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1.
Actin-based gels were prepared from clarified high-salt extracts of human platelets by dialysis against physiological salt buffers. The gel was partially solubilized with 0.3 M KCl. Mice were immunized with the 0.3 M KCl extract of the actin gel, and hybridomas were produced by fusion of spleen cells with myeloma cells. Three hybridomas were generated that secrete antibodies against an 80-kD protein. These monoclonal antibodies stained stress fibers in cultured cells and cross-reacted with proteins in several tissue types, including smooth muscle. The cross-reacting protein in chicken gizzard smooth muscle had an apparent molecular weight of 140,000 and was demonstrated to be caldesmon, a calmodulin and actin-binding protein (Sobue, K., Y. Muramoto, M. Fujita, and S. Kakiuchi, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 78:5652-5655). No proteins of molecular weight greater than 80 kD were detectable in platelets by immunoblotting using the monoclonal antibodies. The 80-kD protein is heat stable and was purified using modifications of the procedure reported by Bretscher for the rapid purification of smooth muscle caldesmon (Bretscher, A., 1985, J. Biol. Chem., 259:12873-12880). The 80-kD protein bound to calmodulin-Sepharose in a Ca++-dependent manner and sedimented with actin filaments, but did not greatly increase the viscosity of F-actin solutions. The actin-binding activity was inhibited by calmodulin in the presence of calcium. Except for the molecular weight difference, the 80-kD platelet protein appears functionally similar to 140-kD smooth muscle caldesmon. We propose that the 80-kD protein is platelet caldesmon.  相似文献   

2.
We have developed a simple and conventional purification method for caldesmon and MLC kinase from bovine arterial smooth muscle, and compared the arterial and gizzard proteins. Arterial caldesmon shares the alternative binding to calmodulin or F-actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner and the antigenic determinants with the gizzard protein. Both caldesmons have the same association constant with F-actin (1.3-1.7 X 10(7) M-1) and the same maximum binding (1 caldesmon per 12-14 actins). However, the molecular weight of arterial caldesmon (dimer of a 148 kDa polypeptides) was slightly different from that of gizzard caldesmon (heterodimer of 150/147 kDa polypeptides). The molecular weight of arterial MLC kinase (160 kDa) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (135 kDa). The enzyme activities of both MLC kinases were comparable (Km = 9.5 microM, Vmax = 12.5 mumol/min X mg). The association constant of the arterial enzyme to F-actin (5.1 X 10(6) M-1) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (9.0 X 10(5) M-1) but the maximum binding was the same (1 enzyme per 12-13 actins). Immunocytochemical examinations showed that caldesmon and MLC kinase in cultured arterial cells have a restricted localization along the stress fibers, suggesting functional linkages between both proteins and actin filaments in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Vascular smooth muscle caldesmon   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein, has been identified in diverse bovine tissues, including smooth and striated muscles and various nonmuscle tissues, by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of tissue homogenates and immunoblotting using rabbit anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon. Caldesmon was purified from vascular smooth muscle (bovine aorta) by heat treatment of a tissue homogenate, ion-exchange chromatography, and affinity chromatography on a column of immobilized calmodulin. The isolated protein shared many properties in common with chicken gizzard caldesmon: immunological cross-reactivity, Ca2+-dependent interaction with calmodulin, Ca2+-independent interaction with F-actin, competition between actin and calmodulin for caldesmon binding only in the presence of Ca2+, and inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin without affecting the phosphorylation state of myosin. Maximal binding of aorta caldesmon to actin occurred at 1 mol of caldesmon: 9-10 mol of actin, and binding was unaffected by tropomyosin. Half-maximal inhibition of the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase occurred at approximately 1 mol of caldesmon: 12 mol of actin. This inhibition was also unaffected by tropomyosin. Caldesmon had no effect on the Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin in the absence of actin. Bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmons differed in several respects: Mr (149,000 for bovine aorta caldesmon and 141,000 for chicken gizzard caldesmon), extinction coefficient (E1%280nm = 19.5 and 5.0 for bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmon, respectively), amino acid composition, and one-dimensional peptide maps obtained by limited chymotryptic and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. In a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, using anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon, a 174-fold molar excess of bovine aorta caldesmon relative to chicken gizzard caldesmon was required for half-maximal inhibition. These studies establish the widespread tissue and species distribution of caldesmon and indicate that vascular smooth muscle caldesmon exhibits physicochemical differences yet structural and functional similarities to caldesmon isolated from chicken gizzard.  相似文献   

