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1.
The effects of ether, chloroform, and halothane on calcium accumulation and ATPase activity of rat heart microsomes and mitochondria as well as on myofibrillar ATPase activity were investigated. Chloroform and halothane depressed microsomal and mitochondrial calcium uptake and binding in a parallel fashion. Ether decreased microsomal calcium binding and mitochondrial calcium uptake to varying degrees, while mitochondrial calcium binding was slightly enhanced. Whereas ether had no effect, chloroform depressed microsomal and mitochondrial total APTase activities and halothane decreased microsomsl ATPase and slightly stimulated mitochondrial total ATPase activities. Halothane was found to depress myofibrillar Mg2+-ATPase and ether was capable of decreasing myofibrillar Ca2+-ATPase. Chloroform was seen to inhibit both myofibrillar enzymes. These results suggest that the cardiodepressant actions of volatile anesthetic agents may be due to alterations in the calcium accumulating abilities of microsomal and mitochondrial membranes while direct myofibrillar effects may contribute to the depression seen with relatively higher concentrations of anesthetics.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the effects of two purported calcium sensitizing agents, MCI-154 and DPI 201–106, and a known calcium sensitizer caffeine on Mg-ATPase (myofibrillar ATPase) and myosin ATPase activity of left ventricular myofibrils isolated from non-failing, idiopathic (IDCM) and ischemic cardiomyopathic (ISCM) human hearts (i.e. failing hearts). The myofibrillar ATPase activity of non-failing myofibrils was higher than that of diseased myofibrils. MCI-154 increased myofibrillar ATPase Ca2+ sensitivity in myofibrils from non-failing and failing human hearts. Effects of caffeine similarly increased Ca2+ sensitivity. Effects of DPI 201–106 were, however, different. Only at the 10–6 M concentration was a significant increase in myofibrillar ATPase calcium sensitivity seen in myofibrils from non-failing human hearts. In contrast, in myofibrils from failing hearts, DPI 201–106 caused a concentration-dependent increase in myofibrillar ATPase Ca2+ sensitivity. Myosin ATPase activity in failing myocardium was also decreased. In the presence of MCI-154, myosin ATPase activity increased by 11, 19, and 24% for non-failing, IDCM, and ISCM hearts, respectively. DPI 201–106 caused an increase in the enzymatic activity of less than 5% for all preparations, and caffeine induced an increase of 4, 11, and 10% in non-failing, IDCM and ISCM hearts, respectively. The mechanism of restoring the myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity and myosin enzymatic activity in diseased human hearts is most likely due to enhancement of the Ca2+ activation of the contractile apparatus induced by these agents. We propose that myosin light chain-related regulation may play a complementary role to the troponin-related regulation of myocardial contractility.  相似文献   

3.
In this study we explore the mechanisms by which a double mutation (E59D/D75Y) in cardiac troponin C (CTnC) associated with dilated cardiomyopathy reduces the Ca2+-activated maximal tension of cardiac muscle. Studying the single mutants (i.e. E59D or D75Y) indicates that D75Y, but not E59D, causes a reduction in the calcium affinity of CTnC in troponin complex, regulated thin filaments (RTF), and the Ca2+ sensitivity of contraction and ATPase in cardiac muscle preparations. However, both D75Y and E59D are required to reduce the actomyosin ATPase activity and maximal force in muscle fibers, indicating that E59D enhances the effects of D75Y. Part of the reduction in force/ATPase may be due to a defect in the interactions between CTnC and cardiac troponin T, which are known to be necessary for ATPase activation. An additional mechanism for the reduction in force/ATPase comes from measurements of the binding stoichiometry of myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) to the RTF. Using wild type RTFs, 4.8 mol S-1 was bound per mol filament (seven actins), whereas with E59D/D75Y RTFs, the number of binding sites was reduced by ∼23% to 3.7. Altogether, these results suggest that the reduction in force and ATPase activation is possibly due to a thin filament conformation that promotes fewer accessible S-1-binding sites. In the absence of any family segregation data, the functional results presented here support the concept that this is likely a dilated cardiomyopathy-causing mutation.  相似文献   

