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1.
We have used electron microscopy and proteolytic susceptibility to study the structural basis of myosin-linked regulation in synthetic filaments of scallop striated muscle myosin. Using papain as a probe of the structure of the head-rod junction, we find that this region of myosin is approximately five times more susceptible to proteolytic attack under activating (ATP/high Ca2+) or rigor (no ATP) conditions than under relaxing conditions (ATP/low Ca2+). A similar result was obtained with native myosin filaments in a crude homogenate of scallop muscle. Proteolytic susceptibility under conditions in which ADP or adenosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) (AMPPNP) replaced ATP was similar to that in the absence of nucleotide. Synthetic myosin filaments negatively stained under relaxing conditions showed a compact structure, in which the myosin cross-bridges were close to the filament backbone and well ordered, with a clear 14.5-nm axial repeat. Under activating or rigor conditions, the cross-bridges became clumped and disordered and frequently projected further from the filament backbone, as has been found with native filaments; when ADP or AMPPNP replaced ATP, the cross-bridges were also disordered. We conclude (a) that Ca2+ and ATP affect the affinity of the myosin cross-bridges for the filament backbone or for each other; (b) that the changes observed in the myosin filaments reflect a property of the myosin molecules alone, and are unlikely to be an artifact of negative staining; and (c) that the ordered structure occurs only in the relaxed state, requiring both the presence of hydrolyzed ATP on the myosin heads and the absence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

2.
Substructure and accessory proteins in scallop myosin filaments   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Native myosin filaments from scallop striated muscle fray into subfilaments of approximately 100-A diameter when exposed to solutions of low ionic strength. The number of subfilaments appears to be five to seven (close to the sevenfold rotational symmetry of the native filament), and the subfilaments probably coil around one another. Synthetic filaments assembled from purified scallop myosin at roughly physiological ionic strength have diameters similar to those of native filaments, but are much longer. They too can be frayed into subfilaments at low ionic strength. Synthetic filaments share what may be an important regulatory property with native filaments: an order-disorder transition in the helical arrangement of myosin cross-bridges that is induced on activation by calcium, removal of nucleotide, or modification of a myosin head sulfhydryl. Some native filaments from scallop striated muscle carry short "end filaments" protruding from their tips, comparable to the structures associated with vertebrate striated muscle myosin filaments. Gell electrophoresis of scallop muscle homogenates reveals the presence of high molecular weight proteins that may include the invertebrate counterpart of titin, a component of the vertebrate end filament. Although the myosin molecule itself may contain much of the information required to direct its assembly, other factors acting in vivo, including interactions with accessory proteins, probably contribute to the assembly of a precisely defined thick filament during myofibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
Electron microscopy has been used to study the structural changes that occur in the myosin filaments of tarantula striated muscle when they are phosphorylated. Myosin filaments in muscle homogenates maintained in relaxing conditions (ATP, EGTA) are found to have nonphosphorylated regulatory light chains as shown by urea/glycerol gel electrophoresis and [32P]phosphate autoradiography. Negative staining reveals an ordered, helical arrangement of crossbridges in these filaments, in which the heads from axially neighboring myosin molecules appear to interact with each other. When the free Ca2+ concentration in a homogenate is raised to 10(-4) M, or when a Ca2+-insensitive myosin light chain kinase is added at low Ca2+ (10(-8) M), the regulatory light chains of myosin become rapidly phosphorylated. Phosphorylation is accompanied by potentiation of the actin activation of the myosin Mg-ATPase activity and by loss of order of the helical crossbridge arrangement characteristic of the relaxed filament. We suggest that in the relaxed state, when the regulatory light chains are not phosphorylated, the myosin heads are held down on the filament backbone by head-head interactions or by interactions of the heads with the filament backbone. Phosphorylation of the light chains may alter these interactions so that the crossbridges become more loosely associated with the filament backbone giving rise to the observed changes and facilitating crossbridge interaction with actin.  相似文献   

