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1.
Actin-tropomyosin-troponin has three structural states, but the functional properties of regulation can be explained with models having two functional states. As a step towards assigning functional properties to all the structural states, we examined fluorescent probes that monitor changes in troponin and tropomyosin. Tropomyosin labeled with pyrene-iodoacetamide is thought to reflect the transition to the most active state, whereas N-((2-iodoacetoxy)ethyl)-N-methyl)-amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole-labeled troponin I is thought to monitor the transition to any state other than the inactive state. The fraction of actin in an active state determined from pyrene excimer fluorescence agreed with that calculated from light-scattering measurements of myosin subfragment 1 (S1)-ADP to regulated actin in both the presence and absence of Ca2+ over a range of ionic strength conditions. The only exceptions were conditions where the binding of S1-ADP to actin was too strong to measure accurately. Pyrene-tropomyosin excimer fluorescence was Ca2+ dependent and so reflected the change in population caused by both Ca2+ binding and S1-ADP binding. Pyrene labeling of tropomyosin did not cause a large perturbation of the transition among states of regulated actin. Using pyrene-tropomyosin fluorescence we were able to extend the ionic strength dependence of the parameters describing the co-operativity of binding of S1-ADP to actin as low as 0.1 M. The probes on tropomyosin and troponin I had different responses to Ca2+ and S1-ADP binding. These different sensitivities can be explained by an intermediate between the inactive and active states of regulated actin.  相似文献   

2.
Alterations in the troponin complex can lead to increases or decreases in contractile activity. Most mutations of troponin that cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy increase the activity of cardiac muscle fibers. In at least some cases these mutants stabilize the active state of regulated actin. In contrast, phosphorylation of troponin I at residues 43, 45, and 144 inhibits muscle contractility. To determine if alterations of troponin I that reduce activity do stabilize the inactive state of actin, we introduced negative charges at residues 43, 45, and 144 of troponin I to mimic a constitutively phosphorylated state. At saturating calcium, all mutants decreased ATPase rates relative to wild-type actin-tropomyosin-troponin. Reduced activation of ATPase activity was seen with a single mutation at S45E and was not further altered by mutating the other two sites. In the presence of low concentrations of NEM-S1, wild-type troponin was more active than the mutants. At high NEM-S1, the rates of wild-type and mutants approached the same limiting value. Changes in Ca2+ affinity also support the idea that the equilibrium between states of actin-tropomyosin-troponin was shifted to the inactive state by mutations that mimic troponin I phosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
Changes in the orientation of tropomyosin on actin are important for the regulation of striated muscle contraction and could also be important for smooth muscle regulation. We showed earlier that acrylodan-labeled skeletal muscle tropomyosin reports the kinetics of the reversible transitions among the active, intermediate, and inactive states when S1 is rapidly detached from actin-tropomyosin. We now show that acrylodan-labeled smooth muscle tropomyosin reports similar transitions among states of actin-tropomyosin. When S1 was rapidly detached from actin-smooth muscle tropomyosin, there was a rapid decrease in acrylodan-tropomyosin fluorescence as the intermediate state became populated. The rate constant for this process was >600 s(-1) at temperatures near 5 °C. In the presence of skeletal troponin and EGTA, the decrease in fluorescence was followed by the redevelopment of fluorescence as the inactive state became populated. The apparent rate constant for the fluorescence increase was 14 s(-1) at 5 °C. Substituting smooth muscle caldesmon for skeletal muscle troponin produced a similar decrease and re-increase in fluorescence, but the apparent rate constant for the increase was >10 times that observed with troponin. Furthermore, the fluorescence increase was correlated with an increase in the extent of caldesmon attachment as S1-ATP dissociated. Although the measured rate constant appeared to reflect the rate-limiting transition for inactivation, it is unclear if the fluorescence change resulted from caldesmon binding, the movement of tropomyosin over actin, or both.  相似文献   

