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1.
We report here on the UV-induced vanadate-dependent cleavage of the alpha and beta heavy chains of the outer arm dynein from Chlamydomonas flagella. Both polypeptides are cleaved at a single site (termed the V1 site) by UV irradiation in the presence of Mg2+, ATP, and vanadate. The alpha chain yields fragments of Mr 290,000 and 190,000. Fragments of Mr 255,000 and 185,000 are obtained from the beta chain. Ultraviolet irradiation of the alpha and beta chains in the presence of vanadate and Mn2+ (but no nucleotide) induces cleavage of both molecules at sites (termed the V2 sites) distinct from the V1 sites. The single V2 site within the beta chain is located 75,000 daltons from the site of V1 cleavage within the Mr 255,000 V1 fragment. The alpha chain contains three distinct sites of V2 cleavage; all are located within the Mr 290,000 V1 fragment, 60,000, 90,000, and 100,000 daltons from the site of V1 cleavage. From these studies, we estimate the masses of the alpha and beta heavy chains to be 480,000 and 440,000 daltons, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
Here we document the UV-induced, vanadate-dependent cleavage of the alpha-, beta-, and gamma-heavy chains of 22 S outer arm dynein obtained from Tetrahymena cilia. All three polypeptides have a single site of photocleavage in the presence of Mg2+, ATP, and vanadate (termed V1 cleavage). The alpha-chain yields complementary fragments with masses of 232 and 185 kDa, the beta-chain has complementary fragments with masses of 225 and 195 kDa, and the gamma-chain has complementary fragments with masses of 242 and 161 kDa. In the absence of ATP, only the beta-chain undergoes V1 cleavage. All three polypeptides have one single site of V2 cleavage, which are unaffected by the presence of nucleotide and only require the presence of Mn2+ and vanadate. V2 cleavage always occurs on the larger V1 fragments and is separated from the V1 site by 52, 48, and 57 kDa for the alpha-, beta-, and gamma-heavy chains, respectively. We have also found a third type of UV-induced vanadate-dependent cleavage which we have termed VMT cleavage. VMT cleavage occurs when dynein is bound to microtubules in an ATP-sensitive manner under V1 solution conditions that should only support cleavage of the beta-chain (i.e. vanadate, Mg2+, and absence of ATP). Under these conditions V1 cleavage of the beta-chain and V2 cleavage of all three chains occur. This is the first documented evidence of V2 cleavage occurring under V1 solution conditions and implies a change in dynein structure when it binds to a microtubule. Using a combination of polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies, we have been able to construct linear polypeptide maps of all three heavy chains. Their relationship to the polypeptide maps previously obtained for heavy chains obtained from the dynein of Chlamydomonas and sea urchin axonemes is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The photoaffinity analogs 2-azidoadenosine 5'-tri(di)-phosphate (2-N3AT(D)P) and 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (8-N3ATP) have been used to probe the substructural organization of the nucleotide binding pockets within the alpha and beta heavy chains of the outer arm dynein from Chlamydomonas flagella. Both 2-N3ATP and 8-N3ATP are competitive inhibitors of dynein ATP hydrolysis, and both analogs are themselves hydrolyzed by the alpha-beta dimer. Following vanadate-dependent photolysis at the V1 site (by UV irradiation in the presence of Mg2+, ATP, and vanadate), both probes exclusively labeled the larger fragment from the alpha chain. In contrast, within the beta chain the predominant insertion sites for the two analogs were located on opposite sides of the V1 site. Therefore, the hydrolytic pockets of these two molecules have different substructures. Vanadate-dependent photolysis of the alpha and beta chains at the V2 sites (by UV irradiation in the presence of vanadate and Mn2+) profoundly affected the predominant modification sites; for example, following photolysis at the V2a site neither fragment of the alpha chain was photolabeled by 2-N3ATP or 8-N3ATP. Based on the photolabeling patterns obtained, the single V2 site within the beta chain is predicted to be analogous to the V2b site within the alpha chain. The results support the hypothesis that the V2 sites occur within the ATP binding pockets, and indicate that these functional domains are composed of portions of the heavy chains which are linearly separated by up to at least 100,000 daltons. Thus, the central region of each dynein heavy chain must be extensively folded so as to bring the widely separated photocleavage and photolabeling sites together within a single catalytic unit.  相似文献   

