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1.
The Ca2+-sensitive ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal myofibrils disappeared completely after treatment with a solution containing CDTA, a strong divalent cation chelator, at a low ionic strength. A gel electrophoretic study revealed that all troponin C and about half of myosin light chain 2 were removed from the myofibrils by the CDTA treatment. The CDTA-treated myofibrils, when reconstituted with skeletal troponin C, showed almost exactly the same Ca2+- or Sr2+-sensitive ATPase activity as that of intact myofibrils. The CDTA-treated myofibrils reconstituted with porcine cardiac troponin C showed the same Ca2+- or Sr2+-sensitivity of the ATPase as that of porcine cardiac myofibrils; Sr2+-sensitivity relative to Ca2+-sensitivity was about ten times higher than, and the maximal slope of the activation curve was about half that of skeletal myofibrils. These findings indicate that these characteristic features of divalent cation regulation in the contraction of skeletal and cardiac muscles are determined solely by the species of troponin C. Bovine brain calmodulin hardly activated the ATPase activity of the CDTA-treated myofibrils even in the presence of Ca2+. Excess calmodulin, however, was found to give Ca2+- or Sr2+-sensitivity to the ATPase activity of the CDTA-treated myofibrils. Frog skeletal parvalbumins 1 and 2, even in excess, did not affect the ATPase activity of the CDTA-treated myofibrils.  相似文献   

2.
Ca2+ binding to skeletal muscle troponin C in skeletal or cardiac myofibrils was measured by the centrifugation method using 45Ca. The specific Ca2+ binding to troponin C was obtained by subtracting the amount of Ca2+ bound to the CDTA-treated myofibrils (troponin C-depleted myofibrils) from that to the myofibrils reconstituted with troponin C. Results of Ca2+ binding measurement at various Ca2+ concentrations showed that skeletal troponin C had two classes of binding sites with different affinity for Ca2+. The Ca2+ binding of low-affinity sites in cardiac myofibrils was about eight times lower than that in skeletal myofibrils, while the high-affinity sites of troponin C in skeletal or cardiac myofibrils showed almost the same affinity for Ca2+. The Ca2+ sensitivity of the ATPase activity of skeletal troponin C-reconstituted cardiac myofibrils was also about eight times lower than that of skeletal myofibrils reconstituted with troponin C. These findings indicated that the difference in the sensitivity to Ca2+ of the ATPase activity between skeletal and cardiac CDTA-treated myofibrils reconstituted with skeletal troponin C was mostly due to the change in the affinity for Ca2+ of the low-affinity sites on the troponin C molecule.  相似文献   

3.
R E Johnson 《FEBS letters》1988,232(2):289-292
It was previously shown that when rabbit skeletal myofibrils are titrated with Mg2+ AMPPNP under conditions that result in the dissociation of cross-bridges from the thin filaments (i.e. 50% ethylene glycol, 0 degrees C), Ca2+-sensitive, biphasic binding is observed. These titrations have been repeated using myofibrils from which the troponin C has been selectively removed. The disappearance of both Ca2+ sensitivity and biphasic binding is taken as evidence that the Ca2+ sensitivity is due to Ca2+ binding to troponin C and the biphasic binding of Mg2+ AMPPNP observed in intact myofibrils is not due to packing constraints or steric hindrance.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of Mg2+ on the Ca2+ binding to rabbit fast skeletal troponin C and the CA2+ dependence of myofibrillar ATPase activity was studied in the physiological state where troponin C was incorporated into myofibrils. The Ca2+ binding to troponin C in myofibrils was measured directly by 45Ca using the CDTA-treated myofibrils as previously reported (Morimoto, S. and Ohtsuki, I. (1989) J. Biochem. 105, 435-439). It was found that the Ca2+ binding to the low and high affinity sites of troponin C in myofibrils was affected by Mg2+ competitively and the Ca2(+)- and Mg2(+)-binding constants were 6.20 x 10(6) and 1.94 x 10(2) M-1, respectively, for the low affinity sites, and 1.58 x 10(8) and 1.33 x 10(3) M-1, respectively, for the high affinity sites. The Ca2+ dependence of myofibrillar ATPase was also affected by Mg2+, with the apparent Ca2(+)- and Mg2(+)-binding constants of 1.46 x 10(6) and 276 x 10(2) M-1, respectively, suggesting that the myofibrillar ATPase was modulated through a competitive action of Mg2+ on Ca2+ binding to the low affinity sites, though the Ca2+ binding to the low affinity sites was not simply related to the myofibrillar ATPase.  相似文献   

