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1.
A stacking sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis system has been used to resolve and quantify all the major myofibrillar protein components (actin, myosin, tropomyosin, and troponin C, T, and I). Quantification was achieved by densitometry of the fast green-stained gels calibrated with the use of purified proteins. The approximate molar ratios of these proteins in rabbit muscle are: actin: myosin: tropomyosin: troponin T: troponin I: troponin C = 7:1:1:1:1:1. On the basis of these results and available structural information one obtains an estimate of 254 myosin molecules per thick filament.  相似文献   

2.
We have determined the myosin heavy chain (MHC) composition (using a sensitive sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis system) and the maximal velocity of shortening (Vmax) of single cells from neonatal and adult chicken anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscles. In addition, the MHC, myosin light chain, and regulatory protein (i.e., troponin and tropomyosin subunits) compositions of bundles of ALD fibers were determined at late embryonic, neonatal, and adult ages. At young ages, there are two MHCs in ALD muscle, SM1 and SM2, with SM1 decreasing in relative amount with increasing age, as shown previously by others. The mean Vmax of single fibers also decreases from neonatal to adult ages. A strong quantitative correlation is demonstrated between the specific MHC composition and Vmax among individual cells of the ALD muscle at several ages. Since virtually no changes occur in the regulatory protein and myosin light chain compositions of the ALD muscle between late embryonic and adult ages, it appears that the MHC composition of an individual cell in this muscle is the primary determinant of the maximal shortening velocity. These results are the first to illustrate the functional significance of the developmental transition in myosin heavy chain composition of an avian slow skeletal muscle, consistent with our previous findings on mammalian muscle.  相似文献   

3.
The mode of degradation of myofibrillar proteins by the action of highly purified rabbit muscle cathepsin D (EC 3.4.23.5) was studied using SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Cathepsin D optimally degraded myosin heavy chain, α-actinin, tropomyosin, troponin T and troponin I at around pH 3. It did not degrade actin or troponin C. Degradation of myosin heavy chain produced four major fragments of 155 000, 130 000, 110 000 and 90 000 daltons. Troponin T was hydrolyzed to 33 000-, and 20 000- and 11 000-dalton fragments. Troponin I was degraded into fragments of 13 000 and 11 000 daltons. Degradation of α-actinin and tropomyosin was not as rapid as that of mysoin and troponins T and I. Tropomyosin gave a fragment of 30 000 daltons, but α-actinin showed no distinct band of this fragment on gels.  相似文献   

4.
Isotopes of a number of crustacean myofibrillar proteins have been identified with sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis, and their distribution in muscles of the snapping shrimp has been examined. Fast-slow differences in distribution have been observed for myosin light chains and tropomyosin. In contrast, three troponin T subunits have been resolved, each specific to one of the three muscles examined. This result suggests that expression of crustacean contractile proteins is not accomplished by a simple coexpression of a battery of slow or fast isotopes. In addition, the expression of these proteins was examined during the quasi-developmental fiber-type transition of the main claw closer muscle during the reversal of claw asymmetry in response to the loss of the large snapper appendage. The changes observed appear similar to the cross-innervation induced changes in gene expression of vertebrate muscle.  相似文献   

5.
Contents of myofibrillar proteins in cardiac, skeletal, and smooth muscles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The in situ contents of myosin, actin, alpha-actinin, tropomyosin, troponin, desmin were estimated in dog cardiac, rabbit skeletal, and chicken smooth muscles. Whole muscle tissues were dissolved with 8 M guanidine hydrochloride and subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, which is a nonequilibrium pH gradient electrophoresis (Murakami, U. & Uchida, K. (1984) J. Biochem. 95, 1577-1584) with some modification. The amount of protein in a spot on a slab gel was determined by quantification of the extracted dye. Dye binding capacity of individual myofibrillar proteins was determined by using the purified protein. Myosin contents were 82 +/- 7 pmol/mg wet weight in cardiac muscle, 105 +/- 10 pmol/mg wet weight in skeletal muscle, and 45 +/- 4 pmol/mg wet weight in smooth muscle. Actin contents were 339 +/- 15 pmol/mg wet weight in cardiac muscle, 625 +/- 27 pmol/mg wet weight in skeletal muscle, and 742 +/- 13 pmol/mg wet weight in smooth muscle. The subunit stoichiometry of myosin in the three types of muscles was two heavy chains and four light chains, and there was one light chain 2 for every heavy chain. The molar ratio of actin to tropomyosin was 7/1 in the three types of muscles. Striking differences were seen in the molar ratio of myosin to actin: 1.0/4.1 in cardiac muscle, 1.0/6.0 in skeletal muscle, and 1.0/16.5 in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

