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1.
We have shown that the phosphorylation of smooth muscle regulatory myosin light chain (L20) with myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) produces faster moving bands (GMP1: heterodimer myosin with 1 unphosphorylated L20 and 1 mono-phosphorylated L20, GMP2: homodimer myosin with 2 mono-phosphorylated L20S) on native pyrophosphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PP1 PAGE) (J. Biochem. 100, 259-268, 1986; J. Biochem. 100, 1681-1684, 1986). However, the mobility of the myosin phosphorylated, at its L20, with protein kinase C (PK-C) was the same that of the unphosphorylated myosin (GM) on PPi PAGE. When the myosin prephosphorylated with MLCK was further phosphorylated with PK-C, PPi PAGE analysis showed only one band comigrating with GM, i.e., GMP1 and GMP2 migrated to the same position as GM. Conversely, when the myosin prephosphorylated with PK-C was further phosphorylated with MLCK, GMP1 and GMP2 were not produced. Thus the effect of L20 phosphorylated with PK-C is quite the opposite of that with MLCK, and the former predominated over the latter. We speculate that phosphorylation of L20 with PK-C "freezes" myosin in the inactive state.  相似文献   

2.
Smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) can serve as a substrate for the Ca2+-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) as well as for the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase, myosin light chain kinase. When turkey gizzard HMM is incubated with protein kinase C, 1.7-2.2 mol of phosphate are incorporated per mol of HMM, all of it into the 20,000-Da light chain of HMM. Two-dimensional peptide mapping following tryptic hydrolysis revealed that protein kinase C phosphorylated a different site on the 20,000-Da HMM light chain than did myosin light chain kinase. Moreover, sequential phosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase and protein kinase C resulted in the incorporation of 4 mol of phosphate/mol of HMM, i.e. 2 mol of phosphate into each 20,000-Da light chain. When unphosphorylated HMM was phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase, its actin-activated MgATPase activity increased from 4 nmol to 156 nmol of phosphate released/mg of HMM/min. Subsequent phosphorylation of this phosphorylated HMM by protein kinase C decreased the actin-activated MgATPase activity of HMM to 75 nmol of phosphate released/mg of HMM/min.  相似文献   

3.
Actin-activation of unphosphorylated gizzard myosin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effect of light chain phosphorylation on the actin-activated ATPase activity and filament stability of gizzard smooth muscle myosin was examined under a variety of conditions. When unphosphorylated and phosphorylated gizzard myosins were monomeric, their MgATPase activities were not activated or only very slightly activated by actin, and when they were filamentous, their MgATPase activities could be stimulated by actin. At pH 7.0, the unphosphorylated myosin in the presence of ATP required 2-3 times as much Mg2+ for filament formation as did the phosphorylated myosin. The amount of stimulation of the unphosphorylated myosin filaments depended upon pH, temperature, and the presence of tropomyosin. At pH 7.0 and 37 degrees C and at pH 6.8 and 25 degrees C, the MgATPase activity of filamentous, unphosphorylated, gizzard myosin was stimulated 10-fold by actin complexed with gizzard tropomyosin. These tropomyosin-actin-activated ATPase activities were 40% of those of the phosphorylated myosin. Under other conditions, pH 7.5 and 37 degrees C and pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C, even though the unphosphorylated myosin was mostly filamentous, its MgATPase activity was stimulated only 4-fold by tropomyosin-actin. Thus, both unphosphorylated and phosphorylated gizzard myosin filaments appear to be active, but the cycling rate of the unphosphorylated myosin is less than that of the phosphorylated myosin. Active unphosphorylated myosin may help explain the ability of smooth muscles to maintain tension in the absence of myosin light chain phosphorylation.  相似文献   

