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1.
Myosin was isolated from amoebae of Physarum polycephalum and compared with myosin from plasmodia, another motile stage in the Physarum life cycle. Amoebal myosin contained heavy chains (Mr approximately 220,000), phosphorylatable light chains (Mr 18,000), and Ca2+-binding light chains (Mr 14,000) and possessed a two-headed long-tailed shape in electron micrographs after rotary shadow casting. In the presence of high salt concentrations, myosin ATPase activity increased in the following order: Mg-ATPase activity less than K-EDTA-ATPase activity less than Ca-ATPase activity. In the presence of low salt concentrations, Mg-ATPase activity was activated approximately 9-fold by skeletal muscle actin. This actin-activated ATPase activity was inhibited by micromolar levels of Ca2+. Amoebal myosin was indistinguishable from plasmodial myosin in ATPase activities and molecular shape. However, the heavy chain and phosphorylatable light chains of amoebal myosin could be distinguished from those of plasmodial myosin in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, peptide mapping, and immunological studies, suggesting that these are different gene products. Ca2+-binding light chains of amoebal and plasmodial myosins were found to be identical using similar criteria, supporting our hypothesis that the Ca2+-binding light chain plays a key role in the inhibition of actin-activated ATPase activity in Physarum myosins by micromolar levels of Ca2+.  相似文献   

2.
We have established a new method for preparing Physarum myosin whose actin-activated ATPase activity is inhibited by micromolar levels of Ca2+. This Ca2+-inhibition is mediated by the Ca2+ binding to the myosin rather than by the Ca2+-dependent modification of the phosphorylated state of the myosin (Kohama, K., and Kendrick-Jones, J. (1986) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 99, 1433-1446). Ca2+-binding light chain (CaLC) has been suggested to be primary importance in this Ca2+ inhibition (Kohama, K., Takano-Ohmuro, H., Tanaka, T., Yamaguchi, T., and Kohama, T. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 8022-8027). The amino acid sequence of CaLC was determined; it was composed of 147 amino acid residues and the N terminus was acetylated. The molecular weight was calculated to be 16,131. The homology of CaLC in the amino acid sequence with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) light chain and alkali light chain of skeletal muscle myosin were rather low, i.e., 25% and 30%, respectively. Interestingly, however, the CaLC sequence was 40% homologous with brain calmodulin. This amino acid sequence was confirmed by sequencing the cloned phage DNA accommodating cDNA coding CaLC. Northern and Southern blot analysis indicated that 0.8-kilobase pair mRNA was transcribed from a single CaLC gene. This is the first report on the amino acid sequence of myosin light chain of lower eukaryotes and nucleotide sequence of its mRNA.  相似文献   

3.
The actin-activated ATPase activity of Physarum myosin has been shown to be inhibited by microM levels of Ca2+, the mode of which is in contrast to the activating effect of Ca2+ on scallop myosin (Kohama, K. (1987) Adv. Biophys. 23, 149-182 for a review). To determine if Ca2+ regulates ATP-dependent sliding between actin and the myosins, fluorescent actin-filaments were allowed to move on the myosins fixed to a glass surface. The movement on Physarum and scallop myosins was inhibited and activated, respectively, by Ca2+. For this myosin-linked regulation to occur for Physarum myosin, myosin phosphorylation was shown to be a prerequisite.  相似文献   

