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1.
The fluorescence of N-acetyl-N'-(sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine (AEDANS) covalently bound to Cys-374 of actin is used as a probe for different conformational states of G-actin according to whether Ca-ATP, Mg-ATP, or unchelated ATP is bound to the nucleotide site. Upon addition of large amounts (greater than 10(2)-fold molar excess) of EDTA to G-actin, metal ion-free ATP-G-actin is obtained with EDTA bound. Metal ion free ATP-G-actin is characterized by a higher AEDANS fluorescence than Mg-ATP-G-actin, which itself has a higher fluorescence than Ca-ATP-G-actin. Evidence for EDTA binding to G-actin is shown using difference spectrophotometry. Upon binding of EDTA, the rate of dissociation of the divalent metal ion from G-actin is increased (2-fold for Ca2+, 10-fold for Mg2+) in a range of pH from 7.0 to 8.0. A model is proposed that quantitatively accounts for the kinetic data. The affinity of ATP is weakened 10(6)-fold upon removal of the metal ion. Metal ion-free ATP-G-actin is in a partially open conformation, as indicated by the greater accessibility of -SH residues, yet it retains functional properties of polymerization and ATP hydrolysis that appear almost identical to those of Ca-ATP-actin, therefore different from those of Mg-ATP-actin. These results are discussed in terms of the role of the ATP-bound metal ion in actin structure and function.  相似文献   

2.
Mechanism of actin polymerization in cellular ATP depletion   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Cellular ATP depletion in diverse cell types results in the net conversion of monomeric G-actin to polymeric F-actin and is an important aspect of cellular injury in tissue ischemia. We propose that this conversion results from altering the ratio of ATP-G-actin and ADP-G-actin, causing a net decrease in the concentration of thymosinactin complexes as a consequence of the differential affinity of thymosin beta4 for ATP- and ADP-G-actin. To test this hypothesis we examined the effect of ATP depletion induced by antimycin A and substrate depletion on actin polymerization, the nucleotide state of the monomer pool, and the association of actin monomers with thymosin and profilin in the kidney epithelial cell line LLC-PK1. ATP depletion for 30 min increased F-actin content to 145% of the levels under physiological conditions, accompanied by a corresponding decrease in G-actin content. Cytochalasin D treatment did not reduce F-actin formation during ATP depletion, indicating that it was predominantly not because of barbed end monomer addition. ATP-G-actin levels decreased rapidly during depletion, but there was no change in the concentration of ADP-G-actin monomers. The decrease in ATP-G-actin levels could be accounted for by dissociation of the thymosin-G-actin binary complex, resulting in a rise in the concentration of free thymosin beta4 from 4 to 11 microm. Increased detection of profilin-actin complexes during depletion indicated that profilin may participate in catalyzing nucleotide exchange during depletion. This mechanism provides a biochemical basis for the accumulation of F-actin aggregates in ischemic cells.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochalasin D strongly inhibits the faster components in the reactions of actin filament depolymerization and elongation in the presence of 10 mM Tris-Cl-, pH 7.8, 0.2 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM CaCl2, and 0.2 mM ATP or ADP. Assuming an exclusive and total capping of the barbed end by the drug, the kinetic parameters derived at saturation by cytochalasin D refer to the pointed end and are 10-15-fold lower than at the barbed end. In ATP, the critical concentration increases with cytochalasin D up to 12-fold its value when both ends are free; as a result of the lowering of the free energy of nucleation by cytochalasin D, short oligomers of F-actin exist just above and below the critical concentration. Cytochalasin D interacts strongly with the barbed ends independently of the ADP-G-actin concentration (K = 0.5 nM-1). In contrast, the affinity of cytochalasin D decreases cooperatively with increasing ATP-G-actin concentration. These data are equally well accounted for by two different models: either cytochalasin D binds very poorly to ATP-capped filament ends whose proportion increases with actin concentration, or cytochalasin D binds equally well to ATP-ends and ADP-ends and also binds to actin dimers in ATP but not in ADP. A linear actin concentration dependence of the rate of growth was found at the pointed end, consistent with the virtual absence of an ATP cap at that end.  相似文献   

