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1.
Using polarization microfluorimetry, the interaction of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) isoforms containing alkali light chains A1 and A2 respectively (S1(A1) and S1(A2] with F-actin of single glycerinated rabbit skeletal muscle fibers was studied. The alkali light chains of S1 were substituted by reassociation for A1 or A2 chains modified by a fluorescent label (1.5-IAEDANS) at the single SH-group located in the C-terminus. It was found that in S1(A1) bound to muscle fiber F-actin the mobility of the fluorescent label is lower than in S1(A2). At the same time the S1(A1) and S1(A2) interaction with F-actin induces similar changes in polarized fluorescence of rhodamine linked to falloidine which, in turn, is specifically bound to F-actin. It is concluded that the both S1 isoforms bind to F-actin and produce similar effects on the conformational state of actin filaments in muscle fibers. Local differences between S1(A1) and S1(A2) seem to be due to the interaction of the N-terminus of A1 within S1(A1) with the C-terminal region of actin.  相似文献   

2.
Muscle fibres, free of myosin, troponin and tropomyosin, containing thin filaments reconstructed from G-actin and modified by fluorescent label 1,5-IAEDANS were used for polarized microfluorimetric studies of the effect of tropomyosin (TM) from smooth muscles, and of subfragment 1 (S1) from skeletal muscles on the structural state of F-actin. TM and S1 were shown to initiate different changes in polarized fluorescence of 1,5-IAEDANS of F-actin: TM increases, whereas S1 decreases fluorescent anisotropy. It was suggested that the structural state of F-actin may differ in the C-terminal of polypeptide chain of actin.  相似文献   

3.
The orientation and mobility of an N-(iodoacetyl)-(1-naphtyl-5-sulpho-ethylenediamine) fluorescent probe (1.5-IAEDANS) specifically bound to Cys-374 of actin in ghost muscle fibers isolated from fast and slow rat muscles were studied by polarized fluorimetry in the absence and presence of a myosin subfragment-1 (S1) in intact rats and in animals with a gradual (2–5 weeks) reduction in the level of thyroid hormones (development of hypothyroidism). The binding of S1 to F-actin of ghost muscle fibers was shown to induce changes in the orientation of dipoles of the 1.5-IAEDANS fluorescent probe and in the relative amount of the randomly oriented fluorophores that indicates changes in actin subdomain-1 orientation and mobility resulting from formation of its strong binding with S1. This effect is markedly inhibited by the development of hypothyroidism. The maximal effect of hypothyroidism is observed after 34 days of the development of the disease. It is suggested that the change in the thyroid status in muscle inhibits the ability of F-actin to form strong binding with myosin, which is essential for the generation of force.  相似文献   

4.
The role of the N-terminal region of myosin light chain 1 (LC1) in actomyosin interaction was investigated using an IgG monoclonal antibody (2H2) directed against the N-terminal region of LC1. We defined the binding site of 2H2 by examining its cross-reactivity with myosin light chains from a variety of species and with synthetic oligopeptides. Our findings suggest that 2H2 is directed against the N-terminal region of LC1 which includes the trimethylated alanine residue at the N-terminus. In the presence of 2H2, the rate of actomyosin superprecipitation was reduced, although the extent was not. 2H2 caused a reduction in the Vmax of both myosin and chymotryptic S1(A1) actin-activated ATPase activity, while the Km appeared to be unaltered. The Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of myosin alone was also unaffected. Binding studies revealed that 2H2 did not prevent the formation of acto-S1 complex, either in the presence or in the absence of ATP, nor did it affect the ability of ATP to dissociate S1 from F-actin. Our findings suggest that the N-terminal region of LC1 is not essential for actin binding but is involved in modulating actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin.  相似文献   

