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1.
Chymotryptic digestability of scallop myosin was studied by measuring (a) changes in the gel electrophoretic pattern and (b) production of the soluble fraction obtained by centrifugation. Chymotryptic digestion of essential light chain (SH-LC) was strongly inhibited by association of regulatory light chain (R-LC) with myosin. This is in agreement with the observation of Stafford et al. (Biochemistry 18, 5273 (1979]. SH-LC and R-LC were both more resistant to the chymotryptic digestion when R-LCs were associated with myosin in the presence of calcium than when they dissociated from myosin in the presence of EDTA. In contrast, heavy chains of scallop myosin were digested more quickly in the presence of calcium than EDTA. This suggests that association of R-LC induces reversible changes in the heavy chain conformation, which lead to an increase in the chymotryptic digestability of heavy chains. The chymotryptic digestability of scallop myosin increased in two distinct phases as the calcium concentration in the digestion medium was increased, but monophasically as the magnesium concentration was increased. The magnesium increased the digestability by approximately half as much as did calcium. These findings suggest two types of attachment between regulatory light chains and desensitized myosin: one mediated specifically by low concentrations of calcium ions, the second by higher concentrations of either calcium or magnesium.  相似文献   

2.
Essential light chain exchange in scallop myosin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The exchange of essential light chains (SH-LCs) of scallop myosin was followed with the aid of scallop SH-LC alkylated with 14C-labeled iodoacetate. More than 70% of the SH-LCs were exchanged in myosin preparations that were desensitized by removal of both regulatory light chains (R-LCs) with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) treatment. Although desensitized myosin solubilized with 0.6 M NaCl or with 10 mM adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) in the absence of salt equilibrated rapidly with SH-LCs even in the cold, exchange in myosin filaments required elevated temperatures. Equilibration of the SH-LCs in desensitized preparations did not depend on ATP or magnesium ions but was significantly accelerated by actin. The desensitized myosin preparations containing alkylated SH-LCs (approximately 1 mol of thiol alkylated/mol of SH-LC) readily recombined with R-LCs. The preparations regained fully the calcium dependence of the actin-activated magnesium adenosinetriphosphatase (Mg-ATPase), contained R-LCs and SH-LCs in equimolar amounts, and had an ATPase activity similar to that of untreated myosin preparations. R-LCs interfered with the equilibration of the SH-LCs. In intact myosin preparations, the exchange of SH-LCs was slow and was frequently associated with the dissociation of the R-LCs. The blocking action of the R-LC on SH-LC exchange agrees with evidence showing that the two light chain types interact and suggests that parts of the SH-LC may lie between the R-LC and the heavy chain of myosin.  相似文献   