4.
We reported previously that myosins from amoebal and plasmodial stages in the life cycle of Physarum polycephalum differ in the primary structure of heavy chains and phosphorylatable 18,000 Mr light chains, while Ca-binding 14,000 Mr light chains are common to both myosins (Kohama & Takano-Ohmuro, Proc Jpn acad 60B (1984) 431; Kohama et al., J biol chem 260 (1986) 8022). We have carried out immunofluorescence microscopical studies upon differentiating cultures of amoebic colonies, which show apogamic amoebo-plasmodial differentiation as follows: Typical amoebae differentiate into mono-nucleate intermediate cells with swollen nuclei and then into two or multi-nucleate young plasmodia (Anderson et al., Protoplasma 89 (1976) 29. Antibodies against plasmodial myosin heavy chain (PMHC) and 18,000 Mr plasmodial myosin light chain (PMLC18) stained intermediate cells and young plasmodia, but not typical amoebae. On the other hand, antibody against amoebal myosin heavy chain (AMHC) stained typical amoebae and intermediate cells--but not young plasmodia. Thus staining was detected using antibodies against both PMHC and AMHC in intermediate cells. Intermediate cells were also stained by antibody against another plasmodium-specific cytoskeletal protein, viz., high molecular weight actin-binding protein (HMWP). We propose that synthesis of myosin subunits switches immediately from amoebal to plasmodial type in mono-nucleate cells with swollen nuclei. This myosin switching is associated with the initiation of HMWP synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
The hypothesis that an alteration in the SH1 site of hypertrophy myosin is reponsible for the reduced Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activity is examined.The functional integrity of the SH1 site was evaluated by measurement of the (K+)-EDTA-stimulated and Mg2+-inhibited ATPase activities. Neither activity differed from control although the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase of the same preparations was significantly reduced. The reduction in Ca2+-activated ATPase was independent of ionic strength. Titration with N-ethylmaleimide elevated the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase of hypertrophy myosin to the same peak activity as control. Actin-stimulated ATPase activity of hypertrophy myosin was also reduced. The results indicate that the SH1 of hypertrophy myosin is functionally intact for (K+)EDTA-stimulated ATPase and Mg2+ inhibition, but functionally deficient with regard to Ca2+-stimulated and actin-activated ATPase activities. This implies a partition of the functional aspects of SH1.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase of myosin II from Acanthamoeba castellanii is regulated by phosphorylation of 3 serine residues at the tip of the tail of each of its two heavy chains; only dephosphorylated myosin II is active, whereas the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms have identical Ca2+-ATPase activities and Mg2+-ATPase activities in the absence of F-actin. We have now chemically modified phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin II with N-ethylmaleimide (NEM). The modification occurred principally at a single site within the NH2-terminal 73,000 Da of the globular head of the heavy chain. NEM-myosin II bound to F-actin and formed filaments normally, but the Ca2+- and Mg2+-ATPase activities of phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin II and the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of NEM-dephosphorylated myosin II were inhibited. Only filamentous myosin II has actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity. Native phosphorylated myosin II acquired actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when it was co-polymerized with NEM-inactivated dephosphorylated myosin II, and the increase in its activity was cooperatively dependent on the fraction of NEM-dephosphorylated myosin II in the filaments. From this result, we conclude that the specific activity of each molecule within a filament is independent of its own state of phosphorylation, but is highly cooperatively dependent upon the state of phosphorylation of the filament as a whole. This enables the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin II filaments to respond rapidly and extensively to small changes in the level of their phosphorylation.  相似文献   

8.
The fluorescent reagent 4-fluoro-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-F) reacted specifically with 1.9 lysyl residues/mol of the myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) ATPase. When 1.9 lysyl residues were modified, the K+- and Ca2+-ATPase activities were almost completely inhibited, whereas the Mg2+-ATPase activity was increased to 180% of original activity. The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity was decreased to 30% of original activity by this modification. However, affinity of S-1 for actin in the presence of ATP was unchanged. The NBD fluorescence of the modified S-1 was quenched on addition of ATP, suggesting that ATP induced conformational changes around the NBD groups attached to S-1. Tryptic digestion of the modified S-1 revealed that the NBD groups are attached mainly to the 50-kDa peptide of S-1, more precisely the 45-kDa peptide. These results confirm the recent reports that the 50-kDa peptide of S-1 is involved in the myosin ATPase reaction (K?rner, M., Thiem, N. V., Cardinaud, R., and Lacombe, G. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5843-5847; Hiratsuka, T. (1986) Biochemistry 25, in press).  相似文献   

