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1.
The molecular switching mechanism governing skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction couples the binding of Ca2+ on troponin to the movement of tropomyosin on actin filaments. Despite years of investigation, this mechanism remains unclear because it has not yet been possible to directly assess the structural influence of troponin on tropomyosin that causes actin filaments, and hence myosin-crossbridge cycling and contraction, to switch on and off. A C-terminal domain of troponin I is thought to be intimately involved in inducing tropomyosin movement to an inhibitory position that blocks myosin-crossbridge interaction. Release of this regulatory, latching domain from actin after Ca2+ binding to TnC (the Ca2+ sensor of troponin that relieves inhibition) presumably allows tropomyosin movement away from the inhibitory position on actin, thus initiating contraction. However, the structural interactions of the regulatory domain of TnI (the “inhibitory” subunit of troponin) with tropomyosin and actin that cause tropomyosin movement are unknown, and thus, the regulatory process is not well defined. Here, thin filaments were labeled with an engineered construct representing C-terminal TnI, and then, 3D electron microscopy was used to resolve where troponin is anchored on actin-tropomyosin. Electron microscopy reconstruction showed how TnI binding to both actin and tropomyosin at low Ca2+ competes with tropomyosin for a common site on actin and drives tropomyosin movement to a constrained, relaxing position to inhibit myosin-crossbridge association. Thus, the observations reported reveal the structural mechanism responsible for troponin-tropomyosin-mediated steric interference of actin-myosin interaction that regulates muscle contraction.  相似文献   

2.
The Ca2+-dependent interaction of troponin I (TnI) with actin·tropomyosin (Tm) in muscle thin filaments is a critical step in the regulation of muscle contraction. Previous studies have suggested that, in the absence of Ca2+, TnI interacts with Tm and actin in reconstituted muscle thin filaments, maintaining Tm at the outer domain of actin and blocking myosin-actin interaction. To obtain direct evidence for this Tm-TnI interaction, we performed photochemical crosslinking studies using Tm labeled with 4-maleimidobenzophenone at position 146 or 174 (Tm*146 or Tm*174, respectively), reconstituted with actin and troponin [composed of TnI, troponin T (TnT), and troponin C] or with actin and TnI. After near-UV irradiation, SDS gels of the Tm*146-containing thin filament showed three new high-molecular-weight bands determined to be crosslinked products Tm*146-TnI, Tm*146-troponin C, and Tm*146-TnT using fluorescence-labeled TnI, mass spectrometry, and Western blot analysis. While Tm*146-TnI was produced only in the absence of Ca2+, the production of other crosslinked species did not show Ca2+ dependence. Tm*174 mainly crosslinked to TnT. In the absence of actin, a similar crosslinking pattern was obtained with a much lower yield. A tryptic peptide from Tm*146-TnI with a molecular mass of 2601.2 Da that was not present in the tryptic peptides of Tm*146 or TnI was identified using HPLC and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight. This was shown, using absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, to be the 4-maleimidobenzophenone-labeled peptide from Tm crosslinked to TnI peptide 157-163. These data, which show that a region in the C-terminal domain of TnI interacts with Tm in the absence of Ca2+, support the hypothesis that a TnI-Tm interaction maintains Tm at the outer domain of actin and will help efforts to localize troponin in actin·Tm muscle thin filaments.  相似文献   

3.
The molecular regulation of striated muscle contraction couples the binding and dissociation of Ca2+ on troponin (Tn) to the movement of tropomyosin on actin filaments. In turn, this process exposes or blocks myosin binding sites on actin, thereby controlling myosin crossbridge dynamics and consequently muscle contraction. Using 3D electron microscopy, we recently provided structural evidence that a C-terminal extension of TnI is anchored on actin at low Ca2+ and competes with tropomyosin for a common site to drive tropomyosin to the B-state location, a constrained, relaxing position on actin that inhibits myosin-crossbridge association. Here, we show that release of this constraint at high Ca2+ allows a second segment of troponin, probably representing parts of TnT or the troponin core domain, to promote tropomyosin movement on actin to the Ca2+-induced C-state location. With tropomyosin stabilized in this position, myosin binding interactions can begin. Tropomyosin appears to oscillate to a higher degree between respective B- and C-state positions on troponin-free filaments than on fully regulated filaments, suggesting that tropomyosin positioning in both states is troponin-dependent. By biasing tropomyosin to either of these two positions, troponin appears to have two distinct structural functions; in relaxed muscles at low Ca2+, troponin operates as an inhibitor, while in activated muscles at high Ca2+, it acts as a promoter to initiate contraction.  相似文献   