4.
Small proteins often fold in an apparent two-state manner with the absence of detectable early-folding intermediates. Recently, using native-state hydrogen exchange, intermediates that exist after the rate-limiting transition state have been identified for several proteins. However, little is known about the folding kinetics from these post-transition intermediates to their corresponding native states. Herein, we have used protein engineering and a laser-induced temperature-jump (T-jump) technique to investigate this issue and have applied it to Rd-apocyt b(562) , a four-helix bundle protein. Previously, it has been shown that Rd-apocyt b(562) folds via an on-pathway hidden intermediate, which has only the N-terminal helix unfolded. In the present study, a double mutation (V16G/I17A) in the N-terminal helix of Rd-apocyt b(562) was made to further increase the relative population of this intermediate state at high temperature by selectively destabilizing the native state. In the circular dichroism thermal melting experiment, this mutant showed apparent two-state folding behavior. However, in the T-jump experiment, two kinetic phases were observed. Therefore, these results are in agreement with the idea that a folding intermediate is populated on the folding pathway of Rd-apocyt b(562) . Moreover, it was found that the exponential growth rate of the native state from this intermediate state is roughly (25 microsec)(-1) at 65 degrees C.  相似文献   

5.
From Emerson enhancement measurements of O2 evolution in Chlorella pyrenoidosa, it was possible to establish a relationship between the concentration of photosystem II open reaction centers (E) and the distribution of photons between photosystems I and II [(1 − )/] during steady state. The superposition of lights of two different wavelengths (1 and 2) gives concentrations of E and intermediate between those obtained with light 1 and 2 separately. This relationship extends a previous one based on quantum yield measurements. It has been expressed here by a curve corresponding to a fixed value of the intersystem apparent equilibrium constant (K). Up to 700 nm, K remains equal to 6. Above this wavelength, although the margin of error is rather great, K apparently increases to 12 or more.

The possibility of “spill-over” of light absorbed by System II to System I was studied. There is no probability that this spill-over, if any, exceeds 25% in Chlorella.

The apparent equilibrium constant is decreased by 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. This is not in favor of the hypothesis of fully independent electron-transfer chains in photosynthesis; it is therefore likely that some communication between those chains exists.  相似文献   


6.
Weinreb G  Lentz BR 《Biophysical journal》2007,92(11):4012-4029
We propose a model that accounts for the time courses of PEG-induced fusion of membrane vesicles of varying lipid compositions and sizes. The model assumes that fusion proceeds from an initial, aggregated vesicle state ((A) membrane contact) through two sequential intermediate states (I(1) and I(2)) and then on to a fusion pore state (FP). Using this model, we interpreted data on the fusion of seven different vesicle systems. We found that the initial aggregated state involved no lipid or content mixing but did produce leakage. The final state (FP) was not leaky. Lipid mixing normally dominated the first intermediate state (I(1)), but content mixing signal was also observed in this state for most systems. The second intermediate state (I(2)) exhibited both lipid and content mixing signals and leakage, and was sometimes the only leaky state. In some systems, the first and second intermediates were indistinguishable and converted directly to the FP state. Having also tested a parallel, two-intermediate model subject to different assumptions about the nature of the intermediates, we conclude that a sequential, two-intermediate model is the simplest model sufficient to describe PEG-mediated fusion in all vesicle systems studied. We conclude as well that a fusion intermediate "state" should not be thought of as a fixed structure (e.g., "stalk" or "transmembrane contact") of uniform properties. Rather, a fusion "state" describes an ensemble of similar structures that can have different mechanical properties. Thus, a "state" can have varying probabilities of having a given functional property such as content mixing, lipid mixing, or leakage. Our data show that the content mixing signal may occur through two processes, one correlated and one not correlated with leakage. Finally, we consider the implications of our results in terms of the "modified stalk" hypothesis for the mechanism of lipid pore formation. We conclude that our results not only support this hypothesis but also provide a means of analyzing fusion time courses so as to test it and gauge the mechanism of action of fusion proteins in the context of the lipidic hypothesis of fusion.  相似文献   

