首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
A 110-kDa protein present in chicken intestinal brush-border microvilli is believed to laterally link the actin filament bundle that forms the structural core of the microvilli with the microvillar plasma membrane. We have purified a 110-kDa protein to greater than 95% homogeneity by extraction of brush borders with solution containing 0.6 M KCl and 5 mM ATP, followed by gel filtration chromatography, sedimentation as a complex with exogenous actin, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The 110-kDa protein-calmodulin complex bound F-actin in the absence but not the presence of ATP and had K+,EDTA-ATPase (0.2 mumol/min/mg) and Ca2+-ATPase (0.2 mumol/min/mg) activities and Mg2+-ATPase activity (0.03 mumol/min/mg) that was not activated by F-actin. The actin-binding and ATPase activities of the complex were similar to those of purified brush-border myosin. However, immunoblot analysis showed no reactivity between the 110-kDa protein and polyclonal antibody against purified chicken brush-border myosin. Also, peptide maps of 110-kDa protein and myosin obtained by limited proteolysis with chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease had few, if any, peptides in common. Immunoblot analysis also showed that myosin heavy chain was stable under the conditions of the preparation.  相似文献   

2.
A contractile protein closely resembling natural actomyosin (myosin B) of rabbit skeletal muscle was extracted from plasmodia of the slime mold, Physarum polycephalum, by protecting the SH-groups with beta-mercaptoethanol or dithiothreitol. Superprecipitation of the protein induced by Mg2+-ATP at low ionic strength was observed only in the presence of very low concentrations of free Ca2+ ions, and the Mg2+-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reaction was activated 2- to 6-fold by 1 muM of free Ca2+ ions. Crude myosin and actin fractions were separated by centrifuging plasmodium myosin B in the presence of Mg2+-PPi at high ionic strength. The crude myosin showed both EDTA- and Ca2+-activated ATPase activities. The Mg2+-ATPase activity of crude myosin from plasmodia was markedly activated by the addition of pure F-actin from rabbit skeletal muscle. Addition of the F-action-regulatory protein complex prepared from rabbit skeletal muscle as well as the actin fraction of plasmodium caused the same degree of activation as the addition of pure F-actin only in the presence of very low concentrations of Ca2+ ion  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The interactions were analyzed between actin, myosin, and a recently discovered high molecular weight actin-binding protein (Hartwig, J. H., and Stossel, T. P. (1975) J. Biol Chem.250,5696-5705) of rabbit alveolar macrophages. Purified rabbit alveolar macrophage or rabbit skeletal muscle F-actins did not activate the Mg2+ATPase activity of purified rabbit alveolar macrophage myosin unless an additional cofactor, partially purified from macrophage extracts, was added. The Mg2+ATPase activity of cofactor-activated macrophage actomyosin was as high as 0.6 mumol of Pi/mg of myosin protein/min at 37 degrees. The macrophage cofactor increased the Mg2+ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin, and calcium regulated the Mg2+ATPase activity of cofactor-activited muscle actomyosin in the presence of muscle troponins and tropomyosin. However, the Mg2+ATPase activity of macrophage actomyosin in the presence of the cofactor was inhibited by muscle control proteins, both in the presence and absence of calcium. The Mg2+ATPase activity of the macrophage actomyosin plus cofactor, whether assembled from purified components or studied in a complex collected from crude macrophage extracts, was not influenced by the presence of absence of calcium ions. Therefore, as described for Acanthamoeba castellanii myosin (Pollard, T. D., and Korn, E. D. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 4691-4697), rabbit alveolar macrophage myosin requires a cofactor for activation of its Mg2+ATPase activity by F-actin; and no evidence was found for participation of calcium ions in the regulation of this activity.In macrophage extracts containing 0.34 M sucrose, 0.5 mM ATP, and 0.05 M KCl at pH 7.0,the actin-binding protein bound F-actin into bundles with interconnecting bridges. Purified macrophage actin-binding protein in 0.1 M KCl at pH 7.0 also bound purified macrophage F-actin into filament bundles. Macrophage myosin bound to F-actin in the absence but not the presence of Mg2+ATP, but the actin-binding protein did not bind to macrophage myosin in either the presence or absence of Mg2+ATP.  相似文献   

