models of the actin-tropomyosin interface.  相似文献   

16.
Analyses of the binding of tropomyosin to muscle and Acanthamoeba actin by the use of Scatchard plots indicate that the binding exhibits strong positive cooperativity in the presence of Mg2+. The cooperative nature of the binding is not affected by the presence of 80 mm KCl, but appears to decrease somewhat in the presence of heavy meromyosin or subfragment-1. Heavy meromyosin, subfragment-1, and KCl each increase the binding affinity of actin for tropomyosin; depending on the experimental condition and the type of actin involved, the apparent binding constant, Kapp, is in the range of 1 to 4 x 10(6) M-1. Muscle actin cross-linked with glutaraldehyde failed to bind tropomyosin even when heavy meromyosin, subfragment-1, or KCl were added as inducers, although the cross-linked actin still markedly activated the heavy meromyosin ATPase.  相似文献   

17.
Formins are conservative proteins with important roles in the regulation of the microfilament system in eukaryotic cells. Previous studies showed that the binding of formins to actin made the structure of actin filaments more flexible. Here, the effects of tropomyosin on formin-induced changes in actin filaments were investigated using fluorescence spectroscopic methods. The temperature dependence of the Förster-type resonance energy transfer showed that the formin-induced increase of flexibility of actin filaments was diminished by the binding of tropomyosin to actin. Fluorescence anisotropy decay measurements also revealed that the structure of flexible formin-bound actin filaments was stabilized by the binding of tropomyosin. The stabilizing effect reached its maximum when all binding sites on actin were occupied by tropomyosin. The effect of tropomyosin on actin filaments was independent of ionic strength, but became stronger as the magnesium concentration increased. Based on these observations, we propose that in cells there is a molecular mechanism in which tropomyosin binding to actin plays an important role in forming mechanically stable actin filaments, even in the case of formin-induced rapid filament assembly.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP), ADP, and PPi to dissociate the actin.myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) complex was studied using an analytical ultracentrifuge with UV optics, which enabled the direct determination of the dissociated S-1. At mu = 0.22 M, pH 7.0, 22 degrees C, with saturating nucleotide present, ADP weakens the binding of S-1 to actin about 40-fold (K congruent to 10(5) M-1), while both AMP-PNP and PPi weakens the binding about 400-fold (K congruent to 10(4) M-1). This 10-fold stronger dissociating effect of AMP-PNP and PPi compared to ADP correlates with our data showing that the binding of AMP-PNP and PPi to S-1 is about 10-fold stronger than the binding of ADP. In contrast, the binding constants of ADP, AMP-PNP, and PPi to acto.S-1 are nearly identical (K congruent to 5 x 10(3) M-1). At 4 degrees C, AMP-PNP has only a 3-fold stronger dissociating effect than ADP and, similarly, our data suggest that the binding of AMP-PNP and ADP to S-1 is quite similar at 4 degrees C. AMP-PNP and PPi are, therefore, somewhat better dissociating agents than ADP, but the difference among these three ligands is quite small. These data also show that actin and nucleotide bind to separate but interacting sites on S-1 and that the S-1 molecules bind independently along the F-actin filament with a binding constant of about 1 x 10(7) M-1 at 22 degrees C and physiological ionic strength.  相似文献   

19.
Striated muscle thin filaments contain many troponin molecules, which contact each other indirectly via tropomyosin and actin. Such allosteric interactions between troponin molecules may be responsible for cooperative Ca2+ binding to the regulatory sites of the cardiac thin filament (Tobacman, L. S., and Sawyer, D. S. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 931-939). To test whether thin filament-bound troponin molecules interact, we studied the competitive binding of troponin and troponin T-troponin I (an inhibitory complex lacking the Ca2+ binding subunit troponin C) to actin-tropomyosin. The relative affinities of these two forms of troponin for the thin filament depended upon their relative concentrations. Under conditions where total binding was saturated, each form binds with greater apparent affinity to sites that have similar neighbors. A theoretical model for competitive binding of two ligands to interacting sites on a linear lattice was developed and fit to the data. Surprisingly, energetically unfavorable interactions occurred between adjacent troponin and troponin T-troponin I molecules not only in the presence of Ca2+, but also in the presence of [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid and/or myosin subfragment 1. Removal of Ca2+ strengthened the affinity of troponin for the thin filament less than 50%. These results suggest that, even in the absence of myosin, long range allosteric interactions occur between troponin molecules. The detailed involvement of tropomyosin and actin in these interactions remains to be established.  相似文献   

20.
Golitsina NL  Lehrer SS 《FEBS letters》1999,463(1-2):146-150
To obtain proximity information between tropomyosin (Tm) and caldesmon (CaD) on the muscle thin filament, we cloned gizzard alphaTm and created two single Cys mutants S56C/C190S (56Tm) and D100C/C190S (100Tm). They were labeled with benzophenone maleimide (BPM) and UV-irradiated on thin filaments. One chain of BPM-56Tm and two chains of BPM-100Tm crosslinked to CaD. Only BPM-100Tm crosslinked to actin in the absence and presence of CaD and binding of low ratios of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) prevented the crosslinking. Tm-S1 crosslinks were produced when actin.Tm was saturated with S1. Thus, CaD on the actin.Tm filament is located <10 A away from Tm amino acids 56 and 100; in the closed state of the actin.Tm filament, Tm residue 100 is located close to the actin surface and is moved further away in the S1-induced open state; in the open state, S1 binds close to Tm.  相似文献   

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