4.
The muscle thin filament protein troponin (Tn) regulates contraction of vertebrate striated muscle by conferring Ca2+ sensitivity to the interaction of actin and myosin. Troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+ binding subunit of Tn contains two homologous domains and four divalent cation binding sites. Two structural sites in the C-terminal domain of TnC bind either Ca2+ or Mg2+, and two regulatory sites in the N-terminal domain are specific for Ca2+. Interactions between TnC and the inhibitory Tn subunit troponin I (TnI) are of central importance to the Ca2+ regulation of muscle contraction and have been intensively studied. Much remains to be learned, however, due mainly to the lack of a three-dimensional structure for TnI. In particular, the role of amino acid residues near the C-terminus of TnI is not well understood. In this report, we prepared a mutant TnC which contains a single Trp-26 residue in the N-terminal, regulatory domain. We used fluorescence lifetime and quenching measurements to monitor Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent changes in the environment of Trp-26 in isolated TnC, as well as in binary complexes of TnC with a Trp-free mutant of TnI or a truncated form of this mutant, TnI(1-159), which lacked the C-terminal 22 amino acid residues of TnI. We found that full-length TnI and TnI(1-159) affected Trp-26 similarly when all four binding sites of TnC were occupied by Ca2+. When the regulatory Ca2+-binding sites in the N-terminal domain of TnC were vacant and the structural sites in the C-terminal domain of were occupied by Mg2+, we found significant differences between full-length TnI and TnI(1-159) in their effect on Trp-26. Our results provide the first indica- tion that the C-terminus of TnI may play an important role in the regulation of vertebrate striated muscle through Ca2+-dependent interactions with the regula- tory domain of TnC.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the functions of troponin T (CeTnT-1) in Caenorhabditis elegans embryonic body wall muscle. TnT tethers troponin I (TnI) and troponin C (TnC) to the thin filament via tropomyosin (Tm), and TnT/Tm regulates the activation and inhibition of myosin-actin interaction in response to changes in intracellular [Ca2+]. Loss of CeTnT-1 function causes aberrant muscle trembling and tearing of muscle cells from their exoskeletal attachment sites (Myers, C.D., P.-Y. Goh, T. StC. Allen, E.A. Bucher, and T. Bogaert. 1996. J. Cell Biol. 132:1061–1077). We hypothesized that muscle tearing is a consequence of excessive force generation resulting from defective tethering of Tn complex proteins. Biochemical studies suggest that such defective tethering would result in either (a) Ca2+-independent activation, due to lack of Tn complex binding and consequent lack of inhibition, or (b) delayed reestablishment of TnI/TnC binding to the thin filament after Ca2+ activation and consequent abnormal duration of force. Analyses of animals doubly mutant for CeTnT-1 and for genes required for Ca2+ signaling support that CeTnT-1 phenotypes are dependent on Ca2+ signaling, thus supporting the second model and providing new in vivo evidence that full inhibition of thin filaments in low [Ca2+] does not require TnT.  相似文献   

6.
The Ca2+-induced transition in the troponin complex (Tn) regulates vertebrate striated muscle contraction. Tn was reconstituted with recombinant forms of troponin I (TnI) containing a single intrinsic 5-hydroxytryptophan (5HW). Fluorescence analysis of these mutants of TnI demonstrate that the regions in TnI that respond to Ca2+ binding to the regulatory N-domain of TnC are the inhibitory region (residues 96-116) and a neighboring region that includes position 121. Our data confirms the role of TnI as a modulator of the Ca2+ affinity of TnC; we show that point mutations and incorporation of 5HW in TnI can affect both the affinity and the cooperativity of Ca2+ binding to TnC. We also discuss the possibility that the regulatory sites in the N-terminal domain of TnC might be the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites in the troponin complex.  相似文献   