5.
J E Estes  L C Gershman 《Biochemistry》1978,17(13):2495-2499
F-actin monomer (F-monomer) is formed upon the addition of neutral salt to G-actin. Since F-monomer has a digestibility similar to that of F-actin and much lower than that of G-actin, it has been proposed that F-monomer has a conformation different from that of G-actin and similar to the conformation of the subunits in F-actin. To examine whether F-monomer will enhance the magnesium-activated myosin adenosine triphosphatase (Mg2+-ATPase) as much as F-actin, the ability of partially polymerized actin populations at equilibrium to activate the Mg2+-ATPase of heavy meromyosin was investigated. Correlations were made between ATPase activities and the polymerization state of actin as determined by measurements of viscosity and digestibility. No significant activation of the heavy meromyosin ATPase was observed under conditions where G-actin or mixtures of G-actin and F-monomer were present. As polymer formation occurred at higher actin concentrations, or with increased KCl concentrations, substantial activation characteristic of F-actin was observed. The data suggest that F-monomer may undergo a further conformational change as it forms nuclei or joins onto polymers. Alternatively, the site of actin which activates the myosin ATPase may involve the crevice between two adjacent actin subunits.  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.
An activating factor for the superprecipitation of actomyosin reconstructed from scallop smooth muscle myosin and rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin was purified from thin filaments of scallop smooth and striated muscles. Two components were obtained from the smooth muscle and one from the striated muscle. All three components similarly affected the actomyosin ATPase activity. According to the results of analysis involving double reciprocal plotting of the ATPase activity versus F-actin concentration, the activating factor for superprecipitation decreased the apparent dissociation constants of actomyosin about 30 to 110 times. The activation of the superprecipitation by the factor, therefore, may be due to the enhancement of the affinity between F-actin and myosin in the presence of ATP. The activating factor was identified as tropomyosin based on it mobility on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and on the recovery of the Ca2+-sensitivity of purified rabbit skeletal actomyosin in the presence of troponin.  相似文献   

8.
It has been shown that in the absence of KCl, the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal myosin minifilaments with phosphorylated regulatory lights chains (LC2) exceeds 3-4-fold that of myosin minifilaments with dephosphorylated LC2. Addition of KCl leads to a decrease in the difference between the two ATPase activities. LC2 phosphorylation considerably increases the rate of ATPase reaction and only slightly decreases the affinity of myosin minifilaments for F-actin. It is suggested that the unusual effect of LC2 phosphorylation on the kinetic parameters of the actin-stimulated ATPase reaction of myosin minifilaments can be accounted for by its influence on the interaction between myosin heads which results in the ordered self-assembly of minifilaments.  相似文献   

9.
Calcium-sensitive modulation of the actomyosin ATPase by fodrin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Fodrin, a spectrin-like protein isolated from brain, is a long flexible molecule which binds calmodulin and cross-links F-actin. The effects of fodrin on the actin-activated ATPase of myosin have been examined. When added after ATP, fodrin inhibited the actomyosin ATPase. Two to three times as much fodrin was required for inhibition in the presence of Ca2+ as in its absence. Complete inhibition in the absence of Ca2+ occurred at about one fodrin to 200 actins. Inhibition does not appear to result from fodrin cross-linking F-actin, and, thereby, preventing the myosin filaments from reaching the actin filaments; but cross-linking may promote inhibition by trapping the myosin filaments within the cross-linked F-actin. When added before ATP, fodrin stimulated the actomyosin ATPase almost 3-fold in the presence of Ca2+ and by less than 50% in the absence of Ca2+. Stimulation is thought to result from fodrin cross-linking F-actin. After several minutes the stimulations in Ca2+ were greatly reduced, and in the absence of Ca2+ the actomyosin ATPases were substantially inhibited. Whether added before or after ATP, fodrin inhibited the actin-activated ATPase of myosin subfragment 1. This inhibition was also slightly Ca2+ sensitive.  相似文献   