7.
EPR spectroscopy is very useful in studies of the oxygen evolving cycle in Photosystem II and EPR signals from the CaMn4 cluster are known in all S states except S4. Many signals are insufficiently understood and the S0, S1, and S3 states have not yet been quantifiable through their EPR signals. Recently, split EPR signals, induced by illumination at liquid helium temperatures, have been reported in the S0, S1, and S3 states. These split signals provide new spectral probes to the S state chemistry. We have studied the flash power dependence of the S state turnover in Photosystem II membranes by monitoring the split S0, split S1, split S3 and S2 state multiline EPR signals. We demonstrate that quantification of the S1, S3 and S0 states, using the split EPR signals, is indeed possible in samples with mixed S state composition. The amplitudes of all three split EPR signals are linearly correlated to the concentration of the respective S state. We also show that the S1 → S2 transition proceeds without misses following a saturating flash at 1 °C, whilst substantial misses occur in the S2 → S3 transition following the second flash.  相似文献   

8.
Interaction of filipin and amphotericin B with sterols in phosphatidylcholine membranes has been studied using various spin probes; epiandrosterone, cholestanone, phosphatidylcholine with 12-nitroxide or 5-nitroxide stearate attached to 2 position and also with tempocholine at the head group. Filipin caused increase in the fluidity of cholesterol-containing phosphatidylcholine membranes near the center, while it rather decreased the fluidity near the polar surface. On the other hand, amphotericin B did not apparently affect the fluidity. In the electron spin resonance spectrum of steroid spin probes in the antibiotic-containing membranes, both bound and free signals were observed and the association constant was calculated from the siganal intensity. In the binding of steroids with filipin, both 3 and 17 positions were involved, while the 17 position was less involved in the binding with amphotericin B. Phase change in the host membrane markedly affected the interaction of filipin with epiandrosterone probe. The bound fraction jumped from 0.4 to 0.8 on going to the crystalline state and increased further with decrease in temperature. The overall splitting of the bound signal also increased on lowering the temperature below phase transition. This change was attributed to aggregate formation of filipin-steroid complexes in the crystalline state. On the other hand, effect of phase transition was much smaller on the interaction of amphotericin B with the steroid probe.  相似文献   

9.
Spin-labeling and multifrequency EPR spectroscopy were used to probe the dynamic local structure of skeletal myosin in the region of force generation. Subfragment 1 (S1) of rabbit skeletal myosin was labeled with an iodoacetamide spin label at C707 (SH1). X-and W-band EPR spectra were recorded for the apo state and in the presence of ADP and nucleotide analogs. EPR spectra were analyzed in terms of spin-label rotational motion within myosin by fitting them with simulated spectra. Two models were considered: rapid-limit oscillation (spectrum-dependent on the orientational distribution only) and slow restricted motion (spectrum-dependent on the rotational correlation time and the orientational distribution). The global analysis of spectra obtained at two microwave frequencies (9.4 GHz and 94 GHz) produced clear support for the second model and enabled detailed determination of rates and amplitudes of rotational motion and resolution of multiple conformational states. The apo biochemical state is well-described by a single structural state of myosin (M) with very restricted slow motion of the spin label. The ADP-bound biochemical state of myosin also reveals a single structural state (M*, shown previously to be the same as the post-powerstroke ATP-bound state), with less restricted slow motion of the spin label. In contrast, the extra resolution available at 94 GHz reveals that the EPR spectrum of the S1.ADP.Vi-bound biochemical state of myosin, which presumably mimics the S1.ADP.Pi state, is resolved clearly into three spectral components (structural states). One state is indistinguishable from that of the ADP-bound state (M*) and is characterized by moderate restriction and slow motion, with a mole fraction of 16%. The remaining 84% (M**) contains two additional components and is characterized by fast rotation about the x axis of the spin label. After analyzing EPR spectra, myosin ATPase activity, and available structural information for myosin II, we conclude that post-powerstroke and pre-powerstroke structural states (M* and M**) coexist in the S1.ADP.Vi biochemical state. We propose that the pre-powerstroke state M** is characterized by two structural states that could reflect flexibility between the converter and N-terminal domains of myosin.  相似文献   