7.
Striated muscle contraction in most animals is regulated at least in part by the troponin-tropomyosin (Tn-Tm) switch on the thin (actin-containing) filaments. The only group that has been suggested to lack actin-linked regulation is the mollusks, where contraction is regulated through the myosin heads on the thick filaments. However, molluscan gene sequence data suggest the presence of troponin (Tn) components, consistent with actin-linked regulation, and some biochemical and immunological data also support this idea. The presence of actin-linked (in addition to myosin-linked) regulation in mollusks would simplify our general picture of muscle regulation by extending actin-linked regulation to this phylum as well. We have investigated this question structurally by determining the effect of Ca2+ on the position of Tm in native thin filaments from scallop striated adductor muscle. Three-dimensional reconstructions of negatively stained filaments were determined by electron microscopy and single-particle image analysis. At low Ca2+, Tm appeared to occupy the “blocking” position, on the outer domain of actin, identified in earlier studies of regulated thin filaments in the low-Ca2+ state. In this position, Tm would sterically block myosin binding, switching off filament activity. At high Ca2+, Tm appeared to move toward a position on the inner domain, similar to that induced by Ca2+ in regulated thin filaments. This Ca2+-induced movement of Tm is consistent with the hypothesis that scallop thin filaments are Ca2+ regulated.  相似文献   

8.
Troponin (Tn), in association with tropomyosin (Tm), plays a central role in the calcium regulation of striated muscle contraction. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between probes attached to the Tn subunits (TnC, TnI, TnT) and to Tm was measured to study the spatial relationship between Tn and Tm on the thin filament. We generated single-cysteine mutants of rabbit skeletal muscle α-Tm, TnI and the β-TnT 25-kDa fragment. The energy donor was attached to a single-cysteine residue at position 60, 73, 127, 159, 200 or 250 on TnT, at 98 on TnC and at 1, 9, 133 or 181 on TnI, while the energy acceptor was located at 13, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271 or 279 on Tm. FRET analysis showed a distinct Ca2+-induced conformational change of the Tm-Tn complex and revealed that TnT60 and TnT73 were closer to Tm13 than Tm279, indicating that the elongated N-terminal region of TnT extends beyond the beginning of the next Tm molecule on the actin filament. Using the atomic coordinates of the crystal structures of Tm and the Tn core domain, we searched for the disposition and orientation of these structures by minimizing the deviations of the calculated FRET efficiencies from the observed FRET efficiencies in order to construct atomic models of the Tn-Tm complex with and without bound Ca2+. In the best-fit models, the Tn core domain is located on residues 160-200 of Tm, with the arrowhead-shaped I-T arm tilting toward the C-terminus of Tm. The angle between the Tm axis and the long axis of TnC is ∼ 75° and ∼ 85° with and without bound Ca2+, respectively. The models indicate that the long axis of TnC is perpendicular to the thin filament without bound Ca2+, and that TnC and the I-T arm tilt toward the filament axis and rotate around the Tm axis by ∼ 20° upon Ca2+ binding.  相似文献   

9.
The complete amino acid sequence of squid Todarodes pacificus troponin C (TnC), which was shown to bind only 1 mol Ca2+/mol, was determined by both the Edman and cDNA methods. The squid TnC is composed of 147 amino acids including an unblocked Pro at the N-terminus and the calculated molecular weight is 17 003.9. Among the four potential Ca2+-binding sites, namely sites I–IV from the N-terminus, only site IV completely satisfied the consensus amino acid sequence for the active Ca2+-binding loop. This indicates that squid TnC possesses a single Ca2+-binding site at the site IV as scallop TnCs [Nishita et al., J. Biol. Chem. 269 (1994) 3464–3468; Ojima et al., Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 311 (1994) 272–276). The sequence homology of squid TnC to TnCs of scallop, arthropods, and rabbit was 61%, 31–38%, and 31%, respectively. In the sequence of the central D/E-helix region of squid and scallop TnCs, a deletion of three amino acids was required to maximize the homology with the other TnCs.  相似文献   