10.
A myosin was isolated from the clonal rat glial cell strain C-6 and compared with rat skeletal muscle myosin. After cell extracts were subjected to gel filtration chromatography in the presence of KI and magnesium pyrophosphate the C-6 myosin was rapidly purified by a procedure similar to that used for skeletal muscle myosin. The C-6 myosin resembles muscle myosin both physically and enzymatically. It contains heavy chains of 200,000 daltons and two classes of light chains of 17,000 and 19,000 daltons in approximately equal molar ratios. This myosin forms bipolar thick filaments in 0.1 M KCl and binds reversibly to skeletal muscle F-actin, the binding being inhibited by MgATP. Skeletal muscle F-actin stimulates the C-6 myosin adenosine triphosphatase 2- to 3-fold in the presence of KCl and Mg2+. The action activation of muscle myosin ATPase at low ionic strength is 10-fold greater than that of C-6 myosin. Ca2+ and EDTA stimulated the ATPase activities of both enzymes. When assayed in the presence of 0.6 M KCl and 1 mM EDTA the skeletal muscle myocin ATPase demonstrates substrate saturation while the C-6 myosin enzyme activity is stimulated by ATP concentrations above 2.5 mM.  相似文献   

11.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(6):1761-1765
Tomato activation inhibiting protein (AIP) is a molecule of an apparent molecular weight of 72,000 that co-purifies with tomato actin. In an assay system containing rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin and rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 (myosin S-1), tomato AIP dissociated the acto-S-1 complex in the absence of Mg+2ATP and inhibited the ability of F-actin to activate the low ionic strength Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1. At a molar ratio of 5 actin to 1 AIP, a 50% inhibition of the actin-activated Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1 was observed. The inhibition can be reversed by raising the calcium ion concentration to 1 X 10(-5) M. The AIP had no effect on the basal low ionic strength Mg+2ATPase activity of myosin S-1 in the absence of actin. The protein did not bind directly to actin nor did it cause depolymerization or aggregation of F-actin but appeared, instead, to interact with the actin binding site on myosin S-1. Since AIP is a potent, reversible inhibitor of the rabbit acto-S-1 ATPase activity, it is postulated that it may be responsible for the low levels of actin activation exhibited by tomato F-actin fractions containing the AIP.  相似文献   

12.
Myosin (opaque myosin) isolated from the opaque portion of scallop smooth muscle, a catch muscle, was subjected to limited digestion by trypsin during the steady-state ATPase reaction. The 200-kDa heavy chain of opaque myosin was cleaved into 125- and 74-kDa fragments. The proteolytic rate in the absence of Ca2+ was lower than that in the presence of Ca2+, and was similar to that in the presence of ADP and absence of Ca2+. The results suggest that the steady-state intermediate of opaque myosin ATPase in the absence of Ca2+ is EADP, which is consistent with the previous results based on the difference UV-absorption spectrum (Takahashi, M., Sohma, H., & Morita, F. (1988) J. Biochem. 104, 102-107). In the presence of F-actin, the proteolytic rates were decreased, but the digestive patterns by trypsin were similar to those of myosin alone. Even in the presence of F-actin, the proteolytic rate during the ATPase reaction in the absence of Ca2+ was lower than that in the presence of Ca2+, and was similar to that in the presence of ADP and absence of Ca2+. In addition, there was another trypsin-susceptible site which is probably located at 18 kDa from the N-terminal of the heavy chain. The site in the absence of Ca2+ was hardly cleaved when ATP or ADP was present. Similar tendencies were observed even in the presence of F-actin. These findings suggest that the intermediate of opaque myosin ATPase at the steady state in the absence of Ca2+ is EADP even in the presence of F-actin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Two Triton-insoluble fractions were isolated from Acanthamoeba castellanii. The major non-membrane proteins in both fractions were actin (30-40%), myosin II (4-9%), myosin I (1-5%), and a 55-kD polypeptide (10%). The 55-kD polypeptide did not react with antibodies against tubulins from turkey brain, paramecium, or yeast. All of these proteins were much more concentrated in the Triton-insoluble fractions than in the whole homogenate or soluble supernatant. The 55-kD polypeptide was extracted with 0.3 M NaCl, fractionated by ammonium sulfate, and purified to near homogeneity by DEAE-cellulose and hydroxyapatite chromatography. The purified protein had a molecular mass of 110 kD and appeared to be a homodimer by isoelectric focusing. The 110-kD dimer bound to F-actin with a maximal binding stoichiometry of 0.5 mol/mol of actin (1 mol of 55-kD subunit/mol of actin). Although the 110-kD protein enhanced the sedimentation of F-actin, it did not affect the low shear viscosity of F-actin solutions nor was bundling of F-actin observed by electron microscopy. The 110-kD dimer protein inhibited the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activities of Acanthamoeba myosin I and myosin II in a concentration-dependent manner. By indirect immunofluorescence, the 110-kD protein was found to be localized in the peripheral cytoplasm near the plasma membrane which is also enriched in F-actin filaments and myosin I.  相似文献   