4.
The ATPase activity of frog sartorius myofibrils has been studied at 1.5°C using different concentrations of ATP and calcium. The progressive activation of the ATPase activity at Ca-concentrations between pCa 8 and pCa 4 is paralleled by increases in Ca-binding. Similar to the findings of Weber and Bremel (1972) on rabbit psoas myofibrils more calcium is bound at pCa 5 – 7 in presence of 10 μM ATP than at 2 mM ATP. The observation, that in presence of 2 mμM N-ethyl maleimide/mg myofibrillar protein Ca-binding is essentially abolished at the lower calcium levels and becomes reduced by 30 – 40% at pCa 4 – 6, has been explained in terms of a Ca-binding site on the myosin. Using carbon-14-labelled ATP it could be demonstrated that the lower ATPase activity at pCa 7 or pCa 9 is associated with an increase in nucleotide binding, which is much reduced at a pCa of 4. However, removal of calcium from the medium does not increase the number of nucleotide binding sites as has been reported for rabbit myofibrils. A kinetic interpretation of the ATPase and ligand binding studies is offered.  相似文献   

5.
Calcium binding by rabbit skeletal myosin, thin filaments and myofibrils was measured in solutions with and without 2 mM MgATP and with ionic strengths adjusted with KCl to 0.05, 0.10 and 0.14 M. Free Mg2+ was held constant at 1 mM, pH at 7.0 and temperature at 25 °C. In the presence of MgATP, the relation between free Ca2+ and myofibrillar bound calcium shifted to the left as ionic strength was decreased from 0.14 to 0.05 M. In the absence of MgATP, myofibrillar calcium binding was enhanced over a wide range of free Ca2+ concentration, but calcium binding was no longer a function of ionic strength. Similarly, calcium binding by thin filaments and myosin was unaffected by changes in ionic strength from 0.05 to 0.14 M. In view of evidence that cross-bridge connections between thick and thin filaments increase as ionic strength decreases, our results suggest that these connections enhance myofibrillar calcium binding. These results thus confirm previous data of Bremel and Weber (Bremel, R. D. and Weber, A. (1972) Nature New Biol. 238, 97–101) who first showed that nucleotide-free cross-bridge connections enhance thin filament calcium binding.  相似文献   

6.
1. The steady-state kinetic behaviour of the ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) of intact myofibrils was studied in the presence of both high and low concentrations of Ca2+ (0.25 mM and less than 10 nM respectively). 2. Kinetic data were collected over the initial linear phase of the assay, which lasts for 20--60s. To obtain consistent data we found it necessary to use either fresh myofibril preparations or preparations that had been stored in the presence of thiol compounds. 3. When assayed in the presence of 0.25 mM-Ca2+, the myofibrillar ATPase obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics over the range 0.03--5.0 mM-MgATP (Km 16 +/- 6 micrometer, V 0.4 +/- 0.1 mumol/min per mg). 4. At low Ca2+ concentrations (less than 10 nM) the myofibrillar ATPase displayed pronounced substrate inhibition, which was not observed at high Ca2+ concentrations. Thus increasing the MgATP concentration had the net effect of decreasing the ATPase activity at low Ca2+ relative to that at high Ca2+. This preferential effect of MgATP on the low-Ca2+ ATPase may be important in Ca2+ control. 5. The substrate inhibition that was observed at low Ca2+ was lost on storage or thiol modification of the myofibrils. 6. Under physiological conditions (2 mM-MgATP, I 0.15, pH 7.0), the ATPase of fresh and thiol-protected myofibrils displayed approx. 100-fold activation by Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
In vertebrate striated muscle, troponon-tropomyosin is responsible, in part, not only for transducing the effect of calcium on contractile protein activation, but also for inhibiting actin and myosin interaction when calcium is absent. The regulatory troponin (Tn) complex displays several molecular and calcium binding variations in cardiac muscles of different species and undergoes genetic changes with development and in various pathologic states.Extensive reviews on the role of tropomyosin (Tm) and Tn in the regulation of striated muscle contraction have been published describing the molecular mechanisms involved in contractile protein regulation. In our studies, we have found an increase in Mg2+ ATPase activity in cardiac myofibrils from dystrophic hamsters and in rats with chronic coronary artery narrowing. The abnormalities in myofibrillar ATPase activity from cardiomyopathic hamsters were largely corrected by recombining the preparations with a TnTm, complex isolated from normal hamsters indicating that the TnTm, may play a major role in altered myocardial function. We have also observed down regulation of Ca2+ Mg2+ ATPase of myofibrils from hypertrophic guinea pig hearts, myocardial infarcted rats and diabetic-hypertensive rat hearts. In myosin from diabetic rats, this abnormality was substantially corrected by adding troponin-tropomyosin complex from control hearts. All of these disease models are associated with decreased ATPase activities of pure myosin and in the case of rat and hamster models, shifts of myosin, heavy chain from alpha to beta predominate.In summary, there are three main troponin subunit components which might alter myofibrillar function however, very few direct links of molecular alterations in the regulatory proteins to physiologic and pathologic function have been demonstrated so far.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(6):1761-1765
Tomato activation inhibiting protein (AIP) is a molecule of an apparent molecular weight of 72,000 that co-purifies with tomato actin. In an assay system containing rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin and rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 (myosin S-1), tomato AIP dissociated the acto-S-1 complex in the absence of Mg+2ATP and inhibited the ability of F-actin to activate the low ionic strength Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1. At a molar ratio of 5 actin to 1 AIP, a 50% inhibition of the actin-activated Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1 was observed. The inhibition can be reversed by raising the calcium ion concentration to 1 X 10(-5) M. The AIP had no effect on the basal low ionic strength Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1 in the absence of actin. The protein did not bind directly to actin nor did it cause depolymerization or aggregation of F-actin but appeared, instead, to interact with the actin binding site on myosin S-1. Since AIP is a potent, reversible inhibitor of the rabbit acto-S-1 ATPase activity, it is postulated that it may be responsible for the low levels of actin activation exhibited by tomato F-actin fractions containing the AIP.  相似文献   

