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1.
The interaction of caldesmon with different Ca2+-binding proteins has been analyzed, and it is supposed that one of the conformers of calmodulin might be an endogenous regulator of caldesmon. The arrangement of caldesmon and Ca2+-binding proteins within their complexes has been analyzed by different methods. The central helix of calmodulin is supposed to be located near the single Cys residue in the C-terminal domain of caldesmon. The N-terminal globular domain of calmodulin interacts with sites A and B" of caldesmon, whereas the C-terminal globular domain of calmodulin binds to site B of caldesmon. The complex of calmodulin and caldesmon is very flexible; therefore, both parallel and antiparallel orientation of polypeptide chains of the two proteins is possible in experiments with short fragments of caldesmon and calmodulin. The length, flexibility, and charge of the central helix of calmodulin play an important role in its interaction with caldesmon. Phosphorylation of caldesmon by different protein kinases in vitro has been analyzed. It was shown that phosphorylation catalyzed by casein kinase II of sites located in the N-terminal domain decreases the interaction of caldesmon with myosin and tropomyosin. Caldesmon and calponin may interact with phospholipids. The sites involved in the interaction of these actinbinding proteins with phospholipids have been mapped. It is supposed that the interaction of calponin and caldesmon with phospholipids may play a role in the formation of cytoskeleton. Calponin interacts with 90-kD heat shock protein (hsp90) that may be involved in transportation of calponin and its proper interaction with different elements of cytoskeleton. Calponin, filamin, and a-actinin can simultaneously interact with actin filaments. Simultaneous binding of two actin-binding proteins affects the structure of actin bundles and their mechanical properties and may be of great importance in formation of different elements of cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

2.
Caldesmon is a component of smooth muscle thin filaments which inhibits their interaction with myosin. We have used polarized fluorescence technique to study the behavior of caldesmon during the interaction of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) with thin filaments reconstituted in rabbit skeletal muscle ghost fibers by incorporation of smooth muscle tropomyosin and caldesmon labeled with acrylodan at cysteine residue located in the C-terminal region. Significant changes in acrylodan fluorescence intensity upon addition of skeletal muscle S1 reflected substantial displacement of caldesmon from thin filaments, while alterations in the calculated fluorescence parameters indicated the simultaneous rearrangement of the remaining caldesmon fraction. The orientation of caldesmon in the S1-thin filament complex relative to the fiber axis changes by approximately 7 degrees and the mobility of the fluorescent probe by about 9%. The alterations in caldesmon orientation were proportional to the strength of S1 binding and diminished respectively upon addition of ADP and ADP-V(i). The changes in orientation of acrylodan-caldesmon evoked by the interaction of S1 with thin filaments were more pronounced than that in AEDANS-F-actin which suggests that the spatial arrangement of caldesmon in the complex is governed not only by F-actin but also by S1. The results may indicate that the changes in spatial arrangement of caldesmon are adjusted to the conformation of F-actin and S1 characteristic for particular steps of the ATP hydrolysis cycle.  相似文献   

3.
Interaction of smooth muscle caldesmon with S-100 protein   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The interaction of caldesmon with certain Ca-binding proteins was investigated by means of electrophoresis under non-denaturating conditions. In the presence of Ca2+ calmodulin, troponin C and S-100 protein form a complex with caldesmon. No complex formation takes place in the absence of Ca2+. Lactalbumin and pike parvalbumin (pI4.2) do not interact with caldesmon independently of Ca-concentration. Both S-100 protein and calmodulin effectively inhibit phosphorylation of caldesmon by Ca-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase. At low ionic strength S-100 protein reverses the inhibitory action of caldesmon on the skeletal muscle acto-heavy meromyosin ATPase more effectively than calmodulin. It is supposed that in certain tissues and cell compartments the proteins belonging to the S-100 family are able to substitute for calmodulin in the caldesmon-dependent regulation of actin and myosin interaction.  相似文献   