4.
Ikkai & Ooi [Ikkai, T. & Ooi, T. (1966) Biochemistry 5, 1551-1560] made a thorough study of the effect of pressure on G- and F-actins. However, all of the measurements in their study were made after the release of pressure. In the present experiment in situ observations were attempted by using epsilon ATP to obtain further detailed kinetic and thermodynamic information about the behaviour of actin under pressure. The dissociation rate constants of nucleotides from actin molecules (the decay curve of the intensity of fluorescence of epsilon ATP-G-actin or epsilon ADP-F-actin) followed first-order kinetics. The volume changes for the denaturation of G-actin and F-actin were estimated to be -72 mL x mol(-1) and -67 mL x mol(-1) in the presence of ATP, respectively. Changes in the intensity of fluorescence of F-actin whilst under pressure suggested that epsilon ADP-F-actin was initially depolymerized to epsilon ADP-G-actin; subsequently there was quick exchange of the epsilon ADP for free epsilon ATP, and then polymerization occurred again with the liberation of phosphate from epsilon ATP bound to G-actin in the presence of excess ATP. In the higher pressure range (> 250 MPa), the partial collapse of the three-dimensional structure of actin, which had been depolymerized under pressure, proceeded immediately after release of the nucleotide, so that it lost the ability to exchange bound ADP with external free ATP and so was denatured irreversibly. An experiment monitoring epsilon ATP fluorescence also demonstrated that, in the absence of Mg(2+)-ATP, the dissociation of actin-heavy meromyosin (HMM) complex into actin and HMM did not occur under high pressure.  相似文献   

5.
Nucleotide in monomeric actin regulates the reactivity of the thiol groups   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A new thiol reagent, 2,4-dinitrophenyl glutathionyl disulfide, allowed the characterization of four thiol groups in monomeric actin by stoichiometric reaction. The number of thiol groups exposed to the reagent was found to depend on the nucleotide bound. In the absence of ATP, G-actin exposed four thiol groups ( G4s ). On the addition of ATP (1 equiv), three of them were shielded. The resulting actin with one thiol group exposed ( G1s ) is the form of monomeric actin normally produced by depolymerization of F-actin in buffers containing ATP. G1s is stable over hours, while G4s , i.e., monomeric actin in ATP-free solution, is not. This must be concluded from the fact that the shielding effect of thiol groups induced by addition of ATP was lost within ca. 30 min probably due to denaturation of G4s to G4s *. Therefore, denaturation of monomeric actin must be understood in terms of loss of thiol shielding, rather than by oxidation of the thiol groups. Addition of equimolar amounts of Ca2+ significantly retarded the denaturation process. ADP (50 equiv) shielded only ca. two of the four thiol groups but, similar to ATP, protected actin from denaturation. Three ATP analogues (10 equiv) were tested but had no shielding effect. In the presence of these analogues actin ( G4s ) rapidly denatured (to G4s *) as in the absence of added nucleotides. It was shown that the thiol-shielding activity and the protective capacity of a nucleotide are interrelated with its binding capability to monomeric actin. G1s was found to be polymerizable as was G approximately 2s on the addition of ATP. No polymerization could be detected for G4s or G4s *.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Interaction of plasma gelsolin with ADP-actin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In the presence of Ca2+, gelsolin forms a very tight, stoichiometric complex with 2 molecules of ADP-G-actin. Removal of free Ca2+ causes the 1:2 complex to dissociate to a 1:1 complex. Gelsolin accelerates the very slow polymerization of ADP-actin, apparently by accelerating the rate of nucleation, but the number concentration of filaments formed is probably less than the gelsolin concentration, indicating that the GA2 complex is not a true nucleus. These results are similar to those obtained for the interaction of gelsolin with ATP-G-actin. Both kinetic and equilibrium measurements demonstrate that the critical concentration of gelsolin-capped ADP-actin filaments (8 microM in 1 mM MgCl2 and 0.2 mM ADP) is the same as for the uncapped filaments, proving that the critical concentration is the same at both ends of the equilibrium polymer in ADP as predicted by theory. The association and dissociation rate constants for the addition of ADP-G-actin at the pointed end of an ADP-F-actin filament are estimated to be 4.6 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 and 0.4 s-1, respectively, about 15-fold lower than the rate constants at the barbed end.  相似文献   