4.
Like other vertebrate nonmuscle myosins, thymus myosin contains two phosphorylatable light chains. Phosphorylation of these light chains regulates the actin-activated ATPase of this myosin. The time courses for the phosphorylation of both monomeric and filamentous thymus myosin by gizzard myosin light chain kinase fitted single exponentials to greater than 85% phosphorylation. This indicates that the two heads of thymus myosin are phosphorylated at the same rate and suggests that these phosphorylations are random processes. The actin-activated ATPases of thymus myosins with different levels of light chain phosphorylation were also determined. A linear relationship was obtained between the extent of light chain phosphorylation and stimulation of the actin-activated ATPase. Since thymus myosin appears to be phosphorylated randomly, this linear relationship indicates that phosphorylation of one head of thymus myosin stimulates the actin-activated ATPase of that head independently of the phosphorylation of the second head. The apparent random phosphorylation of thymus myosin light chains contrasts with the reported ordered phosphorylation of the light chains of filamentous smooth (gizzard) muscle myosin. Also, while the actin-activated ATPases of the two heads of thymus myosin are regulated independently, both heads of gizzard myosin must be phosphorylated before the ATPase of either head is activated by actin.  相似文献   

5.
One of the two regulatory light chains, RLC-a, of scallop smooth muscle myosin was fully phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase of chicken gizzard muscle. The residue phosphorylated was Ser. It may be the Ser at number 11 from the N-terminal. The sequence of 9 residues around the Ser-11, QRATSNVFA, is identical with that around the phosphorylatable Ser of LC20 of chicken gizzard myosin. RLC-a was also phosphorylated slowly by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The phosphorylation of RLC-a may be involved in the regulatory system for the catch contraction of scallop muscle.  相似文献   

6.
Treatment of human platelets with 162 nM 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) resulted in phosphorylation of a number of peptides, including myosin heavy chain and the 20-kDa myosin light chain. The site phosphorylated on the myosin heavy chain was localized by two-dimensional peptide mapping to a serine residue(s) in a single major tryptic phosphopeptide. This phosphopeptide co-migrated with a tryptic peptide that was produced following in vitro phosphorylation of platelet myosin heavy chain using protein kinase C. The sites phosphorylated in the 20-kDa myosin light chain in intact cells were analyzed by two-dimensional mapping of tryptic peptides and found to correspond to Ser1 and Ser2 in the turkey gizzard myosin light chain. In vitro phosphorylation of purified human platelet myosin by protein kinase C showed that in addition to Ser1 and Ser2, a third site corresponding to Thr9 in turkey gizzard myosin light chain is also phosphorylated. The phosphorylatable myosin light chains from human platelets were found to consist of two major isoforms present in approximately equal amounts, but differing in their molecular weights and isoelectric points. A third, minor isoform was also visualized by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Following treatment with TPA, both the mono- and diphosphorylated forms of each isoform could be visualized, and the sites of phosphorylation were identified. The phosphate content rose from negligible amounts found prior to treatment with TPA to 1.2 mol of phosphate/mol of myosin light chain and 0.7 mol of phosphate/mol of myosin heavy chain following treatment. These results suggest that TPA mediates phosphorylation of both myosin light and heavy chains in intact platelets by activation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,101(5):1897-1902
In smooth muscles there is no organized sarcomere structure wherein the relative movement of myosin filaments and actin filaments has been documented during contraction. Using the recently developed in vitro assay for myosin-coated bead movement (Sheetz, M.P., and J.A. Spudich, 1983, Nature (Lond.)., 303:31-35), we were able to quantitate the rate of movement of both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin on ordered actin filaments derived from the giant alga, Nitella. We found that movement of turkey gizzard smooth muscle myosin on actin filaments depended upon the phosphorylation of the 20-kD myosin light chains. About 95% of the beads coated with phosphorylated myosin moved at velocities between 0.15 and 0.4 micron/s, depending upon the preparation. With unphosphorylated myosin, only 3% of the beads moved and then at a velocity of only approximately 0.01-0.04 micron/s. The effects of phosphorylation were fully reversible after dephosphorylation with a phosphatase prepared from smooth muscle. Analysis of the velocity of movement as a function of phosphorylation level indicated that phosphorylation of both heads of a myosin molecule was required for movement and that unphosphorylated myosin appears to decrease the rate of movement of phosphorylated myosin. Mixing of phosphorylated smooth muscle myosin with skeletal muscle myosin which moves at 2 microns/s resulted in a decreased rate of bead movement, suggesting that the more slowly cycling smooth muscle myosin is primarily determining the velocity of movement in such mixtures.  相似文献   