6.
The regulatory proteins of Ascaris suum striated skeletal muscle were partially purified and characterized. A tropomyosin isoform (Mr 41K) and three troponin subunits identified as troponin T (Mr 37.5K), troponin I (Mr 25.5K) and troponin C (Mr 18.5K) were purified. Three myosin light chains (Mr 25K, 19K, and 17K) were isolated from washed Ascaris actomyosin; the 19K subunit was phosphorylated in vitro. A calcium/calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase activity was identified in the muscle. In contrast to previously reported data suggesting that Ascaris obliquely striated muscle contraction is regulated by a myosin-mediated mechanism, these data indicate that all of the proteins required for actin-mediated, calcium-dependent muscle contraction are present in this tissue.  相似文献   

7.
Contractile protein populations were determined, using gel electrophoresis, during development of the claw closer muscles of the lobster Homarus americanus. In the adult the paired claw closer muscles are asymmetric, consisting of a crusher muscle with all slow fibers and a cutter muscle with a majority of fast and a few slow fibers. The electrophoretic banding pattern of these adult fast and slow fibers shows a similarity in the major proteins including myosin, actin, and tropomyosin which are common to both fiber types. Paramyosin is slightly heavier in fast fibers than in slow. However, fast fibers have three proteins and slow fibers have four proteins which are unique to themselves. Several of these unique proteins belong to the regulatory troponin complexes. In juvenile 4th stage lobster, where the paired closer muscles are undifferentiated, the banding pattern reveals the presence of proteins common to both fiber types including myosin, actin, and tropomysin but the conspicuous absence of all unique fast fiber proteins as well as one unique slow fiber protein. By the juvenile 10th stage most of these unique proteins are present except for one unique slow fiber protein. Thus lobster fast and slow fiber differentiation entails coordinate gene activation to add unique contractile proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Tropomyosin is present in virtually all eucaryotic cells, where it functions to modulate actin-myosin interaction and to stabilize actin filament structure. In striated muscle, tropomyosin regulates contractility by sterically blocking myosin-binding sites on actin in the relaxed state. On activation, tropomyosin moves away from these sites in two steps, one induced by Ca(2+) binding to troponin and a second by the binding of myosin to actin. In smooth muscle and non-muscle cells, where troponin is absent, the precise role and structural dynamics of tropomyosin on actin are poorly understood. Here, the location of tropomyosin on F-actin filaments free of troponin and other actin-binding proteins was determined to better understand the structural basis of its functioning in muscle and non-muscle cells. Using electron microscopy and three-dimensional image reconstruction, the association of a diverse set of wild-type and mutant actin and tropomyosin isoforms, from both muscle and non-muscle sources, was investigated. Tropomyosin position on actin appeared to be defined by two sets of binding interactions and tropomyosin localized on either the inner or the outer domain of actin, depending on the specific actin or tropomyosin isoform examined. Since these equilibrium positions depended on minor amino acid sequence differences among isoforms, we conclude that the energy barrier between thin filament states is small. Our results imply that, in striated muscles, troponin and myosin serve to stabilize tropomyosin in inhibitory and activating states, respectively. In addition, they are consistent with tropomyosin-dependent cooperative switching on and off of actomyosin-based motility. Finally, the locations of tropomyosin that we have determined suggest the possibility of significant competition between tropomyosin and other cellular actin-binding proteins. Based on these results, we present a general framework for tropomyosin modulation of motility and cytoskeletal modelling.  相似文献   