5.
A third isoform of myosin I has been isolated from Acanthamoeba and designated myosin IC. Peptide maps and immunoassays indicate that myosin IC is not a modified form of myosin IA, IB, or II. However, myosin IC has most of the distinctive properties of a myosin I. It is a globular protein of native Mr approximately 162,000, apparently composed of a single 130-kDa heavy chain and a pair of 14-kDa light chains. It is soluble in MgATP at low ionic strength, conditions favoring filament assembly by myosin II. Myosin IC has high Ca2+- and (K+,EDTA)-ATPase activities. Its low Mg2+-ATPase activity is stimulated to a maximum rate of 20 s-1 by the addition of F-actin if its heavy chain has been phosphorylated by myosin I heavy chain kinase. The dependence of the Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin IC on F-actin concentration is triphasic; and, at fixed concentrations of F-action, this activity increases cooperatively as the concentration of myosin IC is increased. These unusual kinetics were first demonstrated for myosins IA and IB and shown to be due to the presence of two actin-binding sites on each heavy chain which enable those myosins I to cross-link actin filaments. Myosin IC is also capable of cross-linking F-actin, which, together with the kinetics of its actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity, suggests that it, like myosins IA and IB, possesses two independent actin-binding domains.  相似文献   

6.
F Nakamura  M Naka  T Tanaka 《FEBS letters》1992,314(1):93-96
Ruthenium red was found to inhibit actin-activated myosin Mg(2+)-ATPase in smooth muscle and to bind to myosin heavy chain, but not to F-actin. The inhibition by Ruthenium red of actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase was of the competitive type with respect to actin (Ki 4.4 microM) and of the non-competitive type with respect to ATP (Ki 6.6 microM). However, Ruthenium red scarcely dissociated the acto-heavy meromyosin complex during the ATPase reaction. These results suggest that Ruthenium red interacts directly with the binding site for F-actin on the myosin heavy chain. This site is considered to be necessary not for maintaining the binding affinity of myosin for F-actin, but for activation of the Mg(2+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

7.
We have purified a cofactor protein previously shown (Pollard, T. D., and Korn, E. D. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 4691-4697) to be required for actin activation of the Mg2+-ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosin I. The purified cofactor protein is a novel myosin kinase that phosphorylates the single heavy chain, but neither of the two light chains, of Acanthamoeba myosin I. Phosphorylation of Acanthamoeba myosin I by the purified cofactor protein requires ATP and Mg2+ but is Ca2+-independent. The Mg2+-ATPase activity of phosphorylated Acanthamoeba myosin I is highly activated by F-actin in the absence of cofactor protein. Actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity is lost when phosphorylated Acanthamoeba myosin I is dephosphorylated by platelet phosphatase. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation have no effect on the (K+,EDTA)-ATPase and Ca2+-ATPase activities of Acanthamoeba myosin I. These results show that cofactor protein is an Acanthamoeba myosin I heavy chain kinase and that phosphorylation of the heavy chain of this myosin is required for actin activation of its Mg2+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

8.
Using glycerinated muscle fibers, free of myosin, tropomyosin and troponin, a study was made of the structural state of F-actin modified by N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(1-naphthyl-5-sulfo)-ethylendiamine (1.5-IAEDANS) and by rhodaminyl--phalloin at decoration of thin filaments with a proteolytic fragment of myosin--heavy meromyosin containing phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin light chains. The heavy meromyosin used has three SH-groups of heavy chain SH1, SH2 and SH chi modified by bifunctional reagent N,N'-n-phenylmaleimide (SH1-SH2, SH2-SH chi). At decoration of thin filaments with heavy meromyosin, some changes in polarized fluorescence of rhodaminyl--phalloin and 1.5-IAEDANS independent of phosphorylation of myosin light chains were found. Fluorescence anisotropy of the fiber was found to depend primarily on the character of heavy chain of SH-group modification. The ability of heavy chains to change their conformations is supposed to play an important role in the mechanism of myosin system modulation of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