8.
Protein kinase C phosphorylates different sites on the 20,000-Da light chain of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) than did myosin light chain kinase (Nishikawa, M., Hidaka, H., and Adelstein, R. S. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14069-14072). Although protein kinase C incorporates 1 mol of phosphate into 1 mol of 20,000-Da light chain when either HMM or the whole myosin molecule is used as a substrate, it catalyzes the incorporation of up to 3 mol of phosphate/mol of 20,000-Da light chain when the isolated light chains are used as a substrate. Threonine is the major phosphoamino acid resulting from phosphorylation of HMM by protein kinase C. Prephosphorylation of HMM by protein kinase C decreases the rate of phosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase due to a 9-fold increase of the Km for prephosphorylated HMM compared to that of unphosphorylated HMM. Prephosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase also results in a decrease of the rate of phosphorylation by protein kinase C due to a 2-fold increase of the Km for HMM. Both prephosphorylations have little or no effect on the maximum rate of phosphorylation. The sequential phosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase and protein kinase C results in a decrease in actin-activated MgATPase activity due to a 7-fold increase of the Km for actin over that observed with phosphorylated HMM by myosin light chain kinase but has little effect on the maximum rate of the actin-activated MgATPase activity. The decrease of the actin-activated MgATPase activity correlates well with the extent of the additional phosphorylation of HMM by protein kinase C following initial phosphorylation by myosin light chain kinase.  相似文献   

9.
Regulation of the actin-activated ATPase of aorta smooth muscle myosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Phosphorylation of the 20,000-Da light chains, LC20, of vertebrate smooth muscle myosins is thought to be the primary mechanism for regulating the actin-activated ATPase activities of these myosins and consequently smooth muscle contraction. While actin stimulates the MgATPase activities of phosphorylated smooth muscle myosins, it is generally believed that the MgATPase activities of the unphosphorylated myosins are not stimulated by actin. However, under conditions where both unphosphorylated (5% phosphorylated LC20) and phosphorylated calf aorta myosins are mostly filamentous, the maximum rate, Vmax, of the actin-activated ATPase of the unphosphorylated myosin is one-half that of the phosphorylated myosin. While LC20 phosphorylation causes only a modest increase in Vmax, in the presence of tropomyosin, this phosphorylation does cause up to a 10-fold decrease in Kapp, the actin concentration required to achieve 1/2 Vmax. In the presence of low concentrations of tropomyosin/actin, a linear relationship is obtained between the fraction of LC20 phosphorylated and stimulation of the actin-activated ATPase. The relatively high actin-activated ATPase activity of unphosphorylated aorta myosin suggests that other proteins may be involved in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. In contrast to the results presented here for aorta myosin, it has been reported that actin does not activate the MgATPase activity of unphosphorylated gizzard myosin and that the actin-activated ATPase of gizzard myosin increases more slowly than LC20 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

10.
31P and 1H n.m.r. studies of the phosphorylatable light chains from rabbit fast skeletal and chicken gizzard muscles in the isolated state and in the intact myosin molecule indicate that the N-terminal region of the light chain containing the sites of phosphorylation has independent segmental flexibility. The ionization behaviour of serine phosphate in both rabbit skeletal and chicken gizzard P light chains exhibits cooperativity and is compatible with the phosphate group being influenced by neighbouring positively charged side-chains. No marked difference in phosphate ionization behaviour was apparent between the monophosphorylated P light chains of rabbit skeletal and chicken gizzard myosins. From 1H and 31P n.m.r. studies of the overall conformation, side-chain ionization properties and the spectral effects of titration with an anionic paramagnetic reagent bound at the basic N-terminal region, it is concluded that Thr-18 and Ser-19 are phosphorylated in the bisphosphorylated P light chain of gizzard myosin, the latter residue being the site of monophosphorylation. In the presence of F-actin the mobility of the serine phosphate of the P light chain of intact gizzard myosin was reduced. No interaction between the isolated P light chain and F-actin was however detected. These results are discussed with reference to the observed conformational features of the P light chain.  相似文献   