4.
NH2-terminal analysis of the alpha and beta heavy chain polypeptides (Mr greater than 400,000) from the outer arm dynein of sea urchin sperm flagella, compared with that of the 230,000- and 200,000-Mr peptides formed upon photocleavage of dynein by irradiation at 365 nm in the presence of vanadate and ATP, shows that the NH2 termini of the intact chains are acetylated and that the 230,000- and 200,000 Mr peptides constitute the amino- and carboxy-terminal portions of the heavy chains, respectively. Tryptic digestion of the beta heavy chain is known to separate it into two particles, termed fragments A and B, that sediment at 12S and 6S (Ow, R. A., W.-J. Y. Tang, G. Mocz, and I. R. Gibbons, 1987. J. Biol. Chem. 262:3409-3414). Immunoblots against monoclonal antibodies specific for epitopes on the beta heavy chain, used in conjunction with photoaffinity labeling, show that the ATPase-containing fragment A is derived from the amino-terminal region of the beta chain, with the two photolytic sites thought to be associated with the purine-binding and the gamma-phosphate-binding areas of the ATP-binding site spanning an approximately 100,000 Mr region near the middle of the intact beta chain. Fragment B is derived from the complementary carboxy-terminal region of the beta chain.  相似文献   

5.
Irradiation of the outer-arm dynein ATPase from sea urchin sperm flagella at 365 nm in the presence of 50-200 microM vanadate (Vi) and 1 mM manganese acetate, in the absence of ATP, cleaves the alpha and beta heavy chains at a specific site, termed the V2 site, to form discrete peptides of Mr approximately 260,000 and 170,000 from the alpha chain and of Mr approximately 255,000 and 175,000 from the beta chain, with a yield of 80%. This cleavage at the V2 site is not correlated with any direct effect on the dynein ATPase activity. In the presence of 100 microM Vi, the half-times for cleavage of the alpha and beta chains are about 12 and 50 min, respectively. The rate of heavy chain cleavage shows a sigmoidal dependence upon Vi concentration, with half-maximal rate occurring at 58 +/- 7 microM, consistent with the chromophore responsible for cleavage being tri-vanadate. Addition of 10 microM ATP or ADP, or of 100 microM CTP or UTP, to the irradiation medium inhibits cleavage at the V2 site, and results in a slow cleavage occurring at the V1 site described previously. The peptides produced by sequential cleavage at the V2 and then the V1 sites indicate that the sites are separated by about 100,000 Da along the length of each heavy chain. Photoaffinity labeling with [alpha-32P] 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (8-N3ATP) gives specific incorporation of 32P into both the Mr 255,000 and 175,000 peptides of the beta chain but into only the Mr 260,000 peptide of the alpha chain. These results suggest that V2 cleavage occurs on a loop of the heavy chain that forms part of the ATP-binding site, close to the locus of 8-N3ATP attachment.  相似文献   