9.
G DasGupta  E Reisler 《Biochemistry》1992,31(6):1836-1841
The binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) to actin in the presence of ATP and the acto-S-1 ATPase activities of acto-S-1 complexes were determined at 5 degrees C under conditions of partial saturation of actin, up to 90%, by antibodies against the first seven N-terminal residues on actin. The antibodies [Fab(1-7)] inhibited strongly the acto-S-1 ATPase and the binding of S-1 to actin in the presence of ATP at low concentrations of S-1, up to 25 microM. Further increases in S-1 concentration resulted in a partial and cooperative recovery of both the binding of S-1 to actin and the acto-S-1 ATPase while causing only limited displacement of Fab(1-7) from actin. The extent to which the binding and the ATPase activity were recovered depended on the saturation of actin by Fab(1-7). The combined amounts of S-1 and Fab binding to actin suggested that the activation of the myosin ATPase activity was due to actin free of Fab. Examination of the acto-S-1 ATPase activities as a function of S-1 bound to actin at different levels of actin saturation by Fab(1-7) revealed that the antibodies inhibited the activation of the bound myosin. Thus, the binding of antibodies to the N-terminal segment of actin can act to inhibit both the binding of S-1 to actin in the presence of ATP and a catalytic step in ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin. The implications of these results to the regulation of actomyosin interaction are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Europium luminescence from europium bound to sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+ Mg2+)-ATPase indicates that there are two high affinity calcium binding sites. Furthermore, the two calcium ions at the binding sites are highly coordinated by the protein as the number of H2O molecules surrounding the Ca2+ ions are 3 and 0.5. In the presence of ATP, calcium ions are occluded even further down to 2 and zero H2O molecules, respectively. The Ca2+ - Ca2+ intersite distance is estimated to be 8–9 Å and the average distance from the Ca2+ sites to CrATP is about 18 Å.Digestion of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase at the T2 site (Arg 198) causes uncoupling of Ca2+-transport from ATPase activity while calcium occlusion due to E1-P formation remains unchanged. Further tryptic digestion beyond T2 and in the presence of ATP diminishes Ca2+ occlusion to zero while 50% of the ATPase hydrolytic activity remains. Tryptic digestion beyond T2 and in the absence of ATP diminishes ATPase hydrolytic activity to 50% of normal while Ca2+ occlusion remains intact. These data are consistent with a mechanism in which the functional enzyme must be in the dimeric form for occlusion and calcium uptake to occur, but each monomer can hydrolyze ATP.  相似文献   