10.
Ergosterol is an evolutionary precursor of cholesterol and is the major sterol present in lower eukaryotes. Although detailed biophysical characterization of the effect of cholesterol on membranes is well documented, the effect of ergosterol on the organization and dynamics of membranes is still at a very early stage. We have monitored the effect of cholesterol and ergosterol on the dynamic properties of both fluid (POPC) and gel (DPPC) phase membranes utilizing fluorescent reporter probes pyrene and TMA-DPH. These results show, for the first time, the important differences on the effect of cholesterol and ergosterol in short-range ordering (reported by TMA-DPH) and long-range dynamics (reported by pyrene). In addition, pyrene vibronic peak intensity ratio provides information on polarity of the microenvironment experienced by the probe. These novel results are relevant in the context of membrane domains in ergosterol-containing organisms such as Drosophila which maintain a low level of sterol compared to higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

11.
Fluorescence techniques were used to study conformational changes that occur in inactive E. coli 30 S ribosomal subunits during activation by heating in 12 mM Mg2+. Activation is associated with movement of a fluorophore on the 3'-end of 16 S RNA into a less polar environment and towards a probe on the cysteine thiol of ribosomal protein S21. The conformational change causes an apparent decrease in distance between the probes from 59 to 52 A as determined by non-radiative energy transfer.  相似文献   

12.
We examined four cardiomyopathy-causing mutations of troponin I that appear to disturb function by altering the distribution of thin filament states. The R193H (mouse) troponin I mutant had greater than normal actin-activated myosin-S1 ATPase activity in both the presence and absence of calcium. The rate of ATPase activity was the same as that of the wild-type at near-saturating concentrations of the activator, N-ethylmaleimide-S1. This mutant appeared to function by stabilizing the active state of thin filaments. Mutations D191H, R146G, and R146W had lower ATPase activities in the presence of calcium, but higher activities in the absence of calcium. These effects were most pronounced with mutations at position 146. For all three mutants the rates were similar to those of the wild-type at near-saturating concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide-S1. These results, combined with previous results, show that any alteration in the normal distribution of actomyosin states is capable of producing cardiomyopathy. The results of the D191H, R146G, and R146W mutations are most readily explained if the intermediate state of regulated actin has a unique function. The intermediate state appears to have an ability to accelerate the rate of ATP hydrolysis by myosin that exceeds that of the inactive state.  相似文献   

13.
We examined the cardiomyopathy-causing tropomyosin mutations E180G, D175N, and V95A to determine their effects on actomyosin regulation. V95A reduced the ATPase rate when filaments were saturated with regulatory proteins both in the presence and absence of calcium, indicating either a stabilization of the inactive state or an inability to fully populate the active state. Effects of E180G and D175N were more complex. These two mutations increased ATPase rates at sub-saturating concentrations of troponin and tropomyosin as compared to wild type tropomyosin. At higher concentrations of regulatory proteins, ATPase rates became similar to wild type. Normal activation was achieved with the tight-binding myosin analog N-ethylmaleimide-S1, at saturating regulatory protein concentrations. These results suggest that the E180G and D175N mutations reduce the affinity of tropomyosin for actin and also destabilize troponin binding to the actin thin filaments.  相似文献   

14.
Unlike superoxide dismutases (SODs), superoxide reductases (SORs) eliminate superoxide anion (O2•−) not through its dismutation, but via reduction to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the presence of an electron donor. The microaerobic protist Giardia intestinalis, responsible for a common intestinal disease in humans, though lacking SOD and other canonical reactive oxygen species-detoxifying systems, is among the very few eukaryotes encoding a SOR yet identified. In this study, the recombinant SOR from Giardia (SORGi) was purified and characterized by pulse radiolysis and stopped-flow spectrophotometry. The protein, isolated in the reduced state, after oxidation by superoxide or hexachloroiridate(IV), yields a resting species (Tfinal) with Fe3+ ligated to glutamate or hydroxide depending on pH (apparent pKa = 8.7). Although showing negligible SOD activity, reduced SORGi reacts with O2•− with a pH-independent second-order rate constant k1 = 1.0 × 109 M− 1 s− 1 and yields the ferric-(hydro)peroxo intermediate T1; this in turn rapidly decays to the Tfinal state with pH-dependent rates, without populating other detectable intermediates. Immunoblotting assays show that SORGi is expressed in the disease-causing trophozoite of Giardia. We propose that the superoxide-scavenging activity of SOR in Giardia may promote the survival of this air-sensitive parasite in the fairly aerobic proximal human small intestine during infection.  相似文献   