9.
Myosin X is a member of the diverse myosin superfamily that is ubiquitously expressed in various mammalian tissues. Although its association with actin in cells has been shown, little is known about its biochemical and mechanoenzymatic function at the molecular level. We expressed bovine myosin X containing the entire head, neck, and coiled-coil domain and purified bovine myosin X in Sf9 cells. The Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of myosin X was significantly activated by actin with low K(ATP). The actin-activated ATPase activity was reduced at Ca(2+) concentrations above pCa 5 in which 1 mol of calmodulin light chain dissociates from the heavy chain. Myosin X translocates F-actin filaments with the velocity of 0.3 microm/s with the direction toward the barbed end. The actin translocating activity was inhibited at concentrations of Ca(2+) at pCa 6 in which no calmodulin dissociation takes place, suggesting that the calmodulin dissociation is not required for the inhibition of the motility. Unlike class V myosin, which shows a high affinity for F-actin in the presence of ATP, the K(actin) of the myosin X ATPase was much higher than that of myosin V. Consistently nearly all actin dissociated from myosin X in the presence of ATP. ADP did not significantly inhibit the actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin X, suggesting that the ADP release step is not rate-limiting. These results suggest that myosin X is a nonprocessive motor. Consistently myosin X failed to support the actin translocation at low density in an in vitro motility assay where myosin V, a processive motor, supports the actin filament movement.  相似文献   

10.
Earlier 1H-NMR experiments on the myosin subfragment-1 (S1) light chain isoenzymes from rabbit fast muscle, containing either the A1 or the A2 alkali light chains [S1(A1) or S1(A2)], have shown that the 41-residue N-terminal extension of A1, rich in proline, alanine and lysine residues, is freely mobile in solution but that this mobility is constrained in the acto-S1(A1) complex [Prince et al. (1981) Eur. J. Biochem. 121, 213-219]. It is now established that this N-terminal region of the A1-light chain interacts directly with the C-terminal region of actin in the acto-S1(A1) complex. This was shown by covalently labelling the Cys-374 residue of actin with a spin-label and observing the enhanced relaxation this paramagnetic centre induced in the 1H-NMR spectrum of S1(A1). In particular, the signal arising from the -N+(CH3)3 protons of alpha-N-trimethylalanine (Me3Ala) were monitored as this residue is uniquely sited at the N-terminus of the A1 light chain [Henry et al. (1982) FEBS Lett. 144, 11-15]. Experiments using complexes of actin with either the N-terminal 37-residue peptide of A1, S1(A1) or heavy meromyosin indicate that the N-terminal region of A1 is binding in a similar manner to actin in each case, with the N-terminal Me3Ala residue within 1.5 nm of the spin label introduced to Cys-374 of actin. A similar strategy was adopted to show that the Me3Ala residue can also be found close (less than 1.5 nm) to the fast-reacting SH1 thiol group on the S1 heavy chain. These data, together with published work, have been used to suggest a possible organisation for the polypeptide chains in the myosin head.  相似文献   

