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1.
The position of the N terminus of myosin light chain 1 (LC1) and myosin light chain 2 (LC2) of rabbit skeletal muscle was mapped on the myosin head with a monoclonal antibody (SI304), which recognized the amino acid sequence N-trimethylalanyl-prolyl-lysyl-lysyl at the N terminus of LC1 and LC2. The complex of the antibody and myosin was observed by electron microscopy. By selective cleavage of the N terminus of LC1 or LC2 with papain or chymotrypsin, the position of the N terminus of LC1 and LC2 was determined separately. The N terminus of LC2 is located at the head-rod junction. The N terminus of LC1 is 11 nm (+/- 3 nm, standard deviation) from the head-rod junction. This position is near the actin-binding site of the myosin head.  相似文献   

2.
Probing myosin head structure with monoclonal antibodies   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Monoclonal antibodies that react with defined regions of the heavy and light chains of chicken skeletal muscle myosin have been used to provide a correlation between the primary and the tertiary structures of the head. Electron microscopy of rotary shadowed antibody-myosin complexes shows that the sites for three epitopes in the 25,000 Mr tryptic fragment (25k) of subfragment-1, including one within 4000 Mr of the amino terminus of the myosin heavy chain, are clustered 145(+/- 20) A from the head-rod junction. An epitope in the 50,000 Mr fragment maps even further out on the head. These antibodies bind to the head in several orientations, suggesting that each of the heads can rotate can rotate 180 degrees about the head-rod junction. The epitopes are accessible on subfragment-1 bound to actin when they were probed with Fab fragments; therefore, none of these heavy chain sites is is on the contact surface between the head and actin. Two of the anti-25k antibodies affect the K+-EDTA-and Ca2+-ATPase activities of myosin in a manner that mimics the effect on activity of the modification of the reactive thiol, SH-1. These two antibodies also inhibit the actin-activated ATPase non-competitively with respect to actin. None of the other eight antibodies tested had any marked effect on activity. A monoclonal antibody that reacts with an epitope in the amino-terminal third of myosin light chain 2 maps close to the head-rod junction. A polyclonal antibody specific for the amino terminus of light chain 3 binds further up in the "neck region" of the head, indicating that these portions of the two classes of light chains are located at different sites.  相似文献   

3.
It was previously shown that tryptic digestion of subfragment 1 (S1) of skeletal muscle myosins at 0 degree C results in cleavage of the heavy chain at a specific site located 5 kDa from the NH2-terminus. This cleavage is enhanced by nucleotides and suppressed by actin and does not occur at 25 degrees C, except in the presence of nucleotide. Here we show a similar temperature sensitivity and protection by actin of an analogous chymotryptic cleavage site in the heavy chain of gizzard S1. The results support the view that the myosin head, in general, can exist in two different conformational states even in the absence of nucleotides and actin, and indicate that the heavy chain region 5 kDa from the NH2-terminus is involved in the communication between the sites of nucleotide and actin binding. We also show here for the first time that the S1-S2 junction in gizzard myosin can be cleaved by chymotrypsin and that this cleavage (observed in papain-produced S1 devoid of the regulatory light chain) is also temperature-dependent but insensitive to nucleotides and actin. It is suggested that the temperature-dependent alteration in the flexibility of the head-rod junction, which is apparent from these and similar observations on skeletal muscle myosin [Miller, L. & Reisler, E. (1985) J. Mol. Biol. 182, 271-279; Redowicz, M.J. & Strzelecka-Go?aszewska, H. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 177, 615-624], may contribute to the temperature dependence of some steps in the cross-bridge cycle.  相似文献   