5.
The two cysteine residues (Cys-35 and Cys-84) of bovine cardiac troponin C (cTnC) were labeled with the pyrene-containing SH-reactive compounds, N-(1-pyrene) maleimide, and N-(1-pyrene)iodoacetamide in order to study conformational changes in the regulatory domain of cTnC associated with cation binding and cross-bridge attachment. The labeled cTnC exhibits the characteristic fluorescence spectrum of pyrene with two sharp monomer fluorescence peaks and one broad excimer fluorescence peak. The excimer fluorescence results from dimerization of adjacent pyrene groups. With metal binding (Mg2+ or Ca2+) to the high affinity sites of cTnC (sites III and IV), there is a small decrease in monomer fluorescence but no effect on excimer fluorescence. In contrast, Ca2+ binding to the low affinity regulatory (site II) site elicits an increase in monomer fluorescence and a reduction in excimer fluorescence. These results can be accounted for by assuming that the pyrene attached to Cys-84 is drawn into a hydrophobic pocket formed by the binding of Ca2+ to site II. When the labeled cTnC is incorporated into the troponin complex or substituted into cardiac myofibrils the monomer fluorescence is enhanced while the excimer fluorescence is reduced. This suggests that the association with other regulatory components in the thin filament might influence the proximity (or mobility) of the two pyrene groups in a way similar to that of Ca2+ binding. With the binding of Ca2+ to site II the excimer fluorescence is further reduced while the monomer fluorescence is not changed significantly. In myofibrils, cross-bridge detachment (5 mM MgATP, pCa 8.0) causes a reduction in monomer fluorescence but has no effect on excimer fluorescence. However, saturation of the cTnC with Ca2+ reduces excimer fluorescence but causes no further change in monomer fluorescence. Thus, the pyrene fluorescence spectra define the different conformations of cTnC associated with weak-binding, cycling, and rigor cross-bridges.  相似文献   

6.
Binding of Ca2+ to the troponin C (TnC) subunit of troponin is necessary for tension development in skeletal and cardiac muscles. Tension was measured in skinned fibers from rabbit skeletal muscle at various [Ca2+] before and after partial substitution of skeletal TnC with cardiac TnC. Following substitution, the tension-pCa relationship was altered in a manner consistent with the differences in the number of low-affinity Ca2+-binding sites on the two types of TnC and their affinities for Ca2+. The alterations in the tension-pCa relationship were for the most part reversed by reextraction of cardiac TnC and readdition of skeletal TnC into the fiber segments. These findings indicate that the type of TnC present plays an important role in determining the Ca2+ dependence of tension development in striated muscle.  相似文献   

7.
The interactions between troponin I and troponin C are central to the Ca(2+)-regulated control of striated muscle. Using isothermal titration microcalorimetry we have studied the binding of human cardiac troponin C (cTnC) and its isolated domains to human cardiac troponin I (cTnI). We provide the first binding data for these proteins while they are free in solution and unmodified by reporter groups. Our data reveal that the C-terminal domain of cTnC is responsible for most of the free energy change upon cTnC.cTnI binding. Importantly, the interaction between cTnI and the C-terminal domain of cTnC is 8-fold stronger in the presence of Ca(2+) than in the presence of Mg(2+), suggesting that the C-terminal domain of cTnC may play a modulatory role in cardiac muscle regulation. Changes in the affinity of cTnI for cTnC and its isolated C-terminal domain in response to ionic strength support this finding, with both following similar trends. At physiological ionic strength the affinity of cTnC for cTnI changed very little in response to Ca(2+), although the thermodynamic data show a clear distinction between binding in the presence of Ca(2+) and in the presence of Mg(2+).  相似文献   