4.
We have previously shown that treatment of bovine endothelial cell (EC) monolayers with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) leads to the thinning of cortical actin ring and rearrangement of the cytoskeleton into a grid-like structure, concomitant with the loss of endothelial barrier function. In the current work, we focused on caldesmon, a cytoskeletal protein, regulating actomyosin interaction. We hypothesized that protein kinase C (PKC) activation by PMA leads to the changes in caldesmon properties such as phosphorylation and cellular localization. We demonstrate here that PMA induces both myosin and caldesmon redistribution from cortical ring into the grid-like network. However, the initial step of PMA-induced actin and myosin redistribution is not followed by caldesmon redistribution. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that short-term PMA (5 min) treatment leads to the weakening of caldesmon ability to bind actin and, to the lesser extent, myosin. Prolonged incubation (15-60 min) with PMA, however, strengthens caldesmon complexes with actin and myosin, which correlates with the grid-like actin network formation. PMA stimulation leads to an immediate increase in caldesmon Ser/Thr phosphorylation. This process occurs at sites distinct from the sites specific for ERK1/2 phosphorylation and correlates with caldesmon dissociation from the actomyosin complex. Inhibition of ERK-kinase MEK fails to abolish grid-like structure formation, although reducing PMA-induced weakening of the cortical actin ring, whereas inhibition of PKC reverses PMA-induced cytoskeletal rearrangement. Our results suggest that PKC-dependent phosphorylation of caldesmon is involved in PMA-mediated complex cytoskeletal changes leading to the EC barrier compromise.  相似文献   

5.
Caldesmon, calmodulin and tropomyosin interactions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Binary complex interactions between caldesmon and tropomyosin, and calmodulin and tropomyosin, and ternary complex interaction involving the three proteins were studied using viscosity, electron microscopy, fluorescence and affinity chromatography techniques. In 10 mM NaCl, caldesmon decreased the viscosity of chicken gizzard tropomyosin by 7-8 fold with a concomitant increase in turbidity (A330nm). Electron micrographs showed spindle-shaped particles in the tropomyosin-caldesmon samples. These results suggest side-by-side aggregation of tropomyosin polymers induced by caldesmon. Binding studies in 10 mM NaCl between caldesmon and chicken gizzard tropomyosin labelled with the fluorescent probe N-(1-anilinonaphthyl-4)maleimide (ANM) gave association constants from 5.3.10(6) to 7.9.10(6) M-1 and stoichiometry from 1.0 to 1.4 tropomyosin per caldesmon. Similar binding was observed for rabbit cardiac tropomyosin and caldesmon. Removal of 18 and 11 residues from the COOH ends of the gizzard and cardiac tropomyosin by carboxypeptidase A, respectively, had no significant effect on their binding to caldesmon. In the presence of Ca2+, chicken gizzard tropomyosin bound to a calmodulin-Sepharose-4B column and was eluted with a salt concentration of 140 mM. This interaction was weakened in the absence of Ca2+, and the bound tropomyosin was eluted by 65 mM KCl. ANM-labelled tropomyosin bound calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ with a binding constant of 3.5.10(6) M-1 and a binding stoichiometry of 1 to 1.4 tropomyosin per calmodulin. In 10 mM NaCl, calmodulin reduced the specific viscosity of chicken gizzard tropomyosin in the presence of Ca2+ by 5 fold, while a 1.5-fold reduction in viscosity was observed in the absence of Ca2+. In either case, no significant increase in turbidity was observed suggesting that calmodulin reduced head-to-tail polymerization of tropomyosin. The interaction of caldesmon with the calmodulin-ANM-tropomyosin complex in the presence and absence of Ca2+ was also examined. The result is consistent with a model that in the absence of Ca2+, calmodulin binds weakly to either caldesmon or tropomyosin and has little effect on the tropomyosin-caldesmon interaction; whereas, Ca2(+)-calmodulin interacts with caldesmon and reduces its affinity to tropomyosin.  相似文献   