4.
In our previous paper (Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 141, 20-26 (1986) we reported the isolation of a 34000-dalton protein (p34K) which binds to calmodulin and F-actin from chicken gizzard smooth muscle. We examined the distribution of the immunoreactive component of gizzard p34K in bovine tissues by immunoblot analysis using a rabbit polyclonal antibody raised against gizzard p34K. The immunoreactive components with molecular weights of 33000-35000 were detected in all smooth muscles from aorta, esophagus, stomach, trachea and uterus. In non-smooth muscle tissues, a 36000-dalton cross-reactive protein was present in adrenal medulla and cortex. The immunoreactive form of gizzard p34K occurred in large amounts in smooth muscles from various bovine tissues.  相似文献   

5.
Calponin is an actin binding protein found in the smooth muscle cells of chicken gizzard. The localization of the protein was examined in bovine platelets, mouse fibroblasts, and the smooth muscle cells of the bovine aorta. Immunoblotting of whole platelet lysates revealed that the antibody to chicken gizzard calponin recognized two proteins with apparent molecular masses of 37 and 23 kDa in the resting state and an additional high-molecular-weight component (approximately 40 kDa) in the activated state. The localizations of calponin and caldesmon, and the correlation of their localizations with that of the actin cytoskeleton were analyzed by immunofluorescence microscopy using appropriate antibodies and rhodamine-phalloidin. In resting bovine platelets, calponin exhibited the same distribution as actin filaments, which are organized in a characteristic wheel-like structure. A similar distribution was observed with the anti-caldesmon antibody. Colocalization of calponin and actin were shown in activated platelets and along stress fibers of both fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells. These results suggest not only a cytoskeletal role associated with microfilaments but also a regulatory role of these proteins for actin-myosin interaction.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphorylation of caldesmon by protein kinase C   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Protein kinase C catalyzes phosphorylation of caldesmon, an F-actin binding protein of smooth muscle, in the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid. Protein kinase C incorporates about 8 mol of phosphate/mol of chicken gizzard caldesmon. When calmodulin was added in the medium, there was an inhibition of phosphorylation. The fully phosphorylated, but not unphosphorylated, caldesmon inhibited myosin light chain kinase activity. The possibility that protein kinase C plays some role in smooth muscle contractile system through caldesmon, warrants further attention.  相似文献   

7.
A 140-kDa polypeptide present in the striated muscle of Pecten maximus and Sepia officinalis was purified to homogeneity and its main properties were investigated using biochemical and cytochemical approaches. The protein was found to be similar to chicken gizzard caldesmon. It is a heat-stable protein. It cross-reacts immunologically with anti-(gizzard caldesmon) antibody, binds to calmodulin-Sepharose in a Ca2+-dependent manner, cosediments with F-actin filaments and acts in the absence and presence of tropomyosin as a potent inhibitor of rabbit skeletal actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase. The immunocytochemistry of ultrathin sections revealed, at the light microscopy resolution level, that caldesmon-like protein is present in all types of muscles hitherto examined from invertebrates and vertebrates. However, according to the distribution and the intensity of the fluorescent reaction, we concluded that, under our experimental conditions, caldesmon is not homogeneously distributed and not located in the myofibrillar bands of striated muscles but rather in the sarcoplasmic elements, at the periphery of the fibres.  相似文献   