3.
Specific antibodies directed against the regulatory light chains (R-LC) or essential light chains (SH-LC) of scallop myosin abolished calcium regulation in myofibrils, myosin, and heavy meromyosin by elevating the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity in the absence of calcium. Calcium dependence was completely eliminated at molar ratios of 2.5-3 antibodies bound per myosin. Monovalent anti-R-LC Fab and anti-SH-LC Fab fragments also desensitized myofibrils fully. High Ca2+-ATPase activity remained unaffected by the antibodies. Anti-SH-LC IgG reduced to about one-half the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase in the presence of calcium and the potassium-activated ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)-ATPase activities. Anti-SH-LC Fab, however, desensitized without inhibiting the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase. The desensitizing effect of both antibodies was abolished by prior absorption with the homologous myosin light chain. Calcium binding and R-LC and anti-SH-LC IgG's and by anti-SH-LC Fab. The anti-R-LC Fab fragment induced a significant (70%) dissociation of R-LC from myofibrils and myosins with concomitant losses in calcium binding. In contrast, anti-R-LC IgG prevented the dissociation of R-LC from myosin by EDTA. Binding of anti-R-LC IgG to myofibrils was proportional to thier R-LC content. Increased amounts of anti-SH-LC IgG were bound by myofibrils devoid of R-LC. Bound anti-SH-LC antibody significantly inhibited the reuptake of R-LC by EDTA-treated myofibrils as well as the full binding of anti-R-LC antibody. Certain rabbits produced a population of anti-SH-LC antibodies which were specific for this light chain and bound extensively to myosin but failed to desensitize it (nondesensitizing anti-SH-LC antibody). The desensitizing and nondesensitizing anti-SH-LC populations bound to different regions of the SH-LC on the myosin, and the binding of the two types of antibody to the SH-LC was nearly additive. The nondesensitizing SH-antibody inhibited the reuptake of R-LC less, and its binding to myofibrils was not influenced by the absence of R-LC. These studies indicate a direct or indirect involvement of the SH-LC's in myosin-linked regulation, raise the possibility of an interaction between the R-LC and SH-LC, and confirm the regulatory function of the scallop R-LC. A model for a relative location of the two types of light chains and the involvement of the subfragment-2 region of myosin linked regulation is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Heavy meromyosin (HMM) and subfragment-1 (S1) were obtained from squid mantle myosin by tryptic digestion and chymotryptic digestion, respectively. Squid HMM(T) and S1(CT) preparations contained stoichiometric amounts of the two types of light chain subunit; regulatory light chain, LC-2, and essential light chain, LC-1. No difference was detected in the chymotryptic digestibilities of squid mantle myosin in Ca-medium and in EDTA-medium. This is in contrast to the digestibility of scallop adductor myosin. The Mg-ATPase activity of HMM(T) alone and that of acto-HMM(T) were both sensitive to calcium ions. In contrast, the activity of S1(CT) alone and that of acto-S1(CT) were both insensitive to calcium ions. The affinity of HMM(T) for actin was not affected by calcium ions, but the amount of HMM(T) bound to actin was increased by calcium ions from 20% to 60% of the total amount of HMM(T). On the other hand, the actin affinity of S1(CT) and the amount of S1(CT) bound to actin were both unaffected by calcium ions. The role of calcium ions in the regulation of contraction in molluscan muscles is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Thermal treatment of squid myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) in the presence of EDTA results in a rapid inactivation of ATPase, a marked turbidity increase, and a dissociation of light chains. These effects were suppressed by addition of calcium ion. Different light chain binding in EDTA-medium from that in Ca-medium was demonstrated by the tryptic digestion of native squid S-1; the two types of light chain are both resistant to trypsinolysis in Ca-medium, whereas they are readily degraded in EDTA-medium. S-1 heavy chain was converted into three fragments with sizes of 27, 47, and 22 kDa in both media. However, trypsinolysis of S-1 inactivated in Ca-medium generated no such heavy chain fragments that survived, while the two types of light chain survived. These light chains were isolated as a complex lacking any heavy chain fragments, and the complex formation was Ca-sensitive. It is concluded that regulatory and essential light chains are present on S-1 as a complex whose formation is mediated by calcium ion, and this binding might alter the S-1 conformation so as to confer resistance to thermal treatment.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium control was studied in single-headed myosin and subfragment-1 (S1) preparations obtained by papain digestion of scallop myosin. Single-headed myosin, containing light chains in stoichiometric amounts, was calcium regulated; in contrast, the actin-activated Mg-ATPase of all S1 species lacked calcium sensitivity. Both regulatory and essential light chains were retained by S1 and single-headed myosin preparations provided divalent cations were present during papain digestion, although a peptide amounting to 10% of the mass was removed from regulatory light chains. The modified regulatory light chain retained its ability to confer calcium binding and restore calcium sensitivity to the ATPase of desensitized myofibrils. Regulatory light chains protected the essential light chains from fragmentation by papain. S1 bound regulatory light chains with a uniformly high affinity and appeared to consist of a single species. The results demonstrate that head to head interactions are not obligatory for calcium control, although they may occur in the intact myosin molecule, and suggest a role for the subfragment-2 region in calcium regulation of myosin.  相似文献   