14.
1. The influence of KCl and CaCl2 on ATPase activity of ventricular myosin of the mouse, rat, rabbit and cow, the temperature dependence of ATPase and the effect of pCMB treatment and tryptic digestion on ATPase activity of these myosins were studied. 2. Ca2+ - and K+ -ATPase activities of myosins were inversely related to body size of the animal species; when K+ -ATPase activities were measured in the absence of EDTA, the body size/ATPase dependence was only slightly apparent. 3. The influence of temperature, the effect of pCMB and the influence of tryptic digestion on Ca2+ - ATPase activity distinguished the compared myosins. 4. There was a marked alteration of the effect of myosin treatment with pCMB or trypsin on K+ -ATPase activity of these myosins and in this case differences in K+ -ATPase activities were less pronounced.  相似文献   

15.
Natural actomyosin, actin and myosin, have been pressurized at up to 150 MN/m2 for 1 h at 0 degrees C and examined 3-5 h later. Pressurization of myosin resulted in the formation of aggregates with a molecular weight approximately that expected for a dimer, whereas with F-actin depolymerization occurred. With actomyosin, a gel to sol transition was promoted. Viscosity and light-scattering measurements indicated that pressurization results in a large measure of disaggregation of actomyosin in solution. Pressurization of actomyosin resulted in a greater decrease in the calcium-sensitive, than in the calcium-independent, Mg2+ ATPase activity. The Ca2+ and K+-EDTA ATPase activities of myosin were inhibited to about the same extent.  相似文献   

16.
Actomyosin, myosin, and actin from different sources are adsorbed, apparently as a monolayer, by polystyrene particles teins for 1 mg of Lytron were about 10-7 liters mol-1, while heterogeneity indices (alpha) varied from 0.70 to 1.0 presumably as a function of spontaneous aggregation in the liquid phase. Adsorption was irreversible. Orientation of absorbed molecules permitted association of bound muscle actin with platelet or muscle myosin. The association constant of the former reaction was 2.78 times 10-6 liters mol-1. Enzymatic properties of adsorbed actomyosin, Mg2+ATPase activity was abolished, but association of myosin with bound actin, or association of actin with bound myosin was accompanied by restoration of Mg2+ATPase activity. Every subunit of F-actin strands, unless F-actin had been fully depolymerized to G-actin, could bind myosin and activate Mg2+ATPase activity. Immunogenic characteristics of muscle myosin were enhanced by Lytron adsorption. Elicited antibodies showed selective specificity for an antigenic determinant located near or at the actin combining site of muscle myosin. Antibodies did not react with actomyosin. Antibodies prevented association of actin with muscle myosin because they inhibited both superprecipitation and development of Mg2+ATPase activity.  相似文献   

