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1.
Actin contains a single high-affinity cation-binding site, for which Ca2+ and Mg2+ can compete, and multiple low-affinity cation-binding sites, which can bind Ca2+, Mg2+, or K+. Binding of cations to the low-affinity sites causes polymerization of monomeric actin with either Ca2+ or Mg2+ at the high-affinity site. A rapid conformational change occurs upon binding of cations to the low-affinity sites (G----G) which is apparently associated with the initiation of polymerization. A much slower conformational change (G----G', or G----G' if the low-affinity sites are also occupied) follows the replacement of Ca2+ by Mg2+ at the high-affinity site. This slow conformational change is reflected in a 13% increase in the fluorescence of G-actin labeled with the fluorophore 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzene-2-oxadiazole (NBD-labeled actin). The rate of the ATP hydrolysis that accompanies elongation is slower with Ca-G-actin than with Mg-G'-actin (i.e. with Ca2+ rather than Mg2+ at the high-affinity site) although their rates of elongation are similar. The slow ATP hydrolysis on Ca-F-actin causes a lag in the increase in fluorescence associated with the elongation of actin labeled with the fluorophore N-pyrene iodoacetamide (pyrenyl-labeled actin), even though there is no lag in the elongation rate, because pyrenyl-labeled ATP-F-actin subunits have a lower fluorescence intensity than pyrenyl-labeled ADP-F-actin subunits. The effects of the cation bound to the high-affinity binding site must, therefore, be considered in quantitatively analyzing the kinetics of polymerization of NBD-labeled actin and pyrenyl-labeled actin. Although their elongation rates are not very different, the rate of nucleation is much slower for Ca-G-actin than for Mg-G'-actin, probably because of the slower rate of ATP hydrolysis when Ca2+ is bound to the high-affinity site.  相似文献   

2.
The fluorescence resonance energy transfer parameter, f, is defined as the efficiency of the energy transfer normalized by the quantum yield of the donor in the presence of acceptor. It is possible to characterize the flexibility of the protein matrix between the appropriate fluorescent probes by monitoring the temperature dependence of f. The intermonomer flexibility of the Ca-actin and Mg-actin filaments was characterized by using this method at pH values of 6.5 and 7.4. The protomers were labeled on Cys374 with donor [N-(((iodoacetyl)amino)ethyl)-5-naphthylamine-1-sulfonate; IAEDANS] or acceptor [5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein; IAF] molecules. The temperature profile of f suggested that the intermonomer flexibility of actin filaments was larger at pH 7.4 than pH 6.5 in the case of Mg-F-actin while this difference was absent in the case of Ca-F-actin. More rigid intermonomer connection was identified at both pH values between the protomers of Mg-F-actin compared to the Ca-F-actin. The results were further supported by time dependent fluorescence measurements made on IAEDANS and IAF labeled Mg- and Ca-actin filaments at pH 6.5 and 7.4. Our spectroscopic results may suggest that the altered function of muscle following the change of pH within the muscle cells under physiological or pathological conditions might be affected by the modified dynamic properties of the magnesium saturated actin filaments. The change of the intracellular pH does not have an effect on the intermonomer flexibility of the Ca-actin filaments.  相似文献   

3.
Enzymatic hydrolysis of e-ATP by F-actin with and without application of sonic vibration at various pHs was investigated and compared with that of ATP. These was no significant difference on enzymatic activity between F-actin-bound e-ADP and F-actin-bound ADP. The hydrolysis rate of e-ATP under sonic vibration decreases monotonically with decreasing pH, similar to that of ATP. The magnitude of e-ATP hydrolysis rate was, however, about one third of that of ATP hydrolysis rate in the pH range between 6.3 and 8.5. Enzymatic hydrolysis of e-ATP without sonic vibration at room or higher temperatures decreases monotonically with increasing pH and becomes almost negligible at pH 8.5. The pH profile and the magnitude of enzymatic hydrolysis without sonic vibration were similar with ATP. Since the fluorescence intensity of e-ATP at 410 nm is enhanced by the binding with G-actin, the exchange binding affinity of e-ATP to G-actin which can be measured fluorophotometrically was about one third of that of ATP.  相似文献   