9.
The effects of chemical modifications of myosin's reactive cysteines on actomyosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activities and sliding velocities in the in vitro motility assays were examined in this work. The three types of modifications studied were 4-[N-[(iodoacetoxy)ethyl]-N-methylamino]-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3- diazole labeling of SH2 (based on Ajtai and Burghart. 1989. Biochemistry. 28:2204-2210.), phenylmaleimide labeling of SH1, and phenylmaleimide labeling of myosin in myofibrils under rigor conditions. Each type of modified myosin inhibited the sliding of actin in motility assays. The sliding velocities of actin over copolymers of modified and unmodified myosins in the motility assay were slowest with rigor-modified myosin and most rapid with SH2-labeled myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of similarly copolymerized myosins were lowest with SH2-labeled myosin and highest with rigor-modified myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of myosin subfragment-1 obtained from these modified myosins decreased in the same linear manner with the fraction of modified heads. These results are interpreted using a model in which the sliding of actin filaments over myosin filaments decreases the probability of myosin activation by actin. The sliding velocity of actin over monomeric rigor-modified myosin exceeded that over the filamentous form, which suggests for this myosin that filament structure is important for the inhibition of actin sliding in motility assays. The fact that all cysteine modifications examined inhibited the actomyosin ATPase activities and sliding velocities of actin over myosin poses questions concerning the information about the activated crossbridge obtained from probes attached to SH1 or SH2 on myosin.  相似文献   

10.
The actin-dependent ATPase activity of myosin is retained in the separated heads (S1) which contain the NH2-terminal 95-kDa heavy chain fragment and one or two light chains. The S1 heavy chain can be degraded further by limited trypsin treatment into characteristic 25-, 50-, and 20-kDa peptides, in this order from the NH2-terminal end. The 20-kDa peptide contains an actin-binding site and SH1 and SH2, two thiols whose modification dramatically affects ATPase activity. By treating myosin filaments with trypsin at 4 degrees C in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2, we have now obtained preferential cleavage at the 50-20-kDa heavy chain site without any cleavage at the head-rod junction and hinge region in the rod. Incubation of these trypsinized filaments at 37 degrees C in the presence of MgATP released a new S1 fraction which lacked the COOH-terminal 20-kDa heavy chain peptide region. This fraction, termed S1'(75K), has more than 50% of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of S1 and the characteristic Ca2+-ATPase and K+-EDTA ATPase activities of myosin. These results show that SH1 and SH2 are not essential for ATPase activity and that binding of actin to the 20-kDa region is not essential for the enhancement of the Mg2+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Steady-state ATPase activities of cardiac myosin from thyroxine-treated rabbit hearts have been determined before and after removal of the 18-kDa light-chain subunit (LC2) of myosin. LC2 was selectively removed from myosin by treatment with a myofibrillar protease according to the method of Kuo and Bhan (Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 92, 570-576 (1980) ). The effects of removal of LC2 on the enzymatic properties of thyrotoxic myosin were compared with the results obtained for cardiac myosin from normal rabbits by parallel studies. It has been found that removal of LC2 does not affect the Ca2+- and K+ (EDTA)-ATPase activities of these myosins. The actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase activities of intact and LC2-deficient thyrotoxic myosin were 0.18 +/- 0.03 and 0.36 +/- 0.03 mumol Pi/mg per min, respectively, whereas the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase activities of intact and LC2-deficient normal myosin were 0.12 +/- 0.02 and 0.18 +/- 0.03 mumol Pi/mg per min, respectively. Thus, removal of LC2 increases the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase activity of thyrotoxic myosin by 100%, and the same activity is increased about 50% for normal myosin, indicating that the degree of potentiation of actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase activity as a result of LC2 removal is 2-fold greater in thyrotoxic myosin than that obtained for normal myosin. These results suggest that LC2 does not influence the increased actomyosin ATPase activity of thyrotoxic myosin and that potentiation of actomyosin ATPase following LC2 removal may depend on the variations of the heavy-chain domain where LC2 interacts.  相似文献   