6.
Irradiation of demembranated flagella of sea urchin sperm at 365 nm in the presence of 0.05-1 mM MgATP and 5-10 microM vanadate (Vi) cleaves the alpha and beta heavy chains of the outer arm dynein at the same site and at about the same rate as reported previously for the solubilized dynein (Gibbons, I. R., Lee-Eiford, A., Mocz, G., Phillipson, C. A., Tang, W.-J. Y., and Gibbons, B. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2780-2786). The decrease in intact alpha and beta heavy chain material is biphasic, with about 80% being lost with a half-time of 8-10 min, and the remainder more slowly. Five other axonemal polypeptides of Mr greater than 350,000 are lost similarly, concomitant with the appearance of at least 9 new peptides of Mr 150,000-250,000. The motility of irradiated sperm flagella upon subsequent dilution into reactivation medium containing 1 mM ATP and 2.5 mM catechol shows a progressive decrease in flagellar beat frequency for irradiation times that produce up to about 50% cleavage of the dynein heavy chains; more prolonged irradiation causes irreversible loss of motility. Competition between photocleaved and intact outer arm dynein for rebinding to dynein-depleted sperm flagella shows that cleavage has little effect upon the ability for rebinding, although the cleaved dynein partially inhibits subsequent motility. Substitution of MnATP for the MgATP in the irradiation medium prevents the loss of all of the axonemal polypeptides during irradiation for up to 60 min and also protects the potential for subsequent flagellar motility. It is concluded that loss of the five axonemal polypeptides upon irradiation results from a Vi-sensitized photocleavage similar to that which occurs in the alpha and beta heavy chains of outer arm dynein and that these polypeptides represent Vi-inhibitable ATPase subunits of dyneins located in the inner arms and possibly elsewhere in the flagellar axoneme.  相似文献   

7.
Irradiation of soluble dynein 1 from sea urchin sperm flagella at 365 nm in the presence of MgATP and 0.05-50 microM vanadate (Vi) cleaves the alpha and beta heavy chains (Mr 428,000) at their V1 sites to give peptides of Mr 228,000 and 200,000, without the nonspecific side effects produced by irradiation at 254 nm as described earlier (Lee-Eiford, A., Ow, R. A., and Gibbons, I. R. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 2337-2342). The decrease in intact heavy chain material is biphasic; in 10 microM Vi, approximately 80% occurs with a half-time of 7 min and the remainder with a half-time of about 90 min, and the yield of cleavage peptides is better than 90%. Loss of dynein ATPase activity appears to be a direct result of the cleavage process and is not significantly affected by the presence of up to 0.1 M cysteamine (CA, 60-23-1) or 2-aminoethyl carbamimidothioic acid dihydrobromide (CA, 56-10-0) as free radical trapping agents. The concentration of Vi required for 50% maximal initial cleavage rate is 4.5 microM, while that for 50% ATPase inhibition is 0.8 microM, both in a 0.6 M NaCl medium. In the presence of 20 microM Vi, CTP and UTP support cleavage at about half the rate of ATP, whereas GTP and ITP support cleavage only if the Vi concentration is raised to about 200 microM. Substitution of any of the transition metal cations Cr2+, Mn2+, Fe2+, or Co2+ for the usual Mg2+ suppresses the photocleavage, presumably by quenching the excited chromophore prior to scission of the heavy chain. The photocleaved dynein 1 binds to dynein-depleted flagella similarly to intact dynein 1, but upon reactivation of the flagella with 1 mM ATP their motility is partially inhibited, rather than being augmented as with intact dynein. These results indicate that Vi acts as a photosensitizing catalyst and suggest that the cleavage proceeds through excitation of Vi bound to dynein at the hydrolytic ATP binding site on each heavy chain, probably in a dynein X MgADP X Vi complex. The exquisite specificity of Vi-sensitized photocleavage will aid the peptide mapping of dynein heavy chains and may be of broader use in studies of protein structure.  相似文献   

8.
The 18 S dynein from the outer arm of Chlamydomonas flagella is composed of an alpha subunit containing an alpha heavy chain (Mr = approximately 340,000) and an Mr = 16,000 light chain, and a beta subunit containing a beta heavy chain (Mr = approximately 340,000), two intermediate chains (Mr = 78,000 and 69,000), and seven light chains (Mr = 8,000-20,000). Both subunits contain ATPase activity. We have used 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (8-N3 ATP), a photoaffinity analog of ATP, to investigate the ATP-binding sites of intact 18 S dynein. 8-N3ATP is a competitive inhibitor of 18 S dynein's ATPase activity and is itself hydrolyzed by 18 S dynein; moreover, 18 S dynein's hydrolysis of ATP and 8-N3ATP is inhibited by vanadate to the same extent. 8-N3ATP therefore appears to interact with at least one of 18 S dynein's ATP hydrolytic sites in the same way as does ATP. When [alpha- or gamma-32P]8-N3ATP is incubated with 18 S dynein in the presence of UV irradiation, label is incorporated primarily into the alpha, beta, and Mr = 78,000 chains; a much smaller amount is incorporated into the Mr = 69,000 chain. The light chains are not labeled. The incorporation is UV-dependent, ATP-sensitive, and blocked by preincubation of the enzyme with vanadate plus low concentrations of ATP or ADP. These results suggest that the alpha heavy chain contains the site of ATP binding and hydrolysis in the alpha subunit. In the beta subunit, the beta heavy chain and one or both intermediate chains may contain ATP-binding sites.  相似文献   