4.
Conformational changes in subdomain 2 of actin were investigated using fluorescence probes dansyl cadaverine (DC) or dansyl ethylenediamine (DED) covalently attached to Gln41. Examination of changes in the fluorescence emission spectra as a function of time during Ca2+/Mg2+ and ATP/ADP exchange at the high-affinity site for divalent cation-nucleotide complex in G-actin confirmed a profound influence of the type of nucleotide but failed to detect a significant cation-dependent difference in the environment of Gln41. No significant difference between Ca- and Mg-actin was also seen in the magnitude of the fluorescence changes resulting from the polymerization of these two actin forms. Evidence is presented that earlier reported cation-dependent differences in the conformation of the loop 38-52 may be related to time-dependent changes in the conformation of subdomain 2 in DED- or DC-labeled G-actin, accelerated by substitution of Mg2+ for Ca2+ in CaATP-G-actin and, in particular, by conversion of MgATP- into MgADP-G-actin. These spontaneous changes are associated with a denaturation-driven release of the bound nucleotide that is promoted by two effects of DED or DC labeling: lowered affinity of actin for nucleotide and acceleration of ATP hydrolysis on MgATP-G-actin that converts it into a less stable MgADP form. Evidence is presented that the changes in the environment of Gln41 accompanying actin polymerization result in part from the release of Pi after the hydrolysis of ATP on the polymer. A similarity of this change to that accompanying replacement of the bound ATP with ADP in G-actin is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The correlation between the time courses of actin polymerization under continuous sonication and the associated ATP hydrolysis has been studied. ATP hydrolysis was not mechanistically coupled to polymerization, i.e. not necessary for polymerization, but occurred on F-actin in a subsequent monomolecular reaction. Under sonication, polymerization was complete in 10 s while hydrolysis of ATP on the polymer required 200 s. A value of 0.023 s-1 was found for the first order rate constant of ATP hydrolysis on the polymer at 25 degrees C, pH 7.8, in the presence of 0.2 mM ATP, 0.1 mM CaCl2, and 1 mM MgCl2, independent of the F-actin concentration. The conversion of ATP X F-actin to ADP X F-actin was accompanied by an increase in fluorescence of a pyrenyl probe covalently attached to actin, consistent with a 2-fold greater fluorescence for ADP X F-actin than for ATP X F-actin, with a rate constant of 0.022 s-1. In contrast, the fluorescence of F-actin labeled with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzeno-2-oxa-1,3-diazole did not change significantly when ATP or ADP was bound. The direct consequence of the uncoupling between polymerization and ATP hydrolysis is the formation of an ATP cap at the ends of the filaments, which maintains the stability of the polymer, while most of the filament contains bound ADP. The heterogeneity of the filament with respect to ATP and ADP results in a nonlinear relationship between the rate of elongation and the concentration of G-actin with a discontinuity at the critical concentration, where the rate of growth is zero. In this respect, F-actin in ATP behaves similarly to microtubules in GTP.  相似文献   

6.
F-actin at steady state in the presence of ATP partially depolymerized to a new steady state upon mechanical fragmentation. The increase in critical concentration with the number concentration of filaments has been quantitatively studied. The data can be explained by a model in which the preferred pathway for actin association-dissociation reactions at steady state in the presence of ATP involves binding of G-actin . ATP to filaments, ATP hydrolysis, and dissociation of G-actin . ADP which is then slowly converted to G-actin . ATP. As a consequence of the slow exchange of nucleotide on G-actin, the respective amounts of G-actin . ATP and G-actin . ADP coexisting with F-actin at steady state depend on the filament number concentration. G-actin coexisting with F-actin at zero number concentration of filaments would then consist of G-actin . ATP only, while the critical concentration obtained at infinite number of filaments would be that for G-actin . ADP. Values of 0.35 and 8 microM, respectively, were found for these two extreme critical concentrations for skeletal muscle actin at 20 degrees C, pH 7.8, 0.1 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, and 0.2 mM ATP. The same value of 8 microM was directly measured for the critical concentration of G-actin . ADP polymerized in the presence of ADP and absence of ATP, and it was unaffected by fragmentation. These results have important implications for experiments in which critical concentrations are compared under conditions that change the filament number concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
Actin binding proteins control actin assembly and disassembly by altering the critical concentration and by changing the kinetics of polymerization. All of these control mechanisms in some way or the other make use of the energy of hydrolysis of actin-bound ATP. Capping of barbed filament ends increases the critical concentration as long as ATP hydrolysis maintains a difference in the actin monomer binding constants of the two ends. A further increase in the critical concentration on adding a second cap, tropomodulin, to the other, pointed filament end also requires ATP hydrolysis as described by the model presented here. Changes in the critical concentration are amplified into much larger changes of the monomer pool by actin sequestering proteins, provided their actin binding equilibrium constants fall within a relatively narrow range around the values for the two critical concentrations of actin. Cofilin greatly speeds up treadmilling, which requires ATP hydroysis, by increasing the rate constant of depolymerization. Profilin increases the rate of elongation at the barbed filament end, coupled to a lowering of the critical concentration, only if ATP hydrolysis makes profilin binding to the barbed end independent of its binding constant for actin monomers.  相似文献   