12.
The regulatory light chains of dog heart myosin were removed by digestion with myopathic hamster neutral protease. The heavy chains were also cleaved to an extent of 15%, but a homogeneous, rod-free LC2-deficient myosin was obtained by ion-exchange chromatography. A similar approach was used to prepare LC2-deficient heavy meromyosin. Neither Ca2+- nor K+-EDTA-activated ATPases were affected by LC2 removal. The Lineweaver-Burk plots for actin-activated ATPase in 25 mM KCl were biphasic giving a Vmax of 1.54 s-1 for control and LC2-recombined myosins and 1.08 s-1 for LC2-deficient myosin at low actin concentrations. At high actin concentrations, the Vmax for control and recombined myosins was 2.33 s-1 and 1.39 s-1 for LC2-deficient myosin. Increasing the KCl concentration in the reaction mixtures resulted in more linear plots without suppressing the 35-45% decrease in Vmax that accompanied LC2 removal. The results from assays with control and LC2-deficient heavy meromyosin performed in the absence of KCl, paralleled those obtained with myosin. The latter was also assayed in the presence of equimolar concentrations of C-protein in 50 mM KCl: C-protein induced a significant increase in the actin-activated ATPase of both control and LC2-recombined myosins, with no effect on LC2-deficient myosin. The Vmax for actin-activation in the presence of C-protein was 2.38 s-1, 0.83 s-1, and 1.71 s-1 for control, LC2-deficient, and recombined myosins, respectively. The enhancement of actin-activation in both the control and LC2-recombined myosins represents a possible role for C-protein in a LC2-mediated potentiation of actomyosin ATPase.  相似文献   

13.
Myosin VI is expressed in a variety of cell types and is thought to play a role in membrane trafficking and endocytosis, yet its motor function and regulation are not understood. The present study clarified mammalian myosin VI motor function and regulation at a molecular level. Myosin VI ATPase activity was highly activated by actin with K(actin) of 9 microm. A predominant amount of myosin VI bound to actin in the presence of ATP unlike conventional myosins. K(ATP) was much higher than those of other known myosins, suggesting that myosin VI has a weak affinity or slow binding for ATP. On the other hand, ADP markedly inhibited the actin-activated ATPase activity, suggesting a high affinity for ADP. These results suggested that myosin VI is predominantly in a strong actin binding state during the ATPase cycle. p21-activated kinase 3 phosphorylated myosin VI, and the site was identified as Thr(406). The phosphorylation of myosin VI significantly facilitated the actin-translocating activity of myosin VI. On the other hand, Ca(2+) diminished the actin-translocating activity of myosin VI although the actin-activated ATPase activity was not affected by Ca(2+). Calmodulin was not dissociated from the heavy chain at high Ca(2+), suggesting that a conformational change of calmodulin upon Ca(2+) binding, but not its physical dissociation, determines the inhibition of the motility activity. The present results revealed the dual regulation of myosin VI by phosphorylation and Ca(2+) binding to calmodulin light chain.  相似文献   

14.
Previous studies had led to the conclusion that the globular, single-headed myosins IA and IB from Acanthamoeba castellanii contain two actin-binding sites: one associated with the catalytic site and whose binding to F-actin activates the Mg2+-ATPase activity and a second site whose binding results in the cross-linking of actin filaments and makes the actin-activated ATPase activity positively cooperative with respect to myosin I concentration. We have now prepared a 100,000-Da NH2-terminal peptide and a 30,000-Da COOH-terminal peptide by alpha-chymotryptic digestion of the myosin IA heavy chain. The intact 17,000-Da light chain remained associated with the 100,000-Da fragment, which also contained the serine residue that must be phosphorylated for expression of actin-activated ATPase activity by native myosin IA. The 30,000-Da peptide, which contained 34% glycine and 21% proline, bound to F-actin with a KD less than 0.5 microM in the presence or absence of ATP but had no ATPase activity. The 100,000-Da peptide bound to F-actin with KD = 0.4-0.8 microM in the presence of 2 mM MgATP and KD less than 0.01 microM in the absence of MgATP. In contrast to native myosin IA, neither peptide cross-linked actin filaments. The phosphorylated 100,000-Da peptide had actin-activated ATPase activity with the same Vmax as that of native phosphorylated myosin IA but this activity displayed simple, noncooperative hyperbolic dependence on the actin concentration in contrast to the complex cooperative kinetics observed with native myosin IA. These results provide direct experimental evidence for the presence of two actin-binding sites on myosin IA, as was suggested by enzyme kinetic and filament cross-linking data, and also for the previously proposed mechanism by which monomeric myosins I could support contractile activities.  相似文献   

