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1.
Previous experiments on thick filaments of the anterior byssus retractor muscle of Mytilus and the telson-levator muscle of Limulus polyphemus have shown large, reversible length changes up to 23% and 66% of initial length, respectively, within the physiological tension range. Using nanofabricated cantilevers and newly developed high-resolution detection methods, we investigated the dynamics of isolated Mytilus anterior byssus retractor muscle thick filaments. Single thick filaments were suspended between the tips of two microbeams oriented perpendicular to the filament axis: a deflectable cantilever and a stationary beam. Axial stress was applied by translating the base of the deflectable nanolever away from the stationary beam, which bent the nanolever. Tips of flexible nanolevers and stationary beam were imaged onto a photodiode array to track their positions. Filament shortening and lengthening traces, obtained immediately after the motor had imposed stress on the filament, showed steps and pauses. Step sizes were 2.7 nm and integer multiples thereof. Steps of this same size paradigm have been seen both during contraction of single sarcomeres and during active interaction between single isolated actin and myosin filaments, raising the question whether all of these phenomena might be related.  相似文献   

2.
Structure of short thick filaments from Limulus muscle   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Shortened Limulus thick filaments, isolated from stimulated muscle, are structurally similar to long filaments, isolated from unstimulated muscle, except for length. Both have 3-fold screw symmetry with a helical repeat at approximately 43 nm, axial spacing of 14.5 nm between successive crowns of crossbridges and 4-fold rotational symmetry as estimated from the Bessel argument, by analysis of optical transforms of electron micrograph negatives of negatively stained samples. Both short and long filaments also have similar radii for the location of their crossbridges, thus similar diameters. Equal numbers of subunits/helical strand are also apparent on images of metal-shadowed long and short filaments. Since these data argue against molecular reorganization during filament shortening, it is suggested that the change in length of Limulus thick filaments may occur by reversible disaggregation of constituent protein molecules.  相似文献   

3.
Changes in thick filament length in Limulus striated muscle   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Here we describe the change in thick filament length in striated muscle of Limulus, the horseshoe crab. Long thick filaments (4.0 microns) are isolated from living, unstimulated Limulus striated muscle while those isolated from either electrically or K+-stimulated fibers are significantly shorter (3.1 microns) (P less than 0.001). Filaments isolated from muscle glycerinated at long sarcomere lengths are long (4.4 microns) while those isolated from muscle glycerinated at short sarcomere lengths are short (2.9 microns) and the difference is significant (P less than 0.001). Thin filaments are 2.4 microns in length. The shortening of thick filaments is related to the wide range of sarcomere lengths exhibited by Limulus telson striated muscle.  相似文献   

4.
Here we present evidence that strongly suggests that the well-documented phenomenon of A-band shortening in Limulus telson muscle is activation dependent and reflects fragmentation of thick filaments at their ends. Calcium activation of detergent-skinned fiber bundles of Limulus telson muscle results in large decreases in A-band (from 5.1 to 3.3 microns) and thick filament (from 4.1 to 3.3 microns) lengths and the release of filament end fragments. In activated fibers, maintained stretched beyond overlap of thick and thin filaments, these end fragments are translocated to varying depths within the I-bands. Here they are closely associated with fine filamentous structures that also span the gap between A- and I-bands and attach to the distal one-third of the thick filaments. End-fragments are rarely, if ever, present in similarly stretched and skinned, but unstimulated fibers, although fine "gap filaments" persist. Negatively stained thick filaments, separated from skinned, calcium-activated, fiber bundles, allowed to shorten freely, are significantly shorter than those obtained from unstimulated fibers, but are identical to the latter with respect to both the surface helical array of myosin heads and diameters. Many end-fragments are present on grids containing thick filaments from activated fibers; few, if any, on those from unstimulated fibers. SDS-PAGE shows no evidence of proteolysis due to activation and demonstrates the presence of polypeptides with very high molecular weights in the preparations. We suggest that thick filament shortening is a direct result of activation in Limulus telson muscle and that it occurs largely by breakage within a defined distal region of each polar half of the filament. It is possible that at least some of the fine "gap filaments" are composed of a titin-like protein. They may move the activation-produced, fragmented ends of thick filaments to which they attach, into the I-bands by elastic recoil, in highly stretched fibers.  相似文献   