8.
Smooth muscle caldesmon was phosphorylated in vitro by sea star p44mpk up to 2.0 mol of phosphate/mol of protein at both Ser and Thr residues. The phosphorylation sites were contained mainly in the COOH-terminal 10-kDa cyanogen bromide fragment which houses the binding sites for calmodulin, tropomyosin, and F-actin. Tryptic peptide maps of 32P-labeled caldesmon by p44mpk and p34cdc2 showed that while both enzymes recognized similar sites of phosphorylation, they have different preferred sites. Phosphorylation of caldesmon attenuated slightly its interaction with actin and had no effect on its binding to calmodulin and tropomyosin. Smooth muscle cell extracts from chicken gizzard and rat aorta contained 42- and 44-kDa proteins, respectively, which were cross-reactive with an antibody to sea star p44mpk. Immunoprecipitates from gizzard and aorta cell extracts, generated with the p44mpk antibody, possessed kinase activities toward myelin basic protein as well as caldesmon. These results suggest that MAP kinase may have functions in the differentiated smooth muscle cells distinct from those involved in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

9.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2487-2498
Caldesmon is present in a high molecular mass form in smooth muscle and predominantly in a low molecular mass form in nonmuscle cells. Their biochemical properties are very similar. To examine whether these two forms of caldesmon behave differently in cultured cells, we microinjected fluorescently labeled smooth muscle and nonmuscle caldesmons into fibroblasts. Simultaneous injection of both caldesmons into the same cells has revealed that both high and low relative molecular mass caldesmons are quickly (within 10 min) and stably (over 3 d) incorporated into the same structures of microfilaments including stress fibers and membrane ruffles, suggesting that nonmuscle cells do not distinguish nonmuscle caldesmon from smooth muscle caldesmon. The effect of calmodulin on the incorporation of caldesmon has been examined by coinjection of caldesmon with calmodulin. We have found that calmodulin retards the incorporation of caldesmon into stress fibers for a short period (10 min) but not for a longer incubation (30 min). The behavior of caldesmon in developing muscle cells was also examined because we previously observed that caldesmon disappears during myogenesis (Yamashiro, S., R. Ishikawa, and F. Matsumura. 1988. Protoplasma Suppl. 2: 9-21). We have found that, in contrast to its stable incorporation into stress fibers of fibroblasts, caldesmon is unable to be incorporated into thin filament structure (I-band) of differentiated muscle.  相似文献   

10.
Caldesmon is a major F-actin binding protein of smooth muscle that has been implicated as a component of a thin filament regulatory system. Chicken gizzard caldesmon consists of polypeptides of Mr-135,000 and 140,000 which are closely related as determined by analysis of cyanogen bromide cleavage fragments. It is a highly extended flexible protein having a contour length of about 146 nm and a secondary structure composed primarily of random coil. Physical and chemical cross-linking data suggest that caldesmon exists as a monomer in solution. The cysteine content of caldesmon was determined to be 2 residues/polypeptide. Remarkably, in solution it readily undergoes sulfhydryl oxidation to form either an internal disulfide bridge in the protein or cross-links between individual polypeptides to form dimers, trimers, tetramers, etc. The internally cross-linked species have a smaller Stokes radius than the reduced molecules, indicating that the cross-link "trapped" the molecule in a compact conformation. Oxidized protein containing caldesmon oligomers is a potent F-actin bundling protein. Complete reduction of caldesmon abolishes the F-actin bundling activity. Since a vast excess of reducing agent is required to convert caldesmon from an oxidized to reduced state, it may exist in either state in vivo. Thus, the ability of caldesmon to undergo reversible sulfhydryl cross-linking, and thereby reversible F-actin cross-linking, may be of physiological significance.  相似文献   

11.
Polyclonal antibodies raised in rabbits against chicken gizzard caldesmon have been purified and used in immunoblotting experiments to study the distribution of this actin- and calmodulin-binding protein in diverse tissues of the chicken. Total homogenates and heat-treated homogenate supernatants derived from each tissue were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gradient slab gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting using the horseradish peroxidase method. All chicken tissues examined contained caldesmon of Mr = 141,000. The amount of caldesmon found in the different tissues varied considerably and semi-quantitative comparison of stained immunoblots indicated the following relative caldesmon contents: gizzard greater than oesophagus greater than duodenum = small intestine greater than lung greater than aorta greater than heart = skeletal muscle greater than kidney = trachea greater than brain greater than liver. Each tissue revealed small amounts of lower Mr immunoreactive proteins, predominantly bands of Mr 94,000 and 70,000, which appear to be proteolytic fragments of caldesmon. Isolated caldesmon was found to be highly sensitive to proteolysis. The widespread distribution and similarity of caldesmon in different tissues of the chicken suggest its functional importance and structural conservation.  相似文献   