7.
Reinvestigation of the inhibition of actin polymerization by profilin   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
In buffer containing 50 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA, 5 mM imidazole, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM CaCl2, 0.2 mM dithiothreitol, 0.01% NaN3, and 0.2 mM ATP, the KD for the formation of the 1:1 complex between Acanthamoeba actin and Acanthamoeba profilin was about 5 microM. When the actin was modified by addition of a pyrenyl group to cysteine 374, the KD increased to about 40 microM but the critical concentration (0.16 microM) was unchanged. The very much lower affinity of profilin for modified actin explains the anomalous critical concentrations curves obtained for 5-10% pyrenyl-labeled actin in the presence of profilin and the apparently weak inhibition by profilin of the rate of filament elongation when polymerization is quantified by the increase in fluorescence of pyrenyl-labeled actin. Light-scattering assays of the polymerization of unmodified actin in the absence and presence of profilin gave a similar value for the KD (about 5-10 microM) when determined by the increase in the apparent critical concentration of F-actin at steady state at all concentrations of actin up to 20 microM and by the inhibition of the initial rates of polymerization of actin nucleated by either F-actin or covalently cross-linked actin dimer. In the same buffer, but with ADP instead of ATP, the critical concentration of actin was higher (4.9 microM) and the KD of the profilin-actin complex was lower for both unmodified (1-2 microM) and 100% pyrenyl-labeled actin (4.9 microM).  相似文献   

8.
Twinfilin is a ubiquitous and abundant actin monomer-binding protein that is composed of two ADF-H domains. To elucidate the role of twinfilin in actin dynamics, we examined the interactions of mouse twinfilin and its isolated ADF-H domains with G-actin. Wild-type twinfilin binds ADP-G-actin with higher affinity (K(D) = 0.05 microM) than ATP-G-actin (K(D) = 0.47 microM) under physiological ionic conditions and forms a relatively stable (k(off) = 1.8 s(-1)) complex with ADP-G-actin. Data from native PAGE and size exclusion chromatography coupled with light scattering suggest that twinfilin competes with ADF/cofilin for the high-affinity binding site on actin monomers, although at higher concentrations, twinfilin, cofilin, and actin may also form a ternary complex. By systematic deletion analysis, we show that the actin-binding activity is located entirely in the two ADF-H domains of twinfilin. Individually, these domains compete for the same binding site on actin, but the C-terminal ADF-H domain, which has >10-fold higher affinity for ADP-G-actin, is almost entirely responsible for the ability of twinfilin to increase the amount of monomeric actin in cosedimentation assays. Isolated ADF-H domains associate with ADP-G-actin with rapid second-order kinetics, whereas the association of wild-type twinfilin with G-actin exhibits kinetics consistent with a two-step binding process. These data suggest that the association with an actin monomer induces a first-order conformational change within the twinfilin molecule. On the basis of these results, we propose a kinetic model for the role of twinfilin in actin dynamics and its possible function in cells.  相似文献   

9.
Influence of the bound nucleotide on the molecular dynamics of actin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Rotational dynamics of actin spin-labelled with maleimide probes at the reactive thiol Cys-374 were studied. Replacement of the bound nucleotide by Br8ATP in G-actin and Br8ADP in F-actin causes significant increase of the rotational correlation time of the spin probe, indicating reduced motion in both G and F-actin. The orientation dependence of the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra in oriented F-actin filaments revealed an altered molecular order of the probe when the nucleotide was a Br-substituted one. The bound nucleotide affects the myosin S1 ATPase activation by actin; both Vmax and K(actin) decreased significantly when the bound nucleotide of actin was Br8ADP.  相似文献   