11.
To probe the molecular properties of the actin recognition site on the smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, the rigor complexes between skeletal F-actin and chicken gizzard myosin subfragments 1 (S1) were investigated by limited proteolysis and by chemical cross-linking with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethyl-amino)propyl]carbodiimide. Earlier, these approaches were used to analyze the actin site on the skeletal muscle myosin heads [Mornet, D., Bertrand, R., Pantel, P., Audemard, E., & Kassab, R. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 2110-2120; Labbé, J.P., Mornet, D., Roseau, G., & Kassab, R. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 6897-6902]. In contrast to the case of the skeletal S1, the cleavage with trypsin or papain of the sensitive COOH-terminal 50K-26K junction of the head heavy chain had no effect on the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase activity of the smooth S1. Moreover, actin binding had no significant influence on the proteolysis at this site whereas it abolished the scission of the skeletal S1 heavy chain. The COOH-terminal 26K segment of the smooth papain S1 heavy chain was converted by trypsin into a 25K peptide derivative, but it remained intact in the actin-S1 complex. A single actin monomer was cross-linked with the carbodiimide reagent to the intact 97K heavy chain of the smooth papain S1. Experiments performed on the complexes between F-actin and the fragmented S1 indicated that the site of cross-linking resides within the COOH-terminal 25K fragment of the S1 heavy chain. Thus, for both the striated and smooth muscle myosins, this region appears to be in contact with F-actin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
As previously reported when a specific thiol group, S2, of myosin reacts with N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), its Ca2+-ATPase activity is decreased. Therefore, the reactivity of S2 can be estimated by measuring the decrement of the enzymatic activity. Using the change in the reactivity as a structural probe, we investigated whether F-actin affects the conformation around the region containing S2 under physiological conditions (at neutral pH and low ionic strength). 1. Experiments were carried out with heavy meromyosin (HMM), S1 of which had heen blocked with NEM, to observe the reactivity of S2 alone. In the experiments done in the presence of F-actin, the Ca2+-ATPase activity was measured using the heavy meromyosin fraction after actin had been removed by centrifugation and gel filtration. 2. ATP and other nucleotides activated the reactivity of S2 in the presence of Mg2+. On the other hand, F-actin markedly activated the reactivity of S2 which had been increased by ATP, but not by the other nucleotides. 3. The above cooperative action of F-actin with ATP was not observed in the presence of Ca2+ instead of Mg2+, or above 0.2 M KCl. These results suggest that the S2 region of the myosin molecule is a key region in the molecular interaction of the actin myosin-ATP system under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

13.
The structural state of tropomyosin (TM) modified by 5-(iodoacetamidoethyl)-aminonaphthalene-1-sulfonate (1.5-IAEDANS) upon F-actin decoration with myosin subfragment 1 (S1) and heavy meromyosin (HMM) in glycerinated myosin- and troponin-free muscle fibers was studied. HMM preparations contained native phosphorylated myosin light chains, while S1 preparations did not. The changes in the polarized fluorescence of 1.5-IAEDANS-TM during the F-actin interaction with S1 were independent of light chains phosphorylation and Ca2+ concentration, but were dependent on these factors during the F-actin interaction with HMM. The binding of myosin heads to F-actin is supposed to initiate conformational changes in TM which are accompanied by changes in the flexibility and molecular arrangement of TM. In the presence of light chains, the structural changes in TM depend on light chains phosphorylation and Ca2+ concentration. The conformational changes in TM seem to be responsible for the mechanisms of coupling of the myosin and tropomyosin modulation system during the actin-myosin interaction in skeletal muscles.  相似文献   

14.
The biological functions of the myosin light chain 1 (LC1) have not been clearly elucidated yet. In this work we cloned and expressed N- and C- terminal fragments of human ventricular LC1 (HVLC1) containing amino acid residues 1-98 and 99-195 and two parts, NN and NC of N fragment in GST-fusion forms, respectively. Using GST pull-down assay, the direct binding experiments of LC1 with rat cardiac G-actin, F-actin and thin filaments, as well as rat cardiac myosin heavy chain (RCMHC) have been performed. Furthermore, the recombinant complexes of rat myosin S1 with N- and C-fragments, as well as the whole molecular of HVLC1 were generated. The results suggested that both binding sites of HVLC1 for actin and myosin heavy chain are positioned in its N-terminal fragment, which may contain several actin-binding sites in tandem. The polymerization of G-actin, the tropomyosin and troponin molecules located in the thin filaments do not hinder the binding of N-terminal fragment of HVLC1 with actin and thin filaments in vitro. The recombinant complex of rat cardiac myosin S1 (RCMS1) with N fragment of HVLC1 greatly decreased actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity for lack of C fragment. We conclude that the N-fragment is the binding domain of human ventricular LC1, whereas the C-fragment serves as a functional domain, which may be more involved in the modulation of the actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin.  相似文献   