10.
Vertebrate troponin regulates muscle contraction through alternative binding of the C-terminal region of the inhibitory subunit, troponin-I (TnI), to actin or troponin-C (TnC) in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms of this regulation by molluskan troponin, we compared the functional properties of the recombinant fragments of Akazara scallop TnI and rabbit fast skeletal TnI. The C-terminal fragment of Akazara scallop TnI (ATnI(232-292)), which contains the inhibitory region (residues 104-115 of rabbit TnI) and the regulatory TnC-binding site (residues 116-131), bound actin-tropomyosin and inhibited actomyosin-tropomyosin Mg-ATPase. However, it did not interact with TnC, even in the presence of Ca(2+). These results indicated that the mechanism involved in the alternative binding of this region was not observed in molluskan troponin. On the other hand, ATnI(130-252), which contains the structural TnC-binding site (residues 1-30 of rabbit TnI) and the inhibitory region, bound strongly to both actin and TnC. Moreover, the ternary complex consisting of this fragment, troponin-T, and TnC activated the ATPase in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner almost as effectively as intact Akazara scallop troponin. Therefore, Akazara scallop troponin regulates the contraction through the activating mechanisms that involve the region spanning from the structural TnC-binding site to the inhibitory region of TnI. Together with the observation that corresponding rabbit TnI-fragment (RTnI(1-116)) shows similar activating effects, these findings suggest the importance of the TnI N-terminal region not only for maintaining the structural integrity of troponin complex but also for Ca(2+)-dependent activation.  相似文献   

11.
Nara M  Yumoto F  Kagi H  Tanokura M 《Biopolymers》2008,89(7):595-599
Akazara scallop striated adductor muscle troponin C (TnC) binds only one Ca2+ because the three EF-hand motifs are short of critical residues for the coordination of Ca2+. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy was applied to study coordination structures of M2+ (= Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, and Ba2+) bound in an Akazara scallop TnC mutant (E142D) and the wild-type TnC C-lobe in D2O solution. The region of the COO- antisymmetric stretch provides information regarding the coordination modes of a COO- group to a metal ion. The side chain COO- group of Asp142 did not bind to Ca2+ in the bidentate coordination mode, suggesting that the absence of a methylene group is critical for the Ca2+ coordination structure of Akazara scallop TnC (Nara et al., Vib Spect 2006, 42, 188-191). The present study has shown that the absence of a methylene group is not compensated for by a larger metal ion such as Sr2+ or Ba2+. CD spectra showed that the secondary structures are conserved between M2+-free (apo), Mg2+-loaded, Ca2+-loaded, Sr2+-loaded, and Ba2+-loaded states, which was consistent with the results estimated from their amide I band patterns. The metal-ligand interaction at position 12 of site IV is discussed in comparison with the coordination mode of the side chain COO- group of the wild-type TnC C-lobe.  相似文献   

