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1.
Conformational changes of the beta chain of the outer-arm dynein from sea urchin sperm flagella in relation to ATP hydrolysis was examined by tryptic digestion. Tryptic digestion of the beta chain in the presence of 2 mM ATP (ADP) and 100 microM vanadate (Vi) or in the presence of 4 mM ATP gamma S produced different polypeptides from in the case of no addition. The difference was similar to the result previously reported for 21S outer-arm dynein heavy chains [Inaba, K. & Mohri, H. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 8384-8388]. Unlike the tryptic digestion pattern of 21S dynein heavy chains, however, the 135-kDa polypeptide was consistently produced from the beta chain, even in the presence of ATP (ADP) and Vi. The tryptic digestion pattern of the 21S particle reconstituted from the separated a chain, the beta/IC1 complex and the IC2/IC3 complex [Tang, W.-J.Y., Bell, C.W., Sale, W.S., & Gibbons, I.R. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 508-515] was similar to that of intact 21S dynein; the 135-kDa polypeptide was only slightly produced in the presence of ATP and Vi. The digestion rate constant of the 135-kDa polypeptide from the beta chain in the presence of ATP and Vi was significantly decreased as compared with in the case of 21S dynein or that of the reconstituted 21S particle. These results suggest that the trypsin sensitivity of the 135-kDa region of the beta chain changes with the association of the beta/ICI complex with the alpha chain and the IC2/IC3 complex in the presence of ATP and Vi.  相似文献   

2.
Conformational changes of 21 S dynein ATPase from sea urchin sperm flagella were examined by tryptic digestion under physiological conditions. In the presence of 2 mM ATP or ADP plus 100 microM inorganic vanadate (Vi), dynein heavy chains were digested by trypsin into quite different polypeptides from those obtained in other cases (no addition, 2 mM ATP, 4 mM adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-imido)triphosphate, 4 mM adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-methylene)triphosphate, 2 mM ADP, 100 microM Vi). In the presence of 4 mM adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate), however, the digestion pattern was similar to that in the presence of ATP (ADP) and Vi, to a certain extent. In all conditions other than the presence of ATP (ADP) and Vi, 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides were the main products, whereas in the presence of ATP (ADP) and Vi, 200-, 150/148-, and 105/96-kDa peptides were produced and 320-kDa peptide became rather inaccessible to trypsin. The latter digestion pattern was not observed in the absence of divalent cations. These results suggest that, in the ATP hydrolysis cycle, dynein changes its conformation remarkably in the dynein-ADP-Pi state, which is presumably responsible for force generation.  相似文献   

3.
Tryptic digestion of 21S outer arm dynein from sea urchin sperm flagella in the presence of ATP (or ADP) and vanadate produced quite different polypeptides from those obtained in the absence of ATP (ADP) and/or vanadate (Inaba and Mohri (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 8384-8388). The 21S dynein heavy chains were consistently digested into 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides in the absence of both ATP (ADP) and vanadate. In the presence of 2 mM ADP and 100 microM vanadate, 300-kDa polypeptide, which appeared to be a precursor of 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides, became less accessible to trypsin, and 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides were digested into 150-/148-kDa and 96-kDa polypeptides, respectively. Quantitative analysis of the degradation of 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides showed that the conformations of these polypeptides change remarkably in the presence of ATP (ADP) and vanadate, and slightly in the presence of ATP gamma S. Photoaffinity labeling with 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate and vanadate-mediated photocleavage of dynein heavy chains revealed that both adenine- and gamma-Pi-binding sites were located on 165- and 150-/148-kDa polypeptides, but not on 135-kDa polypeptide. These results suggest that the conformational change occurring in the 165-kDa region on binding ATP spreads to the 135-kDa region and causes the conformational change of the 135-kDa region.  相似文献   