12.
Caldesmon, a major calmodulin- and actin-binding protein of smooth muscle (Sobue, K., Muramoto, Y., Fujita, M., and Kakiuchi, S. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 78, 5652-5655), has been obtained in highly purified form from chicken gizzard by a modification of a previously published procedure (Ngai, P. K., Carruthers, C. A., and Walsh, M. P. (1984) Biochem. J. 218, 863-870) and was found to cause a significant inhibition of both superprecipitation and actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase activity in a system reconstituted from the purified contractile and regulatory proteins without influencing the phosphorylation state of myosin. This inhibitory effect was seen both in the presence and absence of tropomyosin. A Ca2+-and calmodulin-dependent kinase which catalyzed phosphorylation of caldesmon was identified in chicken gizzard; this kinase is distinct from myosin light-chain kinase. Caldesmon prepared by calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography was contaminated with caldesmon kinase activity and was unable to inhibit actomyosin ATPase activity or superprecipitation. Phosphatase activity capable of dephosphorylating caldesmon was also identified in smooth muscle. These results indicate that caldesmon can inhibit smooth muscle actomyosin ATPase activity in vitro, and this function may itself be subject to regulation by reversible phosphorylation of caldesmon.  相似文献   

13.
A pair of 10-kDa peptides, designated CB-a and CB-b, was isolated by calmodulin-Sepharose chromatography from a total CNBr digest of turkey gizzard caldesmon. CB-a encompasses the COOH-terminal segment of residues 659-756, according to the sequence of adult chicken gizzard caldesmon (Bryan, J., Imai, M., Lee, R., Moore, P., Cook, R.G., and Lin, W.G. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 13873-13879), whereas CB-b comprises the same structure but was a few amino acids shorter at its COOH terminus. Both peptides cosedimented with F-actin, and their binding was increased by smooth muscle tropomyosin. The Kd values were 1.3 and 0.5 microM, in the absence and presence of tropomyosin, respectively, with a maximum binding capacity of 6.9 actins/mol of peptides. The CB-a/CB-b fragments inhibited, in a tropomyosin-sensitive and Ca2(+)-calmodulin-dependent manner, the skeletal actomyosin subfragment 1 ATPase activity to a level close but not identical to that observed for the parent caldesmon. Ca2(+)-calmodulin was selectively cross-linked to either caldesmon or the CNBr peptides with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide producing 1:1 covalent complexes that were retained neither by phenyl-Sepharose nor by immobilized calmodulin. Moreover, the cross-linked caldesmon bound weakly to F-actin and did not inhibit the actomyosin subfragment 1 ATPase in the absence of Ca2+. The results suggest that the CB-a/CB-b peptide region contains major regulatory determinants of caldesmon.  相似文献   

14.
Arp2/3 protein complex consists of seven subunits (Arp2, Arp3, p41-Arc, p34-Arc, p21-Arc, p20-Arc and p16-Arc) in apparent 1:1 stoichiometry. This complex has been shown to promote the formation of Y-branch structures of F-actin in cultured cells. We generated specific antibodies against chicken Arp2, Arp3, and p34-Arc to analyze the distribution of these subunits in chicken tissues.In whole samples of brain and gizzard, antibodies against each recombinant protein reacted with single bands of predicted molecular mass based on their cDNA sequences of the antigens. Anti-p34-Arc antibody detected at least two neighboring spots in 2D-PAGE, which might suggest the existence of isoforms or modified forms. Arp2/3 complex bound to an F-actin affinity column from gizzard extract. However, Arp2/3 complex did not tightly bind major actin cytoskeleton because the complex was extracted easily when gizzard smooth muscle was homogenized in PBS. Immunoblot analysis of various tissues revealed that the amounts of Arp2/3 subunits were lower in striated muscle than in non-muscle and smooth muscle tissues. Amounts and ratio of the three subunits varied in tissues, as estimated by quantitative immunoblotting. With immunofluorescence microscopy, we also observed localization of Arp3 and p34-Arc in frozen sections of gizzard with different staining patterns around blood vessels. These results suggest that the Arp2/3 complex exists also in places where rapid actin polymerization does not occur, and that a part of the subunits may exist in different forms from the complex containing the seven subunits in some tissues.  相似文献   