17.
Interaction of isolated bacterial flagellum filaments (BFF) and intact flagella from E. coli MS 1350 and B. brevis G.-B.p+ with rabbit skeletal myosin was studied. BFF were shown to coprecipitate with myosin (but not with isolated myosin rod) at low ionic strength, that is, under conditions of myosin aggregation. The data of electron microscopy indicate that filaments of intact bacterial flagella interact with isolated myosin heads (myosin subfragment 1, S1), and this interaction is fully prevented by addition of Mg2+ -ATP. Addition of BFF inhibited both K+ -EDTA- and Ca2+ -ATPase activity of skeletal muscle myosin, but had no effect on its Mg2+ -ATPase activity. Monomeric flagellin did not coprecipitate with myosin and had no effect on its ATPase activities. BFF were shown to compete with F-actin in myosin binding. It is concluded that BFF interact with myosin heads and affect their ATPase activity. Thus, BFF composed of a single protein flagellin are in many respects similar to actin filaments. Common origin of actin and flagellin may be a reason for this similarity.  相似文献   

18.
Myosin and F-actin were prepared from bovine carotid arterial smooth muscle and the properties of the binding of myosin to F-actin were compared with those of the binding of skeletal muscle myosin to F-actin. The following differences were observed between skeletal and smooth muscle myosins. 1. The rate of ATP-induced dissociation of arterial actomyosin was equal to that of hybrid actomyosin reconstituted from arterial myosin and skeletal muscle F-actin, but was much lower than those of skeletal muscle actomyosin and of hybrid actomyosin reconstituted from skeletal muscle myosin and arterial F-actin. 2. The amount of ATP necessary for complete dissociation of arterial actomyosin was 2 mol/mol of myosin, although it is well known that skeletal muscle actomyosin is dissociated completely by the addition of 1 mol ATP per mol of myosin. 3. Arterial actomyosin and hybrid actomyosin reconstituted from arterial myosin and skeletal muscle F-actin did not dissociate upon addition of 0.1 mM PPi, while skeletal muscle actomyosin dissociated completely. 4. In the absence of Mg2+, neither dissociation by ATP nor ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] activity was observed with arterial actomyosin and hybrid actomyosin reconstituted from arterial myosin and skeletal muscle F-actin. On the other hand, skeletal muscle actomyosin dissociated almost completely upon addition of ATP and showed a considerably high ATPase activity. These observations reveal marked differences between myosins from skeletal and smooth muscles in their binding properties to F-actin.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The Mg2+-ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosin IA is activated by F-actin only when the myosin heavy chain is phosphorylated at a single residue. In order to gain insight into the conformational changes that may be responsible for the effects of F-actin and phosphorylation on myosin I ATPase, we have studied their effects on the proteolysis of the myosin IA heavy chain by trypsin. Trypsin initially cleaves the unphosphorylated, 140-kDa heavy chain of Acanthamoeba myosin IA at sites 38 and 112 kDa from its NH2 terminus and secondarily at sites 64 and 91 kDa from the NH2 terminus. F-actin has no effect on tryptic cleavage at the 91- and 112-kDa sites, but does protect the 38-kDa site and the 64-kDa site. Phosphorylation (which occurs very near the 38-kDa site) has no detectable effect on the tryptic cleavage pattern in the absence of F-actin or on F-actin protection of the 64-kDa site, but significantly enhances F-actin protection of the 38-kDa site. Protection of the 64-kDa site is probably due to direct steric blocking because F-actin binds to this region of the heavy chain. The protection of the 38-kDa site by F-actin may be the result of conformational changes in this region of the heavy chain induced by F-actin binding near the 64-kDa site and by phosphorylation. The conformational changes in the heavy chain of myosin IA that are detected by alterations in its susceptibility to proteolysis are likely to be related to the conformational changes that are involved in the phosphorylation-regulated actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activities of Acanthamoeba myosins IA and IB.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号