6.
Disulfide cross-linking of caldesmon to actin.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Treatment of a solution of actin and smooth muscle caldesmon with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) results in the formation of a disulfide cross-link between the C-terminal penultimate residue Cys-374 of actin and Cys-580 in caldesmon's C-terminal actin-binding region. Therefore, these 2 residues are close in the actin-caldesmon complex. Since myosin also binds to actin in the vicinity of Cys-374 and since caldesmon inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity by the reduction of myosin binding to actin, then the inhibition might be by caldesmon sterically hindering or blocking myosin's interaction with actin. [Ca2+]Calmodulin, which reverses the inhibition of the ATPase activity, decreases the yield of the cross-linked species, suggesting a weakening of the caldesmon-actin interaction in the cross-linked region. It is possible to maximally cross-link one caldesmon molecule/every three actin monomers, in the absence or presence of tropomyosin, clearly ruling out an elongated, end-to-end alignment of caldesmon on the actin filament in vitro, and raising the possibility that the N-terminal part of caldesmon projects out from the filament. Reaction of 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)-modified actin with caldesmon leads to the same disulfide cross-linked product between actin and caldesmon Cys-580, enabling the specific labeling of the other caldesmon cysteine, residue 153, in the N-terminal part of caldesmon with a spectroscopic probe.  相似文献   

7.
A recent report by Bretscher [(1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12873-12880] showed that caldesmon prepared by his method crosslinks actin filaments to form thick bundles. This is in contrast to the results of previous work that caldesmon binds to F-actin but does not cause any gelation [(1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 78, 5652-5655]. The present work clearly showed that caldesmon purified according to Bretscher does not cause any gelation of F-actin. However, caldesmon aggregates formed by concentration or by freeze-thawing gelated F-actin to form bundles.  相似文献   

8.
The movement of reconstituted thin filaments over an immobilized surface of thiophosphorylated smooth muscle myosin was examined using an in vitro motility assay. Reconstituted thin filaments contained actin, tropomyosin, and either purified chicken gizzard caldesmon or the purified COOH-terminal actin-binding fragment of caldesmon. Control actin-tropomyosin filaments moved at a velocity of 2.3 +/- 0.5 microns/s. Neither intact caldesmon nor the COOH-terminal fragment, when maintained in the monomeric form by treatment with 10 mM dithiothreitol, had any effect on filament velocity; and yet both were potent inhibitors of actin-activated myosin ATPase activity, indicating that caldesmon primarily inhibits myosin binding as reported by Chalovich et al. (Chalovich, J. M., Hemric, M. E., and Velaz, L. (1990) Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 599, 85-99). Inhibition of filament motion was, however, observed under conditions where cross-linking of caldesmon via disulfide bridges was present. To determine if monomeric caldesmon could "tether" actin filaments to the myosin surface by forming an actin-caldesmon-myosin complex as suggested by Chalovich et al., we looked for caldesmon-dependent filament binding and motility under conditions (80 mM KCl) where filament binding to myosin is weak and motility is not normally seen. At caldesmon concentrations > or = 0.26 microM, actin filament binding was increased and filament motion (2.6 +/- 0.6 microns/s) was observed. The enhanced motility seen with intact caldesmon was not observed with the addition of up to 26 microM COOH-terminal fragment. Moreover, a molar excess of the COOH-terminal fragment competitively reversed the enhanced binding seen with intact caldesmon. These results show that tethering of actin filaments to myosin by the formation of an actin-caldesmon-myosin complex enhanced productive acto-myosin interaction without placing a significant mechanical load on the moving filaments.  相似文献   

9.
Sen A  Chen YD  Yan B  Chalovich JM 《Biochemistry》2001,40(19):5757-5764
Equilibrium measurements of the rate of binding of caldesmon and myosin S1 to actin-tropomyosin from different laboratories have yielded different results and have led to different models of caldesmon function. An alternate approach to answering these questions is to study the kinetics of binding of both caldesmon and S1 to actin. We observed that caldesmon decreased the rate of binding of S1 to actin in a concentration-dependent manner. The inhibition of the rate of S1 binding was enhanced by tropomyosin, but the effect of tropomyosin on the binding was small. Premixing actin with S1 reduced the amplitude (extent) of caldesmon binding in proportion to the fraction of actin that contained bound S1, but the rate of binding of caldesmon to free sites was not greatly altered. No evidence for a stable caldesmon-actin-tropomyosin-S1 complex was observed, although S1 did apparently bind to gaps between caldesmon molecules. These results indicate that experiments involving caldesmon, actin, tropomyosin, and myosin are inherently complex. When the concentration of either S1 or caldesmon is varied, the amount of the other component bound to actin-tropomyosin cannot be assumed to remain fixed. The results are not readily explained by a mechanism in which caldesmon acts only by stabilizing an inactive state of actin-tropomyosin. The results support regulatory mechanisms that involve changes in the actin-S1 interaction.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of caldesmon domains with tropomyosin has been studied using x-ray crystallography and an optical biosensor. Only whole caldesmon and the carboxyl-terminal domain of caldesmon (CaD-4, chicken gizzard residues 597-756) bound to tropomyosin with greater than millimolar affinity at 100 and 150 microM salt. Under these conditions the affinities of whole caldesmon and CaD-4 were both in the micromolar range. Data from the x-ray studies showed that whole caldesmon bound to tropomyosin in several places, with the region of tightest interaction being at tropomyosin residues 70-100 and/or 230-260. Studies with CaD-4 revealed that this region corresponded to the strong binding site seen with whole caldesmon. Weaker association of other regions of caldesmon to tropomyosin residues 180-210 and 5-50 was also observed. The results suggest that the carboxyl-terminus of caldesmon binds tightly to tropomyosin and that other regions of caldesmon may interact with tropomyosin tightly only when they are held close to tropomyosin by the carboxyl-terminal domain. Four models are presented to show the possible interactions of caldesmon with tropomyosin.  相似文献   