8.
When KCl is added to a solution of G-actin to induce full polymerization, a decrease in the rate at which actin undergoes enzymatic proteolysis occurs. This decrease cannot be accounted for by factors affecting the enzymes employed, but rather appears to be due to a change in the conformation of G-actin. Partially polymerized actin solutions also show a reduction in digestibility which is dependent on the F-actin content, suggesting that F-actin is essentially indigestible. Moreover, low rates of digestion were also observed at sub-critical actin concentrations, where actin in the presence of 0.1 m-KCl does not polymerize. This indicates that a confomational change occurs in G-actin before the polymerization step.At sub-critical concentrations in 0.1 m-KCl, actin is in a truly monomeric state as judged by its viscosity characteristics, its inability to enhance the rate of polymerization of G-actin and its possession of ATP as the actin-bound nucleotide. These data support the existence of a new species of actin, called F-ATP-actin monomer, which has the same physical properties and the same bound nucleotide as G-actin, but digestion characteristics like F-actin. Since F-ATP-actin monomers have the same low susceptibility to proteolysis as F-ADP-actin polymers, and because both G-ATP-actin and G-ADP-actin have similar high rates of digestion, the observed change in the conformation of actin cannot be due to the phosphorylated state of the actin-bound nucleotide. Instead, the conformational change appears to be caused by the addition of KCl to G-actin.The newly-detected monomeric species is considered to be an intermediate in the polymerization process where F-ATP-actin monomers form a population of polymerizable molecules which must reach a critical concentration before nucleation and F-actin polymer formation begin.  相似文献   

9.
The yeast plasma membrane proton-pumping ATPase forms a phosphorylated intermediate during the hydrolysis of ATP. The fraction of enzyme phosphorylated during steady-state ATP hydrolysis was studied as a function of substrate concentration (MgATP), Mg2+ concentration, and pH. The dependence of the fraction of enzyme phosphorylated on the concentration of MgATP is sigmoidal, and the isotherms can be fit with parameters and mechanisms similar to those used to describe ATP hydrolysis. The isotherm is significantly more sigmoidal at pH 5.5 than at pH 6.0, with the limiting percentage (100.mol of phosphate/mol of enzyme) of enzyme phosphorylated being 70% and 6%, respectively, at the two pH values. The maxima in the steady-state rate of ATP hydrolysis occur at higher concentrations of Mg2+ and higher pH than the maxima in the fraction of enzyme phosphorylated. This suggests that the rate-determining step for ATP hydrolysis is different from that for enzyme phosphorylation and the hydrolysis of phosphoenzyme is enhanced by Mg2+ and high pH. The rate of phosphoenzyme formation was investigated with the quenched-flow method, but only a lower bound of 140 s-1 could be obtained for the rate constant at MgATP concentrations greater than 2.5 mM. Since the turnover number for ATP hydrolysis under similar conditions is 14 s-1, the rate-determining step in ATP hydrolysis occurs after enzyme phosphorylation.  相似文献   

10.
Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent polymerization of actin by myelin basic protein   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The interaction between myelin basic protein (MBP) and G-actin was studied under nonpolymerizing conditions, i.e.,2mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM CaCl2 and 0.2 mM ATP. Fluorescence studies using pyrenyl-actin and the measurements of ATP hydrolysis rate show that MBP induces changes in the structure of the actin monomer similar to those occurring during polymerization by salt. Electron microscope observations of the MBP-G-actin complex reveal the presence of filamentous structures which appear as separate filaments or as bundles of filaments in lateral association. These filaments are polar as visualized by attachment of heavy meromyosin. The biochemical data together with electron microscope observations suggest that the binding of MBP to G-actin under non-polymerizing conditions induces an interaction between actin monomers leading to the formation of filamentous structures which may be similar to F-actin filaments. The effects of MBP on G-actin can be reversed by calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