5.
Under in vitro movement assay conditions, actin filaments move about 10 times faster toward, than away from, the center of large bipolar thick filaments of molluscan smooth muscle. Using thick filaments isolated from the anterior byssus retractor muscle of Mytilus edulis, the two speed modes of movement were studied in detail. Some thick filaments crossed over each other on the surface of the assay chamber, allowing actin filaments that moved into the crossover region to transfer to other thick filaments. When an actin filament that had been moving in the low speed mode crossed over to another thick filament and the speed changed to fast, the entire actin filament started to move in the high speed mode at the moment of transfer of its leading end, leaving the trailing part still in contact with the original thick filament. This indicates that myosin cross-bridges interacting in the slow mode do not impose a significant load on the cross-bridges interacting in the fast mode. Assuming the theoretical model of Tawada and Sekimoto [Biophys. J. 59, 343-356 (1991)], we suggest that the magnitude of force developed, as well as the speed of unloaded movement, differs greatly, depending on the orientation of the myosin cross-bridges.  相似文献   

6.
By quantitative sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, paramyosin:myosin heavy chain molecular ratios were calculated for three molluscan muscles:Aequipecten striated adductor, Mercenaria opaque adductor, and Mytilus anterior byssus retractor; and four arthropodan muscles:Limulus telson, Homarus slow claw. Balanus scutal depressor, and Lethocerus air tube retractor. These ratios correlate positively with both thick filament dimensions and maximum active tension development in these tissues. The role of paramyosin in these muscles is discussed with respect to the following characteristics: force development, "catch," and extreme reversible changes in length.  相似文献   

7.
Airway smooth muscle adapts to different lengths with functional changes that suggest plastic alterations in the filament lattice. To look for structural changes that might be associated with this plasticity, we studied the relationship between isometric force generation and myosin thick filament density in cell cross sections, measured by electron microscope, after length oscillations applied to the relaxed porcine trachealis muscle. Muscles were stimulated regularly for 12 s every 5 min. Between two stimulations, the muscles were submitted to repeated passive +/- 30% length changes. This caused tetanic force and thick-filament density to fall by 21 and 27%, respectively. However, in subsequent tetani, both force and filament density recovered to preoscillation levels. These findings indicate that thick filaments in airway smooth muscle are labile, depolymerization of the myosin filaments can be induced by mechanical strain, and repolymerization of the thick filaments underlies force recovery after the oscillation. This thick-filament lability would greatly facilitate plastic changes of lattice length and explain why airway smooth muscle is able to function over a large length range.  相似文献   

8.
During flight, the wings of Drosophila melanogaster beat nearly 200 times per second. The indirect flight muscle fibers that power this movement have evolved to resist the repetitive mechanical stress that results from the 5-ms wing beat cycle at a strain amplitude of 3.5%. In order to understand how this is achieved at the sarcomere level, we have analyzed the mechanical properties of native thick filaments isolated from indirect flight muscle. Single filaments adsorbed onto a solid support were manipulated in physiological buffer using an atomic force microscope. Images taken after the manipulation revealed that segments were stretched, on average, to 150%, with a maximum at 385% extension. The lateral-force-versus-displacement curve associated with each manipulation contained information about the bending and tensile properties of each filament. The bending process was dominated by shearing between myosin dimers and yielded a shear modulus between 3 and 13 MPa. Maximum tension along the stretched filaments was observed at ∼ 200% extension and varied between 8 and 17 nN. Based on current models of thick filament structure, these variations can be attributed to cross-links between myosin dimers distributed along the filament.  相似文献   

9.
Length-tension relation in Limulus striated muscle   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Laser diffraction techniques coupled with simultaneous tension measurements were used to determine the length-tension relation in intact, small (0.5-mm thick, 10-mm wide, 20-25-mm long) bundles of a Limulus (horseshoe crab) striated muscle, the telson levator muscle. This muscle differs from the model vertebrate systems in that the thick filaments are not of a constant length, but shorten from 4.9 to approximately 2.0 micrometers as the sarcomeres shorten from 7 to 3 micrometers. In the Limulus muscle, the length-tension relation plateaued to an average maximum tension of 0.34 N/mm2 at a sarcomere length of 6.5 micrometers (Lo) to 8.0 micrometers. In the sarcomere length range from 3.8 to 12.5 micrometers, the muscle developed 50% or more of the maximum tension. When the sarcomere lengths are normalized (expressed as L/Lo) and the Limulus data are compared to those from frog muscle, it is apparent that Limulus muscle develops tension over a relatively greater range of sarcomere lengths.  相似文献   