4.
Native myosin filaments from scallop striated muscle that have been rapidly frozen in relaxing solutions appear to be well preserved in vitreous ice. Electron micrographs of samples at -177 degrees C were recorded with an electron dose of 10 e/A2 at 1.5 microns defocus. After filament images were straightened by spline-fitting, several transforms showed well-defined layer-lines arising from the helical structure of the filament. A set of 17 near-meridional layer-lines has been collected and corrected for background and for phase and amplitude contrast functions. Preliminary helical reconstructions from this still incomplete data set reveal aspects of structure that were not apparent from earlier analysis of negatively stained filaments from scallop muscle. Individual pear-shaped myosin heads now appear to be well resolved from each other and from the filament backbone. The two heads of each myosin molecule appear to be splayed apart axially. The reconstructions also reveal that the filament backbone has a polygonal shape in cross-section, and that it appears to contain seven peripherally located subfilaments.  相似文献   

5.
Myosin filaments isolated from scallop striated muscle have been activated by calcium-containing solutions, and their structure has been examined by electron microscopy after negative staining. The orderly helical arrangement of myosin projections characteristic of the relaxed state is largely lost upon activation. The oblique striping that arises from alignment of elongated projections along the long-pitched helical tracks is greatly weakened, although a 145 A axial periodicity is sometimes partially retained. The edges of the filaments become rough, and the myosin heads move outwards as their helical arrangement becomes disordered. Crossbridges at various angles appear to link thick and thin filaments after activation. The transition from order to disorder is reversible and occurs over a narrow range of free calcium concentration near pCa 5.7. Removal of nucleotide, as well as dissociation of regulatory light chains, also disrupts the ordered helical arrangement of projections. We suggest that the relaxed arrangement of the projections is probably maintained by intermolecular interactions between myosin molecules, which depend on the regulatory light chains. Calcium binding changes the interactions between light chains and the rest of the head, activating the myosin molecule. Intermolecular contacts between molecules may thus be altered and may propagate activation cooperatively throughout the thick filament.  相似文献   

6.
In order to examine the involvement of troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, in addition to well-known myosin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, in the contraction of molluscan striated muscle, myofibrils from Ezo-giant scallop striated muscle were desensitized to Ca(2+) by removing both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C by treatment with a strong divalent cation chelator, CDTA. The ATPase level in the desensitized myofibrils was about half the maximum level in intact myofibrils regardless of the Ca(2+)-concentration at 25 and 15 degrees C. In the absence of Ca(2+), the ATPase of the desensitized myofibrils was suppressed by myosin regulatory light chain but not affected by troponin C at either temperature. The ATPase was activated at higher Ca(2+)-concentrations by both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C, but the activating effects of these two proteins were affected differently by temperature. The activation of ATPase by myosin regulatory light chain was much greater than that by troponin C at 25 degrees C, whereas the activation by troponin C was much greater than that by myosin regulatory light chain at 15 degrees C. The maximum activation was only obtained in the presence of both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C at these temperatures. These findings strongly suggest that the contraction of scallop striated muscle is regulated through both myosin-linked and troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, and that the troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation is more significant at lower temperature.  相似文献   

7.
Muscle myosins are molecular motors that convert the chemical free energy available from ATP hydrolysis into mechanical displacement of actin filaments, bringing about muscle contraction. Myosin cross-bridges exert force on actin filaments during a cycle of attached and detached states that are coupled to each round of ATP hydrolysis. Contraction and ATPase activity of the striated adductor muscle of scallop is controlled by calcium ion binding to myosin. This mechanism of the so-called “thick filament regulation” is quite different to vertebrate striated muscle which is switched on and off via “thin filament regulation” whereby calcium ions bind to regulatory proteins associated with the actin filaments. We have used an optically based single molecule technique to measure the angular disposition adopted by the two myosin heads whilst bound to actin in the presence and absence of calcium ions. This has allowed us to directly observe the movement of individual myosin heads in aqueous solution at room temperature in real time. We address the issue of how scallop striated muscle myosin might be regulated by calcium and have interpreted our results in terms of the structures of smooth muscle myosin that also exhibit thick filament regulation. This paper is not being submitted elsewhere and the authors have no competing financial interests  相似文献   