11.
The interactions of vascular smooth muscle caldesmon with actin, tropomyosin, and calmodulin were determined under conditions in which the four proteins can form reconstituted Ca2+-sensitive smooth muscle thin filaments. Caldesmon bound to actin in a complex fashion with high affinity sites (K = 10(7) M-1) saturating at a stoichiometry of 1 per 28 actins, and lower affinity sites at 1 per 7 actins. The affinity of binding was increased in the presence of tropomyosin, and this could be attributed to a direct interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin which was demonstrated using caldesmon cross-linked to Sepharose. In the presence of tropomyosin, occupancy of the high affinity sites was associated with inhibition of actin-activated myosin MgATPase activity. Caldesmon was found to bind to calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+, with an affinity of 10(6) M-1. The binding of Ca2+ X calmodulin to caldesmon was associated with the neutralization of inhibition of actin-tropomyosin. Ca2+ X calmodulin binding reduced but did not abolish the binding of caldesmon to actin-tropomyosin. From this data we have proposed a model for smooth muscle thin filaments in which Ca2+ regulates activity by converting the inhibited actin-tropomyosin-caldesmon complex to the active complexes, actin-tropomyosin-caldesmon-calmodulin X Ca2+ and actin-tropomyosin.  相似文献   

12.
The Ca2+-dependent regulation of the activation of myosin MgATPase by vascular-smooth-muscle thin filaments involves caldesmon. This effect may be due to the direct interaction of caldesmon with a Ca2+-binding protein such as calmodulin or phosphorylation of caldesmon by a Ca2+-dependent kinase. I have found that Ca2+ switches on aorta thin filaments in less than 10 s, whereas the caldesmon in the thin filaments is phosphorylated only slowly (half-time greater than 10 min) and the maximum phosphorylation is very low (1 molecule per 7 molecules of caldesmon). I conclude that the phosphorylation of caldesmon hypothesis is untenable.  相似文献   

13.
K Y Horiuchi  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1988,27(22):8388-8393
Cysteine residues of caldesmon were labeled with the fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide. The number of sulfhydryl (SH) groups in caldesmon was around 3.5 on the basis of reactivity to 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate); 80% of the SH groups were labeled with pyrene. The fluorescence spectrum from pyrene-caldesmon showed the presence of excited monomer and dimer (excimer). As the ionic strength increased, excimer fluorescence decreased, disappearing at salt concentrations higher than around 50 mM. The labeling of caldesmon with pyrene did not affect its ability to inhibit actin activation of heavy meromyosin Mg-ATPase and the release of this inhibition in the presence of Ca2+-calmodulin. Tropomyosin induced a change in the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon, indicating a conformational change associated with the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin. The affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was dependent on ionic strength. The binding constant was 5 x 10(6) M-1 in low salt, and the affinity was 20-fold less at ionic strengths close to physiological conditions. In the presence of actin, the affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was increased 5-fold. The addition of tropomyosin also changed the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon bound to actin filaments. The change in the conformation of tropomyosin, caused by the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin, was studied with pyrene-labeled tropomyosin. Fluorescence change was evident when unlabeled caldesmon was added to pyrene-tropomyosin bound to actin. These data suggest that the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin on the actin filament is associated with conformational changes on these thin filament associated proteins. These conformational changes may modulate the ability of thin filament to interact with myosin heads.  相似文献   