9.
Study of myosin and actomyosin preparations photocleavage conditioned by polyvanadates confirmed the data on V1 and V2 centre cleavage independence of bivalent cations. Actin does not change sufficiently the reaction in V1 centre and considerably slows down the reaction in V2 centre. These actin properties do not depend on bivalent cation (Mg2+), nor on preliminary incubation with vanadate. It was also discovered that preincubation with vanadate in EDTA medium results in myosin molecule cleavage with producing light (M 18 kD) fragments in both cases: with myosin and actomyosin preparations. Besides vanadate-dependent photocleavage of myosin peptide bonds, there were discovered photocrosslinkings of polypeptide chains in myosin and actomyosin preparations also depending on the presence of vanadate. In actomyosin preparations they probably lead to crosslinking of heavy minor proteins to heavy myosin chains.  相似文献   

10.
Irradiation of outer arm dynein ATPase from sea urchin sperm tail flagella at 365-410 nm in the presence of Fe(III)-gluconate complex and ATP produces photolytic cleavage at two distinct sites on the beta heavy chain, located approximately 250 and approximately 230 kDa from its amino terminus. The former cut is close to or identical with the V1 site of the vanadate-mediated photocleavage (Gibbons, I.R., Lee-Eiford, A., Mocz, G., Phillipson, C. A., Tang, W.-J.Y., and Gibbons, B.H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2780-2786. The rate of photolysis shows a hyperbolic dependence on Fe(III)-gluconate concentration with half-maximal rate occurring at 23 microM at pH 6.3. In the presence of 0.1-0.5 mM Fe(III)-gluconate-ATP, approximately 58% of the beta chain becomes cleaved with a half-time of about 34 s; the remainder of the beta chain and almost all of the alpha chain are resistant to cleavage. This photolytic cleavage of the beta chain is accompanied by an approximately parallel loss of the dynein latent ATPase activity, whereas the Triton-activated ATPase is lost to a somewhat greater extent. Mg2+ concentrations above approximately 3 mM inhibit photolysis. Substitution of ADP for ATP changes the pattern of cleavage so that both the alpha and beta heavy chain undergo scission but at the 250-kDa site only. AMP, adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate and Fe(II) do not support cleavage at either site. Trivalent rhodium-ATP complexes, as models of MgATP, can also catalyze photolysis of the beta chain at the 250-kDa site. These results suggest that photolysis results from the activation of an Fe(III)-ATP complex bound to the hydrolytic ATP binding site of the beta chain and that both Fe(III) cleavage sites are located close to the nucleotide binding site in the tertiary folding of the beta heavy chain. The cleavage reaction possibly involves initial photoreduction of Fe(III) bound at the Mg2+ binding site in the dynein.Fe.ATP complex, followed by covalent modification of an amino acid side chain that leads to eventual peptide scission.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Irradiation of adenylate kinase (AK) from chicken muscle with 300-400-nm light in the presence of 0.25 mM vanadate ion first inactivated the enzyme and then cleaved the polypeptide chain near the NH2 terminus. The addition of the multisubstrate analogue, P1,P5-bis(5'-adenosyl) pentaphosphate, prevented both effects. ATP, but not AMP, blocked both inactivation and cleavage in a saturable manner, suggesting that both effects were due to modification at the ATP-binding site. The polypeptide products of the photocleavage were isolated by HPLC and characterized by amino acid composition, peptide sequencing, and mass spectral analyses. The predominant (greater than 90%) small peptide fragment contained the first 16 amino acids from the amino terminus of the enzyme. The amino terminus of this peptide contained an acetylated serine, and the "carboxy" terminus was modified by a cyclized gamma-aminobutyric acid which originated from photooxidation and decarboxylation of proline-17 by vanadate. Edman sequencing indicated that the majority of the large peptide fragment (Mr approximately 19,500) was amino-terminal blocked, but a small portion was sequenceable starting at either glycine-18 (7%) or serine-19 (2%). These studies indicate that in the ATP-AK complex proline-17 is close to the phosphate chain of ATP but not AMP, consistent with the latest evaluation of nucleotide-binding sites on mitochondrial matrix AK by X-ray crystallography [Diederichs, K., & Schulz, G.E. (1991) J. Mol. Biol. 217, 541-549]. Furthermore, this is the first report that an amino acid other than serine can be involved in vanadate-promoted photocleavage reactions.  相似文献   