4.
The actin-dependent ATPase activity of myosin is retained in the separated heads (S1) which contain the NH2-terminal 95-kDa heavy chain fragment and one or two light chains. The S1 heavy chain can be degraded further by limited trypsin treatment into characteristic 25-, 50-, and 20-kDa peptides, in this order from the NH2-terminal end. The 20-kDa peptide contains an actin-binding site and SH1 and SH2, two thiols whose modification dramatically affects ATPase activity. By treating myosin filaments with trypsin at 4 degrees C in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2, we have now obtained preferential cleavage at the 50-20-kDa heavy chain site without any cleavage at the head-rod junction and hinge region in the rod. Incubation of these trypsinized filaments at 37 degrees C in the presence of MgATP released a new S1 fraction which lacked the COOH-terminal 20-kDa heavy chain peptide region. This fraction, termed S1'(75K), has more than 50% of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of S1 and the characteristic Ca2+-ATPase and K+-EDTA ATPase activities of myosin. These results show that SH1 and SH2 are not essential for ATPase activity and that binding of actin to the 20-kDa region is not essential for the enhancement of the Mg2+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Monoclonal antibodies against gizzard smooth muscle myosin were generated and characterized. One of these antibodies, designated MM-2, recognized the 17-kDa light chain and modulated the ATPase activities and hydrodynamic properties of smooth muscle myosin. Rotary shadowing electron microscopy showed that MM-2 binds 51 (+/- 25) A from the head-rod junction. The depression of Ca2+- and Mg2+-ATPase activities of myosin and Ca2+-ATPase activity of heavy meromyosin at low KCl concentration were abolished by MM-2. Viscosity measurement indicated that MM-2 inhibits the transition of 6 S myosin to 10 S myosin. While the rate of the production of subfragment-1 by papain proteolysis of 6 S myosin was inhibited by MM-2, the rate of proteolysis of the heavy chain of 10 S myosin was enhanced by MM-2 and reached the same rate as that of 6 S myosin plus MM-2. These results suggest that MM-2 inhibits the formation of 10 S myosin by binding to the 17-kDa light chain which is localized at the head-neck region of the myosin molecule. MM-2 increased the Vmax of actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activities of both dephosphorylated myosin and dephosphorylated heavy meromyosin about 10- and 20-fold, respectively. MM-2 also activated the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of phosphorylated myosin at a low MgCl2 concentration and thus abolished the Mg2+-dependence of acto phosphorylated myosin ATPase activity. These results suggest that MM-2 inhibits the formation of 10 S myosin, and this results in the activation of actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity even in the absence of phosphorylation.  相似文献   

6.
The location of the single cysteinyl residue of the alkali light chain on the myosin head was determined by electron microscopy. The cysteinyl residue of isolated alkali light chain 2 was biotinylated and the light chain was exchanged with that of heavy meromyosin in 4.7 M-NH4Cl. Avidin was attached to the biotin in the heavy meromyosin and the complex was rotary shadowed and observed in the electron microscope. The distance from the head-rod junction to the centre of avidin was 8(+/- 3) nm (mean value +/- standard deviation: n = 105).  相似文献   

7.
D A Winkelmann  S Lowey  J L Press 《Cell》1983,34(1):295-306
Monoclonal antibodies were used to identify and localize by immunoelectron microscopy epitopes on myosin isozymes. An antibody that reacts with an amino-terminal fragment of the myosin heavy chain maps on the myosin head 140 A distal to the head-rod junction. It identifies an epitope that is shared on adult and embryonic myosin, and detects two transitions in myosin expression during avian pectoralis myogenesis. Another antibody maps to the carboxyl terminus of the myosin rod. It is specific for an adult fast myosin epitope that is not detected in early developing pectoralis muscle. In contrast, an epitope that is present throughout development is identified by an antibody that reacts with a myosin light chain. This light chain epitope is localized at the head-rod junction. These results demonstrate structural changes in widely separated regions of the myosin molecule accompanying the sequential expression of developmental myosin isozymes.  相似文献   

8.
We determined the spatial location of the N terminus of the heavy chain of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin by electron microscopy, using a site-directed antibody raised against its N-terminal eight residues as an electron microscopic probe. By examining rotary-shadowed images of the heavy meromyosin-antibody complex, we measured distances between the head-rod junction and the attachment site of the antibody bound on the head. The average distance was estimated to be about 12 nm. The result indicates that the N terminus of the heavy chain is located at the middle region of the head.  相似文献   

9.
Limited digestion of filamentous myosin with chymotrypsin at 0 degrees C in the absence of divalent cations generates two forms of subfragment 1 (S1), with heavy chains of 95 kDa and 98 kDa. The difference is at the C-terminal end of the chain. The 98 kDa form prevails, in contrast to the preparations obtained by digestion at room temperature which consist of the shorter species and only traces of the longer one. The results support the idea of a temperature-dependent conformational transition at the head-rod junctional region of the myosin heavy chain.  相似文献   