8.
It has been reported that catch and striated muscle myosin heavy chains of scallop are generated through alternative splicing from a single gene [Nyitray et al. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91, 12686-12690]. They suggested that the catch muscle type myosin was expressed in various tissues of scallop, including the gonad, heart, foot, and mantle. However, there have been no reports of the primary structure of myosin from tissues other than the adductor muscles. In this study, we isolated a cDNA encoding the motor domain of myosin from the mantle tissue of scallop (Patinopecten yessoensis), and determined its nucleotide sequence. Sequence analysis revealed that mantle myosin exhibited 65% identity with Drosophila non muscle myosin, 60% with chicken gizzard smooth muscle myosin, and 44% with scallop striated muscle myosin. The mantle myosin has inserted sequences in the 27 kDa domain of the head region, and has a longer loop 1 structure than those of scallop striated and catch muscle myosins. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that the mantle myosin is classified as a smooth/nonmuscle type myosin. Western blot analysis with antibodies produced against the N-terminal region of the mantle myosin revealed that this myosin was specifically expressed in the mantle pallial cell layer consisting of nonmuscle cells. Our results show that mantle myosin is classified as a nonmuscle type myosin in scallop.  相似文献   

9.
Smooth muscle thin filaments are made up of actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon, and a Ca(2+)-binding protein and their interaction with myosin is Ca(2+)-regulated. We suggested that Ca(2+) regulation by caldesmon and Ca(2+)-calmodulin is achieved by controlling the state of thin filament through a cooperative-allosteric mechanism homologous to troponin-tropomyosin in striated muscles. In the present work, we have tested this hypothesis. We monitored directly the thin filament transition between the ON and OFF state using the excimer fluorescence of pyrene iodoacetamide (PIA)-labeled smooth muscle alphaalpha-tropomyosin homodimers. In steady state fluorescence measurements, myosin subfragment 1 (S1) cooperatively switches the thin filaments to the ON state, and this is exhibited as an increase in the excimer fluorescence. In contrast, caldesmon decreases the excimer fluorescence, indicating a switch of the thin filament to the OFF state. Addition of Ca(2+)-calmodulin increases the excimer fluorescence, indicating a switch of the thin filament to the ON state. The excimer fluorescence was also used to monitor the kinetics of the ON-OFF transition in a stopped-flow apparatus. When ATP induces S1 dissociation from actin-PIA-tropomyosin, the transition to the OFF state is delayed until all S1 molecules are dissociated actin. In contrast, caldesmon switches the thin filament to the OFF state in a cooperative way, and no lag is displayed in the time course of the caldesmon-induced fluorescence decrease. We have also studied caldesmon and Ca(2+)-calmodulin-caldesmon binding to actin-tropomyosin in the ON and OFF states. The results are used to discuss both caldesmon inhibition and Ca(2+)-calmodulin-caldesmon activation of actin-tropomyosin.  相似文献   

10.
Ca2(+)-dependent protein phosphatase was purified from scallop adductor smooth muscle by a combination of DEAE-Toyoperal 650S ion exchange chromatographies and gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300. The phosphatase consisted of two subunits having molecular weights of 60 and 19 kDa. Phosphorylated regulatory light chain-a (RLC-a) was dephosphorylated by this phosphatase both in free and bound states in myosin prepared from the opaque portion of scallop smooth muscle (opaque myosin). The dephosphorylation was activated by Ca2+. The half maximal activation was a 1 microM free Ca2+ in the presence of calmodulin and 7 microM free Ca2+ in the absence of calmodulin. Opaque myosin phosphorylated at the heavy chain was not dephosphorylated with this phosphatase. p-Nitrophenyl phosphate was dephosphorylated. In addition to Ca2+, the phosphatase activity for RLC-a was activated by Mn2+, while p-nitrophenylphosphatase activity was activated by Mg2+ more strongly than by Mn2+. The pH-activity curves showed a maximum at pH 7 in the presence of Mn2+, but at around pH 8 in the presence of Mg2+. This phosphatase is similar to phosphatase 2B or calcineurin. The possible regulatory function of this phosphatase in scallop catch muscle is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The regulatory light chains (RLCs) located on the myosin head, regulate the interaction of myosin with actin in response to either Ca2+ or phosphorylation signals. The RLCs belong to a family of calcium binding proteins and are composed of four "EF hand" ancestral calcium binding motifs (numbered I to IV). To determine the role of the first EF hand (EF hand I) in the regulatory process, chimaeric light chains were constructed by protein engineering, by switching this region between smooth muscle and skeletal muscle myosin RLCs. For example, chimaera G(I)S consisted of EF hand I of the smooth muscle (gizzard) RLC and EF hands II to IV of the skeletal muscle RLC, whereas chimaera S(I)G consisted of EF hand I of the skeletal muscle RLC and EF hands II to IV of the smooth muscle RLC. The chimaeric RLCs were expressed in Escherichia coli using the pLcII expression system, and after isolation and purification their regulatory properties were compared with those of wild-type smooth and skeletal muscle myosin RLCs. The chimaeric RLCs bound to the myosin heads in scallop striated muscle myofibrils from which the endogenous RLCs had been removed ("desensitized" myofibrils) with similar affinities to those of the wild-type smooth and skeletal muscle RLCs. Both chimaeric RLCs were able to regulate the actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of scallop myosin: G(I)S inhibited the ATPase in the presence and absence of Ca2+, like the wild-type skeletal muscle RLC, while S(I)G inhibited the myosin ATPase in the absence of Ca2+, and this inhibition was relieved on Ca2+ addition, in the same way as the wild-type smooth muscle RLC. Thus the type of regulation that the RLCs confer on the myosin is determined by the source of EF hands II to IV rather than that of EF hand I.  相似文献   