4.
G Mocz  J Farias  I R Gibbons 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7225-7231
The stability of different regions of the beta heavy chain of dynein has been investigated by examining the perturbing effects of methanol, temperature, salt, and nucleotide on the pattern of tryptic digestion. In standard low-salt medium, tryptic proteolysis cleaves the beta heavy chain into three principal polypeptides of 130, 215, and 110 kDa, with the 215-kDa central peptide containing the ATP binding site as well as the vanadate and iron photocleavage sites (Mocz, G., Tang, W.-J. Y., & Gibbons, I. R. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 1607-1614). The 130-kDa peptide is the most stable, and its susceptibility to trypsin appears unaffected by methanol concentrations up to 25% or temperatures up to 45 degrees C, although a 5-kDa region at one end is lost in the presence of salt (greater than 20 mM NaCl). The 215-kDa tryptic peptide contains two regions of different stability: its 123-kDa portion adjoining the 130-kDa peptide is destabilized by mild heat (37 degrees C) or by 25% methanol and becomes digested away to leave the more stable region of 92 kDa that is located toward the 110-kDa peptide and retains the V1 photocleavage site and most of the ATP binding site. The 110-kDa peptide is the least stable and at 37 degrees C, or in the presence of low concentrations of methanol or salt, it rapidly digested to small peptides. The presence of ATP during digestion of the beta heavy chain retards the formation of the 130- and 215-kDa peptides and also protects the 215-kDa peptide from further digestion at 37 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The domain structures of the Escherichia coli Rep and Helicase II proteins and their ligand-dependent conformational changes have been examined by monitoring the sensitivity of these helicases to proteolysis by trypsin and chymotrypsin. Limited treatment of unliganded Rep protein (73 kDa) with trypsin results in cleavage at a single site in its carboxyl-terminal region, producing a 68-kDa polypeptide which is stabilized in the presence of ATP, ADP, or adenosine 5'-O-thiotriphosphate) (ATP gamma S). The purified 68-kDa Rep tryptic polypeptide retains single-stranded (ss) DNA binding, DNA unwinding (helicase), and full ATPase activities. When bound to ssDNA, the Rep protein can be cleaved by trypsin at an additional site in its carboxyl-terminal region, producing a 58-kDa polypeptide that also retains ssDNA binding and ATPase activities. This 58-kDa Rep tryptic polypeptide can also be produced by further tryptic treatment of the 68-kDa Rep tryptic polypeptide when the latter is bound to ssDNA. This 58-kDa polypeptide displays a lower affinity for ssDNA indicating that the 10-kDa carboxyl-terminal peptide facilitates Rep protein binding to ssDNA. The 58-kDa Rep tryptic polypeptide is also stabilized in the presence of nucleotides. Based on these and previous studies that showed that the 68-kDa Rep tryptic polypeptide cannot support DNA replication in a system that is dependent upon the phi X174 cis-A protein (Arai, N. & Kornberg, A. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 5294-5298), we conclude that the carboxyl-terminal end (approximately 5 kDa) of the Rep protein is not required for its helicase or ATPase activities. However, we suggest that this region of the Rep protein is important for its interactions with the phi X174 cis-A protein. Limited treatment of unliganded Helicase II protein (82 kDa) with chymotrypsin results in cleavage after Tyr254, producing a 29-kDa amino-terminal polypeptide and a 53-kDa carboxyl-terminal polypeptide, which remain associated under nondenaturing conditions. This chymotrypsin cleavage reduces the ssDNA binding activity and eliminates the ssDNA-dependent ATPase and helicase activities of the Helicase II protein. The binding of ATP, ADP, ATP gamma S, and/or DNA to Helicase II protein results in protection of this site (Tyr254) from cleavage by chymotrypsin. Limited treatment of Helicase II protein with trypsin results in cleavage near its carboxyl-terminal end producing two polypeptides with apparent Mr = 72,000, in a manner similar to that observed with the Rep protein; these polypeptides are also stabilized by binding ATP or single-stranded DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Limited tryptic digestion of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled (H+-K+)-ATPase from rat resting light gastric membranes produced a soluble 27-kDa polypeptide which retained the fluorescence of the parent enzyme. Its production was markedly enhanced in the presence of an amphiphilic detergent, Zwittergent 3-14, which potently inhibits the ATPase activity. This increase is probably due to protection of certain tryptic cleavage sites through conformational changes of the membrane enzyme by the detergent. The NH2-terminal sequence of the 27-kDa polypeptide corresponded exactly to that beginning at Asn-369 of the cDNA-deduced primary structure of the rat ATPase. The presence of the phosphorylation site, Asp-385, and FITC-labeled Lys-517, which is known to be a part of the ATP-binding site, indicates that the 27-kDa polypeptide contains a major cytoplasmic portion of (H+-K+)-ATPase. Interestingly, the polypeptide was stained with periodate-Schiff's base, indicating its glycoprotein nature. The carbohydrate group attached to the polypeptide seems to include at least an N-linked high-mannose moiety, since the polypeptide showed Con A binding activity as detected with a Con A-biotin/avidin-peroxidase assay on nitrocellulose transblots. Also, its Con A binding activity was inhibited by excess methyl alpha-D-mannopyranoside and disappeared upon treatment of the polypeptide with endoglycosidase H and N-glycanase. Further tryptic action converted the 27-kDa polypeptide to 2 smaller FITC-labeled polypeptides of 25 and 15 kDa, which lost 18 and 96 amino acid residues, respectively, from the NH2 terminus of the parent polypeptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Tryptic cleavage of EF-2, molecular mass 93 kDa, produced an 82-kDa polypeptide and a 10-kDa fragment, which was further degraded. By a slower reaction the 82-kDa polypeptide was gradually split into a 48-kDa and a 34-kDa fragment. Similarly, treatment with chymotrypsin resulted in the formation of an 82-kDa polypeptide and a small fragment. In contrast to the tryptic 82-kDa polypeptide the corresponding chymotryptic cleavage product was relatively resistant to further attack. The degradation of the 82-kDa polypeptide with either trypsin or chymotrypsin was facilitated by the presence of guanosine nucleotides, indicating a conformational shift in native EF-2 upon nucleotide binding. No effect was observed in the presence of ATP, indicating that the effect was specific for guanosine nucleotides. After affinity labelling of native EF-2 with oxidized [3H]GTP and subsequent trypsin treatment the radioactivity was recovered in the 48-kDa polypeptide showing that the GTP-binding site was located within this part of the factor. Correspondingly, tryptic degradation of EF-2 labelled with [14C]NAD+ in the presence of diphtheria toxin showed that the site of ADP-ribosylation was within the 34-kDa polypeptide. By cleavage with the tryptophan-specific reagent N-chlorosuccinimide the site of ADP-ribosylation could be located at a distance of 40-60 kDa from the GTP-binding site and about 4-11 kDa from the nearest terminus.  相似文献   