15.
Localisation of light chain and actin binding sites on myosin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A gel overlay technique has been used to identify a region of the myosin S-1 heavy chain that binds myosin light chains (regulatory and essential) and actin. The 125I-labelled myosin light chains and actin bound to intact vertebrate skeletal or smooth muscle myosin, S-1 prepared from these myosins and the C-terminal tryptic fragments from them (i.e. the 20-kDa or 24-kDa fragments of skeletal muscle myosin chymotryptic or Mg2+/papain S-1 respectively). MgATP abolished actin binding to myosin and to S-1 but had no effect on binding to the C-terminal tryptic fragments of S-1. The light chains and actin appeared to bind to specific and distinct regions on the S-1 heavy chain, as there was no marked competition in gel overlay experiments in the presence of 50-100 molar excess of unlabelled competing protein. The skeletal muscle C-terminal 24-kDa fragment was isolated from a tryptic digest of Mg2+/papain S-1 by CM-cellulose chromatography, in the presence of 8 M urea. This fragment was characterised by retention of the specific label (1,5-I-AEDANS) on the SH1 thiol residue, by its amino acid composition, and by N-terminal and C-terminal sequence analyses. Electron microscopical examination of this S-1 C-terminal fragment revealed that: it had a strong tendency to form aggregates with itself, appearing as small 'segment-like' structures that formed larger aggregates, and it bound actin, apparently bundling and severing actin filaments. Further digestion of this 24-kDa fragment with Staphylococcus aureus V-8 protease produced a 10-12-kDa peptide, which retained the ability to bind light chains and actin in gel overlay experiments. This 10-12-kDa peptide was derived from the region between the SH1 thiol residue and the C-terminus of S-1. It was further shown that the C-terminal portion, but not the N-terminal portion, of the DTNB regulatory light chain bound this heavy chain region. Although at present nothing can be said about the three-dimensional arrangement of the binding sites for the two kinds of light chain (regulatory and essential) and actin in S-1, it appears that these sites are all located within a length of the S-1 heavy chain of about 100 amino acid residues.  相似文献   

16.
Movements of different areas of polypeptide chains within F-actin monomers induced by S1 or pPDM-S1 binding were studied by polarized fluorimetry. Thin filaments of ghost muscle were reconstructed by adding G-actin labeled with fluorescent probes attached alternatively to different sites of actin molecule. These sites were: Cys-374 labeled with 1,5-IAEDANS, TMRIA or 5-IAF; Lys-373 labeled with NBD-Cl; Lys-113 labeled with Alexa-488; Lys-61 labeled with FITC; Gln-41 labeled with DED and Cys-10 labeled with 1,5-IAEDANS, 5-IAF or fluorescein-maleimid. In addition, we used TRITC-, FITC-falloidin and e-ADP that were located, respectively, in filament groove and interdomain cleft. The data were analysed by model-dependent and model-independent methods (see appendixes). The orientation and mobility of fluorescent probes were significantly changed when actin and myosin interacted, depending on fluorophore location and binding site of actomyosin. Strong binding of S with actin leads to 1) a decrease in the orientation of oscillators of derivatives of falloidin (TRITC-falloidin, FITC-falloidin) and actin-bound nucleotide (e-ADP); 2) an increase in the orientation of dye oscillators located in the "front' surface of the small domain (where actin is viewed in the standard orientation with subdomains 1/2 and 3/4 oriented to the right and to the left, respectively); 3) a decrease in the angles of dye oscillators located on the "back" surface of subdomain-1. In contrast, a weak binding of S1 to actin induces the opposite effects in orientation of these probes. These data suggest that during the ATP hydrolysis cycle myosin heads induce a change in actin monomer (a tilt and twisting of its small domain). Presumably, these alterations in F-actin conformation play an important role in muscle contraction.  相似文献   