12.
The results discussed in the preceding paper (Levine, R. J. C., J. L. Woodhead, and H. A. King. 1991. J. Cell Biol. 113:563-572.) indicate that A-band shortening in Limulus muscle is a thick filament response to activation that occurs largely by fragmentation of filament ends. To assess the effect of biochemical changes directly associated with activation on the length and structure of thick filaments from Limulus telson muscle, a dually regulated tissue (Lehman, W., J. Kendrick-Jones, and A. G. Szent Gyorgyi. 1973. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 37:319-330.) we have examined the thick filament response to phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains. In agreement with the previous work of J. Sellers (1981. J. Biol. Chem. 256:9274-9278), Limulus myosin, incubated with partially purified chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and [gamma 32P]-ATP, binds 2 mol phosphate/mole protein. On autoradiographs of SDS-PAGE, the label is restricted to the two regulatory light chains, LC1 and LC2. Incubation of long (greater than or equal to 4.0 microns) thick filaments, separated from Limulus telson muscle under relaxing conditions, with either intact MLCK in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, or Ca2(+)-independent MLCK obtained by brief chymotryptic digestion (Walsh, M. P., R. Dabrowska, S. Hinkins, and D. J. Hartshorne. 1982. Biochemistry. 21:1919-1925), causes significant changes in their structure. These include: disordering of the helical surface arrangement of myosin heads as they move away from the filament backbone; the presence of distal bends and breaks, with loss of some surface myosin molecules, in each polar filament half; and the production of shorter filaments and end-fragments. The latter structures are similar to those produced by Ca2(+)-activation of skinned fibers (Levine, R. J. C., J. L. Woodhead, and H. A. King. J. Cell Biol. 113:563-572). Rinsing experimental filament preparations with relaxing solution before staining restores some degree of order of the helical surface array, but not filament length. We propose that outward movement of myosin heads and thick filament shortening in Limulus muscle are responses to activation that are dependent on phosphorylation of regulatory myosin light chains. Filament shortening may be due, in large part, to breakage at the filament ends.  相似文献   

13.
In vertebrate smooth/non-muscle myosins, phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains by a specific calmodulin-activated kinase controls both myosin head interaction with actin and assembly of the myosin into filaments. Previous studies have shown that the C-terminal domain of the regulatory light chain is crucial for the regulation of these myosin functions. To further dissect the role of this region of the light chain in myosin regulation, a series of chicken smooth muscle myosin regulatory light chain mutants has been constructed with successive C-terminal deletions. These mutants were synthesized in Escherichia coli and analysed by their ability to restore Ca2+ regulation to scallop myosin that had been stripped of its native regulatory light chains ('desensitized'). The results show that regulatory light chain mutants with deletions in the C-terminal helix in subdomain 4 were able to reform the regulatory Ca2+ binding site on the scallop myosin head, but had lost the ability to suppress scallop myosin filament assembly and interaction with actin in the absence of Ca2+. Further deletions in the C-terminal domain led to a gradual loss of ability to restore the regulatory Ca2+ binding site. Thus, the regions in the C-terminal half of the regulatory light chain responsible for myosin regulation can be identified.  相似文献   