13.
C R Cremo  G T Long  J C Grammer 《Biochemistry》1990,29(34):7982-7990
The heavy chain of myosin's subfragment 1 (S1) was cleaved at two distinct sites (termed V1 and V2) after irradiation with UV light in the presence of millimolar concentrations of vanadate and in the absence of nucleotides or divalent metals. The V1 site cleavage appeared to be identical with the previously described active site cleavage at serine-180, which is effected by irradiation of a photomodified form of the S1-MgADP-Vi complex [Cremo, C. R., Grammer, J. C., & Yount, R. G. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 6608-6011]. The V2 site was cleaved specifically, without cleavage at the V1 site, first by formation of the light-stable S1-Co2+ADP-Vi complex at the active site [Grammer, J. C., Cremo, C. R., & Yount, R. G. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 8408-8415] and then by irradiation in the presence of millimolar vanadate. By gel electrophoresis, the V2 site was localized to a region about 20 kDa from the COOH terminus of the S1 heavy chain. From the results of tryptic digestion experiments, the COOH-terminal V2 cleavage peptide appeared to contain lysine-636 in the linker region between the 50- and 20-kDa tryptic peptides of the heavy chain. This site appeared to be the same site cleaved by irradiation of S1 (not complexed with Co2+ADP-Vi) in the presence of millimolar vanadate as previously described [Mocz, G. (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 179, 373-378]. Cleavage at the V2 site was inhibited by Co2+ but was not significantly affected by the presence of nucleotides or Mg2+ ions. Tris buffer significantly inhibited V2 cleavage. From the results of UV-visible absorption, 51V NMR, and frozen-solution EPR spectral experiments, it was concluded that irradiation with UV light reduced vanadate +5 to the +4 oxidation state, which was then protected from rapid reoxidation by O2 by complexation with the Tris buffer. The relatively stable reduced form or forms of vanadium were not competent to cleave S1 at either the V1 or the V2 site. 51V NMR titration experiments indicated that a tetrameric species of vanadium preferentially bound to S1 and to the S1-MgADP-Vi complex, whereas no binding of either the monomeric or dimeric species could be detected. These results suggest that the vanadate tetramer was responsible for the photocleavage of S1 which occurred at both the V1 and V2 sites in the absence of nucleotides or divalent metals.  相似文献   

14.
We have used the zero-length cross-linker 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC) to examine protein-protein associations within purified outer arm dynein and axonemes from Chlamydomonas flagella. When axonemes were treated with 0.5-1 mM EDC in either the presence or absence of ATP/vanadate, a polypeptide band of Mr 127,000 recognized by monoclonal antibody 1878A (specific for the Mr 78,000 intermediate chain (IC78) of outer arm dynein) was generated. This conjugate was not obtained when purified dynein was treated with EDC. Further immunological analysis demonstrated that this complex also contained alpha- (but not beta-) tubulin. These results indicate that IC78 interacts with alpha-tubulin in situ in an ATP-insensitive manner. Identification of this interface between dynein and tubulin suggests that IC78, which probably is located at the base of the dynein particle (King, S. M., and Witman, G. B. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 19807-19811), contributes to the structural attachment of the dynein arms to the A-tubules of the outer doublet microtubules. Analysis of the cross-linked products from the purified dynein revealed several additional interactions involving the intermediate chains; these adducts provide further evidence for an intermediate chain/light chain complex within dynein and confirm that IC78 and IC69 associate directly.  相似文献   