9.
Ca2+ regulation of molluscan actomyosin adenosine triphosphatase is known to be associated with the myosin molecule. Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, however, also suggests the possible presence of troponin, a thin-filament-linked Ca2+-regulatory complex. In the present study, scallop troponin and tropomyosin were prepared and complexed with rabbit actin; the resulting synthetic thin filaments form a Ca2+-dependent actomyosin adenosine triphosphatase with Ca2+-insensitive rabbit myosin, indicating that the troponin in scallops is potentially functional. Scallop troponin I was isolated and mixed with chicken troponin C and troponin T, forming a functional hybrid troponin complex, indicating that scallop and vertebrate troponins may act by a common mechanism. Densitometry of sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gels reveals that in synthetic thin filaments there are larger amounts of troponin than are present in native thin filaments. Amounts present in the intact muscle were not determined.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. A light and electron immunohistochemical study was carried out on the body wall muscles of the chaetognath Sagitta friderici for the presence of a variety of contractile proteins (myosin, paramyosin, actin), regulatory proteins (tropomyosin, troponin), and structural proteins (α‐actinin, desmin, vimentin). The primary muscle (~80% of body wall volume) showed the characteristic structure of transversely striated muscles, and was comparable to that of insect asynchronous flight muscles. In addition, the body wall had a secondary muscle with a peculiar structure, displaying two sarcomere types (S1 and S2), which alternated along the myofibrils. S1 sarcomeres were similar to those in the slow striated fibers of many invertebrates. In contrast, S2 sarcomeres did not show a regular sarcomeric pattern, but instead exhibited parallel arrays of 2 filament types. The thickest filaments (~10–15 nm) were arranged to form lamellar structures, surrounded by the thinnest filaments (~6 nm). Immunoreactions to desmin and vimentin were negative in both muscle types. The primary muscle exhibited the classical distribution of muscle proteins: actin, tropomyosin, and troponin were detected along the thin filaments, whereas myosin and paramyosin were localized along the thick filaments; immunolabeling of α‐actinin was found at Z‐bands. Immunoreactions in the S1 sarcomeres of the secondary muscle were very similar to those found in the primary muscle. Interestingly, the S2 sarcomeres of this muscle were labeled with actin and tropomyosin antibodies, and presented no immunore‐actions to both myosin and paramyosin. α‐Actinin in the secondary muscle was only detected at the Z‐lines that separate S1 from S2. These findings suggest that S2 are not true sarcomeres. Although they contain actin and tropomyosin in their thinnest filaments, their thickest filaments do not show myosin or paramyosin, as the striated muscle thick myofilaments do. These peculiar S2 thick filaments might be an uncommon type of intermediate filament, which were labeled neither with desmin or vimentin antibodies.  相似文献   

11.
Troponin contains a globular Ca(2+)-binding domain and an elongated tail domain composed of the N terminus of subunit troponin T (TnT). The tail domain anchors troponin to tropomyosin and actin, modulates myosin function, and is a site of cardiomyopathy-inducing mutations. Critical interactions between tropomyosin and troponin are proposed to depend on tail domain residues 112-136, which are highly conserved across phyla. Most cardiomyopathy mutations in TnT flank this region. Three such mutations were examined and had contrasting effects on peptide TnT-(1-156), promoting folding and thermal stability assessed by circular dichroism (F110I) or weakening folding and stability (T104V and to a small extent R92Q). Folding of both TnT-(1-156) and whole troponin was promoted by replacing bovine TnT Thr-104 with human TnT Ala-104, further indicating the importance of this cardiomyopathy site residue for protein folding. Mutation F110I markedly stabilized the troponin tail but weakened binding of holo-troponin to actin-tropomyosin 8-fold, suggesting that loss of flexibility impairs troponin tail function. The effect of the F110I mutation on troponin-tropomyosin binding to actin was much less, indicating this flexibility is particularly important for the interactions of troponin with tropomyosin. We suggest that most cardiomyopathic mutations in the troponin tail alter muscle function indirectly, by perturbing interactions between troponin and tropomyosin requisite for the complex effects of these proteins on myosin.  相似文献   

12.
1. The mode of degradation of myofibrillar proteins and the structural changes in myofibrils due to the action of cathepsin B highly purified from rabbit skeletal muscle were studied. 2. Cathepsin B degraded myosin heavy chain, actin and troponin T, but not alpha-actinin, tropomyosin, troponin I or troponin C among myofibrillar proteins. 3. Cathepsin B optimally degraded myosin heavy chain, actin and troponin T at around pH 5. Degradation of myosin heavy chain produced 6 fragments, 180,000, 150,000, 87,000, 81,000, 75,000 and 69,000 Da, respectively. Actin was hydrolyzed into fragments of 41,000, 38,000 and 30,000 Da. Troponin T was degraded into fragments of 21,000, 12,000 and 10,000 Da. 4. Cathepsin B caused the fragmentation of myofibrils and disturbance of the lateral arrangement of myofibrils. 5. Cathepsin B partly disintegrated the Z-line and the M-line, and induced disordering of the arrangement of filaments in the I-band.  相似文献   

13.
Tropomyosin binds end to end along the actin filament. Tropomyosin ends, and the complex they form, are required for actin binding, cooperative regulation of actin filaments by myosin, and binding to the regulatory protein, troponin T. The aim of the work was to understand the isoform and structural specificity of the end-to-end association of tropomyosin. The ability of N-terminal and C-terminal model peptides with sequences of alternate alpha-tropomyosin isoforms, and a troponin T fragment that binds to the tropomyosin overlap, to form complexes was analyzed using circular dichroism spectroscopy. Analysis of N-terminal extensions (N-acetylation, Gly, AlaSer) showed that to form an overlap complex between the N-terminus and the C-terminus requires that the N-terminus be able to form a coiled coil. Formation of a ternary complex with the troponin T fragment, however, effectively takes place only when the overlap complex sequences are those found in striated muscle tropomyosins. Striated muscle tropomyosins with N-terminal modifications formed ternary complexes with troponin T that varied in affinity in the order: N-acetylated > Gly > AlaSer > unacetylated. The circular dichroism results were corroborated by native gel electrophoresis, and the ability of the troponin T fragment to promote binding of full-length tropomyosins to filamentous actin.  相似文献   