8.
In order to examine the involvement of troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, in addition to well-known myosin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, in the contraction of molluscan striated muscle, myofibrils from Ezo-giant scallop striated muscle were desensitized to Ca(2+) by removing both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C by treatment with a strong divalent cation chelator, CDTA. The ATPase level in the desensitized myofibrils was about half the maximum level in intact myofibrils regardless of the Ca(2+)-concentration at 25 and 15 degrees C. In the absence of Ca(2+), the ATPase of the desensitized myofibrils was suppressed by myosin regulatory light chain but not affected by troponin C at either temperature. The ATPase was activated at higher Ca(2+)-concentrations by both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C, but the activating effects of these two proteins were affected differently by temperature. The activation of ATPase by myosin regulatory light chain was much greater than that by troponin C at 25 degrees C, whereas the activation by troponin C was much greater than that by myosin regulatory light chain at 15 degrees C. The maximum activation was only obtained in the presence of both myosin regulatory light chain and troponin C at these temperatures. These findings strongly suggest that the contraction of scallop striated muscle is regulated through both myosin-linked and troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation, and that the troponin-linked Ca(2+)-regulation is more significant at lower temperature.  相似文献   

9.
In order to determine the functional consequences of the Arg145Gly mutation in troponin I found in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, human cardiac troponin I and its mutant were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified, and then their effects on the ATPase activity of porcine cardiac myofibrillar preparations from which both troponins C and I had been depleted were examined. Both the wild-type and mutant troponin Is suppressed the ATPase activity of the troponin C.I-depleted myofibrils, but the maximum inhibition caused by mutant troponin I was weaker than that by wild-type troponin I. In the Ca(2)(+)-activation profile of the myofibrillar ATPase activity after reconstitution with both troponins I and C, the Ca(2)(+)-sensitivity with mutant troponin I was higher than that with wild-type troponin I, whereas the maximum level of the ATPase activity with mutant troponin I was lower than that with wild-type troponin I. These findings strongly suggest that the Arg145Gly mutation in human cardiac troponin I modulates the Ca(2)(+)-regulation of contraction by impairing the interaction of troponin I with both actin-tropomyosin and troponin C.  相似文献   

10.
In an effort to elucidate the mechanism of calmodulin regulation of muscle contraction, we investigated the interaction between calmodulin and troponin components in the presence of Ca2+ or Sr2+ by the use of ultracentrifugation methods and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Skeletal-muscle troponin C bound to troponin I and dissociated it from the tropomyosin-actin complex in the presence of Ca2+ or Sr2+. When troponin T was absent, calmodulin bound to troponin I and dissociated it from the tropomyosin-actin complex in the presence of Ca2+ or Sr2+. When troponin T was present, calmodulin hardly bound to troponin I even in the presence of bivalent cations. Trifluoperazine, a calmodulin antagonist, inhibited the bivalent-cation-dependent interaction between calmodulin and troponin I. Calmodulin migrated more slowly in the presence of Sr2+ than it did in the presence of EGTA but faster than it did in the presence of Ca2+ on polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions. It is concluded that troponin T is not required in the calmodulin regulation of muscle contraction because troponin T inhibits the bivalent-cation-dependent interaction between calmodulin and troponin I and because calmodulin binds to troponin I and dissociates it from the tropomyosin-actin complex in a bivalent-cation-dependent manner. Sr2+-induced exposure of the hydrophobic region enables calmodulin to bind to troponin I, as is the case with Ca2+.  相似文献   