10.
用Aedans标记肌动蛋白单体G-Actin上Cys374残基作为探针,研究了稀土离子Ce~(3+)与G-Actin的结合及引起的微构象变化。Ce~(3+)在低浓度(Ce~(3+)/Actin摩尔比<1)和Ca~(2+)竞争G-Actin上二价离子的高亲合位点。Ce~(3+)取代Ca~(2+)引起Aedans荧光强度增强与Mg~(2+)取代Ca~(2+)的结果相同。Ce~(3+)/Actin>l则导致Aedans荧光强度下降。说明Ce~(3+)在高低两种浓度条件下结合的位点及对Cvs374的微构象的影响不同。时间分辩测得的Aedans荧光寿命也支持这一结论。CD谱结果表明Ce~(3+)/Actin<0.4,Actin的二级结构增加,大于0.4又导致其失去。Ce~(3+)-Actin在有/无游离ATP时用聚合液诱导的聚合结果表明,无游离ATP时,极低浓度Ce~(3+)促进聚合,高浓度虽有促进但有所减弱;有游离ATP时,Ce~(3+)/Actin在实验范围内促进聚合。  相似文献   

11.
The accessibility of the cysteine residues of actin from rabbit muscles to the thiol-targeted reagent 7-dimethylamino-4-methyl-(N-maleimidyl)coumarin (DACM) was investigated. Under conditions where the actin is in the unpolymerized form (G-actin), the most reactive thiol group was Cys-257, suggesting that it was located on the surface of the actin molecule. The selective modification of Cys-374 for this reagent as reported by Sutoh [(1982) Biochemistry 21, 3654-3661] was not observed. Cys-10, Cys-217 and Cys-374 were much less reactive and only gradually became extensively modified when the concentration of DACM approached 5 molar equivalents of actin. Presumably these thiol groups were located further inward away from the surface or situated in a different environment that rendered them less reactive. On the other hand, Cys-285 was completely inaccessible and presumably was buried. The lack of preferential labelling of Cys-374 by DACM is incompatible with the finding with iodoacetic acid as the reagent as reported by Elzinga & Collins [(1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 5897-5905]. This discrepancy, however, might well be due to the different reagents employed. The DACM-G-actin largely retained its competence for polymerization. Upon polymerization of G-actin, practically all the thiol groups became inaccessible to DACM, suggesting that a drastic change occurred in the conformation of actin units in the transition of monomers to filamentous actin.  相似文献   

12.
The structure of the actin-myosin complex during ATP hydrolysis was studied by covalently crosslinking myosin subfragment 1 (S1) to F-actin in the presence of nucleotides (especially ATP) using 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The fluorescence energy transfer was measured between N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(1-sulfo-5-naphthyl)ethylenediamine and 6-(iodoacetamide)fluorescein bound to the SH1 thiol of S1 and the Cys374 thiol of actin. The covalent acto-S1, produced by crosslinking in the absence of nucleotide or in the presence of ADP, showed transfer efficiency of 0.50 to 0.52 and intersite distance of 4.5 to 4.7 nm, which were equal to those obtained with non-crosslinked acto-S1 in the absence of nucleotide. However, the covalent acto-S1, produced by crosslinking in the presence of either 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMPPNP) at high ionic strength or ATP, showed a significant decrease in the efficiency to 0.26 to 0.34 and hence an increase in the distance to 5.2 to 5.5 nm. These results suggest that AM-ATP and/or AM-ADP-P (formed during ATP hydrolysis) and AM-AMPPNP have a very different conformation from AM and AM-ADP (in which A is actin and M is myosin).  相似文献   