15.
Striated muscle contraction is regulated by the actin binding proteins tropomyosin and troponin. Defects in these proteins lead to myopathies and cardiomyopathies. Deletion of the 14 C-terminal residues of cardiac troponin T leads to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. We showed earlier that regulated actin containing Δ14 TnT was more readily activated than wild-type regulated actin. We suggested that the equilibria among the inactive (blocked), intermediate (closed or calcium), and active (open or myosin) states was shifted to the active state. We now show that, in addition, such regulated actin filaments cannot enter the inactive or blocked state. Regulated actin containing Δ14 TnT had ATPase activities in the absence of Ca2+ that were higher than wild-type filaments but far below the fully active rate. The rapid dissociation of S1-ATP from regulated actin filaments containing Δ14 TnT and acrylodan-labeled tropomyosin did not show the fluorescence increase characteristic of moving to the inactive state. Replacing wild-type TnI with S45E TnI, that favors the inactive state, did not restore the fluorescence change. We conclude that TnT has a previously unrecognized role in forming the inactive state of regulated actin.  相似文献   

16.
Development of a tightly packed hydrophobic core drives the folding of water-soluble globular proteins and is a key determinant of protein stability. Despite this, there remains much to be learnt about how and when the hydrophobic core becomes desolvated and tightly packed during protein folding. We have used the bacterial immunity protein Im7 to examine the specificity of hydrophobic core packing during folding. This small, four-helix protein has previously been shown to fold via a compact three-helical intermediate state. Here, overpacking substitutions, in which residue side-chain size is increased, were used to examine the specificity and malleability of core packing in the folding intermediate and rate-limiting transition state. In parallel, polar groups were introduced into the Im7 hydrophobic core via Val→Thr or Phe→Tyr substitutions and used to determine the solvation status of core residues at different stages of folding. Over 30 Im7 variants were created allowing both series of substitutions to cover all regions of the protein structure. Φ-value analysis demonstrated that the major changes in Im7 core solvation occur prior to the population of the folding intermediate, with key regions involved in docking of the short helix III remaining solvent-exposed until after the rate-limiting transition state has been traversed. In contrast, overpacking core residues revealed that some regions of the native Im7 core are remarkably malleable to increases in side-chain volume. Overpacking residues in other regions of the Im7 core result in substantial (> 2.5 kJ mol− 1) destabilisation of the native structure or even prevents efficient folding to the native state. This study provides new insights into Im7 folding; demonstrating that whilst desolvation occurs early during folding, adoption of a specifically packed core is achieved only at the very last step in the folding mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Residue Ser151 of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) is known to be phosphorylated by p21-activated kinase 3 (PAK3). It has been found that PAK3-mediated phosphorylation of cTnI induces an increase in the sensitivity of myofilament to Ca2+, but the detailed mechanism is unknown. We investigated how the structural and kinetic effects mediated by pseudo-phosphorylation of cTnI (S151E) modulates Ca2+-induced activation of cardiac thin filaments. Using steady-state, time-resolved Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and stopped-flow kinetic measurements, we monitored Ca2+-induced changes in cTnI-cTnC interactions. Measurements were done using reconstituted thin filaments, which contained the pseudo-phosphorylated cTnI(S151E). We hypothesized that the thin filament regulation is modulated by altered cTnC-cTnI interactions due to charge modification caused by the phosphorylation of Ser151 in cTnI. Our results showed that the pseudo-phosphorylation of cTnI (S151E) sensitizes structural changes to Ca2+ by shortening the intersite distances between cTnC and cTnI. Furthermore, kinetic rates of Ca2+ dissociation-induced structural change in the regulatory region of cTnI were reduced significantly by cTnI (S151E). The aforementioned effects of pseudo-phosphorylation of cTnI were similar to those of strong crossbridges on structural changes in cTnI. Our results provide novel information on how cardiac thin filament regulation is modulated by PAK3 phosphorylation of cTnI.  相似文献   