11.
Ca2+ binding to fast skeletal muscle troponin C reincorporated into troponin C-depleted (CDTA-treated) myofibrils has been measured directly by using 45Ca and indirectly by using a fluorescent probe. Direct Ca2(+)-binding measurements have shown that the Ca2+ affinity of the low-affinity sites is enhanced in the absence of ATP and conversely reduced when myosin is selectively extracted from myofibrils, compared to the Ca2+ affinity in the presence of ATP. Fluorescence intensity changes of a dansylaziridine label at the Met-25 residue of troponin C have shown the same Ca2(+)-sensitivity whether or not ATP is present, while much lower Ca2(+)-sensitivity is seen in the myosin-extracted myofibrils. Since the Met-25 residue is in the amino terminal side alpha-helix of Ca2(+)-binding site I and far from Ca2(+)-binding site II in the primary structure, Ca2+ binding to site II has been evaluated by assuming that the fluorescence change monitors Ca2+ binding to site I alone. Ca2+ binding to site II thus estimated has shown high positive cooperativity only in the presence of ATP and has been found to be nearly proportional to the activation of myofibrillar ATPase, suggesting that Ca2(+)-binding site II is directly involved in the activation of myofibrillar ATPase activity. On the other hand, Ca2(+)-binding site I has been suggested to regulate the interaction of weakly binding cross-bridges with the thin filament, since the fluorescence change in the presence of ATP is saturated at the free Ca2+ concentration required for the activation of myofibrillar ATPase.  相似文献   

12.
The Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites (III and IV) located in the C-terminal domain of cardiac troponin C (cTnC) have been generally considered to play a purely structural role in keeping the cTnC bound to the thin filament. However, several lines of evidence, including the discovery of cardiomyopathy-associated mutations in the C-domain, have raised the possibility that these sites may have a more complex role in contractile regulation. To explore this possibility, the ATPase activity of rat cardiac myofibrils was assayed under conditions in which no Ca(2+) was bound to the N-terminal regulatory Ca(2+)-binding site (site II). Myosin-S1 was treated with N-ethylmaleimide to create strong-binding myosin heads (NEM-S1), which could activate the cardiac thin filament in the absence of Ca(2+). NEM-S1 activation was assayed at pCa 8.0 to 6.5 and in the presence of either 1mM or 30 μM free Mg(2+). ATPase activity was maximal when sites III and IV were occupied by Mg(2+) and it steadily declined as Ca(2+) displaced Mg(2+). The data suggest that in the absence of Ca(2+) at site II strong-binding myosin crossbridges cause the opening of more active sites on the thin filament if the C-domain is occupied by Mg(2+) rather than Ca(2+). This finding could be relevant to the contraction-relaxation kinetics of cardiac muscle. As Ca(2+) dissociates from site II of cTnC during the early relaxing phase of the cardiac cycle, residual Ca(2+) bound at sites III and IV might facilitate the switching off of the thin filament and the detachment of crossbridges from actin.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of Ca2+-dependent conformational changes of human cardiac troponin (cTn) were studied on isolated cTn and within the sarcomeric environment of myofibrils. Human cTnC was selectively labeled on cysteine 84 with N-((2-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl)-N-methyl)amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole and reconstituted with cTnI and cTnT to the cTn complex, which was incorporated into guinea pig cardiac myofibrils. These exchanged myofibrils, or the isolated cTn, were rapidly mixed in a stopped-flow apparatus with different [Ca2+] or the Ca2+-buffer 1,2-Bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid to determine the kinetics of the switch-on or switch-off, respectively, of cTn. Activation of myofibrils with high [Ca2+] (pCa 4.6) induced a biphasic fluorescence increase with rate constants of >2000 s−1 and ∼330 s−1, respectively. At low [Ca2+] (pCa 6.6), the slower rate was reduced to ∼25 s−1, but was still ∼50-fold higher than the rate constant of Ca2+-induced myofibrillar force development measured in a mechanical setup. Decreasing [Ca2+] from pCa 5.0-7.9 induced a fluorescence decay with a rate constant of 39 s−1, which was approximately fivefold faster than force relaxation. Modeling the data indicates two sequentially coupled conformational changes of cTnC in myofibrils: 1), rapid Ca2+-binding (kB ≈ 120 μM−1 s−1) and dissociation (kD ≈ 550 s−1); and 2), slower switch-on (kon = 390s−1) and switch-off (koff = 36s−1) kinetics. At high [Ca2+], ∼90% of cTnC is switched on. Both switch-on and switch-off kinetics of incorporated cTn were around fourfold faster than those of isolated cTn. In conclusion, the switch kinetics of cTn are sensitively changed by its structural integration in the sarcomere and directly rate-limit neither cardiac myofibrillar contraction nor relaxation.  相似文献   