11.
Formin FH2 domains associate processively with actin-filament barbed ends and modify their rate of growth. We modeled how the elongation rate depends on the concentrations of profilin and actin for four different formins. We assume that (1) FH2 domains are in rapid equilibrium among conformations that block or allow actin addition and that (2) profilin-actin is transferred rapidly to the barbed end from multiple profilin binding sites in formin FH1 domains. In agreement with previous experiments discussed below, we find an optimal profilin concentration with a maximal elongation rate that can exceed the rate of actin alone. High profilin concentrations suppress elongation, largely because free profilin displaces profilin-actin from FH1. The model supports a common polymerization mechanism for the four formin FH1FH2 constructs with differences attributed to varying parameter values. The mechanism does not require ATP hydrolysis by polymerized actin, but we cannot exclude that formins accelerate hydrolysis.  相似文献   

12.
Monomeric actin is known to bind tightly one divalent cation per molecule. We have quantitatively reinvestigated the affinity of actin for Ca++ and Mg++ using the fluorescent Ca++ chelator Quin2 to induce and measure the dissociation of Ca++ from Ca-actin, supporting these studies with measurements using 45Ca. We found that the KD for Ca-actin is actually 1.9 +/- 0.7 nM. Kinetic analysis supported this result and demonstrated a dissociation rate constant (k-) of 0.013 s-1 and an association rate constant (k+) of 6.8 X 10(6)M-1 s-1 for Ca-actin. Competitive binding studies indicated that the binding affinity of actin for Ca++ is 5.4 times that for Mg++, yielding a calculated KD for Mg-actin of about 10 nM. Thus, the tight-binding of divalent cations to actin is 3-4 orders of magnitude stronger than previously thought.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of ATP hydrolysis in myofibrils can be studied by following the time course of tryptophan fluorescence. Stoichiometric quantities of ATP produce an enhancement of the tryptophan fluorescence in stirred suspensions of rabbit psoas myofibrils at pCa greater than 7. Approximately 1 mol of ATP/myosin head is required to obtain the maximum fluorescence enhancement of 4-6%. Upon the addition of quantities of ATP greater than 1 mol/mol of myosin head, the fluorescence rapidly increases to a steady state, which lasts for a period that is proportional to the amount of ATP added. The fluorescence then decays to the initial level with a half-time of approximately 40 s at 20 degrees C. Hydrolysis of [gamma-32P]ATP at pCa greater than 7 in myofibrils has an initial burst of approximately 0.7 mol/mol of myosin head that is followed by a constant rate of hydrolysis. The duration of the steady state hydrolysis is identical to the duration of the enhancement of tryptophan fluorescence. A lower limit of 5 X 10(5) M-1 S-1 was obtained for the second order rate constant of the fluorescence enhancement by ATP. At pCa of 4, the duration of the fluorescence enhancement is one-tenth to one-twentieth as long as at pCa greater than 7; this is consistent with the increased steady state rate of ATP hydrolysis at higher calcium concentrations. The time course of the fluorescence enhancement observed in myofibrils during ATP hydrolysis is qualitatively and quantitatively similar to that observed with actomyosin-S1 in solution. These results suggest that the kinetic mechanism of ATP hydrolysis that has been well established by studies of actomyosin-S1 in solution also occurs in myofibrils.  相似文献   