11.
Separation of particulate matter in rabbit muscle extracts by differential centrifugation leads, in first approximation, to the isolation of fraction I (15,000 to 41,000 g) and fraction II (41,000 to 150,000 g). The former consists mainly of sarcotubular material, actively transporting calcium ions, and displaying relaxation factor activity. The latter is heterogeneous, shows little calcium accumulation, and contains factors both inhibiting and activating myofibrillar ATPase. Fraction I is resolved by density gradient centrifugation into 2 main subfractions. The lighter one represents sarcotubular material in the best state of preservation, with biochemical activities stable for weeks in the cold. The heavier one may consist of the same material in a less well preserved form. Upon aging, it develops an activating activity toward myofibrillar ATPase, when the relaxing effect has declined. Fraction II is resolved by density gradient centrifugation into 3 or more fractions, with some variability. Relaxing activity in terms of inhibition of myofibrillar ATPase predominates among the lighter subfractions, increase of ATPase among the heavier. The intrinsic ATPase of fraction II is activated by calcium ions, but there is little or no bulk accumulation of calcium oxalate. Nevertheless, its limited calcium uptake seems to suffice to explain its relaxing activity. The particulate material contains mucopolysaccharide and lipid. Most of the lipid in fraction I is phospholipid; in fraction II this is less than half, if calculated as lecithin. The unfractionated material contains an adenylcyclase. There is no acetylcholine esterase.  相似文献   

12.
C-protein is a component of thick filaments of skeletal muscle myofibrils. It is bound to the assembly of myosin tails that forms the filament backbone. We report here that C-protein can also bind to F-actin, with a limiting stoichiometry of approximately one C-protein molecule per 3 to 5 actin subunits and a dissociation constant in the micromolar range at ionic strength 0·07. The binding is not significantly affected by ATP, calcium ions or temperature, or by the presence of tropomyosin on the actin, but it is weakened by increasing ionic strength. Myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) competes with C-protein for binding to actin. In the absence of ATP, S-1 displaces nearly all bound C-protein from actin, while in the presence of ATP, C-protein inhibits the actin activation of S-1 ATPase. Although there is no direct evidence that interaction of C-protein with actin is physiologically significant, the lenght of the C-protein molecule is sufficient so that it could make contact with the thin filaments in muscle while remaining attached to the thick filaments.  相似文献   

13.
The synthetic heptapeptide, Ile-Arg-Ile-Cys-Arg-Lsy-Gly-ethoxy, an analog of one of the actin binding sites on myosin head (S-site) (Suzuki, R., Nishi, N., Tokura, S., and Morita, F. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11410-11412) was found to completely inhibit the acto-S-1 (myosin subfragment 1) ATPase activity. The effect of the heptapeptide on the binding ability of S-1 for F-actin was determined by an ultracentrifugal separation. Results indicated that the heptapeptide scarcely dissociated the acto-S-1 complex during the ATPase reaction. Consistent results were obtained from the acto-S-1 ATPase activities determined as a function of S-1 concentrations in the absence or presence of the heptapeptide at a fixed F-actin concentration. The heptapeptide reduced the maximum acto-S-1 ATPase activity without affecting the apparent dissociation constant of the acto-S-1 complex. The heptapeptide bound by a site on actin complementary to the S-site probably inhibits the activation of S-1 ATPase by F-actin. These results suggest that S-1 ATPase is necessary to rebind transiently with F-actin at the S-site in order to be activated by F-actin. This is consistent with the activation mechanism proposed assuming the two actin-binding sites on S-1 ATPase (Katoh, T., and Morita F. (1984) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 96, 1223-1230).  相似文献   

14.
The effect of phosphorylation in skeletal myosin light chain (LC2) on the actomyosin and acto-heavymeromyosin (HMM) ATPase activities was investigated in the presence or absence of regulatory proteins (tropomyosin-troponin complex). Phosphorylation in LC2 did not modulate the actin-myosin and actin-HMM interactions over a wide range of KCl concentrations from 30 to 150 mM without regulatory proteins. In the presence of regulatory proteins, phosphorylation in myosin LC2 enhanced the ATPase activity of actomyosin with calcium ions, but the removal of calcium ions made little difference in the ATPase activity between phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosins. Ca2+-sensitivity of the regulated actomyosin was slightly changed by phosphorylation in myosin LC2. However, both the ATPase activity and Ca2+-sensitivity of the regulated acto-HMM were unaffected by phosphorylation in HMM LC2.  相似文献   