11.
We have determined the crystal structure of a phosphorylated smooth-muscle myosin light chain domain (LCD). This reconstituted LCD is of a sea scallop catch muscle myosin with its phosphorylatable regulatory light chain (RLC SmoA). In the crystal structure, Arg16, an arginine residue that is present in this isoform but not in vertebrate smooth-muscle RLC, stabilizes the phosphorylation site. This arginine interacts with the carbonyl group of the phosphorylation-site serine in the unphosphorylated LCD (determined previously), and with the phosphate group when the serine is phosphorylated. However, the overall conformation of the LCD is essentially unchanged upon phosphorylation. This result provides additional evidence that phosphorylation of the RLC is unlikely to act as an on-switch in regulation of scallop catch muscle myosin.  相似文献   

12.
Although it is generally believed that phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain of myosin is required before smooth muscle can develop force, it is not known if the overall degree of phosphorylation can also modulate the rate at which cross-bridges cycle. To address this question, an in vitro motility assay was used to observe the motion of single actin filaments interacting with smooth muscle myosin copolymers composed of varying ratios of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated myosin. The results suggest that unphosphorylated myosin acts as a load to slow down the rate at which actin is moved by the faster cycling phosphorylated cross-bridges. Myosin that was chemically modified to generate a noncycling analogue of the "weakly" bound conformation was similarly able to slow down phosphorylated myosin. The observed modulation of actin velocity as a function of copolymer composition can be accounted for by a model based on mechanical interactions between cross-bridges.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphorylation of the 20,000-dalton light chains of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) from turkey gizzards results in a large increase in the actin-activated MgATPase activity over that observed with unphosphorylated HMM. In an attempt to define which step in the kinetic cycle is affected by phosphorylation, we have measured the binding of both unphosphorylated and phosphorylated HMM to actin in the presence of ATP using sedimentation. There was only a 4-fold difference in the actin binding constants of unphosphorylated HMM (5.35 x 10(3) M-1) and fully phosphorylated HMM (2.35 x 10(4) M-1). In contrast, the maximum rate of the actin-activated MgATPase activity (Vmax) of phosphorylated HMM was 25 times greater than that for unphosphorylated HMM. These data rule out a mechanism whereby the unphosphorylated light chain of myosin regulates actin-myosin interaction by directly or indirectly blocking the binding of HMM to actin. This implies that some step in the kinetic cycle other than the binding of HMM to actin must be regulated. We have also measured the rate constant for ATP hydrolysis (the initial phosphate burst) under the same conditions and found that this step was very fast compared to the steady state ATPase rate and was unaffected by phosphorylation. This suggests that the step which is regulated by phosphorylation is either phosphate release or a step preceding phosphate release but following ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