10.
The functional activities of myosin head are located in a 95 kilodalton (kDa) heavy chain which can be divided into three fragments of 23 kDa, 50 kDa, and 20 kDa. ATP hydrolysis sites were suggested to be located in the 23 kDa and 50 kDa fragments, and actin binding sites were in the 50 kDa and 20 kDa fragments. In this study, we obtained electron microscopic images of the myosin molecule bound with antibodies directed to the 23 kDa and 50 kDa fragments. We determined that the antigenic sites for 23 kDa fragment are located at 140-180 A from the head-rod junction of myosin, and those for 50 kDa fragment at 160 A from the junction and at the tip of the head itself. The relationship between the spatial locations and the primary structures is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
We reacted a fluorescent probe, N-methyl-2-anilino-6-naphthalenesulfonyl chloride (MNS-Ci), with a specific lysine residue of porcine cardiac myosin located in the S-2 region of myosin. We performed fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy measurements between this site and three loci (Cys109, Cys125, and Cys154) located within different myosin light-chain 2s (LC2) bound to the myosin "head". We used LC2s from rabbit skeletal muscle myosin (Cys125), chicken gizzard smooth muscle myosin (Cys109), or a genetically engineered mutant of chicken skeletal muscle myosin (Cys154). The atomic coordinates of these LC2 loci can be closely approximated, and the FRET measurements were used to determine the position of the MNS-labeled lysine with respect to the myosin head. The C-terminus of myosin subfragment-1 determined by Rayment et al. ends abruptly after a sharp turn of its predominantly alpha-helical structure. We have constructed a model based on our FRET distance data combined with the known structure of chicken skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1. This model suggests that the loci that bracket the head-rod junction will be useful for evaluating dynamic changes in this region.  相似文献   

12.
Myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) which contains the LC2 light chain has been labelled with fluorine to allow an 19F-NMR study of the coupling and energetics of structural changes in the myosin head. Two fluorine-containing reagents, N-4-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl iodoacetamide and N-3,5-di(trifluoromethyl)phenyl iodoacetamide, have been used to label the myosin heavy chain at the unusually reactive sulfhydryl-1 (SH1) position. The chemical shift of both reagents on S-1 is sensitive to a structural transition in the region of SH1 which occurs upon increasing the temperature from 0 degrees C to 35 degrees C. The midpoint of the transition in both papain and chymotryptic S-1 is at approximately 11 degrees C at pH 7 (0.1 M CKl). The temperature dependence of the chemical shift may be fit assuming a two-state equilibrium where delta G degree' (T) = 101-110T +0.386 T2 (where T is the temperature in Kelvin). Both delta H degree' (T) and delta S degree' (T) have a small temperature dependence from 0 to 35 degrees C: at 20 degrees C, delta H degree' (T) = -33 kcal/mol. delta S degree' (T) = -116 e.u. and delta Cp = -226 cal/mol per deg (pH 7.0, 0.1 M KCl). The NMR data indicate that the presence of the LC2 light chain in papain S-1 does not modify the structure of S-1 in the vicinity of SH1, nor does it modify the energetics of the structural transition from that seen in its absence with chymotryptic S-1. The presence of calcium which is bound by the LC2 of papain S-1 also does not alter the energetics of the transition. Thus it would appear that the LC2 light chain (on myosin S-1) does not participate in the two-state transition, nor does it interact strongly with regions of the heavy chain which participate in the transition.  相似文献   

13.
Aorta smooth myosin contains two types of light chain, LC20 and LC17, which fold together with the N-terminal region of each heavy chain to form the globular head region of myosin. We demonstrate an altered conformation of LC20 after its separation from heavy chain by high concentrations of urea, on the basis of the following evidende: 1) A polyclonal antibody against LC20 was not able to recognize this conformationally altered form; 2) Myosin reconstituted from heavy chains and urea-dissociated light chains exhibited extremely low ATPase activity. Circular dichroism unfolding profiles showed that light chains dissociated from heavy chains by SDS appeared to be more stable than those generated by urea dissociation.  相似文献   