7.
Regulation of scallop myosin by mutant regulatory light chains   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Scallop adductor myosin is regulated by its subunits; the regulatory light chain (R-LC) and essential light chain (E-LC). Myosin light chains suppress muscle activity in the absence of calcium and are responsible for relaxation. The binding of Ca2+ to the myosin triggers contraction by releasing the inhibition imposed on myosin by the light chains. To map the functional domains of the R-LC, we have carried out mutagenesis followed by bacterial expression. Both wild-type and mutant proteins were hybridized to scallop myosin heavy chain/E-LC to map the regions of the light chain that are responsible for the binding to the myosin heavy chain/E-LC, for restoring the specific calcium-binding site, and controlling the myosin ATPase activity. The R-LC is expressed in Escherichia coli using the pKK223-3 (Pharmacia) expression vector and has been purified to greater than 90% purity. E. coli-expressed wild-type R-LC differs from the native R-LC by having the initiating methionine residue and an unblocked NH2 terminus. The wild-type R-LC restores Ca2+ binding and Ca2+ sensitivity when hybridized to scallop myosin. A point mutation of the sixth Ca2(+)-liganding position of domain I (Asp39----Ala39) results in a R-LC that binds more weakly to the heavy chain/E-LC and restores the specific Ca2(+)-binding site but not regulation of the actin-activated Mg2+ ATPase. A second mutation was produced by substituting the last 11 residues of the COOH terminus with 15 different residues. This mutant restores the specific Ca2(+)-binding site, but does not restore Ca2+ regulation to the actin-activated ATPase activity. Several other point mutations do not alter light chain function. The experiments directly establish that the divalent cation-binding site of domain I is functionally distinct from the specific Ca2(+)-binding site. The results indicate that an intact domain I and the COOH terminus are required to suppress the myosin ATPase activity. The fact that the domain I mutation and the COOH-terminal mutation disrupt regulation but do not affect Ca2(+)-binding indicates that these two aspects of regulation are separable and, therefore, the R-LC has distinct functional regions.  相似文献   

8.
The light chains of scallop myosin as regulatory subunits   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
In molluscan muscles contraction is regulated by the interaction of calcium with myosin. The calcium dependence of the aotin-activated ATPase activity of scallop myosin requires the presence of a specific light chain. This light chain is released from myosin by EDTA treatment (EDTA-light chains) and its removal desensitizes the myosin, i.e. abolishes the calcium requirement for the actin-activated ATPase activity, and reduces the amount of calcium the myosin binds; the isolated light chain, however, does not bind calcium and has no ATPase activity. Calcium regulation and calcium binding is restored when the EDTA-light chain is recombined with desensitized myosin preparations. Dissociation of the EDTA-light chain from myosin depends on the concentration of divalent cations; half dissociation is reached at about 10?5 M-magnesium or 10?7 M-calcium concentrations. The EDTA-light chain and the residual myosin are fairly stable and the components may be kept separated for a day or so before recombination.Additional light chains containing half cystine residues (SH-light chains) are detached from desensitized myosin by sodium dodecyl sulfate. The EDTA-light chains and the SH-light chains have a similar chain weight of about 18,000 daltons; however, they differ in several amino acid residues and the EDTA-light chains contain no half cystine. The SH-light chains and EDTA-light chains have different tryptic fingerprints. Both light chains can be prepared from washed myofibrils.Densitometry of dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis bands and Sephadex chromatography in sodium dodecyl sulfate indicate that there are three moles of light chains in a mole of purified myosin, but only two in myosin treated with EDTA. The ratio of the SH-light chains to EDTA-light chains was found to be two to one in experiments where the total light-chain complements of myosin or myofibril preparations were carboxymethylated. A similar ratio was obtained from the densitometry of urea-acrylamide gel electrophoresis bands. We conclude that a myosin molecule contains two moles of SH-light chain and one mole of EDTA-light chain, and that the removal of a single EDTA-light chain completely desensitizes scallop myosin.Heavy meromyosin and S-1 subfragment can be prepared from scallop myosin. Both of these preparations bind calcium and contain light chains in significant amounts. The heavy meromyosin of scallop is extensively degraded; the S-1 preparation, however, is remarkably intact. Significantly, heavy meromyosin has a calcium-dependent actin-activated ATPase while the S-1 does not require calcium and shows high ATPase activity in its absence. These results suggest that regulation involves a co-operativity between the two globular ends of the myosin.Desensitized scallop myosin and scallop S-1 preparations can be made calcium sensitive when mixed with rabbit actin containing the rabbit regulatory proteins. This result makes it unlikely that specific light chains of myosin are involved in the regulation of the vertebrate system.The fundamental similarity in the contractile regulation of molluscs and vertebrates is that interaction between actin and myosin in both systems requires a critical level of calcium. We propose that the difference in regulation of these systems is that the interaction between myosin and actin is prevented by blocking sites on actin in the case of vertebrate muscles, whereas in the case of molluscan muscles it is the sites on myosin which are blocked in the absence of calcium.  相似文献   