8.
Acanthamoeba myosin IB contains a 125-kDa heavy chain that has high actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when 1 serine residue is phosphorylated. The heavy chain contains two F-actin-binding sites, one associated with the catalytic site and a second which allows myosin IB to cross-link actin filaments but has no direct effect on catalytic activity. Tryptic digestion of the heavy chain initially produces an NH2-terminal 62-kDa peptide that contains the ATP-binding site and the regulatory phosphorylation site, and a COOH-terminal 68-kDa peptide. F-actin, in the absence of ATP, protects this site and tryptic cleavage then produces an NH2-terminal 80-kDa peptide. Both the 62- and the 80-kDa peptides retain the (NH+4,EDTA)-ATPase activity of native myosin IB and both bind to F-actin in an ATP-sensitive manner. However, only the 80-kDa peptide retains a major portion of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity. This activity requires phosphorylation of the 80-kDa peptide by myosin I heavy chain kinase but, in contrast to the activity of intact myosin IB, it has a simple, hyperbolic dependence on the concentration of F-actin. Also unlike myosin IB, the 80-kDa peptide cannot cross-link F-actin filaments indicating the presence of only a single actin-binding site. These results allow the assignment of the actin-binding site involved in catalytic activity to the region near, and possibly on both sides of, the tryptic cleavage site 62 kDa from the NH2 terminus, and the second actin-binding site to the COOH-terminal 45-kDa domain. Thus, the NH2-terminal 80 kDa of the myosin IB heavy chain is functionally similar to the 93-kDa subfragment 1 of muscle myosin and most likely has a similar organization of functional domains.  相似文献   

9.
Irradiation of soluble dynein 1 from sea urchin sperm flagella at 254 nm in the presence of 50 microM ATP and 100 microM inorganic vanadate (Vi) cleaves the alpha and beta heavy chains into approximately equal quantities of two polypeptides of Mr 228,000 and 200,000, with a conversion efficiency of about 63%. A similar cleavage occurs in the presence of Vi and either ADP or 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (8-N3ATP); in the latter case, 8-N3ATP becomes covalently bound principally to the Mr 228,000 polypeptide. No detectable amount of these fragments is formed if either the Vi or the nucleotide is omitted or in the presence of Vi and 50 microM AMP. These results emphasize the basic similarity of the two ATPases associated with the alpha and beta heavy chain subunits of dynein 1 and give a mean Mr of 428,000 for the intact heavy chains.  相似文献   