15.
Intrinsic Tryptophan fluorescence has been used to reveal conformational changes of the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium pump. It is shown that upon binding of calcium ions the fluorescence is enhanced. The effect being reversed after removal of dependence calcium ions by EGTA. The calcium concentration dependence of this fluorescence change and the effect of inhibitors is compared with the activation of calcium dependent ATPase. We conclude that calcium ions induces a conformational change of the calcium pump and that this change is responsible for the activation of the ATPase activity.  相似文献   

16.
R J Heaslip  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1985,24(11):2731-2736
There are conflicting reports on the effect of Ca2+ on actin activation of myosin adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) once the light chain is fully phosphorylated by a calcium calmodulin dependent kinase. Using thiophosphorylated gizzard myosin, Sherry et al. [Sherry, J. M. F., Gorecka, A., Aksoy, M. O., Dabrowska, R., & Hartshorne, D. J. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 4417-4418] observed that the actin activation of ATPase was not inhibited by the removal of Ca2+. Hence, it was suggested that the regulation of actomyosin ATPase activity of gizzard myosin by calcium occurs only via phosphorylation. In the present study, phosphorylated and thiophosphorylated myosins were prepared free of kinase and phosphatase activity; hence, the ATPase activity could be measured at various concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ without affecting the level of phosphorylation. The ATPase activity of myosin was activated either by skeletal muscle or by gizzard actin at various concentrations of Mg2+ and either at pCa 5 or at pCa 8. The activation was sensitive to Ca2+ at low Mg2+ concentrations with both actins. Tropomyosin potentiated the actin-activated ATPase activity at all Mg2+ and Ca2+ concentrations. The calcium sensitivity of phosphorylated and thiophosphorylated myosin reconstituted with actin and tropomyosin was most pronounced at a free Mg2+ concentration of about 3 mM. The binding of 125I-tropomyosin to actin showed that the calcium sensitivity of ATPase observed at low Mg2+ concentration is not due to a calcium-mediated binding of tropomyosin to F-actin. The actin activation of both myosins was insensitive to Ca2+ when the Mg2+ concentration was increased above 5 mM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
In contrast to previous studies, a new fluorescent method was used to accurately determine the Ca(2+) concentration in test solutions used to activate skinned rat cardiac cells. This method used the calcium green-2 fluorescent indicator, which is shown to change its fluorescence over the Ca(2+) range responsible for Ca(2+) activation of force and ATPase. The dissociation constant (K(d)) of calcium green-2 for Ca(2+) was determined for three different Mg(2+) concentrations in solutions similar to those used in the experiment. Increasing Mg(2+) concentration from 1.0 to 8.0 mM had no significant effect on the Ca(2+) sensitivity of either force or actomyosin ATPase activity, in contrast to previous reported studies on force. The ATPase activity was activated at lower Ca(2+) concentration than the force. The ratio (ATPase/force) is proportional to the dissociation rate of force-generating myosin cross bridges and decreased during Ca(2+) activation. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that cardiac muscle contraction is activated by a single Ca(2+)-specific binding site on troponin C.  相似文献   

18.
In 2 mM MgATP, 0.08 ionic strength and 1 mM free Mg++ cardiac myofibrils bound 3.5 nmoles Ca/mg protein at maximal ATPase activation. Significant amounts of Ca were also bound to cardiac myosin with these same conditions. By subtraction of this myosin-bound Ca we obtained an estimate of 4 moles Ca bound per mole of myofibrillar troponin at maximal ATPase. We found, however, that Ca activation of myofibrillar ATPase could be estimated assuming that only two of troponin's Ca-binding sites are engaged in regulation of crossbridge activity. Increase in MgATP from 0.3 to 5.0 mM raised the free Ca, giving half-maximal isometric tension or ATPase. Although part of this shift is most probably due to changes in the number of rigor (nucleotidefree) actin-myosin linkages, the rightward shift of the free Ca++-activation relation with increase in MgATP from 2 to 5 mM appears to be due to effects of active (nucleotide-containing) actin-myosin linkages.  相似文献   