15.
Inaba K 《Journal of biochemistry》2000,127(6):1115-1120
Conformational changes of dynein during ATP hydrolysis are demonstrated by the difference in the tryptic fragments of the dynein heavy chain between in the absence and presence of ATP and vanadate. Here tryptic sites in the presence of ATP and vanadate (Tav sites) have been mapped on the betaheavy chain of outer arm dynein from sea urchin sperm flagella. Tav sites are located not only near the central catalytic domain which includes four P-loops, but also near the carboxyl-terminal coiled-coil region. The Tav2 site is located in the most carboxyl-terminal region, which is nearly 850 amino acid residues apart from the the fourth P-loop (P4 site). The region from the most amino-terminal Tav site (Tav1 site) to the Tav2 site covers approximately 2,100 amino acid residues, which is almost half the whole betaheavy chain. Comparison of the sequences around the tryptic sites of the sea urchin b chain and those of the dynein heavy chains from other organisms reveals that the sequence around the Tav1 site is highly conserved in both cytoplasmic and axonemal dyneins but that around Tav2 sites is only conserved in axonemal dyneins, suggesting functional differences in the Tav2 region between the two subfamilies of dynein.  相似文献   

16.
Functional domains of chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The proteolytic susceptibility of chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase, a calmodulin-dependent enzyme, has been utilized to define the relative location of the catalytic and regulatory domains of the enzyme. Myosin light chain kinase isolated from this source exhibits a Mr of 130,000 and is extremely sensitive to trypsin at 24 degrees C; however, the molecule is divided into susceptible and resistant domains such that proteolysis proceeds rapidly and at multiple sites in the sensitive regions even at 4 degrees C while the rest of the molecule remains relatively resistant to digestion. One of these sensitive areas is the calmodulin-binding domain. On the other hand, Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion generates a calmodulin-binding fragment (Mr = 70,000) that retains Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent enzymatic activity and both of the phosphorylation sites recognized by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. In contrast, treatment with chymotrypsin produces a 95,000 Mr calmodulin-binding fragment that contains only the calmodulin-modulated phosphorylation site. Sequential proteolytic digestion studies demonstrated that the chymotryptic cleavage site responsible for the generation of this 95,000 Mr peptide is within 3,000 Mr of the V8 protease site which produces the 70,000 Mr fragment. Moreover, the non-calmodulin-modulated phosphorylation site must exist in this 3,000 Mr region. A calmodulin-Sepharose affinity adsorption protocol was developed for the digestion and used to isolate both the 70,000 and 95,000 Mr fragments for further study. Taken together, our results are compatible with a model for chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase in which there is no overlap between the active site, the calmodulin-binding region, and the two sites phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase with regard to their relative position in the primary sequence of the molecule.  相似文献   

17.
The generation of two cleavage products of human C3, termed C3o and C3p, by incubation with a C3-cleaving protease isolated from cobra venom (Naja naja siamensis) is described. The venom protease removes the C3p fragment (Mr approximately 33,000) from the C3dg region of the C3 alpha-chain. The major cleavage fragment C3o (Mr approximately 140,000) contains the unaltered beta-chain of C3 and two alpha-chain-derived polypeptides of Mr approximately 29,000 and Mr approximately 38,000, respectively. Amino-terminal amino acids sequence analysis of C3p and the three chains of C3o allowed the identification of the exact location of the two alpha-chain-derived fragments of C3o and the three cleavage sites of the venom protease. The chain structure of C3o resembles those of C3c and cobra venom factor. In contrast to C3c but like cobra venom factor (and C3b), C3o was found to support the activation of the serine protease Factor B by cleavage in the presence of Factor D and Mg2+ into Bb and Ba, generating an enzymatically active complex that is able to cleave a fluorogenic peptide substrate for C3 convertases. Since the only stretch of amino acid residues of C3o not present in C3c is the carboxyl terminus of the Mr approximately 29,000 chain of C3o, it is suggested that this region is important for the interaction with Factor B and convertase formation.  相似文献   