14.
Study of actin filament ends in the human red cell membrane   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
There is conflicting evidence concerning the state of the actin protofilaments in the membrane cytoskeleton of the human red cell. To resolve this uncertainty, we have analysed their characteristics with respect to nucleation of G-actin polymerization. The effects of cytochalasin E on the rate of elongation of the protofilaments have been measured in a medium containing 0.1 M-sodium chloride and 5 mM-magnesium chloride, using pyrene-labelled G-actin. At an initial monomer concentration far above the critical concentration for the negative ("pointed") end of F-actin, high concentrations of cytochalasin reduce the elongation rate of free F-actin by about 70%. The residual rate is presumed to correspond to the elongation rate at the negative ends. By contrast, the elongation rate on red cell ghosts or cytoskeletons falls to zero, allowing for the background of self-nucleated polymerization of the G-actin. The critical concentration of the actin in the red cell membrane has been measured after elongation of the filaments by added pyrenyl-G-actin in the same solvent. It was found to be 0.07 microM, compared with 0.11 microM under the same conditions for actin alone. This is consistent with prediction for the case of blocked negative ends on the red cell actin. The rate of elongation of actin filaments, free and in the red cell membrane cytoskeleton, has been measured as a function of the concentration of an added actin-capping protein, plasma gelsolin, with a high affinity for the positive ends. The elongation rate falls linearly with increasing gelsolin concentration until it approaches a minimum when the gelsolin has bound to all positive filament ends. The elongation rate at this point corresponds to the activity of the negative ends, and its ratio to the unperturbed polymerization rate (in the absence of capping proteins) is indistinguishable from zero in the case of ghosts, but about 1 : 4 in the case of F-actin. When ATP is replaced in the system by ADP, so that the critical concentrations at the two filament ends are equalized, the difference is equally well-marked: for F-actin, the rate at the equivalence point is about 40% of that in the absence of capping protein, whereas for ghosts the nucleated polymerization rate at the equivalence point is again zero, indicating that under these conditions the negative ends contribute little or not at all to the rate of elongation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Inhibition of an early stage of actin polymerization by actobindin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Actobindin, a 25,000-dalton dimeric protein purified from Acanthamoeba castellanii was previously shown to form a 1:1 molar complex with both Acanthamoeba and rabbit muscle G-actin with KD values of about 5 and 7 microM, respectively, and not to interact with F-actin (Lambooy, P. K., and Korn, E. D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 17150-17155). We now find that actobindin is a much more potent inhibitor of the early phases of polymerization of both Acanthamoeba and muscle G-actin than can be accounted for by its binding to G-actin. Actobindin inhibits the polymerization of both G-ATP-actin and G-ADP-actin, and has little, if any, effect on the rate of ATP hydrolysis that accompanies polymerization of G-ATP-actin. The kinetics of actin polymerization in the presence of actobindin are qualitatively consistent with the postulation that actobindin binds reversibly to and inhibits the elongation of an intermediate between G-actin and F-actin, perhaps a small oligomer(s) or a species in equilibrium with such an intermediate. This hypothesis implies the, at least transient, existence of an actin species with properties different from those of monomers and filaments. Actobindin may, then, provide a useful experimental tool for investigating the still relatively obscure early steps in actin polymerization. Irrespective of its mechanism of action, actobindin might serve in situ to reduce the rate of actin polymerization de novo while having relatively little effect on the rates of elongation of existing filaments or from actobindin-resistant nucleating sites.  相似文献   

16.
Mechanism of K+-induced actin assembly   总被引:14,自引:6,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
The assembly of highly purified actin from Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae and rabbit skeletal muscle by physiological concentrations of KCI proceeds through successive stages of (a) rapid formation of a distinct monomeric species referred to as KCI-monomer, (b) incorporation of KCI-monomers into an ATP-containing filament, and (c) ATP hydrolysis that occurs significantly after the incorporation event. KCI-monomer has a conformation which is distinct from that of either conventional G- or F-actin, as judged by UV spectroscopy at 210-220 nm and by changes in ATP affinity. ATP is not hydrolyzed during conversion of G-actin to KCI-monomer. KCI-monomer formation precedes filament formation and may be necessary for the assembly event. Although incorporation of KCI-monomers into filaments demonstrates lagphase kinetics by viscometry, both continuous absorbance monitoring at 232 nm and rapid sedimentation of filaments demonstrate hyperbolic assembly curves. ATP hydrolysis significantly lags the formation of actin filaments. When half of the actin has assembled, only 0.1 to 0.2 mole of ATP are hydrolyzed per mole of actin present as filaments.  相似文献   