14.
Caldesmon is a component of smooth muscle thin filaments that inhibits the actomyosin ATPase via its interaction with actin-tropomyosin. We have performed a comprehensive transient kinetic characterization of the actomyosin ATPase in the presence of smooth muscle caldesmon and tropomyosin. At physiological ratios of caldesmon to actin (1 caldesmon/7 actin monomers) actomyosin ATPase is inhibited by about 75%. Inhibitory caldesmon concentrations had little effect upon the rate of S1 binding to actin, actin-S1 dissociation by ATP, and dissociation of ADP from actin-S1 x ADP; however the rate of phosphate release from the actin-S1 x ADP x P(i) complex was decreased by more than 80%. In addition the transient of phosphate release displayed a lag of up to 200 ms. The presence of a lag phase indicates that a step on the pathway prior to phosphate release has become rate-limiting. Premixing the actin-tropomyosin filaments with myosin heads resulted in the disappearance of the lag phase. We conclude that caldesmon inhibition of the rate of phosphate release is caused by the thin filament being switched by caldesmon to an inactive state. The active and inactive states correspond to the open and closed states observed in skeletal muscle thin filaments with no evidence for the existence of a third, blocked state. Taken together these data suggest that at physiological concentrations, caldesmon controls the isomerization of the weak binding complex to the strong binding complex, and this causes the inhibition of the rate of phosphate release. This inhibition is sufficient to account for the inhibition of the steady state actomyosin ATPase by caldesmon and tropomyosin.  相似文献   

15.
Binding of caldesmon to actin causes a decrease in the quantity of bound myosin and results in a reduction in the rate of actin-activated adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis. It is generally assumed that the binding of caldesmon and myosin to actin is a pure competitive interaction. However, recent binding studies of enzyme digested caldesmon subfragments directed at mapping the actin binding site of caldesmon have shown that a small 8-kD fragment around the COOH-terminal can compete directly with the myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) binding to actin; at least one other fragment that binds to actin does not inhibit the actin-activated adenosine triphosphate activity of myosin. That is, only a part of the caldesmon sequence may be responsible for directly blocking the binding of S-1 to actin. This prompts us to question the actual mode of binding of intact caldesmon and myosin S-1 to actin: whether the entire intact caldesmon molecule is competing with S-1 binding (pure competitive model) or just a small part of it (mosaic multiple-binding model). To answer this question, we measured the amount of myosin S-1 and caldesmon bound per actin monomer as a function of the total concentration of S-1 added to the system at constant concentrations of actin and caldesmon. A formalism for calculating the titration data based on the pure competitive model and a mosaic multiple-binding model was then developed. When compared with theoretical calculations, it is found that the binding of caldesmon and S-1 to actin cannot be pure competitive if no cooperativity exists between S-1 and caldesmon.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Addition of calmodulin to caldesmon causes a concentration-dependent shortwave shift and an increase of fluorescence intensity of caldesmon tryptophan residues. The existence of a protein complex is confirmed by the increase of the caldesmon sedimentation coefficient s0(20,w) from 3.0 S to 4.5 S in the presence of calmodulin. These findings allow application of the method of protein intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence for quantitative study of unmodified caldesmon and calmodulin in solution. The affinity of the caldesmon-calmodulin interaction (Kass = 1.8 x 10(6) M-1, in 0.1 M-KCl at 25 degrees C) and Ca2+ requirement (half-maximum binding at 0.8 microM-Ca2+) determined by means of the fluorescence technique are in agreement with previously reported values, thus confirming the validity of the method. The same approach was further used to provide information about the nature of interactions stabilizing the caldesmon-calmodulin complex. Association of the proteins and dissociation of the complex were studied in different physicochemical conditions, including variation of pH, temperature and ionic strength and the addition of quenchers, denaturants and anticalmodulin drugs. The results obtained suggest that caldesmon tryptophan residues, together with charged groups, are involved in calmodulin binding. Hydrophobic, electrostatic and hydrogen interactions contribute to the stability of the protein complex, making it insensitive to variations of physicochemical conditions within physiological limits.  相似文献   