14.
The contractile systems of vertebrate smooth and striated muscles are compared. Smooth muscles contain relatively large amounts of actin and tropomyosin organized into thin filaments, and smaller amounts of myosin in the form of thick filaments. The protein contents are consistent with observed thin:thick filament ratios of about 15-18:1 in smooth compared to 2:1 in striated muscle. The basic characteristics of both types of contractile proteins are similar; but there are a variety of quantitative differences in protein structures, enzymatic activities and filament stabilities. Biochemical and X-ray diffraction data generally support recent ultrastructural evidence concerning the organization of the myofilaments in smooth muscle, although a basic contractile unit comparable to the sarcomere in striated muscle has not been discerned. Myofilament interactions and contraction in smooth muscle are controlled by changes in the Ca2+ concentration. Recent evidence suggests the Ca2+-binding regulatory site is associated with the myosin in vertebrate smooth muscle (as in a variety of invertebrate muscles), rather than with troponin which is the regulatory protein associated with the thin filament in vertebrate striated muscle.  相似文献   

15.
The rods of anti-parallel myosin molecules overlap at the centre of bipolar myosin filaments to produce an M-region (bare zone) that is free of myosin heads. Beyond the M-region edges, myosin molecules aggregate in a parallel fashion to yield the bridge regions of the myosin filaments. Adjacent myosin filaments in striated muscle A-bands are cross-linked by the M-band. Vertebrate striated muscle myosin filaments have a 3-fold rotational symmetry around their long axes. In addition, at the centre of the M-region, there are three 2-fold axes perpendicular to the filament long axis, giving the whole filament dihedral 32-point group symmetry. Here we describe the three-dimensional structure obtained by a single-particle analysis of the M-region of myosin filaments from goldfish skeletal muscle under relaxing conditions and as viewed in negative stain. This is the first single-particle reconstruction of isolated M-regions. The resulting three-dimensional reconstruction reveals details to about 55 Å resolution of the density distribution in the five main nonmyosin densities in the M-band (M6′, M4′, M1, M4 and M6) and in the myosin head crowns (P1, P2 and P3) at the M-region edges. The outermost crowns in the reconstruction were identified specifically by their close similarity to the corresponding crown levels in our previously published bridge region reconstructions. The packing of myosin molecules into the M-region structure is discussed, and some unidentified densities are highlighted.  相似文献   

16.
To identify regulatory mechanisms potentially involved in formation of actomyosin structures in smooth muscle cells, the influence of F-actin on smooth muscle myosin assembly was examined. In physiologically relevant buffers, AMPPNP binding to myosin caused transition to the soluble 10S myosin conformation due to trapping of nucleotide at the active sites. The resulting 10S myosin-AMPPNP complex was highly stable and thick filament assembly was suppressed. However, upon addition to F-actin, myosin readily assembled to form thick filaments. Furthermore, myosin assembly caused rearrangement of actin filament networks into actomyosin fibers composed of coaligned F-actin and myosin thick filaments. Severin-induced fragmentation of actin in actomyosin fibers resulted in immediate disassembly of myosin thick filaments, demonstrating that actin filaments were indispensable for mediating myosin assembly in the presence of AMPPNP. Actomyosin fibers also formed after addition of F-actin to nonphosphorylated 10S myosin monomers containing the products of ATP hydrolysis trapped at the active site. The resulting fibers were rapidly disassembled after addition of millimolar MgATP and consequent transition of myosin to the soluble 10S state. However, reassembly of myosin filaments in the presence of MgATP and F-actin could be induced by phosphorylation of myosin P-light chains, causing regeneration of actomyosin fiber bundles. The results indicate that actomyosin fibers can be spontaneously formed by F-actin-mediated assembly of smooth muscle myosin. Moreover, induction of actomyosin fibers by myosin light chain phosphorylation in the presence of actin filament networks provides a plausible hypothesis for contractile fiber assembly in situ.  相似文献   

17.
1. The superprecipitation and ATPase activity of scallop striated muscle myosin B showed essentially the same biphasic pattern as that of vertebrate skeletal muscle myosin B in its responses to changes in the MgATP concentration. Ca2+ had no effect at MgATP concentrations less than 10(-5) M. 2. The superprecipitation of gizzard myosin B showed a weak biphasic pattern, but its ATPase activity showed no sign of a biphasic pattern up to 3 x10(-3) M MgATP, in accord with the result of Bremel (1974). 3. Thus scallop striated muscle is classified into the same group as vertebrate skeletal muscle as far as its response to changes in MgATP concentration is concerned. Gizzard is distinct from the other two kinds of muscle.  相似文献   