14.
Vertebrate nonmuscle myosins contain two phosphorylatable light chains. The maximum rate, Vmax, of the actin-activated adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) of unphosphorylated calf thymus myosin was found to be about 100 nmol/(min X mg), the same as that of thymus myosin with two phosphorylated light chains. However, the Kapp (actin concentration required to achieve 1/2 Vmax) of the unphosphorylated myosin was 15-20-fold greater than that of the phosphorylated myosin. When actin complexed with either skeletal muscle tropomyosin or calf thymus tropomyosin was used, the values for Vmax were about the same as those obtained with F-actin. In the presence of skeletal muscle tropomyosin, the Kapp of the unphosphorylated myosin was only 2-3-fold greater than that of the phosphorylated myosin, and in the presence of thymus tropomyosin, there was about a 5-fold difference in their Kapp values. Thus, light chain phosphorylation regulates the actin-activated ATPase of thymus myosin not by increasing Vmax but rather by decreasing the Kapp of this myosin for actin. These rather small differences in Kapp suggest that other proteins may be involved in the regulation of the actin-activated ATPase of thymus myosin. Regulated actin (actin plus skeletal muscle troponin-tropomyosin) was used to examine possible effects of thin-filament regulatory proteins. In the presence of calcium, phosphorylation caused only a slight increase in Vmax and a 2-fold decrease in Kapp of the regulated actin-activated ATPase of thymus myosin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The limited chymotryptic digestion of unphosphorylated gizzard myosin in 0.15 M NaCl converted a papain-insensitive myosin in ATP to a papain-sensitive one. This conversion without phosphorylation of its 20-kDa light chain was accompanied with truncation of a 200-kDa heavy chain to a 195-kDa fragment and with the degradation of a 20-kDa light chain. Papain also yielded the 195-kDa fragment from the heavy chain, irrespective of the presence or absence of ATP. However, the ATP-induced protection of unphosphorylated myosin from the papain-digestion disappeared concurrently with degradation of the 20-kDa light chain by papain rather than the truncation of heavy chain. Papers from two laboratories [Onishi, H. & Watanabe, S. (1984) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 95, 903-905; Kumon, A., Yasuda, S., Murakami, N., and Matsumura, S. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 140, 265-271] have reported that the ATP-protection of unphosphorylated myosin against papain is not observed after the 20-kDa light chain has been phosphorylated. The present results might indicate that the ATP-induced protection is also abolished through the chymotryptic degradation of the 20-kDa light chain.  相似文献   

16.
Specific phosphorylation of the human ventricular cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (MYL2) modifies the protein at S15. This modification affects MYL2 secondary structure and modulates the Ca(2+) sensitivity of contraction in cardiac tissue. Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (smMLCK) is a ubiquitous kinase prevalent in uterus and present in other contracting tissues including cardiac muscle. The recombinant 130 kDa (short) smMLCK phosphorylated S15 in MYL2 in vitro. Specific modification of S15 was verified using the direct detection of the phospho group on S15 with mass spectrometry. SmMLCK also specifically phosphorylated myosin regulatory light chain S15 in porcine ventricular myosin and chicken gizzard smooth muscle myosin (S20 in smooth muscle) but failed to phosphorylate the myosin regulatory light chain in rabbit skeletal myosin. Phosphorylation kinetics, measured using a novel fluorescence method eliminating the use of radioactive isotopes, indicates similar Michaelis-Menten V(max) and K(M) for regulatory light chain S15 phosphorylation rates in MYL2, porcine ventricular myosin, and chicken gizzard myosin. These data demonstrate that smMLCK is a specific and efficient kinase for the in vitro phosphorylation of MYL2, cardiac, and smooth muscle myosin. Whether smMLCK plays a role in cardiac muscle regulation or response to a disease causing stimulus is unclear but it should be considered a potentially significant kinase in cardiac tissue on the basis of its specificity, kinetics, and tissue expression.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphorylation-dependent regulation of Limulus myosin   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Myosin from Limulus, the horseshoe crab, is shown to be regulated by a calcium-calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of its regulatory light chains. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of a Limulus myosin preparation reveals three light chain bands. Two of these light chains have been termed regulatory light chains based on their ability to bind to light chain-denuded scallop myofibrils (Sellers, J. R., Chantler, P. D., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 144, 223-245). Ths other light chain does not bind to these myofibrils and is thus termed the essential light chain. Both Limulus regulatory light chains can be phosphorylated with a highly purified turkey gizzard myosin light chain kinase or with a partially purified myosin light chain kinase which can be isolated from Limulus muscle by affinity chromatography on a calmodulin-Sepharose column. Phosphorylation with both of these enzymes requires calcium and calmodulin. Limulus myosin is isolated in an unphosphorylated form. The MgATPase of this unphosphorylated myosin is only slightly activated by rabbit skeletal muscle actin plus tropomyosin. The calcium-dependent phosphorylation of the myosin results in an increase in the actin-activated MgATPase rate. Once phosphorylated, the actin-activated MgATPase rate is only slightly modified by calcium. This suggests that calcium operates mainly at the level of the myosin kinase-calmodulin system.  相似文献   