15.
A method for the rapid purification of caldesmon, an F-actin binding protein of smooth muscle, has been developed. Caldesmon remains native after heating at 90 degrees C, a property that provides the basis for the purification in high yield of both caldesmon and tropomyosin, another heat-stable protein of smooth muscle. Caldesmon purified by this procedure is a highly asymmetric protein with a sedimentation coefficient of approximately 2.7 S and a Stokes radius of about 91 A. The protein exists as two polypeptide chains of Mr = 135,000 and 140,000, with each Mr polypeptide being resolvable into several isoelectric species. Estimates based on densitometry of stained gels suggest that caldesmon is more abundant in smooth muscle than filamin or alpha-actinin. Purified caldesmon bound to F-actin in the pH range 6-8. Binding was unaffected by Ca2+ or Mg2+ at up to millimolar levels. Binding was saturable, with a polypeptide molar ratio of about one caldesmon to six actins at saturation. F-actin binding was not inhibited by saturating levels of tropomyosin. Caldesmon dramatically increased the viscosity of F-actin. Light microscopy and electron microscopy of negatively stained material revealed that caldesmon induced the formation of massive F-actin bundles which contained up to hundreds of filaments. Electron microscopy of sectioned caldesmon-saturated F-actin mixtures revealed large bundles which appeared to include linear arrays of regularly spaced actin filaments cut transversely, exhibiting a center to center spacing of 15 nm. Possible structural implications based on the existence of these structures is presented.  相似文献   

16.
Smooth muscles are divided into slowly contracting tonic and relatively fast phasic muscles. In both cases Ca2+ is a key mediator of the contractile response. However, the appearance of a tonic component during sphincter or arterial muscle contraction and its absence in contracting visceral smooth muscle is characteristic of their difference. We have found that in chicken tissues phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu) induces a sustained contraction in carotid arterial muscle, but provokes no contraction in phasic gizzard smooth muscle. Next we were aimed to find differences in PDBu-induced phosphorylation of the key proteins involved in regulation of smooth muscle contraction, i.e. caldesmon, myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), and the myosin light chain kinase-related protein (KRP, also known as telokin). Two correlative differences were observed. 1. PDBu stimulated phosphorylation of MLCK in tonic smooth muscle and had no effect on the level of MLCK phosphorylation in phasic muscle. Phosphopeptide mapping suggests the involvement of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases in phosphorylation of MLCK in situ. 2. PDBu induced phosphorylation of MAP-kinase sites in caldesmon in both types of smooth muscle, but this phosphorylation had no significant effect on caldesmon functional activity in vitro. For the first time we have shown that in gizzard PDBu also stimulates a yet unknown transitory caldesmon-kinase different from protein kinase, C, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II and casein kinase CK2. 3. No significant difference was found in the kinetics of PDBu-dependent phosphorylation of KRP in tonic and phasic smooth muscles. KRP was also demonstrated to be a major phosphoprotein in smooth muscle phosphorylated in vivo at several sites located within its N-terminal sequence. Protein kinases able to phosphorylate these sites were identified in vitro. Among them, MAP-kinase was suggested to phosphorylate a serine residue homologous to that phosphorylated in MLCK. 4. p42erk2 and p38 MAP-kinases were found in phasic and tonic smooth muscles. Both were responsive to PDBu in cultured chicken aortic smooth muscle cells, and their role in phosphorylation of MLCK and low molecular weight isoform of caldesmon was evaluated.  相似文献   

17.
The potential role and function of gastrokine-1 (GNK1) in smooth muscle cells is investigated in this work by first establishing a preparative protocol to obtain this native protein from freshly dissected chicken gizzard. Some unexpected biochemical properties of gastrokine-1 were deduced by producing specific polyclonal antibody against the purified protein. We focused on the F-actin interaction with gastrokine-1 and the potential role and function in smooth muscle contractile properties.