17.
Changes in the actin-myosin interface are thought to play an important role in microfilament-linked cellular movements. In this study, we compared the actin binding properties of the motor domain of Dictyostelium discoideum (M765) and rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 (S1). The Dictyostelium motor domain resembles S1(A2) (S1 carrying the A2 light chain) in its interaction with G-actin. Similar to S1(A2), none of the Dictyostelium motor domain constructs induced G-actin polymerization. The affinity of monomeric actin (G-actin) was 20-fold lower for M765 than for S1(A2) but increasing the number of positive charges in the loop 2 region of the D. discoideum motor domain (residues 613-623) resulted in equivalent affinities of G-actin for M765 and for S1. Proteolytic cleavage and cross-linking approaches were used to show that M765, like S1, interacts via the loop 2 region with filamentous actin (F-actin). For both types of myosin, F-actin prevents trypsin cleavage in the loop 2 region and F-actin segment 1-28 can be cross-linked to loop 2 residues by a carbodiimide-induced reaction. In contrast with the S1, loop residues 559-565 of D. discoideum myosin was not cross-linked to F-actin, probably due to the lower number of positive charges. These results confirm the importance of the loop 2 region of myosin for the interaction with both G-actin and F-actin, regardless of the source of myosin. The differences observed in the way in which M765 and S1 interact with actin may be linked to more general differences in the structure of the actomyosin interface of muscle and nonmuscle myosins.  相似文献   

18.
1. Fast skeletal myosin subfragment 1 (S1) was separated into two isozymes, S1(A1) and S1(A2), based on the associated alkali light chain, and their thermostabilities were compared. 2. Inactivation rate constants of Ca2(+)-ATPase (at 30 and 35 degrees C) were higher and heat-induced turbidity increase at 340 nm (at 40 degrees C) was faster with S1(A1) than with S1(A2), indicating a higher stability of S1(A2). 3. When S1 isozymes were incubated in the presence of excess alkali light chain, turbidity increase was markedly reduced, depending on the amount of light chain added. 4. Results obtained strongly suggest that alkali light chains are involved in the maintenance of myosin head structure.  相似文献   

19.
Acanthamoeba myosin IA is a globular protein composed of a 140-kDa heavy chain and a 17-kDa light chain. It expresses high actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when one serine on the heavy chain is phosphorylated. We previously showed that chymotrypsin cleaves the heavy chain into a COOH-terminal 27-kDa peptide that can bind to F-actin but has no ATPase activity and a complex containing the NH2-terminal 112-kDa peptide and the light chain. The complex also binds F-actin and has full actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity when the regulatory site is phosphorylated. We have now localized the ATP binding site to within 27 kDa of the NH2 terminus and the regulatory phosphorylatable serine to a 20-kDa region between 38 and 58 kDa of the NH2 terminus. Under controlled conditions, trypsin cleaves the heavy chain at two sites, 38 and 112 kDa from the NH2 terminus, producing a COOH-terminal 27-kDa peptide similar to that produced by chymotrypsin and a complex consisting of an NH2-terminal kDa peptide, a central 74-kDa peptide, and the light chain. This complex is similar to the chymotryptic complex but for the cleavage which separates the 38- and 74-kDa peptides. The tryptic complex has full (K+, EDTA)-ATPase activity (the catalytic site is functional) and normal ATP-sensitive actin-binding properties. However, the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity and the F-actin-binding characteristics of the tryptic complex are no longer sensitive to phosphorylation of the regulatory serine. Therefore, cleavage between the phosphorylation site and the ATP-binding site inhibits the effects of phosphorylation on actin binding and actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity without abolishing the interactions between the ATP- and actin-binding sites.  相似文献   

20.
A myosin B-like protein was extracted from the alga Nitella flexilis. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of myosin heavy chain and actin as the main components. At high ionic strength, its ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reaction was activated by EDTA or Ca2+ and inhibited by Mg2+. At low ionic strength, superprecipitation was induced by the addition of ATP. Myosin was purified from Nitella myosin B. The molecular weight of the heavy chain of Nitella myosin, estimated by SDS-gel electrophoresis, was slightly higher than that of skeletal muscle myosin. At low ionic strength, Nitella myosin aggregated to form bipolar filaments about 0.2 micron long. At high ionic strength, its ATPase reaction was activated by EDTA or Ca2+, and inhibited by Mg2+. The Mg2+-ATPase reaction of Nitella myosin was activated by skeletal muscle F-actin.  相似文献   

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