12.
Scallop troponin C (TnC) binds only one Ca(2+)/mol and the single Ca(2+)-binding site has been suggested to be site IV on the basis of the primary structure [K. Nishita, H. Tanaka, and T. Ojima (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 3464-3468; T. Ojima, H. Tanaka, and K. Nishita (1994) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 311, 272-276]. In the present study, the functional role of Ca(2+)-binding site IV of akazara scallop (Chlamys nipponensis akazara) TnC in Ca(2+)-regulation was investigated using a site-directed mutant with an inactivated site IV (TnC-ZEQ), N- and C-terminal half molecule mutants (TnC(N) and TnC(C)), and wild-type TnC (TnC(W)). Equilibrium dialysis using (45)Ca(2+) demonstrated that TnC(W) and TnC(C) bind 0.6-0.8 mol of Ca(2+)/mol, but that TnC-ZEQ and TnC(N) bind virtually no Ca(2+). The UV difference spectra of TnC(W) and TnC(C) showed bands at around 280-290 nm due to the perturbation of Tyr and Trp upon Ca(2+)-binding, while TnC-ZEQ and TnC(N) did not show these bands. In addition, TnC(W) and TnC(C) showed retardation of elution from Sephacryl S-200 upon the addition of 1 mM CaCl(2), unlike TnC-ZEQ and TnC(N). These results indicate that Ca(2+) binds only to site IV and that Ca(2+)-binding causes structural changes in both the whole TnC molecule and the C-terminal half molecule. In addition, TnC(W), TnC-ZEQ, and TnC(C), but not TnC(N), were shown to form soluble complexes with scallop TnI at physiological ionic strength. On the other hand, the Mg-ATPase activity of reconstituted rabbit actomyosin in the presence of scallop tropomyosin was inhibited by scallop TnI and recovered by the addition of an equimolar amount of TnC(W), TnC-ZEQ, or TnC(C), but not TnC(N). These results imply that the site responsible for the association with TnI is located in the C-terminal half domain of TnC. Ternary complex constructed from scallop TnT, TnI, and TnC(W) conferred Ca(2+)-sensitivity to the Mg-ATPase of rabbit actomyosin to the same extent as native troponin, but the TnC(N)-TnT-TnI and TnC-ZEQ-TnT-TnI complexes conferred no Ca(2+)-sensitivity, while the TnC(C)-TnT-TnI complex conferred weak Ca(2+)-sensitivity. Thus, the major functions of scallop TnC, such as Ca(2+)-binding and interaction with TnI, are located in the C-terminal domain, however, the full Ca(2+)-regulatory function requires the presence of the N-terminal domain.  相似文献   

13.
Troponin (Tn) is an important regulatory protein in the thin-filament complex of cardiomyocytes. Calcium binding to the troponin C (TnC) subunit causes a change in its dynamics that leads to the transient opening of a hydrophobic patch on TnC’s surface, to which a helix of another subunit, troponin I (TnI), binds. This process initiates contraction, making it an important target for studies investigating the detailed molecular processes that underlie contraction. Here we use microsecond-timescale Anton molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the dynamics and kinetics of the opening transition of the TnC hydrophobic patch. Free-energy differences for opening are calculated for wild-type Ca2+-bound TnC (∼8 kcal/mol), V44Q Ca2+-bound TnC (3.2 kcal/mol), E40A Ca2+-bound TnC (∼12 kcal/mol), and wild-type apo TnC (∼20 kcal/mol). These results suggest that the mutations have a profound impact on the frequency with which the hydrophobic patch presents to TnI. In addition, these simulations corroborate that cardiac wild-type TnC does not open on timescales relevant to contraction without calcium being bound.  相似文献   

14.
Skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinase (PhK) is a Ca2+-dependent enzyme complex, (αβγδ)4, with the δ subunit being tightly bound endogenous calmodulin (CaM). The Ca2+-dependent activation of glycogen phosphorylase by PhK couples muscle contraction with glycogen breakdown in the “excitation-contraction-energy production triad.” Although the Ca2+-dependent protein-protein interactions among the relevant contractile components of muscle are well characterized, such interactions have not been previously examined in the intact PhK complex. Here we show that zero-length cross-linking of the PhK complex produces a covalent dimer of its catalytic γ and CaM subunits. Utilizing mass spectrometry, we determined the residues cross-linked to be in an EF hand of CaM and in a region of the γ subunit sharing high sequence similarity with the Ca2+-sensitive molecular switch of troponin I that is known to bind actin and troponin C, a homolog of CaM. Our findings represent an unusual binding of CaM to a target protein and supply an explanation for the low Ca2+ stoichiometry of PhK that has been reported. They also provide direct structural evidence supporting co-evolution of the coordinate regulation by Ca2+ of contraction and energy production in muscle through the sharing of a common structural motif in troponin I and the catalytic subunit of PhK for their respective interactions with the homologous Ca2+-binding proteins troponin C and CaM.  相似文献   