9.
Electron microscopy and negative staining techniques have been used to show that the proteolytic removal of 13 amino acids from the N-terminus of essential light chain 1 and 19 amino acids from the N-terminus of the regulatory light chain of rabbit skeletal and cardiac muscle myosins destroys Ca(2+)-induced reversible movement of subfragment-2 (S2) with heads (S1) away from the backbone of synthetic myosin filaments observed for control assemblies of the myosin under near physiological conditions. This is the direct demonstration of the contribution of the S2 movement to the Ca(2+)-sensitive structural behavior of rabbit cardiac and skeletal myosin filaments and of the necessity of intact light chains for this movement. In muscle, such a mobility might play an important role in proper functioning of the myosin filaments. The impairment of the Ca(2+)-dependent structural behavior of S2 with S1 on the surface of the synthetic myosin filaments observed by us may be of direct relevance to some cardiomyopathies, which are accompanied by proteolytic breakdown or dissociation of myosin light chains.  相似文献   

10.
The myosin light chains of cultured muscle cells and embryonic muscle tissue have been examined by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Myosin purified from primary cultures of rat muscle cells or the myogenic cell line L6 contain not only the light chains corresponding to those of fast twitch muscle but also another protein, differing slightly in molecular weight and isoelectric point from the adult LC1 protein. By a number of criteria this additional protein is shown to be a myosin light chain: (1) it is found in highly purified myosin preparations; (2) in L6 myosin it replaces the other LC1-type light chains in stoichiometric amounts; (3) it is part of the subfragment-1 complex of myosin produced by chymotrypsin. as expected for an LC1-type light chain. Total extracts of fused cultured muscle cells, when analyzed by two-dimensional electrophoresis, contain substantial amounts of this additional LC1-type protein, strongly suggesting that it is not a proteolytic fragment produced during myosin isolation. Unfused cultures do not synthesize detectable amounts of the adult light chains or the additional LC1-type light chain. This additional LC1 protein can be detected in embryonic or newborn muscle tissue but it is not present in adult myosin or myofibrils. These results indicate that a novel form of myosin light chain, referred to as an embryonic LC1 or LC1emb, is characteristic of the early stages of muscle development.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Myosin fragments were fractionated on columns of the hydrophobic gel phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B. In the presence of high NaCl concentrations the fragments bound tightly to the columns; they could be eluted by decreasing the ionic strength, by increasing the pH, or by applying various concentrations of ethylene glycol. In myosin subfragment-1 (S-1), the light chains underwent partial dissociation from the heavy chain and bound separately to the column matrix. The order of strength of binding of the various species to the column was heavy chain > A1 light chain > A2 light chain > native S-1 > denatured heavy chain or S-1. Thus the hydrophobic gel appears to be able to differentiate between enzymatically active and inactive S-1. Under appropriate elution conditions it was possible to obtain S-1 preparations depleted from nicked heavy chains and with specific ATPase activities 34–130% higher than those of untreated S-1. When S-1(A2) was fractionated on phenyl-Sepharose a fivefold enrichment of the heavy chain with respect to the light chains was obtained, while the ATPase activity was equal or larger than that of the original S-1, implying that the light chains are not essential for ATPase activity. Thus, it seems that chromatography of S-1 on phenyl-Sepharose is a potentially useful method for obtaining a purified myosin heavy-chain fragment with a high ATPase specific activity.  相似文献   