14.
Striated muscle contraction is regulated by the actin binding proteins tropomyosin and troponin. Defects in these proteins lead to myopathies and cardiomyopathies. Deletion of the 14 C-terminal residues of cardiac troponin T leads to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. We showed earlier that regulated actin containing Δ14 TnT was more readily activated than wild-type regulated actin. We suggested that the equilibria among the inactive (blocked), intermediate (closed or calcium), and active (open or myosin) states was shifted to the active state. We now show that, in addition, such regulated actin filaments cannot enter the inactive or blocked state. Regulated actin containing Δ14 TnT had ATPase activities in the absence of Ca2+ that were higher than wild-type filaments but far below the fully active rate. The rapid dissociation of S1-ATP from regulated actin filaments containing Δ14 TnT and acrylodan-labeled tropomyosin did not show the fluorescence increase characteristic of moving to the inactive state. Replacing wild-type TnI with S45E TnI, that favors the inactive state, did not restore the fluorescence change. We conclude that TnT has a previously unrecognized role in forming the inactive state of regulated actin.  相似文献   

15.
姜惠杰  孙虎山 《动物学报》2003,49(3):362-369
骨骼肌快肌的收缩主要是由钙离子通过肌钙蛋白所调节控制。这些肌钙蛋白位于肌纤维之中。肌蛋白包括肌钙蛋白T、肌钙蛋白C、肌钙蛋白I。采用双向聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳和免疫学技术,对大鼠胚胎、新生大鼠和成年大鼠的骨能肌快肌肌钙蛋白T的同工型进行了研究。在成年大鼠的骨能肌快肌中,发现了10种肌钙蛋白T同工型。在大鼠胚胎和新生大鼠的骨能肌中,发现了7种肌钙蛋白T同工型。作为不同动物、不同发育阶段和不同组织发育的特殊标记,这些肌钙蛋白T同工型具有重要意义[动物学报49(3):362—369,2003]。  相似文献   

16.
Microfilaments were isolated from cultured mammalian cells, utilizing procedures similar to those for isolation of "native" thin filaments from muscle. Isolated microfilaments from rat embryo, baby hamster kidney (BHK- 21), and Swiss mouse 3T3 cells appeared structurally similar to muscle thin filaments, exhibiting long, 6 nm Diam profiles with a beaded, helical substructure. An arrowhead pattern was observed after reaction of isolated microfilaments with rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment 1. Under appropriate conditions, isolated microfilaments will aggregate into a form that resembles microfilament bundles seen in situ cultured cells. Isolated microfilaments represent a complex of proteins including actin. Some of these components have been tentatively identified, based on coelectrophoresis with purified proteins, as myosin, tropomyosin, and a high molecular weight actin-binding protein. The tropomyosin components of isolated microfilaments were unexpected; polypeptides comigrated on SDS-polyacrylamide gels with both muscle and nonmuscle types of tropomyosin. In order to identify more specifically these subunits, we isolated and partially characterized tropomyosin from three cell types. BHK-21 cell tropomyosin was similar to other nonmuscle tropomyosins, as judged by several criteria. However, tropomyosin isolated from rate embryo and 3T3 cells contained subunits that comigrated with both skeletal muscle and nonmuscle types of myosin, whereas the BHK cell protein consistently contained a minor muscle-like subunit. The array of tropomyosin subunits present in a cell culture was reflected in the polypeptide chain pattern seen on SDS-polyacrylamide gels of microfilaments isolated from that culture. These studies provide a starting point for correlating changes in the ultrastructural organization of microfilaments with alterations in their protein composition.  相似文献   