19.
The amelioration of cardioprotective effect of estrogen in diabetes suggests potential interactive action of estrogen and insulin on myofilament activation. We compared Ca2+-dependent Mg2+-ATPase activity of isolated myofibrillar preparations from hearts of sham and 10-wk ovariectomized rats with or without simultaneous 8 wk-induction of diabetes and from diabetic-ovariectomized rats with estrogen and/or insulin supplementation. Similar magnitude of suppressed maximum myofibrillar ATPase activity was demonstrated in ovariectomized, diabetic, and diabetic-ovariectomized rat hearts. Such suppressed activity and the relative suppression in alpha-myosin heavy chain level in ovariectomy combined with diabetes could be completely restored by estrogen and insulin supplementation. Conversely, the myofilament Ca2+ hypersensitivity detected only in the ovariectomized but not diabetic group was also observed in diabetic-ovariectomized rats, which was restored upon estrogen supplementation. Binding kinetics of beta1-adrenergic receptors and immunoblots of beta1-adrenoceptors as well as heat shock 72 (HSP72) were analyzed to determine the association of changes in receptors and HSP72 to that of the myofilament response to Ca2+. The amount of beta1-adrenoceptors significantly increased concomitant with Ca2+ hypersensitivity of the myofilament, without differences in the receptor binding affinity among the groups. In contrast, changes in HSP72 paralleled that of maximum myofibrillar ATPase activity. These results indicate that hypersensitivity of cardiac myofilament to Ca2+ is specifically induced in ovariectomized rats even under diabetes complication and that alterations in the expression of beta1-adrenoceptors may, in part, play a mechanistic role underlying the cardioprotective effects of estrogen that act together with Ca2+ hypersensitivity of the myofilament in determining the gender difference in cardiac activation.  相似文献   

20.
The light chains of scallop myosin as regulatory subunits   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
In molluscan muscles contraction is regulated by the interaction of calcium with myosin. The calcium dependence of the aotin-activated ATPase activity of scallop myosin requires the presence of a specific light chain. This light chain is released from myosin by EDTA treatment (EDTA-light chains) and its removal desensitizes the myosin, i.e. abolishes the calcium requirement for the actin-activated ATPase activity, and reduces the amount of calcium the myosin binds; the isolated light chain, however, does not bind calcium and has no ATPase activity. Calcium regulation and calcium binding is restored when the EDTA-light chain is recombined with desensitized myosin preparations. Dissociation of the EDTA-light chain from myosin depends on the concentration of divalent cations; half dissociation is reached at about 10?5 M-magnesium or 10?7 M-calcium concentrations. The EDTA-light chain and the residual myosin are fairly stable and the components may be kept separated for a day or so before recombination.Additional light chains containing half cystine residues (SH-light chains) are detached from desensitized myosin by sodium dodecyl sulfate. The EDTA-light chains and the SH-light chains have a similar chain weight of about 18,000 daltons; however, they differ in several amino acid residues and the EDTA-light chains contain no half cystine. The SH-light chains and EDTA-light chains have different tryptic fingerprints. Both light chains can be prepared from washed myofibrils.Densitometry of dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis bands and Sephadex chromatography in sodium dodecyl sulfate indicate that there are three moles of light chains in a mole of purified myosin, but only two in myosin treated with EDTA. The ratio of the SH-light chains to EDTA-light chains was found to be two to one in experiments where the total light-chain complements of myosin or myofibril preparations were carboxymethylated. A similar ratio was obtained from the densitometry of urea-acrylamide gel electrophoresis bands. We conclude that a myosin molecule contains two moles of SH-light chain and one mole of EDTA-light chain, and that the removal of a single EDTA-light chain completely desensitizes scallop myosin.Heavy meromyosin and S-1 subfragment can be prepared from scallop myosin. Both of these preparations bind calcium and contain light chains in significant amounts. The heavy meromyosin of scallop is extensively degraded; the S-1 preparation, however, is remarkably intact. Significantly, heavy meromyosin has a calcium-dependent actin-activated ATPase while the S-1 does not require calcium and shows high ATPase activity in its absence. These results suggest that regulation involves a co-operativity between the two globular ends of the myosin.Desensitized scallop myosin and scallop S-1 preparations can be made calcium sensitive when mixed with rabbit actin containing the rabbit regulatory proteins. This result makes it unlikely that specific light chains of myosin are involved in the regulation of the vertebrate system.The fundamental similarity in the contractile regulation of molluscs and vertebrates is that interaction between actin and myosin in both systems requires a critical level of calcium. We propose that the difference in regulation of these systems is that the interaction between myosin and actin is prevented by blocking sites on actin in the case of vertebrate muscles, whereas in the case of molluscan muscles it is the sites on myosin which are blocked in the absence of calcium.  相似文献   

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