14.
Previous electric birefringence experiments have shown that the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosin II correlates with the ability of minifilaments to cycle between flexible and stiff conformations. The cooperative transition between conformations was shown to depend on Mg2+ concentration, on ATP binding, and on the state of phosphorylation of three serines in the C-terminal end of the heavy chains. Since the junction between the heavy meromyosin (HMM) and light meromyosin (LMM) regions is expected to disrupt the alpha-helical coiled-coil structure of the rod, this region was anticipated to be the flexible site. We have now cloned and expressed the wild-type rod (residues 849-1509 of the full-length heavy chain) and rods mutated within the junction in order to test this. The sedimentation and electric birefringence properties of minifilaments formed by rods and by native myosin II are strikingly similar. In particular, the Mg2+-dependent flexible-to-stiff transitions of native myosin II and wild-type rod minifilaments are virtually superimposable. Mutations within the junction between the HMM and LMM regions of the rod modulate the ability of Mg2+ to stabilize the stiff conformation. Less Mg2+ is required to induce minifilament stiffening if proline-1244 is replaced with alanine. Deleting the entire junction region (25 amino acids) results in a even greater decrease in the Mg2+ concentration necessary for the transition. The HMM-LMM junction does indeed seem to act as a Mg2+-dependent flexible hinge.  相似文献   

15.
A monoclonal antibody capable of detecting a conformational change in myosin light chain two (LC2) was characterized in detail. The antibody was shown to bind only to myosin LC2 when tested against fast skeletal myosin (chicken pectoralis muscle). With cardiac or slow muscle myosins, the antibody exclusively recognized their first light chains (LC1). Staining of myofibrils by the monoclonal antibody could be observed only after their irreversible denaturation by acetone or ethanol, or after incubation of the myofibrils in divalent metal chelators. This latter effect was shown to be fully reversible. The metal effect was independent of ionic strength although the affinity of the antibody for myosin was depressed at high salt concentrations. Similar metal effects were detected in the binding of antibody to cardiac or slow myosins. Neither the metal nor the ionic strength-related inhibition of antibody binding were detected with denatured myosin. The antibody binding site overlaps one of the alpha-chymotryptic sites in LC2 protected by divalent metals. Electron microscopic observations of myosin-antibody complexes demonstrated that the antibody binding site is located near the head-rod junction of myosin. Since the binding site of this monoclonal antibody has been mapped by recombinant DNA methods to the junction of the first alpha-helical domain with the calcium binding site of LC2, the location of the calcium binding site must also be located near the head-tail junction of myosin. A model for conformational changes at the myosin head-tail junction is proposed to account for the metal-induced blockage of antibody binding and the inhibition of alpha-chymotryptic digestion of LC2.  相似文献   

16.
The reaction of trypsin on the heavy chain of gizzard myosin and chymotryptic HMM was investigated under restricted fragmentation conditions. The three fragments of the head part with 29 kDa, 50 kDa and 26 kDa were isolated and identified. The 66 K heavy chain segment containing the S1-S2 junction was slowly but extensively degraded liberating a S1-like entity which lacked an intact COOH-terminal 26 kDa region; this isolated species displayed full intrinsic ATPase activities but little actin-binding ability. Tryptic HMM was also formed bearing a fragmented heavy chain and lacking the 20 kDa light chain. Its actin-activated ATPase was derepressed upon cleavage of the 66 kDa segment by papain. We propose that the integral 66 kDa heavy chain component is directly involved in the regulation of the gizzard actomyosin ATPase.  相似文献   

17.
Electron microscopic mappings of myosin head with site-directed antibodies   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Site-directed antibodies were raised against three synthetic peptides whose sequences correspond to a region around the reactive lysine residue and two protease-sensitive regions of subfragment 1 (S1) of skeletal muscle myosin (one at the junction of the 23,000 Mr and 50,000 Mr segments, the J1 junction; and the other at the junction of the 50,000 Mr and 20,000 Mr segments of the heavy chain, the J2 junction). The antisera cross-reacted with intact myosin with titres of 5 x 10(4) (anti-J1 antiserum) and 10(4) (anti-J2 and anti-reactive lysine residue antisera). Site-specific antibodies purified by S1-Sepharose readily bound to myosin. Electron microscopic examinations of antibody-myosin complexes revealed that the J1 and J2 junctions are located 15 nm and 16 nm from the head-rod junction, respectively, while the reactive lysine residue region is 13 nm from the junction.  相似文献   