13.
The dissociation of the regulatory light chains from scallop myosin subfragments, on addition of EDTA, was investigated by using the fluorophore 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonate as a probe. The rate of this process (0.014 s-1) was partially limited by the rate of Mg2+ dissociation (0.058 s-1) from the non-specific high-affinity site. The dissociation of the regulatory light chain subfragment 1 was less extensive than from heavy meromyosin. Reassociation of the scallop regulatory light chain was induced on addition of Mg2+, but it appeared to be limited by a first-order step. The nature of this step was revealed by the kinetics of Mercenaria regulatory light chain association. Scallop heavy meromyosin, denuded of its regulatory light chains, exists in a refractory state, whose reversal to the nascent state limits the rate of light chain association (0.006 s-1). The formation of the refractory state is the driving force for the net dissociation of regulatory light chains from scallop heavy meromyosin. This mechanism is discussed with reference to existing structural information on light-chain-denuded myosin.  相似文献   

14.
Three monoclonal antibodies directed against human platelet myosin heavy chains (MCH) that recognize homologous sequences contained within the functionally active subfragment-1, in platelet and rabbit skeletal muscle myosin were studied. These antibodies are distinguished by their affinities to different myosins and their differential effect on various ATPase activities. Epitope mapping was accomplished by analyzing antibody binding to proteolytic peptides of myosin head subfragment-1 under various experimental conditions. The epitopes recognized by these anti-human platelet MHC monoclonal antibodies reside within a small region of the 50 kDa fragment, beginning 9 kDa from its C-terminus and extending a stretch of 6 kDa towards the N-terminus. These epitopes lie between residues 535-586, and are contained within a highly conserved area of myosin heavy chain.  相似文献   

15.
Myopathic hamster protease was incubated with turkey gizzard, scallop adductor, and Loligo mantle retractor myosins in order to establish if the regulatory light chain could be selectively digested. In contrast to cardiac or skeletal muscle myosin in which almost all of the regulatory light chain is degraded, these light chains from smooth and invertebrate muscle myosins were remarkably resistant to proteolysis. In the case of scallop myosin, increasing the protease to myosin ratio resulted in comparable digestions of both the regulatory and essential light chains regardless of the presence of Mg2+. The isolated light chains on the other hand were readily digested into smaller fragments. In addition, it was observed that the myosin heavy chains were extremely sensitive and that it was possible to cleave them quantitatively to produce a new band moving with a mobility on SDS gels corresponding to an Mr of approximately 150,000. This was again at variance with cardiac or skeletal myosin where the breakdown of the heavy chains was shown to be minimal. In spite of the significant extent of heavy chain cleavage, gizzard myosin appears to maintain its tertiary structure as demonstrated by sedimentation velocity and equilibrium ultracentrifugation analysis. Moreover, upon examination by electron microscopy, both intact and cleaved gizzard myosin revealed the characteristic folded structure which had a sedimentation rate of about 10 S when dialyzed into a low salt, Mg X ATP-containing buffer. The effects and implications of such modifications on catalytic activities of gizzard, scallop, and Loligo myosins are discussed in detail.  相似文献   

16.
Regulatory light chain-a myosin kinase (aMK), which phosphorylates one of the myosin regulatory light chains, RLC-a, contained in the catch muscle of scallop, was also found to phosphorylate heavy chains of scallop myosin. After incubation of myosin isolated from the opaque portion of scallop smooth muscle (opaque myosin) with aMK in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP, about 2 mol of 32P was incorporated per mol of the myosin. The radioactivity was mostly found in the heavy chain at 0.26 M KCl. The pH-activity curve and MgCl2 requirement for the heavy chain phosphorylation were similar to those for RLC-a phosphorylation. In contrast, the dependency of activity on KCl concentration was different from that for RLC-a. The heavy chain phosphorylation activity decreased with increase in KCl concentration up to 0.06 M, and then increased at concentrations over 0.06 M to a maximum at around 0.26 M KCl. This complicated profile probably reflects the solubility of myosin, and the phosphorylation site may be located in the rod portion insoluble at low KCl concentrations. Phosphorylation of heavy chain did not change the solubility of the opaque myosin molecule at all. The acto-opaque myosin ATPase activity in the presence of Ca2+ was found to be decreased to less than one-fourth by the heavy chain phosphorylation.  相似文献   