Background

GNK1 is thought to provide mucosal protection in the superficial gastric epithelium. However, the actual role of gastrokine-1 with regards to its known decreased expression in gastric cancer is still unknown. Recently, trefoil factors (TFF) were reported to have important roles in gastric epithelial regeneration and cell turnover, and could be involved in GNK1 interactions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role and function of GNK1 in smooth muscle cells.

Methodology/Principal Findings

From fresh chicken gizzard smooth muscle, an original purification procedure was used to purify a heat soluble 20 kDa protein that was sequenced and found to correspond to the gastrokine-1 protein sequence containing one BRICHOS domain and at least two or possibly three transmembrane regions. The purified protein was used to produce polyclonal antibody and highlighted the smooth muscle cell distribution and F-actin association of GNK1 through a few different methods.

Conclusion/Significance

Altogether our data illustrate a broader distribution of gastrokine-1 in smooth muscle than only in the gastrointestinal epithelium, and the specific interaction with F-actin highlights and suggests a new role and function of GNK1 within smooth muscle cells. A potential role via TFF interaction in cell-cell adhesion and assembly of actin stress fibres is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Caldesmon induces inhibition of MG2+-ATPase activity of actomyosin and relaxation of skinned fibers of chicken gizzard smooth muscle without influencing the level of myosin light chain-1 phosphorylation. Both these effects are reversed by calmodulin at a high molar excess over caldesmon in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

19.
Evidence for interaction between smooth muscle tropomyosin and caldesmon   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
P Graceffa 《FEBS letters》1987,218(1):139-142
The viscosity of chicken gizzard smooth muscle tropomyosin is enhanced 4.7-fold in the absence of salt and 1.43-fold in 0.1 M salt by the presence of stoichiometric amounts of gizzard caldesmon, indicating that the two proteins interact under these conditions. Since the thin filament regulation of smooth muscle contraction by caldesmon requires the presence of tropomyosin, these results suggest that the direct interaction between tropomyosin and caldesmon on the thin filament plays a role in this regulation.  相似文献   

20.
Caldesmon, an actin- and calmodulin-binding protein of smooth muscle, is a protein serine/threonine kinase capable of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent autophosphorylation [Scott-Woo & Walsh (1988) Biochem. J. 252, 463-472]. Phosphorylation nullifies the inhibitory effect of caldesmon on the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth-muscle myosin [Ngai & Walsh (1987) Biochem. J. 244, 417-425]. We have characterized the kinase activity of caldesmon of chicken gizzard smooth muscle. Autophosphorylation requires Ca2+/calmodulin, but is unaffected by other second messengers (Ca2+/phospholipid/diacylglycerol, cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP), and is inhibited by the calmodulin antagonists chlorpromazine and compound 48/80, with 50% inhibition at 39.8 microM and 12.0 ng/ml respectively. Half-maximal activation of autophosphorylation occurs at 60-80 nM-Ca2+ and 0.14 microM-calmodulin, and maximal activity at 0.14-0.18 microM-Ca2+ and 1 microM-calmodulin; activation is gradually lost at higher Ca2+ and calmodulin concentrations. Autophosphorylation is pH-dependent, with maximal activity over the range pH 7-9, and requires free Mg2+ in addition to the MgATP2- substrate. The Km for ATP is 15.6 +/- 4.1 microM (mean +/- S.D., n = 4), and kinase activity is inhibited by increasing ionic strength [half-maximal inhibition at I = 0.094 +/- 0.009 M (mean +/- S.D., n = 4)]. Autophosphorylation does not affect the rate of hydrolysis of caldesmon (free or bound to calmodulin) by alpha-chymotrypsin. However, a slight difference in peptides generated from phospho- and dephospho-forms of caldesmon is observed. The binding of phospho- or dephospho-caldesmon to F-actin protects the protein against chymotryptic digestion, but does not alter the pattern of peptide generation. Characterization of proteolytic fragments of caldesmon generated by alpha-chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease enables localization of the phosphorylation sites and the kinase active site within the caldesmon molecule.  相似文献   

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