17.
The H(+)-ATPase from the plasma membrane of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was isolated and purified. The rate of ATP hydrolysis and ATP binding was measured as a function of pH and the effect of the vanadate and erythrosine B inhibitors was investigated. The pH dependence of the rate of ATP hydrolysis forms a bell-shaped curve with a maximum at pH 6 and half-maximal rates at pH 5.0 and 7.4. Only the pH dependence between pH 6 and pH 7.6 is reversible. Above pH 7.6 and below pH 5.5, denaturation of the isolated enzyme is observed. The rate of ATP binding shows the same pH dependency as that of ATP hydrolysis. Both pH dependencies can be described by the dissociation of a monovalent acidic group with a pK of 7.4. It is concluded that the enzyme must be protonated before ATP binding. Vanadate does not inhibit ATP binding, ADP release or Pi release at concentrations where complete inhibition of ATP hydrolysis is observed. It is concluded that vanadate inhibits a step of the reaction cycle which occurs after Pi release. In contrast, erythrosine B inhibits ATP binding and thus affects the first step of the reaction cycle.  相似文献   

18.
On linear single-stranded DNA, RecA filaments assemble and disassemble in the 5' to 3' direction. Monomers (or other units) associate at one end and dissociate from the other. ATP hydrolysis occurs throughout the filament. Dissociation can result when ATP is hydrolyzed by the monomer at the disassembly end. We have developed a comprehensive model for the end-dependent filament disassembly process. The model accounts not only for disassembly, but also for the limited reassembly that occurs as DNA is vacated by disassembling filaments. The overall process can be monitored quantitatively by following the resulting decline in DNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis. The rate of disassembly is highly pH dependent, being negligible at pH 6 and reaching a maximum at pH values above 7. 5. The rate of disassembly is not significantly affected by the concentration of free RecA protein within the experimental uncertainty. For filaments on single-stranded DNA, the monomer kcat for ATP hydrolysis is 30 min-1, and disassembly proceeds at a maximum rate of 60-70 monomers per minute per filament end. The latter rate is that predicted if the ATP hydrolytic cycles of adjacent monomers are not coupled in any way.  相似文献   

19.
To obtain kinetic information about the pointed ends of actin filaments, experiments were carried out in the presence of gelsolin which blocks all events at the kinetically dominant barbed ends. The 1:2 gelsolin-actin complex retains 1 mol/mol of actin-bound ATP, but it neither hydrolyzes the ATP nor exchanges it with ATP free in solution at a significant rate. On the other hand, the actin filaments with their barbed ends capped with gelsolin hydrolyze ATP relatively rapidly at steady state, apparently as a result of the continued interaction of ATP-G-actin with the pointed ends of the filaments. ATP hydrolysis during spontaneous polymerization of actin in the presence of relatively high concentrations of gelsolin lags behind filament elongation so that filaments consisting of as much as 50% ATP-actin subunits are transiently formed. Probably for this reason, during polymerization the actin monomer concentration transiently reaches a concentration lower than the final steady-state critical concentration of the pointed end. At steady state, however, there is no evidence for an ATP cap at the pointed ends of gelsolin-capped filaments, which differs from the barbed ends which do have an ATP cap in the absence of gelsolin. As there is no reason presently to think that gelsolin has any effect on events at the pointed ends of filaments, the properties of the pointed ends deduced from these experiments with gelsolin-capped filaments are presumably equally applicable to the pointed ends of filaments in which the barbed ends are free.  相似文献   

20.
Actin ADP-ribosylated at arginine 177 is unable to hydrolyze ATP, and the R177 side chain is in a position similar to that of the catalytically essential lysine 71 in heat shock cognate protein Hsc70, another member of the actin-fold family of proteins. Therefore, actin residue R177 has been implicated in the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis. This paper compares wild-type beta-actin with a mutant in which R177 has been replaced by aspartic acid. The mutant beta-actin was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and purified by DNase I-affinity chromatography. The mutant protein exhibited a reduced thermal stability and an increased nucleotide exchange rate, suggesting a weakened interdomain connection. The ATPase activity of G-actin and the ATPase activity expressed during polymerization were unaffected by the R177D replacement, showing that this residue is not involved in catalysis. In the presence of polymerizing salts, ATP hydrolysis by both wild-type Mg-beta-actin and the mutant protein preceded filament formation. With the mutant actin, the initial rate of ATP hydrolysis was as high as with wild-type actin, but polymer formation was slower, reached lower steady-state levels, and the polymers formed exhibited much lower viscosity. The critical concentration of polymerization (Acc) of the mutant actin was increased 10-fold as compared to wild-type actin. Filaments formed from the R177D mutant beta-actin bound phalloidin.  相似文献   

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