18.
The Nitella-based in vitro motility assay developed by Sheetz and Spudich (Sheetz, M.P., and Spudich, J. A. (1983) Nature 303, 31-35) is a quantitative assay for measuring the velocity of myosin-coated beads over an organized substratum of actin. We have used this assay to analyze the effect of phosphorylation of various sites on the 20,000-Da light chain of smooth muscle and cytoplasmic myosins. Phosphorylation by myosin light chain kinase at serine 19 on the 20,000-Da light chain subunit of smooth muscle myosin from turkey gizzard, bovine trachea and aorta, and of cytoplasmic myosin from human platelets was required for bead movement. The individual phosphorylated myosin-coated beads moved at characteristic rates under the same conditions (turkey gizzard myosin, 0.2 micron/s; aorta or trachea myosin, 0.12 micron/s; and platelet myosin, 0.04 micron/s; in contrast, rabbit skeletal muscle myosin, 2 micron/s). Myosin light chain kinase can also phosphorylate threonine 18 in addition to serine 19, and this phosphorylation resulted in an increase in the actin-activated MgATPase activity (Ikebe, M., and Hartshorne, D.J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10027-10031). Phosphorylation at this site had no effect on the velocity of smooth muscle myosin-coated beads. Protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme) can also phosphorylate two to three sites on the 20,000-Da light chain, and this phosphorylation alone did not result in the movement of myosin-coated beads. When myosin that had been previously phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase at serine 19 was also phosphorylated by protein kinase C, myosin-coated beads moved at the same velocity as beads coated with myosin phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase alone. Tropomyosin binding to actin also had an activating effect on the actin-activated MgATPase activity through an effect on the Vmax and also resulted in an increase in the velocity of myosin-coated beads.  相似文献   

19.
Treatment of phosphorylated chicken gizzard myosin which had incorporated 1.5 mol of phosphate per 4.7 x 10(5) g of protein with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene resulted in the modification of the heavy and light chains when 5.8 mol of the reagent were bound to myosin. Concurrently, the K+-ATPase activity was inhibited and the modified myosin possessed actin activated-ATPase activity. Thiolysis of nearly 2 mol of the dinitrophenyl group mainly from the heavy chains (and some light chains) of the modified myosin with 2-mercaptoethanol restored the K+-ATPase activity. Digestion of phosphorylated gizzard myosin with chymotrypsin or papain occurred to a lesser extent than a control myosin. Chymotryptic fragments of phosphorylated and dinitrophenylated myosin were formed at a faster rate than those of dinitrophenylated myosin alone suggesting that phosphorylation of the light chain of Mr 20,000 altered the susceptibility of the heavy chains of myosin to proteolysis. Phosphorylation of dinitrophenylated gizzard myosin which had incorporated 5.5 mol of 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene per 4.7 x 10(5) g of protein was the same as that of a control myosin; this was also the case for the thiolyzed dinitrophenylated myosin. In the absence of calcium, phosphorylation of control and dinitrophenylated myosins decreased by 73% suggesting that the phosphorylation reaction was calcium dependent. Phosphorylation and dinitrophenylation induced conformational changes in the light chains of gizzard myosin that may be involved in maintaining the structure of the heavy chain region.  相似文献   

20.
Amino acid sequences of peptides containing the phosphorylation site of bovine cardiac myosin light chain (L2) were determined. The site was localized to a serine residue in the tentative amino terminus of the light chain and is homologous to phosphorylation sites in other myosin light chains. Phosphorylation of bovine cardiac light chain by chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase was Ca2+-calmodulin dependent. Kinetic data gave a Km of 107; microM and a Vmax of 23.6 mumol min-1 mg-1. In contrast to what has been observed with smooth muscle light chains, neither the phosphorylation site fragment of the cardiac light chain nor a synthetic tetradecapeptide containing the phosphorylation site were effectively phosphorylated by the chicken gizzard kinase. Phosphorylation of cardiac myosin light chains by chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase, therefore, requires other regions of the light chain in addition to a phosphate acceptor site.  相似文献   

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