18.
Saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to investigate the rotational motion of the head domains of native and desensitized scallop myosin and its proteolytic subfragments. Scallop myosin was spin-labelled with 4-(2-iodoacetamido)-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinooxyl, which reacted with a heavy chain residue in the subfragment 1 domain. As previously shown for rabbit skeletal muscle myosin (Thomas et al., 1975), the two head domains of native scallop myosin appear to have independent motion (rotational correlation time, pi, = 0.8 X 10(-7) s for subfragment 1; 1.4 X 10(-7) s for myosin). However, removal of a regulatory light chain, to effect desensitization of the actin-activated ATPase, was associated with an increase in pi for myosin to a value of 2.4 X 10(-6) s. The Ca2+ sensitivity and initial correlation time were restored on recombination of the regulatory light chain in the presence of Mg2+. Sedimentation velocity profiles in an analytical ultracentrifuge indicated that the desensitized myosin preparations were largely monomeric and therefore the change in pi appears to reflect an intramolecular event. Addition of EDTA to spin-labelled scallop heavy meromyosin caused an immediate 2.5 to 4-fold increase in pi and a partial desensitization of the ATPase activity. Comparable experiments with subfragment 1 yielded a barely detectable increase in pi (1.5-fold) in the first ten minutes. The restricted rotational motion observed in desensitized myosin and heavy meromyosin could arise by a conformational change in the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 hinge region or by an association of one head with its partner. The latter mechanism, involving the exposed light chain binding site, would also explain the preferential release of one regulatory light chain from scallop myosin, and might account for some other co-operative effects observed in this molecule (Bagshaw, 1980).  相似文献   

19.
Incubation of myosin with myopathic hamster protease results in substantial (more than 80%) removal of light chain 2 (LC2) with limited breakdown of the heavy chains. LC2-deficient myosin, purified by ion exchange chromatography, migrates as a single, monodisperse boundary in the analytical ultracentrifuge. The Ca2+- and EDTA-activated ATPases of LC2-deficient myosin are similar to those of the control and LC2-recombined myosins indicating that no denaturation occurred in its preparation. Double reciprocal plots for LC2-deficient, control, and LC2-recombined myosins reveal a biphasic behavior i.e. at actin concentrations above 11 microM, there is a sharp break in the 1/V versus 1/[actin] plots for all samples. The Vm values for LC2-deficient myosin are 50% lower (at low actin, Vm = 3.0 s-1, and at high actin, Vm = 4.2 s-1) than those for control myosin (Vm = 5.3 s-1 at low actin and 8.3 s-1 at high actin). Readdition of LC2 to LC2-deficient myosin restores the actin-activated ATPase to control levels. Electron microscopy of shadow cast preparations reveals a subtle difference between LC2-deficient myosin, and control or recombined myosin. In control and recombined myosins, S1 heads appear "pear"-shaped, whereas in LC2-deficient myosin, the S1 heads are rounder and display a "thinning" of mass in the "neck" region, suggesting that LC2 binds at the S1/S2 junction. Furthermore, removal of LC2 apparently influences the assembly of myosin into minifilaments, as revealed to a certain degree, by an increase in the width of the bare zone, accompanied by a decrease in the stability of these minifilaments.  相似文献   

20.
The heavy chain of myosin from rabbit skeletal muscle can be cleaved at three sites by irradiation with near-ultraviolet light in the presence of 0.1-1.0 mM vanadate. The sigmoidal dependence upon vanadate concentration, with half-maximal rate occurring at about 0.5 mM vanadate and a sigmoidicity of 2.7, is consistent with the chromophore responsible for cleavage being oligomeric vanadate. Cleavage occurs at two sites located within the head region of the molecule, 23 kDa and 75 kDa from the NH2-terminus; these sites are cleaved equally well in heavy meromyosin and subfragment 1. In the presence of 1 mM vanadate, the half-times for cleavage of the 23-kDa and 75-kDa sites are about 15 and 10 min, respectively. The rate of cleavage at both these sites is retarded 2-3-fold by the presence of greater than 10 microM MgATP. The third photocleavage site is located about 5-10 kDa from the COOH terminus of the intact heavy chain, and cleaves equally well in the isolated rod and in light meromyosin. Cleavage at this site occurs with a half-time of 138 min, and its rate is unaffected by the presence of MgATP. The vanadate-mediated cleavage of the heavy chains is accompanied by characteristic changes in the myosin ATPase properties, with the Ca2+, Mg2+ and actin-activated Mg2+ ATPases becoming elevated, whereas the K+/EDTA ATPase becomes inactivated. The sites of photocleavage in the myosin heavy chain might be associated with sites of phosphate binding.  相似文献   

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