18.
Strain-dependent cross-bridge cycle for muscle.   总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The cross-bridge cycle for actin, S1 myosin, and nucleotides in solution is applied to the sliding filament model for fully activated striated muscle. The cycle has attached and rotated isomers of each actomyosin state. It is assumed that these forms have different zero-strain conformations with respect to the filament and that strain-free rate constants are the nominal solution values. Only one S1 unit of heavy meromyosin is considered. Transition-state theory is used to predict the strain dependences of S1 binding to actin, the force-generating transition to rotated states, and the release/binding of nucleotide and phosphate. We propose that ADP release and ATP binding are blocked by positive strain and phosphate release by negative strain. At large strains, rapid dissociation of S1 nucleotide from actin is expected when the compliant element of the cross-bridge is strained in either direction beyond its elastic limits. The dynamical behavior of this model of muscle contraction is discussed in general terms. Its computed steady-state properties are presented in an accompanying paper.  相似文献   

19.
We have determined the primary structure of the myosin heavy chain (MHC) of the striated adductor muscle of the scallop Aequipecten irradians by cloning and sequencing its cDNA. It is the first heavy chain sequence obtained in a directly Ca(2+)-regulated myosin. The 1938-amino acid sequence has an overall structure similar to other MHCs. The subfragment-1 region of the scallop MHC has a 59-62% sequence identity with sarcomeric and a 52-53% identity with nonsarcomeric (smooth and metazoan nonmuscle) MHCs. The heavy chain component of the regulatory domain (Kwon, H., Goodwin, E. B., Nyitray, L., Berliner, E., O'Neall-Hennessey, E., Melandri, F. D., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 4771-4775) starts at either Leu-755 or Val-760. Ca(2+)-sensitive Trp residues (Wells, C., Warriner, K. E., and Bagshaw, C. R. (1985) Biochem. J. 231, 31-38) are located near the C-terminal end of this segment (residues 818-827). More detailed sequence comparison with other MHCs reveals that the 50-kDa domain and the N-terminal two-thirds of the 20-kDa domain differ substantially between sarcomeric and nonsarcomeric myosins. In contrast, in the light chain binding region of the regulatory domain (residues 784-844) the scallop sequence shows greater homology with regulated myosins (smooth muscle, nonmuscle, and invertebrate striated muscles) than with unregulated ones (vertebrate skeletal and heart muscles). The N-terminal 25-kDa domain also contains several residues which are preserved only in regulated myosins. These results indicate that certain heavy chain sites might be critical for regulation. The rod has features typical of sarcomeric myosins. It is 52-60% and 30-33% homologous with sarcomeric and nonsarcomeric MHCs, respectively. A Ser-rich tailpiece (residues 1918-1938) is apparently nonhelical.  相似文献   

20.
Regulatory light chain-a myosin kinase (aMK), which phosphorylates one of the myosin regulatory light chains, RLC-a, contained in the catch muscle of scallop, was also found to phosphorylate heavy chains of scallop myosin. After incubation of myosin isolated from the opaque portion of scallop smooth muscle (opaque myosin) with aMK in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP, about 2 mol of 32P was incorporated per mol of the myosin. The radioactivity was mostly found in the heavy chain at 0.26 M KCl. The pH-activity curve and MgCl2 requirement for the heavy chain phosphorylation were similar to those for RLC-a phosphorylation. In contrast, the dependency of activity on KCl concentration was different from that for RLC-a. The heavy chain phosphorylation activity decreased with increase in KCl concentration up to 0.06 M, and then increased at concentrations over 0.06 M to a maximum at around 0.26 M KCl. This complicated profile probably reflects the solubility of myosin, and the phosphorylation site may be located in the rod portion insoluble at low KCl concentrations. Phosphorylation of heavy chain did not change the solubility of the opaque myosin molecule at all. The acto-opaque myosin ATPase activity in the presence of Ca2+ was found to be decreased to less than one-fourth by the heavy chain phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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