15.
Myosins purified from cardiac (porcine heart) and smooth (chicken gizzard) muscles were modified with 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonate (TNBS) and the effects on the kinetic properties of myosin ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] were studied. The following results were obtained. 1. About 0.5 mol of TNBS per mol of myosin head was incorporated rapidly, irrespective of the presence of PP1 (2mM), into both types of myosin studied. 2. The size of the initial burst of P1 liberation for both myosins was found to be 0.5--0.6 mol/mol head. 3. The rapid incorporation of TNBS into cardiac muscle myosin was accompanied by a rapid decrease in the size of the initial P1 burst, and it was completely lost after modification for 20 min. However, smooth muscle myosin retained its P1 burst. 4. The EDTA (K+)-ATPase activity of both myosins modified in the presence or absence of PP1 decreased sharply with incorporation of TNBS. 5. Superprecipitation and ATPase activity of reconstituted actomyosin from cardiac myosin and skeletal F-actin decreased only after 10 min of modification with TNBS in the absence of PP1. 6. The spectra of TNP bound to myosins from cardiac and smooth muscles were unchanged by the addition of PP1. The above findings are compared with those previously obtained for skeletal muscle myosin [Miyanishi, T., Inoue, A., & Tonomura, Y. (1979) J. Biochem. 85, 747--753], and the structural and functional differences among the myosins derived from skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscles are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Myosin from human erythrocytes   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
We have purified myosin from human erythrocytes using methods similar to that for other cytoplasmic myosins with a yield of about 500 micrograms/100 ml of packed cells. It consists of a 200-kDa heavy chain and light chains of 26- and 19.5 kDa and therefore differs from the isozyme in platelets which has light chains of 20- and 15 kDa. At low ionic strength, the myosin forms short bipolar filaments like those of platelet myosin. Eight of eight monoclonal antibodies to platelet myosin also bind to erythrocyte myosin. Like most myosins, it has a high ATPase activity in the presence of Ca2+ or EDTA, but is inhibited by Mg2+. Myosin light-chain kinase transfers 1 phosphate from ATP to the 20-kDa light chain, and this stimulates the actin-activated ATPase. Thus, myosin may play a role in shape changes in the erythrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Acanthamoeba myosin II has three phosphorylation sites clustered near the end of the tail of each of its two heavy chains (six phosphorylation sites/molecule). Myosin II has little or no actin-activated ATPase activity when four to six of these sites are phosphorylated. Maximal actin-activated ATPase activity is obtained when all six sites are dephosphorylated. Under assay conditions, both phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin II form bipolar filaments. Filaments of dephosphorylated myosin II have larger sedimentation coefficients than filaments of phosphorylated myosin II but this difference does not explain the difference in their actin-activated ATPase activities. Heteropolymers, formed by mixing soluble dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins and then diluting the mixture into low ionic strength buffer containing MgCl2, have sedimentation coefficients close to those of the homopolymer of phosphorylated myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of heteropolymers are, under most conditions, lower than the equivalent mixtures of homopolymers of dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins. It is concluded, therefore, that the phosphorylation of myosin tails regulates the actin-activated ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosin II by affecting the myosin filament as a whole rather than specifically affecting the heads of the phosphorylated myosin molecules only.  相似文献   