15.
Insect indirect flight muscle is activated by sinusoidal length change, which enables the muscle to work at high frequencies, and contracts isometrically in response to Ca2+. Indirect flight muscle has two TnC isoforms: F1 binding a single Ca2+ in the C-domain, and F2 binding Ca2+ in the N- and C-domains. Fibres substituted with F1 produce delayed force in response to a single rapid stretch, and those with F2 produce isometric force in response to Ca2+. We have studied the effect of TnC isoforms on oscillatory work. In native Lethocerus indicus fibres, oscillatory work was superimposed on a level of isometric force that depended on Ca2+ concentration. Maximum work was produced at pCa 6.1; at higher concentrations, work decreased as isometric force increased. In fibres substituted with F1 alone, work continued to rise as Ca2+ was increased up to pCa 4.7. Fibres substituted with various F1:F2 ratios produced maximal work at a ratio of 100:1 or 50:1; a higher proportion of F2 increased isometric force at the expense of oscillatory work. The F1:F2 ratio was 9.8:1 in native fibres, as measured by immunofluorescence, using isoform-specific antibodies. The small amount of F2 needed to restore work to levels obtained for the native fibre is likely to be due to the relative affinity of F1 and F2 for TnH, the Lethocerus homologue of TnI. Affinity of TnC isoforms for a TnI fragment of TnH was measured by isothermal titration calorimetry. The Kd was 1.01 μM for F1 binding and 22.7 nM for F2. The higher affinity of F2 can be attributed to two TnH binding sites on F2 and a single site on F1. Stretch may be sensed by an extended C-terminal domain of TnH, resulting in reversible dissociation of the inhibitory sequence from actin during the oscillatory cycle.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Muscle contraction is tightly regulated by Ca2+ binding to the thin filament protein troponin. The mechanism of this regulation was investigated by detailed mapping of the dynamic properties of cardiac troponin using amide hydrogen exchange-mass spectrometry. Results were obtained in the presence of either saturation or non-saturation of the regulatory Ca2+ binding site in the NH2 domain of subunit TnC. Troponin was found to be highly dynamic, with 60% of amides exchanging H for D within seconds of exposure to D2O. In contrast, portions of the TnT-TnI coiled-coil exhibited high protection from exchange, despite 6 h in D2O. The data indicate that the most stable portion of the trimeric troponin complex is the coiled-coil. Regulatory site Ca2+ binding altered dynamic properties (i.e. H/D exchange protection) locally, near the binding site and in the TnI switch helix that attaches to the Ca2+-saturated TnC NH2 domain. More notably, Ca2+ also altered the dynamic properties of other parts of troponin: the TnI inhibitory peptide region that binds to actin, the TnT-TnI coiled-coil, and the TnC COOH domain that contains the regulatory Ca2+ sites in many invertebrate as opposed to vertebrate troponins. Mapping of these affected regions onto the troponin highly extended structure suggests that cardiac troponin switches between alternative sets of intramolecular interactions, similar to previous intermediate resolution x-ray data of skeletal muscle troponin.  相似文献   