18.
Tryptic digestion of 21S outer arm dynein from sea urchin sperm flagella in the presence of ATP (or ADP) and vanadate produced quite different polypeptides from those obtained in the absence of ATP (ADP) and/or vanadate (Inaba and Mohri (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 8384-8388). The 21S dynein heavy chains were consistently digested into 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides in the absence of both ATP (ADP) and vanadate. In the presence of 2 mM ADP and 100 microM vanadate, 300-kDa polypeptide, which appeared to be a precursor of 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides, became less accessible to trypsin, and 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides were digested into 150-/148-kDa and 96-kDa polypeptides, respectively. Quantitative analysis of the degradation of 165- and 135-kDa polypeptides showed that the conformations of these polypeptides change remarkably in the presence of ATP (ADP) and vanadate, and slightly in the presence of ATP gamma S. Photoaffinity labeling with 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate and vanadate-mediated photocleavage of dynein heavy chains revealed that both adenine- and gamma-Pi-binding sites were located on 165- and 150-/148-kDa polypeptides, but not on 135-kDa polypeptide. These results suggest that the conformational change occurring in the 165-kDa region on binding ATP spreads to the 135-kDa region and causes the conformational change of the 135-kDa region.  相似文献   

19.
We find that two Chlamydomonas outer arm dynein assembly loci, oda6 and oda9, are located on the left arm of linkage group XII, in the vicinity of the previously mapped locus for a 70,000 Mr dynein intermediate chain protein. Restriction fragment length polymorphism mapping indicates that this dynein gene is very closely linked to the oda6 locus. A cDNA clone encoding the 70,000 Mr protein was isolated, sequenced, and used to select genomic clones spanning the corresponding locus from both wild-type and oda6 libraries. When wild-type clones were introduced into cells containing an oda6 allele, the mutant phenotype was rescued, while no rescue was observed after transformation with oda6 clones. Genetic analysis further revealed that newly introduced gene copies were responsible for the rescued phenotype and thus confirms that ODA6 encodes the 70,000 Mr dynein intermediate chain protein. The inability of oda6 mutants to assemble any major outer arm dynein subunits shows that this protein is essential for assembly of stable outer dynein arms. This is the first use of transformation with a wild-type gene to identify the product of a Chlamydomonas mutant.  相似文献   

20.
One major protein was selectively solubilized when phosphate analogues, such as inorganic vanadate (Vi), beryllium fluoride (BeFx) or aluminum fluoride (AlFx), were added to ciliary axonemes of Tetrahymena ssp. (T. pyriformis or T. thermophila) in the presence of ATP. This protein contains three high molecular weight polypeptides, characteristic of an outer arm dynein. Electron microscopic observation of the axonemes after solubilization using ATP and Vi revealed axonemes partially lacking outer arm dyneins. These results suggest that the solubilized protein is an outer arm dynein and also that a dynein-ADP-phosphate complex decreases its affinity with the adjacent microtubules within axonemes. Limited digestion with chymotrypsin revealed that each solubilized dynein has a similar conformation, but it is markedly different from that of dynein in the absence of ATP or a phosphate analogue. The solubilized dynein obtained by the addition of Vi and ATP to axonemes was digested by UV irradiation to yield at least five new polypeptides (240, 230, 225, 180 and 160 kDa) but the dyneins solubilized by BeFx (or AlFx) in the presence of ATP did not produce any photocleavage products under the same conditions.  相似文献   

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