18.
Chicken gizzard myosin rapidly incorporated 3 mol of 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene per 4.7 x 10(5) g of protein with little change in the ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) activity. During an interval when 2 additional mol of the reagent were bound the K+-ATPase activity in the presence of EDTA was inhibited and the Ca2+-ATPase activity was altered to a lesser extent. Cysteine residues were modified in the dinitrophenylated gizzard myosin. The dinitrophenyl group was located mainly in the active proteolytic fragment, subfragment 1. Dinitrophenylation of the heavy and light chains was observed but major changes in the ATPase activity occurred when the 17 000-dalton light chain and some heavy chains were modified as judged by dissociation experiments in sodium dodecyl sulfate. Thiolysis of the dinitrophenylated gizzard myosin with 2-mercaptoethanol restored the ATPase activity and approx. 2 mol of the dinitrophenyl group were removed. The restoration of the enzymic activity, however, occurred when 1 mol of the label was thiolytically cleaved from cysteine residues of the 17 000-dalton light chain. Substrate Mg-ATP(2-) or MgADP did not protect the ATPase activity of modified gizzard myosin. In the presence of nucleotide there was an increase in the incorporation of the reagent, and a change in its distribution into the light and heavy chains. Calcium had no effect on the dinitrophenylation of this myosin. these results indicate that the reagent, 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, could detect chemical differences in smooth muscle myosin when compared to the reactivity of other myosins. Thiol groups of the 17 000-light chain (and some heavy chains) are probably located peripheral to the active site region of gizzard myosin and they are involved in maintaining the enzymic activity of this protein.  相似文献   

19.
Myosin was rapidly prepared from the slime mould, Physarum polycephalum to a high level of homogeneity (greater than 95%), in a high yield (about 10 mg/100 g tissue) and in a phosphorylated state (about 5 mol phosphate/mol of 500,000 Mr myosin). Actin activated the Mg-ATPase activity of this myosin in the absence of Ca2+ about 30-fold, and this actin-activated ATPase activity was reduced to about 20% of the original activity when Ca2+ concentration was increased to 50 microM, i.e., the actin-myosin-ATP interactions show Ca-inhibition. The Ca2+ concentration giving half-maximum inhibition was 1-3 microM. The Ca-inhibition was clearly observed at physiological concentrations of Mg2+ but was obscured at both lower and higher concentrations of Mg2+. The Ca-inhibitory effect on ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin reconstituted from skeletal actin and Physarum myosin was quick and reversible. Ca-binding measurement showed that myosin bound Ca2+ with half-maximal binding at 2 microM Ca2+ and maximum binding of 2 mol per mol myosin, indicating that Ca2+ may inhibit the ATPase activity by binding to myosin. The involvement of this myosin-linked regulatory system in the Ca2+ -control of cytoplasmic streaming is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Limited digestion of Acanthamoeba myosin II by trypsin selectively cleaved the 185,000-Da heavy chains into a 73,000-Da peptide containing the catalytic and actin-binding sites and a 112,000-Da peptide containing the regulatory phosphorylatable sites. The light chains were unaffected. The proteolytic products remained associated and formed bipolar filaments that were very similar in appearance to filaments of native myosin by negative staining electron microscopy. Filaments of trypsin-cleaved, dephosphorylated myosin, however, had a smaller sedimentation coefficient than filaments of native dephosphorylated myosin. Trypsin-cleaved dephosphorylated myosin retained complete Ca2+-ATPase activity but had no actin-activated ATPase activity under conditions that are optimal for native, dephosphorylated myosin (pH 7.0, 4 mM MgCl2, 30 degrees C or pH 6.4, 1 mM MgCl2, 30 degrees C). Trypsin-cleaved dephosphorylated myosin had higher actin-activated ATPase activity at pH 6.0 and 1 mM MgCl2 than undigested dephosphorylated myosin which is appreciably inhibited under these conditions. Trypsin-cleaved, dephosphorylated myosin inhibited the actin-activated ATPase activity of native, dephosphorylated myosin when both were present in the same co-polymers, when enzymatic activity was assayed at pH 7.0, 4 mM MgCl2, and 30 degrees C, but this inhibition was overcome by raising the MgCl2 to 6 mM. These results provide additional evidence that regulation of acanthamoeba myosin II occurs at the filament level and that, under most conditions of assay, the heavy chains must be intact and the regulatory serines unphosphorylated for actin-activated ATPase activity to be maximally expressed.  相似文献   

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