10.
Inaba K 《Journal of biochemistry》2000,127(6):1115-1120
Conformational changes of dynein during ATP hydrolysis are demonstrated by the difference in the tryptic fragments of the dynein heavy chain between in the absence and presence of ATP and vanadate. Here tryptic sites in the presence of ATP and vanadate (Tav sites) have been mapped on the betaheavy chain of outer arm dynein from sea urchin sperm flagella. Tav sites are located not only near the central catalytic domain which includes four P-loops, but also near the carboxyl-terminal coiled-coil region. The Tav2 site is located in the most carboxyl-terminal region, which is nearly 850 amino acid residues apart from the the fourth P-loop (P4 site). The region from the most amino-terminal Tav site (Tav1 site) to the Tav2 site covers approximately 2,100 amino acid residues, which is almost half the whole betaheavy chain. Comparison of the sequences around the tryptic sites of the sea urchin b chain and those of the dynein heavy chains from other organisms reveals that the sequence around the Tav1 site is highly conserved in both cytoplasmic and axonemal dyneins but that around Tav2 sites is only conserved in axonemal dyneins, suggesting functional differences in the Tav2 region between the two subfamilies of dynein.  相似文献   

11.
This paper extends our recent report that renal Na+,K(+)-ATPase is digested by trypsin in the absence of Ca2+ and presence of Rb+ ions to a stable 19-kDa fragment and smaller membrane-embedded fragments of the alpha chain and essentially intact beta chain. These are referred to as "19-kDa membranes." Occlusion of both Rb+ (K+) or Na+ ions is preserved, but ATP-dependent functions are lost (Karlish, S. J. D., Goldshleger, R., and Stein, W. D. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 4566-4570). We now show that extensive digestion with nonselective fungal proteases (Pronase and proteinase K) alone, in combination, or after tryptic digestion can remove up to 70% of membrane protein without destroying Rb+ occlusion. In the most heavily digested membranes, the 19-kDa fragment or a slightly shorter 18.5-kDa fragment and smaller fragments of the alpha chain remain, whereas the beta chain is largely digested, leaving smaller membrane-embedded fragments (13-15 kDa). For either trypsin or Pronase digestion, preservation of Rb+ occlusion and the specific fragmentation pattern is observed only in the absence of divalent metal ions (Mg2+ or Ca2+) and presence of either Rb+ or Na+ or congener ions. Tryptic digestion at pH 7.0 can split the beta chain into two fragments of approximately 50 and 16 kDa joined by an S-S bridge. The 16-kDa fragment is protected against further digestion by the presence of Rb+ ions, but probably is not directly involved in occluding cations. Tryptic 19-kDa membranes show a clear and reproducible fragmentation pattern in which all predicted membrane segments are identifiable. Families of fragments from 19-kDa membranes, including seven peptides of 7.6-11.7 kDa, have been separated by size-exclusion high performance liquid chromatography, concentrated, and resolved on 16.5% Tricine gels. N-terminal sequences of the different fragments have been determined after transfer to polyvinylidene difluoride paper. The most interesting findings are as follows. (a) Whereas the 19-kDa tryptic fragment begins at Asn831 as reported previously, the 18.5-kDa Pronase fragment begins at Thr834. (b) Fragments in tryptic 19-kDa membranes of 7.6-11.7 kDa begin at Asp68, Ile263, and Gln737, respectively. These include all putative transmembrane segments other than those in the 19-kDa fragment. (c) A Pronase fragment of 7.8 kDa begins at Thr834, i.e. apparently the 19-kDa fragment has been partially cut, without loss of Rb+ occlusion. (d) Tryptic 16- and approximately 50-kDa fragments of the beta chain begin at Ala5 and Gly143, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Near-UV irradiation in the presence of vanadate cleaves the heavy chain of myosin subfragment 1 at three specific sites located at 23, 31, and 74 kDa from the N-terminus. Increasing the pH from 6.0 to 8.5, gradually, reduces the efficiency of the cleavage and completely eliminates the 31-kDa cut. Actin specifically inhibits the photocleavage at the sites located 31 and 74 kDa from the N-terminus. ATP strongly protects from cleavage at the 23- and 31-kDa sites and less strongly from the cut at the 74-kDa site. ADP and pyrophosphate have similar, but less pronounced, effects as ATP. Orthophosphate inhibits the photocleavage at the 23- and 74-kDa sites with a similar efficiency. In the ternary actin-S-1-ATP complex, the photocleavage is inhibited at all sites, and the effects of actin and ATP are additive. Photocleavages affect the K+(EDTA)-, Ca2(+)-, and actin-activated ATPase activity of subfragment 1. Loss of all three ATPases is caused by cleavage at the 23-kDa site, while the cut at the 74-kDa site only leads to the loss of actin-activated ATPase activity. It is concluded that subfragment 1 contains at least two distinct phosphate binding sites, the first being part of the "consensus" ATP binding site wherein the 23-kDa photocleavage site is located. This site is responsible for the binding and hydrolysis of ATP. It is possible that the 31-kDa cleavage site is also associated with the "consensus" site through a loop. The 74-kDa cleavage site is a part of another phosphate binding site which may play a role in the regulation of the myosin-actin interaction.  相似文献   