18.
Water molecules in hydrophobic biological cleft/cavities are of contemporary interest for the biomolecular structure and molecular recognition of hydrophobic ligands/drugs. Here, we have explored picosecond-resolved solvation dynamics of water molecules and associated polar amino acids in the hydrophobic cleft around Cys-34 position of Endogenous Serum Albumin (ESA). While site selective acrylodan labeling to Cys-34 allows us to probe solvation in the cleft, Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) from intrinsic fluorescent amino acid Trp 214 to the extrinsic acrylodan probes structural integrity of the protein in our experimental condition. Temperature dependent solvation in the cleft clearly shows that the dynamics follows Arrhenius type behavior up to 60 °C, after which a major structural perturbation of the protein is evident. We have also monitored polarization gated dynamics of the acrylodan probe and FRET from Trp 214 to acrylodan at various temperatures. The dynamical behavior of the immediate environments around the probe acrylodan in the cleft has been compared with a model biomimetic cavity of a reverse micelle (w0 = 5). Using same fluorescent probe of acrylodan, we have checked the structural integrity of the model cavity at various temperatures using picosecond-resolved FRET from Trp to acrylodan in the cavity. We have also estimated possible distribution of donor-acceptor distances in the protein and reverse micelles. Our studies reveal that the energetics of the water molecules in the biological cleft is comparable to that in the model cavity indicating a transition from bound state to quasibound state, closely consistent with a recent MD simulation study.  相似文献   

19.
Much of our understanding of protein folding mechanisms is derived from experiments using intrinsic fluorescence of natural or genetically inserted tryptophan (Trp) residues to monitor protein refolding and site-directed mutagenesis to determine the energetic role of amino acids in the native (N), intermediate (I) or transition (T) states. However, this strategy has limited use to study complex folding reactions because a single fluorescence probe may not detect all low-energy folding intermediates. To overcome this limitation, we suggest that protein refolding should be monitored with different solvent-exposed Trp probes. Here, we demonstrate the utility of this approach by investigating the controversial folding mechanism of ubiquitin (Ub) using Trp probes located at residue positions 1, 28, 45, 57, and 66. We first show that these Trp are structurally sensitive and minimally perturbing fluorescent probes for monitoring folding/unfolding of the protein. Using a conventional stopped-flow instrument, we show that ANS and Trp fluorescence detect two distinct transitions during the refolding of all five Trp mutants at low concentrations of denaturant: T1, a denaturant-dependent transition and T2, a slower transition, largely denaturant-independent. Surprisingly, some Trp mutants (UbM1W, UbS57W) display Trp fluorescence changes during T1 that are distinct from the expected U → N transition suggesting that the denaturant-dependent refolding transition of Ub is not a U → N transition but represents the formation of a structurally distinct I-state (U → I). Alternatively, this U → I transition could be also clearly distinguished by using a combination of two Trp mutations UbF45W-T66W for which the two Trp probes that display fluorescence changes of opposite sign during T1 and T2 (UbF45W-T66W). Global fitting of the folding/unfolding kinetic parameters and additional folding-unfolding double-jump experiments performed on UbM1W, a mutant with enhanced fluorescence in the I-state, demonstrate that the I-state is stable, compact, misfolded, and on-pathway. These results illustrate how transient low-energy I-states can be characterized efficiently in complex refolding reactions using multiple Trp probes.  相似文献   

20.
Peptide substrates were double labeled with pyrenes to prepare fluorescent probes for highly sensitive detection of protease activity and evaluation of protease inhibitors using pyrene monomer/excimer signals. Two proximate pyrene moieties formed excited state dimers in the probes, and these pyrene excimer formations were dissociated by tryptic digestion. The specificity constant of the optimum bispyrene peptide probe was 2.7 times higher than that of the conventional peptide-4-methylcoumarin amide. Moreover, our probe had high sensitivity with an estimated detection limit for trypsin of 4.11?pM. The half maximal inhibitory concentration and dissociation constant of the Bowman–Birk inhibitor were successfully estimated.  相似文献   

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