14.
J Gulati  S Scordilis  A Babu 《FEBS letters》1988,236(2):441-444
The presence of protein kinase C (PKC), a key enzyme in signal transduction, has not been investigated in fungal cells. The phorbol ester TPA, an activator of PKC, may be used as an indicator of the presence and role of PKC in Phycomyces blakesleeanus spores. Activation of spore germination by acetate was prevented by 6 nM TPA. The TPA analog 4 alpha PDD, an ineffective activator of PKC, did not affect spore germination. 3 mM dbcAMP, on the other hand, reversed the inhibition of germination caused by TPA. TPA-stimulated protein kinase activity was detected in spores. The possible relationship between PKC and the increased levels of cAMP that accompany the induction of spore germination is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Molecular dynamics analyses were performed to examine conformational changes in the C-domain of calmodulin and the N-domain of troponin C induced by binding of Ca(2+) ions. Analyses of conformational changes in calmodulin and troponin C indicated that the shortening of the distance between Ca(2+) ions and Ca(2+) binding sites of helices caused widening of the distance between Ca(2+) binding sites of helices on opposite sides, while the hydrophobic side chains in the center of helices hardly moved due to their steric hindrance. This conformational change acts as the clothespin mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
A chicken pectoralis muscle membrane fraction enriched in a Mg2+- or Ca2+-activated (‘basic’) ATPase was obtained by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Enzymatic properties of the ‘basic’ ATPase were determined and used to localize its enzymatic activity in situ by ultrastructural cytochemistry. The enzyme was activated by Mg2+ or Ca2+ but not by Sr2+, Ba2+, Co2+, Ni2+ or Pb2+. It was present in a membranous fraction with a buoyant density of 1.10-1.12 (24–27.5% (ww) sucrose). ‘Basic’ ATPase activity had a sedimentation pattern similar to the putative plasma membrane enzymes, 5′-nucleotidase and leucyl β-naphthylamidase, but different from that of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase. Also unlike sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase, ‘basic’ ATPase was resistant to N-ethylmaleimide and aldehyde fixatives, was active in a medium containing a high Ca2+ concentration (3 mM), and was lost when exposed to Triton X-100 or deoxycholate. In cytochemical studies, a low Pb2+ concentration was used to capture the enzymatically released phosphate ions. Under conditions which eliminated interfering (Na+ + K+) ATPase and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase activities, electron-dense lead precipitates were present at the plasmalemma and T-system membranes. These studies suggest that ‘basic’ ATPase activity is associated with plasmalemma and T-system membranes of skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

20.
In order to compare the role of the Ca2+-receptive protein (troponin), in the characteristic myofibrillar contractile response of chicken fast and slow skeletal muscles, the troponin in both kinds of myofibrils were partially exchanged, under slightly acidic conditions. The Ca2+- or Sr2+-activation of the ATPase of fast (or slow) skeletal myofibrils hybridized with slow (or fast) skeletal troponin profiles were also investigated. The results indicated that the Ca2+- or Sr2+-affinity of the myofibrillar ATPase activity were related to the species of troponin. This procedure for replacing troponin in myofibrils under physiological conditions in thus considered to be useful for the study of the Ca2+-regulatory mechanism in myofibrillar contraction.  相似文献   

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