13.
Localisation of light chain and actin binding sites on myosin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A gel overlay technique has been used to identify a region of the myosin S-1 heavy chain that binds myosin light chains (regulatory and essential) and actin. The 125I-labelled myosin light chains and actin bound to intact vertebrate skeletal or smooth muscle myosin, S-1 prepared from these myosins and the C-terminal tryptic fragments from them (i.e. the 20-kDa or 24-kDa fragments of skeletal muscle myosin chymotryptic or Mg2+/papain S-1 respectively). MgATP abolished actin binding to myosin and to S-1 but had no effect on binding to the C-terminal tryptic fragments of S-1. The light chains and actin appeared to bind to specific and distinct regions on the S-1 heavy chain, as there was no marked competition in gel overlay experiments in the presence of 50-100 molar excess of unlabelled competing protein. The skeletal muscle C-terminal 24-kDa fragment was isolated from a tryptic digest of Mg2+/papain S-1 by CM-cellulose chromatography, in the presence of 8 M urea. This fragment was characterised by retention of the specific label (1,5-I-AEDANS) on the SH1 thiol residue, by its amino acid composition, and by N-terminal and C-terminal sequence analyses. Electron microscopical examination of this S-1 C-terminal fragment revealed that: it had a strong tendency to form aggregates with itself, appearing as small 'segment-like' structures that formed larger aggregates, and it bound actin, apparently bundling and severing actin filaments. Further digestion of this 24-kDa fragment with Staphylococcus aureus V-8 protease produced a 10-12-kDa peptide, which retained the ability to bind light chains and actin in gel overlay experiments. This 10-12-kDa peptide was derived from the region between the SH1 thiol residue and the C-terminus of S-1. It was further shown that the C-terminal portion, but not the N-terminal portion, of the DTNB regulatory light chain bound this heavy chain region. Although at present nothing can be said about the three-dimensional arrangement of the binding sites for the two kinds of light chain (regulatory and essential) and actin in S-1, it appears that these sites are all located within a length of the S-1 heavy chain of about 100 amino acid residues.  相似文献   

14.
The fluorescent reagent 9-anthroylnitrile (ANN) reacted preferentially with serine among various amino acids tested. When the myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) was incubated with ANN, the 9-anthroyl (AN) group was covalently incorporated into the S-1 heavy chain. The incorporation of the AN group was enhanced by the presence of ATP and ADP. In the presence of ATP, 0.98 mol of the AN group was maximally incorporated into S-1. The resulting S-1 derivative exhibited four absorption maxima in the range of 300-400 nm and fluoresced strongly with an emission maximum at 462 nm upon excitation at 390 nm. The spectral properties were similar to those of the AN-derivatives of serine and polyserine. When 0.98 mol of the AN group was incorporated into S-1, the K+- and Ca2+-ATPase activities decreased to 30%, while the Mg2+-ATPase activity increased to 220% of the original value. Tryptic digestion of the labeled S-1 revealed that the AN group was attached only to the NH2-terminal 23-kDa tryptic peptide of the S-1 heavy chain. Neither the 20-nor the 50-kDa peptide was labeled with ANN. The results suggest that a serine residue, which becomes more reactive in the presence of the nucleotide, is located in the 23-kDa tryptic peptide of S-1.  相似文献   