18.
Troponin is a Ca2+-sensitive switch that regulates the contraction of vertebrate striated muscle by participating in a series of conformational events within the actin-based thin filament. Troponin is a heterotrimeric complex consisting of a Ca2+-binding subunit (TnC), an inhibitory subunit (TnI), and a tropomyosin-binding subunit (TnT). Ternary troponin complexes have been produced by assembling recombinant chicken skeletal muscle TnC, TnI and the C-terminal portion of TnT known as TnT2. A full set of small-angle neutron scattering data has been collected from TnC-TnI-TnT2 ternary complexes, in which all possible combinations of the subunits have been deuterated, in both the +Ca2+ and -Ca2+ states. Small-angle X-ray scattering data were also collected from the same troponin TnC-TnI-TnT2 complex. Guinier analysis shows that the complex is monomeric in solution and that there is a large change in the radius of gyration of TnI when it goes from the +Ca2+ to the -Ca2+ state. Starting with a model based on the human cardiac troponin crystal structure, a rigid-body Monte Carlo optimization procedure was used to yield models of chicken skeletal muscle troponin, in solution, in the presence and in the absence of regulatory calcium. The optimization was carried out simultaneously against all of the scattering data sets. The optimized models show significant differences when compared to the cardiac troponin crystal structure in the +Ca2+ state and provide a structural model for the switch between +Ca2+ and -Ca2+ states. A key feature is that TnC adopts a dumbbell conformation in both the +Ca2+ and -Ca2+ states. More importantly, the data for the -Ca2+ state suggest a long extension of the troponin IT arm, consisting mainly of TnI. Thus, the troponin complex undergoes a large structural change triggered by Ca2+ binding.  相似文献   

19.
Troponin I (TnI) is the inhibitory component of the striated muscle Ca2+ regulatory protein troponin (Tn). The other two components of Tn are troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+-binding component, and troponin T (TnT), the tropomyosin-binding component. We have used limited chymotryptic digestion to probe the local conformation of TnI in the free state, the binary TnC*TnI complex, the ternary TnC*. TnI*TnT (Tn) complex, and in the reconstituted Tn*tropomyosin*F-actin filament. The digestion of TnI alone or in the TnC*TnI complex produced initially two major fragments via a cleavage of the peptide bond between Phe100 and Asp101 in the so-called inhibitory region. In the ternary Tn complex cleavage occurred at a new site between Leu140 and Lys141. In the absence of Ca2+ this was followed by digestion of the 1-140 fragment at Leu122 and Met116. In the reconstituted thin filament the same fragments as in the case of the ternary complex were produced, but the rate of digestion was slower in the absence than in the presence of Ca2+. These results indicate firstly that in both free TnI and TnI complexed with TnC there is an exposed and flexible site in the inhibitory region. Secondly, TnT affects the conformation of TnI in the inhibitory region and also in the region that contains the 140-141 bond. Thirdly, the 140-141 region of TnI is likely to interact with actin in the reconstituted thin filament when Ca2+ is absent. These findings are discussed in terms of the role of TnI in the mechanism of thin filament regulation, and in light of our previous results [Y. Luo, J.-L. Wu, J. Gergely, T. Tao, Biochemistry 36 (1997) 13449-13454] on the global conformation of TnI.  相似文献   

20.
Fluorescence titration curves of 2-[4'-iodoacetamido)anilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid-labeled troponin (IAANS-labeled Tn) and troponin-1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid (Tn-ANS) complex indicated that the fluorescent moiety, IAANS or ANS, detects conformational change of troponin I (TnI) or Tn due to the Ca2+ binding or removal reaction with the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of troponin C (TnC) component. A fluorescence stopped-flow study showed that the kinetic behavior of IAANS-labeled Tn reflects a change in state of the TnI component induced by the Ca2+ binding or removal reaction with the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC component. The state change of TnI induced by the Ca2+ binding was complete within the instrumental dead time. On the other hand, that induced by the Ca2+ removal had a rate constant of around 13 s-1. ANS, which is noncovalently bound to Tn, reflects the kinetic properties of both the TnI component and the low affinity Ca2+-binding region of TnC component. The fluorescence intensity change of ANS induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC was complete within the instrumental dead time, while that induced by the Ca2+ removal from the same sites was biphasic. The rate constants of the biphasic process were found to be 62 +/- 7 s-1 and 16 +/- 4 s-1. The former value corresponds to the rate constant of the Ca2+ removal reaction from the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC component, and the latter value to the rate constant observed in the case of IAANS-labeled Tn. Based on these experimental results and on the discussion in our previous paper (Iio, T. & Kondo, H. (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 163-175), we have refined the two-way information-transfer mechanism which we previously proposed in order to explain the biological function of Tn.  相似文献   

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