17.
Podosomes are dynamic cell adhesion structures that degrade the extracellular matrix, permitting extracellular matrix remodeling. Accumulating evidence suggests that actin and its associated proteins play a crucial role in podosome dynamics. Caldesmon is localized to the podosomes, and its expression is down-regulated in transformed and cancer cells. Here we studied the regulatory mode of caldesmon in podosome formation in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed fibroblasts. Exogenous expression analyses revealed that caldesmon represses podosome formation triggered by the N-WASP-Arp2/3 pathway. Conversely, depletion of caldesmon by RNA interference induces numerous small-sized podosomes with high dynamics. Caldesmon competes with the Arp2/3 complex for actin binding and thereby inhibits podosome formation. p21-activated kinases (PAK)1 and 2 are also repressors of podosome formation via phosphorylation of caldesmon. Consequently, phosphorylation of caldesmon by PAK1/2 enhances this regulatory mode of caldesmon. Taken together, we conclude that in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed cells, changes in the balance between PAK1/2-regulated caldesmon and the Arp2/3 complex govern the formation of podosomes.  相似文献   

18.
We studied the effects of caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein found in a variety of muscle and non-muscle tissues, on the various ATPase activities of skeletal-muscle myosin. Caldesmon inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase, and this inhibition was enhanced by tropomyosin. In the presence of the troponin complex and tropomyosin, caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-dependent actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase; this inhibition could be partly overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon, phosphorylated to the extent of approximately 4 mol of Pi/mol of caldesmon, inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase to the same extent as did non-phosphorylated caldesmon. Both inhibitions could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon also inhibited the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the absence of actin; this inhibition also could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the presence or absence of actin, at both low (0.1 M-KCl) and high (0.3 M-KCl) ionic strength. Finally, caldesmon inhibited the skeletal-muscle myosin K+/EDTA-ATPase at 0.1 M-KCl, but not at 0.3 M-KCl. Addition of actin resulted in no inhibition of this ATPase by caldesmon at either 0.1 M- or 0.3 M-KCl. These observations suggest that caldesmon may function in the regulation of actin-myosin interactions in striated muscle and thereby modulate the contractile state of the muscle. The demonstration that caldesmon inhibits a variety of myosin ATPase activities in the absence of actin indicates a direct effect of caldesmon on myosin. The inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin (the physiological activity) may not be due therefore simply to the binding of caldesmon to the actin filament causing blockage of myosin-cross-bridge-actin interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Caldesmon-induced polymerization of actin from profilactin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have investigated the effect of caldesmon, a Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated actin-binding protein, on the complex between profilin and G-actin (profilactin). We found that smooth muscle caldesmon dissociates this complex rapidly and induces the polymerization of the released actin. Native profilactin (e.g. the complex isolated from calf thymus) proved more resistant to the attack of caldesmon than a heterologous complex reconstituted from calf thymus profilin and skeletal muscle actin. The mode of caldesmon-induced profilactin dissociation was similar to that described for Mg2+, and 2 mM MgCl2 potentiated the caldesmon effect. Since both caldesmon and profilin have been found enriched in ruffling membranes of animal cells, our in vitro findings may be relevant to the regulation of actin filaments in living cells.  相似文献   

20.
Orientation and mobility of acrylodan fluorescent probe specifically bound to caldesmon Cys580 incorporated into muscle ghost fibers decorated with myosin S1 and containing tropomyosin was studied in the presence or absence of MgADP, MgAMP-PNP, MgATPgammaS or MgATP. Modeling of various intermediate states of actomyosin has shown discrete changes in orientation and mobility of the dye dipoles which is the evidence for multistep changes in the structural changes of caldesmon during the ATPase hydrolysis cycle. It is suggested that S1 interaction with actin results in nucleotide-dependent displacement of the C-terminal part of caldesmon molecule and changes in its mobility. Thus inhibition of the actomyosin ATPase activity may be due to changes in caldesmon position on the thin filament and its interaction with actin. Our new findings described in the present paper as well as those published recently elsewhere might conciliate the two existing models of molecular mechanism of inhibition of the actomyosin ATPase by caldesmon.  相似文献   

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