13.
Force and motion generation by actomyosin involves the cyclic formation and transition between weakly and strongly bound complexes of these proteins. Actin's N-terminus is believed to play a greater role in the formation of the weakly bound actomyosin states than in the formation of the strongly bound actomyosin states. It has been the goal of this project to determine whether the interaction of actin's N-terminus with myosin changes upon transition between these two states. To this end, a yeast actin mutant, Cys-1, was constructed by the insertion of a cysteine residue at actin's N-terminus and replacement of the C-terminal cysteine with alanine. The N-terminal cysteine was labeled stoichiometrically with pyrene maleimide, and the properties of the modified mutant actin were examined prior to spectroscopic measurements. Among these properties, actin polymerization, strong S1 binding, and the activation of S1 ATPase by pyrenyl-Cys-1 actin were not significantly different from those of wild-type yeast actin, while small changes were observed in the weak S1 binding and the in vitro motility of actin filaments. Fluorescence changes upon binding of S1 to pyrenyl-Cys-1 actin were measured for the strongly (with or without ADP) and weakly (with ATP and ATPgammaS) bound acto-S1 states. The fluorescence increased in each case, but the increase was greater (by about 75%) in the presence of MgATP and MgATPgammaS than in the rigor state. This demonstrates a transition at the S1 contact with actin's N-terminus between the weakly and strongly bound states, and implies either a closer proximity of the pyrene probe on Cys-1 to structural elements on S1 (most likely the loop of residues 626-647) or greater S1-induced changes at the N-terminus of actin in the weakly bound acto-S1 states.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of the replacement of ATP with ADP on the conformational and dynamic properties of the actin monomer was investigated, by means of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and fluorescence spectroscopic methods. The measurement of the ATP concentration during these experiments provided the opportunity to estimate the time dependence of ADP-Mg-G-actin concentration in the samples. According to the results of the fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments, the Gln-41 and Cys-374 residues are closer to each other in the ADP-Mg-G-actin than in the ATP-Mg-G-actin. The fluorescence resonance energy transfer efficiency increased simultaneously with the ADP-G-actin concentration and reached its maximum value within 30 min at 20 degrees C. The EPR data indicate the presence of an ADP-Mg-G-actin population that can be characterized by an increased rotational correlation time, which is similar to the one observed in actin filaments, and exists only transiently. We suggest that the conformational transitions, which were reflected by our EPR data, were coupled with the transient appearance of short actin oligomers during the nucleotide exchange. Besides these relatively fast conformational changes, there is a slower conformational transition that could be detected several hours after the initiation of the nucleotide exchange.  相似文献   

15.
Cyclase-associated protein (CAP), also called Srv2 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is a conserved actin monomer-binding protein that promotes cofilin-dependent actin turnover in vitro and in vivo. However, little is known about the mechanism underlying this function. Here, we show that S. cerevisiae CAP binds with strong preference to ADP-G-actin (Kd 0.02 microM) compared with ATP-G-actin (Kd 1.9 microM) and competes directly with cofilin for binding ADP-G-actin. Further, CAP blocks actin monomer addition specifically to barbed ends of filaments, in contrast to profilin, which blocks monomer addition to pointed ends of filaments. The actin-binding domain of CAP is more extensive than previously suggested and includes a recently solved beta-sheet structure in the C-terminus of CAP and adjacent sequences. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we define evolutionarily conserved residues that mediate binding to ADP-G-actin and demonstrate that these activities are required for CAP function in vivo in directing actin organization and polarized cell growth. Together, our data suggest that in vivo CAP competes with cofilin for binding ADP-actin monomers, allows rapid nucleotide exchange to occur on actin, and then because of its 100-fold weaker binding affinity for ATP-actin compared with ADP-actin, allows other cellular factors such as profilin to take the handoff of ATP-actin and facilitate barbed end assembly.  相似文献   

16.
M A Geeves 《Biochemistry》1989,28(14):5864-5871
The equilibrium and dynamics of the interaction between actin, myosin subfragment 1 (S1), and ADP have been investigated by using actin which has been covalently labeled at Cys-374 with a pyrene group. The results are consistent with actin binding to S1.ADP (M.D) in a two-step reaction, A + M.D K1 equilibrium A-M.D K2 equilibrium A.M.D, in which the pyrene fluorescence only monitors the second step. In this model, K1 = 2.3 X 10(4) M-1 (k+1 = 4.6 X 10(4) M-1 s-1) and K2 = 10 (k+2 less than or equal to 4 s-1); i.e., both steps are relatively slow compared to the maximum turnover of the ATPase reaction. ADP dissociates from both M.D and A-M.D at 2 s-1 and from A.M.D at greater than or equal to 500 s-1; therefore, actin only accelerates the release of product from the A.M.D state. This model is consistent with the actomyosin ATPase model proposed by Geeves et al. [(1984) J. Muscle Res. Cell Motil. 5, 351]. The results suggest that A-M.D cannot break down at a rate greater than 4 s-1 by dissociation of ADP, by dissociation of actin, or by isomerizing to A.M.D. It is therefore unlikely to be significantly occupied in a rapidly contracting muscle, but it may have a role in a muscle contracting against a load where the ATPase rate is markedly inhibited. Under these conditions, this complex may have a role in maintaining tension with a low ATP turnover rate.  相似文献   