17.
The experimental conditions for release of the regulatory light chain (RLC) of scallop myosin at 30 degrees C were studied. Substantially all RLC was released from myosin by incubation for 5 min in medium containing buffer and KCl. This release of RLC was inhibited strongly by Ca2+, while the effect of Mg2+ was about 10,000 times weaker than that of Ca2+. Even in the absence of Ca2+, MgATP and MgADP inhibited the release of RLC, while the protective effect of AMPPNP was negligible. Other Mg nucleotides also showed some protective effect, though appreciably less than MgATP. The incubation of scallop myosin with abalone regulatory light chain (LC2) at 30 degrees C for 5 min produced a hybrid myosin. In the presence of 5 mM MgCl2, 1 of the 2 mol of RLC per mol of scallop myosin was exchanged with 1 mol of LC2. In the presence of Ca2+ or MgATP, myosin bound 1 extra mole of LC2 besides the 2 mol each of SH-LC and RLC.  相似文献   

18.
Two different subfragment-1 preparations were obtained from either skeletal or cardiac myosin. They were identical in the heavy chain and light chain compositions but different in the pH dependence of the Ca-ATPase activity and in the relationship with "reactive lysine residues" (RLR).  相似文献   

19.
Summary Subfragment-1 of rabbit atrial and thyrotoxic ventricular myosin (V1 isomyosin) has been prepared and purified by DEAF-cellulose column chromatography. Pyrophosphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic patterns and column chromatographic profile of the atrial subfragment differ from those of thyrotoxic ventricular myosin subfragment-1. On the other hand, Ca2+, Mg2+ and actin-activated ATPase activities of these subfragments are identical. Comparison of the peptide mapping by limited proteolysis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate of the heavy and the light subunits of these subfragments reveals that the patterns for the heavy chain peptides of these subfragments are substantially similar but their light chain peptide patterns differ. The results suggest that the enzymatic and structural similarities that have been recognized between these isoenzymes using intact myosin hold true for the myosin subfragment-1.The differences between these subfragments are due to the differences in the light chains associated with them.Abbreviations EDTA Ethylene Diamine Tetra-acetic Acid - SDS Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate - S1 myosin subfragment-1 - HC Heavy Chain - LC Light Chain  相似文献   

20.
Myosin was isolated from striated adductor muscle of Akazara shell-fish, and purified on DEAE-Sephadex A50. The sedimentation constant (s 20,2 0 W) and the intrinsic viscosity, [eta] of Akazara myosin thus purified were estimated to be 6.6 S and 2.10 dl/g, respectively. In many respects, Akazara myosin was similar to scallop myosin. (1) Only one size of light-chain component (17,000 daltons) was detectable in SDS-gel electrophoresis of Akazara myosin, but two types of light-chain component were seen in urea-gel electrophoresis; these were equivalent to EDTA-light chain and SH-light chain of scallop myosin. The molar ratio of heavy chain (206,000 daltons), EDTA-light chain, and SH-light chain in Akazara myosin was estimated, from the staining densities of gel-electrophoretic bands, to be approximately 1 : 1 : 1. (2) EDTA-washing procedure removed EDTA-light chain only, causing desensitization of Akazara myosin. EDTA-light chain isolated from Akazara myofibrils was able to resensitize EDTA-washed Akazara myosin. Akazara myosin, however, was found to be different from scallop myosin in two important properties: (1) complete removal of EDTA-light chains was required to achieve a complete loss of calcium sensitivity, and full resensitization was attained on recombination of EDTA-light chains with desensitized myosin prepared essentially free from EDTA-light chains. (2) EDTA-light chains isolated from Akazara myofibrils show a calcium-induced UV absorption difference spectrum.  相似文献   

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