17.
Ca2+-regulated motility is essential to numerous cellular functions, including muscle contraction. Systems with troponin C, myosin light chain, or calmodulin as the Ca2+ receptor have evolved in striated muscle and other types of cells to transduce the cytoplasm Ca2+ signals into allosteric conformational changes of contractile proteins. While these Ca2+ receptors are homologous proteins, their coupling to the responding elements is quite different in various cell types. The Ca2+ regulatory system in vertebrate striated muscle represents a highly specialized such signal transduction pathway consisting of the troponin complex and tropomyosin associated with the actin filament. To understand the molecular mechanism in the Ca2+ regulation of muscle contraction and cell motility, we have revealed a preserved ancestral close linkage between the genes encoding two of the troponin subunits, troponin I and troponin T, in the genome of mouse. The data suggest that the troponin I and troponin T genes may have originated from a single locus and evolved in parallel to encode a striated muscle-specific adapter to couple the Ca2+ receptor, troponin C, to the actin–myosin contractile machinery. This hypothesis views the three troponin subunits as two structure–function domains: the Ca2+ receptor and the signal transducing adapter. This model may help to further our understanding of the Ca2+ regulation of muscle contraction and the structure–function relationship of other potential adapter proteins which are converged to constitute the Ca2+ signal transduction pathways governing nonmuscle cell motility. Received: 15 April 1999 / Accepted: 15 July 1999  相似文献   

18.
Calcium regulation of muscle contraction.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Calcium triggers contraction by reaction with regulatory proteins that in the absence of calcium prevent interaction of actin and myosin. Two different regulatory systems are found in different muscles. In actin-linked regulation troponin and tropomyosin regulate actin by blocking sites on actin required for complex formation with myosin; in myosin-linked regulation sites on myosin are blocked in the absence of calcium. The major features of actin control are as follows: there is a requirement for tropomyosin and for a troponin complex having three different subunits with different functions; the actin displays a cooperative behavior; and a movement of tropomyosin occurs controlled by the calcium binding on troponin. Myosin regulation is controlled by a regulatory subunit that can be dissociated in scallop myosin reversibly by removing divalent cations with EDTA. Myosin control can function with pure actin in the absence of tropomyosin. Calcium binding and regulation of molluscan myosins depend on the presence of regulatory light chains. It is proposed that the light chains function by sterically blocking myosin sites in the absence of calcium, and that the "off" state of myosin requires cooperation between the two myosin heads. Both myosin control and actin control are widely distributed in different organisms. Many invertebrates have muscles with both types of regulation. Actin control is absent in the muscles of molluscs and in several minor phyla that lack troponin. Myosin control is not found in striated vertebrate muscles and in the fast muscles of crustacean decapods, although regulatory light chains are present. While in vivo myosin control may not be excluded from vertebrate striated muscles, myosin control may be absent as a result of mutations of the myosin heavy chain.  相似文献   

19.
In cardiac and skeletal muscles tropomyosin binds to the actin outer domain in the absence of Ca(2+), and in this position tropomyosin inhibits muscle contraction by interfering sterically with myosin-actin binding. The globular domain of troponin is believed to produce this B-state of the thin filament (Lehman, W., Hatch, V., Korman, V. L., Rosol, M., Thomas, L. T., Maytum, R., Geeves, M. A., Van Eyk, J. E., Tobacman, L. S., and Craig, R. (2000) J. Mol. Biol. 302, 593-606) via troponin I-actin interactions that constrain the tropomyosin. The present study shows that the B-state can be promoted independently by the elongated tail region of troponin (the NH(2) terminus (TnT-(1-153)) of cardiac troponin T). In the absence of the troponin globular domain, TnT-(1-153) markedly inhibited both myosin S1-actin-tropomyosin MgATPase activity and (at low S1 concentrations) myosin S1-ADP binding to the thin filament. Similarly, TnT-(1-153) increased the concentration of heavy meromyosin required to support in vitro sliding of thin filaments. Electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction of thin filaments containing TnT-(1-153) and either cardiac or skeletal muscle tropomyosin showed that tropomyosin was in the B-state in the complete absence of troponin I. All of these results indicate that portions of the troponin tail domain, and not only troponin I, contribute to the positioning of tropomyosin on the actin outer domain, thereby inhibiting muscle contraction in the absence of Ca(2+).  相似文献   

20.
Crystals and paracrystals of bovine cardiac tropomyosin and their mixtures with different combinations of troponin subunits were examined in the electron microscope after negative staining. Although the cardiac proteins gave most of the same crystalline and paracrystalline patterns as observed previously with skeletal muscle tropomyosin and troponin, two important differences were noted. Cardiac troponin T was incapable of forming hexagonal networks with either skeletal or cardiac muscle tropomyosins, while skeletal troponin T readily associated in this manner with tropomyosins from either tissue source. Also the characteristic paracrystalline pattern seen with skeletal muscle tropomyosin, troponin T and troponin C only in the presence of calcium was consistently obtained with mixtures of the corresponding cardiac components when calcium was absent.  相似文献   

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