15.
Digestion of scallop muscle membrane fractions with trypsin led to release of soluble polypeptides derived from the large cytoplasmic domain of a Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger. In the presence of 1 mm Ca(2+), the major product was a peptide of approximately 37 kDa, with an N terminus corresponding to residue 401 of the NCX1 exchanger. In the presence of 10 mm EGTA, approximately 16- and approximately 19-kDa peptides were the major products. Polyclonal rabbit IgG raised against the 37-kDa peptide also bound to the 16- and 19-kDa soluble tryptic peptides and to a 105-110-kDa polypeptide in the undigested membrane preparation. The 16-kDa fragment corresponded to the N-terminal part of the 37-kDa peptide. The conformation of the precursor polypeptide chain in the region of the C terminus of the 16-kDa tryptic peptide was thus altered by the binding of Ca(2+). Phosphorylation of the parent membranes with the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A and [gamma-(32)P]ATP led to incorporation of (32)P into the 16- and 37-kDa soluble fragments. A site may exist within the Ca(2+) regulatory domain of a scallop muscle Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger that mediates direct modulation of secondary Ca(2+) regulation by cAMP.  相似文献   

16.
Unlike phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase from lower eukaryotes, the corresponding enzyme from higher eukaryotes displays a pronounced tendency to associate with ribosomes in vitro. To attempt to uncover the structural features responsible for this difference in behavior, a comparative study of the enzymes purified to homogeneity from sheep liver and yeast was undertaken. The two alpha 2 beta 2-type enzymes displayed remarkably similar subunit molecular masses (71 and 63 kDa for sheep, 74 and 63 kDa for yeast), yet differed markedly in their isoelectric points (8.0 and 5.6 pH units, respectively). Mild tryptic digestion of the enzyme from sheep led to preferential degradation of the 63-kDa beta subunit into two major fragments of 35 and 25 kDa, respectively, with concomitant loss of activity. The isoelectric points of the denatured fragments were found to be distinctly lower than that of the denatured beta subunit, implying that the residues responsible for the basic net charge of the original beta subunit are mainly clustered in a small portion of the polypeptide chain which was excised during proteolysis. Despite their different isoelectric points, the enzymes from yeast and sheep displayed identical requirements for aminoacylation of tRNA at optimal rates. Moreover, the incidence of variations in pH and ionic strength on the kinetic parameters of the two enzymes was indistinguishable. Interpreted in terms of the polyelectrolyte theory, these results support the view that the residues responsible for the basic net charge of the mammalian enzyme are located in a region distal from the active site. It is suggested that the cationic charge of the enzyme allows anchorage to a cellular component carrying negative charges, possibly the ribosome.  相似文献   

17.
The thermal unfolding of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) cleaved by trypsin was studied by differential scanning calorimetry. In the absence of nucleotides, trypsin splits the S1 heavy chain into three fragments (25, 50, and 20 kDa). This cleavage has no appreciable influence on the thermal unfolding of S1 examined in the presence of ADP, in the ternary complexes of S1 with ADP and phosphate analogs, such as orthovanadate (Vi) or beryllium fluoride (BeFx), and in the presence of F-actin. In the presence of ATP and in the complexes S1.ADP.Vi or S1.ADP.BeFx, trypsin produces two additional cleavages in the S1 heavy chain: a faster cleavage in the N-terminal region between Arg23 and Ile24, and a slower cleavage at the 50 kDa fragment. It has been shown that the N-terminal cleavage strongly decreases the thermal stability of S1 by shifting the maximum of its thermal transition by about 7 degrees C to a lower temperature, from 50 degrees C to 42.4 degrees C, whereas the cleavage at both these sites causes dramatic destabilization of the S1 molecule leading to total loss of its thermal transition. Our results show that S1 with ATP-induced N-terminal cleavage is able, like uncleaved S1, to undergo global structural changes in forming the stable ternary complexes with ADP and Pi analogs (Vi, BeFx). These changes are reflected in a pronounced increase of S1 thermal stability. However, S1 cleaved by trypsin in the N-terminal region is unable, unlike S1, to undergo structural changes induced by interaction with F-actin that are expressed in a 4-5 degrees C shift of the S1 thermal transition to higher temperature. Thus, the cleavage between Arg23 and Ile24 does not significantly affect nucleotide-induced structural changes in the S1, but it prevents structural changes that occur when S1 is bound to F-actin. The results suggest that the N-terminal region of the S1 heavy chain plays an important role in structural stabilization of the entire motor domain of the myosin head, and a long-distance communication pathway may exist between this region and the actin-binding sites.  相似文献   