17.
The role of the bound nucleotide in the polymerization of actin.   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
R Cooke 《Biochemistry》1975,14(14):3250-3256
Three mucleotides, ATP, ADP, and an unsplit-table analog of ATP (adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMPPNP)), were bound to monomeric actin, and their effects on the rate and extent of the actin polymerization were studied. The kinetics of polymerization, assayed by the change in OD232, followed a simple exponential curve. The rates of polymerization were equal for bound ATP and AMPPNP; both of which were three to five times faster than the rate for ADP. The concentration of actin monomers in apparent equilibrium with the polymer, G(180 degrees longitude), was determined. Values of G(180 degrees longitude) in 100 mM KCl were found for different nucleotides to be: G-ATP(180 degrees longitude) = 0.7 mu-M, G-AMPPNP(180 degrees longitude) = 0.8 MU-M, and G-ADP(180 degrees longitude) = 3.4 mu-M. The equilibrium constant of the polymerization is given by K = [G(180 degrees longitude)]-minus 1 when no nucleotide is split. The polymerization of actin-ATP is more complex due to the splitting of the nucleotide and our data require that this polymerization involves more than one step. The kinetic parameters for the polymerization of actin-ATP can be explained by a simple scheme in which the nucleotide dephosphorylation occurs in a step following the polymerization step. The conclusions are: (1) the binding of ATP to actin monomer promotes polymerization slightly more than the binding of ADP, (2) actin bound ATP provides less than 4 kJ/mol of free energy to promote polymerization, and (3) the dephosphorylation of the nucleotide is not coupled to polymerization.  相似文献   

18.
We have investigated polymerization and the number of SH-groups of monomeric actin exposed in the presence of (beta, gamma)-substituted ATP-analogs. Actin, when depolymerized in a buffer containing 10 equiv. of APPCP exposes 4 thiol groups. The time course of the SH-titration is similar to that obtained when F-actin is depolymerized in a nucleotide free buffer. When actin is depolymerized in a buffer containing 10 equiv. of APPNP it also exposes 4 thiols. However, thiol-titration follows different kinetics. While one SH group reacts quickly the reaction of 3 others is retarded. We conclude that APPNP exhibits a shielding effect on part of the thiols for a period of time, while APPCP does not. In agreement with this, in the presence of APPNP yield of polymerization as well as stability against denaturation are distinctly higher than without added nucleotide or in the presence of APPCP. In line with this a hydrolysis product, most probably APPNH2, was associated with the filaments, as indicated by the replacement of tritiated ADP during polymerization, and from analysis of the attached nucleotide. Under the same conditions APPCP replaced tritiated ADP only to a small extent. The data indicate that APPNP interacts with monomeric actin much less than ATP and still less than ADP, but more so APPCP. APPNP is cleaved by actin ATPase and a hydrolysis product is incorporated into filaments.  相似文献   

19.
Resonance energy transfer measurements were made between a donor fluorophore, N-(bromacetyl)-N'-(1-sulpho-5-naphthyl)ethylenediamine, located on the single cysteine of the Al light chain of myosin (S1(A1), and an acceptor fluorophore, 5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein, sited on Cys-374 of actin. In the binary rigor complex a transfer efficiency of 24% was noted, representing a spatial separation of about 6 nm. When the same measurements were made using a stable analogue of S1 X ATP, in which the fast reacting SH1 thiol group is crosslinked to another thiol group in the 20 kDa domain of S1, the 2 fluorophores were found to have moved closer together by greater than or equal to 3 nm. This provides, for the first time, direct experimental evidence for a change in structure of the myosin crossbridge that could account for tension generation.  相似文献   

20.
Umetskaia VN  Pinaev GP 《Biofizika》2001,46(2):197-202
The mechanism of transformation of ATP-G actin to F actin by the action of Mg2+ ions was studied by measuring UV absorption spectra of solutions of monomeric Ca(2+)-ATP-G actin in the presence of MgCl2 and of Mg(2+)-ATP-G actin. The protein solutions contained no excessive free ATP. The changes in the UV absorption spectra of monomeric ATP-G actin that result from the interaction with Mg2+ are explained by the formation of ADP-G actin from monomeric ATP-G actin due to hydrolysis of ATP which is considered as the initial step of the transformation to F actin.  相似文献   

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