18.
Irradiation of outer arm dynein ATPase from sea urchin sperm tail flagella at 365-410 nm in the presence of Fe(III)-gluconate complex and ATP produces photolytic cleavage at two distinct sites on the beta heavy chain, located approximately 250 and approximately 230 kDa from its amino terminus. The former cut is close to or identical with the V1 site of the vanadate-mediated photocleavage (Gibbons, I.R., Lee-Eiford, A., Mocz, G., Phillipson, C. A., Tang, W.-J.Y., and Gibbons, B.H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2780-2786. The rate of photolysis shows a hyperbolic dependence on Fe(III)-gluconate concentration with half-maximal rate occurring at 23 microM at pH 6.3. In the presence of 0.1-0.5 mM Fe(III)-gluconate-ATP, approximately 58% of the beta chain becomes cleaved with a half-time of about 34 s; the remainder of the beta chain and almost all of the alpha chain are resistant to cleavage. This photolytic cleavage of the beta chain is accompanied by an approximately parallel loss of the dynein latent ATPase activity, whereas the Triton-activated ATPase is lost to a somewhat greater extent. Mg2+ concentrations above approximately 3 mM inhibit photolysis. Substitution of ADP for ATP changes the pattern of cleavage so that both the alpha and beta heavy chain undergo scission but at the 250-kDa site only. AMP, adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate and Fe(II) do not support cleavage at either site. Trivalent rhodium-ATP complexes, as models of MgATP, can also catalyze photolysis of the beta chain at the 250-kDa site. These results suggest that photolysis results from the activation of an Fe(III)-ATP complex bound to the hydrolytic ATP binding site of the beta chain and that both Fe(III) cleavage sites are located close to the nucleotide binding site in the tertiary folding of the beta heavy chain. The cleavage reaction possibly involves initial photoreduction of Fe(III) bound at the Mg2+ binding site in the dynein.Fe.ATP complex, followed by covalent modification of an amino acid side chain that leads to eventual peptide scission.  相似文献   

19.
J Garner  E Crooke 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(13):3477-3485
The capacity of DnaA protein to initiate DNA synthesis at the chromosomal origin is influenced profoundly by the tightly bound nucleotides ATP and ADP. Acidic phospholipids can catalyze the conversion of inactive ADP-DnaA protein into the active ATP form. Proteolytic fragments of the nucleotide form of DnaA protein were examined to determine regions of the protein critical for functional interaction with membranes. A 35 kDa chymotryptic and 29 kDa tryptic fragment retained the tightly bound nucleotide. The fragments, whose amino-termini are within three residues of each other, but differ at their carboxyl ends, showed strikingly different behavior when treated with acidic phospholipids. The larger chymotryptic fragment released the bound nucleotide in the presence of acidic, but not neutral phospholipids. In contrast, the smaller tryptic fragment was inert to both forms of phospholipids. Acidic membranes, but not those composed of neutral phospholipids, protect from tryptic digestion a small portion of the segment that constitutes the difference between the 29 and 35 kDa fragments. The resulting 30 kDa tryptic fragment, which possesses this protected region, interacts functionally with acidic membranes to release the bound effector nucleotide. Inasmuch as the anionic ganglioside GM1, a compound structurally dissimilar to acidic glycerophospholipids, efficiently releases the nucleotide from DnaA protein, an acidic surface associated with a hydrophobic environment is the characteristic of the membrane that appears crucial for regulatory interaction with DnaA protein.  相似文献   

20.
K Pintér  R C Lu  L Szilágyi 《FEBS letters》1986,200(1):221-225
Myosin subfragment-1 (S-1), digested with trypsin in the presence of ATP, rapidly loses its ATPase activity upon mild heat treatment even if ATP or ADP is present. The heat-treated molecule is very sensitive to further tryptic digestion. Undigested S-1 and S-1 digested in the absence of ATP are protected by nucleotides. The loss of the protective effect of nucleotides correlates with the tryptic splitting of the 25 kDa amino-terminal fragment between Arg 23 and Ile 24.  相似文献   

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