10.
The results discussed in the preceding paper (Levine, R. J. C., J. L. Woodhead, and H. A. King. 1991. J. Cell Biol. 113:563-572.) indicate that A-band shortening in Limulus muscle is a thick filament response to activation that occurs largely by fragmentation of filament ends. To assess the effect of biochemical changes directly associated with activation on the length and structure of thick filaments from Limulus telson muscle, a dually regulated tissue (Lehman, W., J. Kendrick-Jones, and A. G. Szent Gyorgyi. 1973. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 37:319-330.) we have examined the thick filament response to phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains. In agreement with the previous work of J. Sellers (1981. J. Biol. Chem. 256:9274-9278), Limulus myosin, incubated with partially purified chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and [gamma 32P]-ATP, binds 2 mol phosphate/mole protein. On autoradiographs of SDS-PAGE, the label is restricted to the two regulatory light chains, LC1 and LC2. Incubation of long (greater than or equal to 4.0 microns) thick filaments, separated from Limulus telson muscle under relaxing conditions, with either intact MLCK in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, or Ca2(+)-independent MLCK obtained by brief chymotryptic digestion (Walsh, M. P., R. Dabrowska, S. Hinkins, and D. J. Hartshorne. 1982. Biochemistry. 21:1919-1925), causes significant changes in their structure. These include: disordering of the helical surface arrangement of myosin heads as they move away from the filament backbone; the presence of distal bends and breaks, with loss of some surface myosin molecules, in each polar filament half; and the production of shorter filaments and end-fragments. The latter structures are similar to those produced by Ca2(+)-activation of skinned fibers (Levine, R. J. C., J. L. Woodhead, and H. A. King. J. Cell Biol. 113:563-572). Rinsing experimental filament preparations with relaxing solution before staining restores some degree of order of the helical surface array, but not filament length. We propose that outward movement of myosin heads and thick filament shortening in Limulus muscle are responses to activation that are dependent on phosphorylation of regulatory myosin light chains. Filament shortening may be due, in large part, to breakage at the filament ends.  相似文献   

11.
To bridge the gap between the contractile system in muscle and in vitro motility assay, we have devised an A-band motility assay system. A glycerinated skeletal myofibril was treated with gelsolin to selectively remove the thin filaments and expose a single A-band. A single bead-tailed actin filament trapped by optical tweezers was made to interact with the inside or the outer surface of the A-band, and the displacement of the bead-tailed filament was measured in a physiological ionic condition by phase-contrast and fluorescence microscopy. We observed large back-and-forth displacement of the filament accompanied by a large change in developed force. Despite this large tension fluctuation, we found that the average force was proportional to the overlap inside and outside the A-band up to approximately 150 nm and 300 nm from the end of the A-band, respectively. Consistent with the difference in the density of myosin molecules, the average force per unit length of the overlap inside the A-band (the time-averaged force/myosin head was approximately 1 pN) was approximately twice as large as that outside. Thus, we conclude that the A-band motility assay system described here is suitable for studying force generation on a single actin filament, and its sliding movement within a regular three-dimensional thick filament lattice.  相似文献   

12.
Structure and paramyosin content of tarantula thick filaments   总被引:11,自引:10,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Muscle fibers of the tarantula femur exhibit structural and biochemical characteristics similar to those of other long-sarcomere invertebrate muscles, having long A-bands and long thick filaments. 9-12 thin filaments surround each thick filament. Tarantula muscle has a paramyosin:myosin heavy chain molecular ratio of 0.31 +/- 0.079 SD. We studied the myosin cross-bridge arrangement on the surface of tarantula thick filaments on isolated, negatively stained, and unidirectionally metal-shadowed specimens by electron microscopy and optical diffraction and filtering and found it to be similar to that previously described for the thick filaments of muscle of the closely related chelicerate arthropod, Limulus. Cross-bridges are disposed in a four-stranded right-handed helical arrangement, with 14.5-nm axial spacing between successive levels of four bridges, and a helical repeat period every 43.5 nm. The orientation of cross-bridges on the surface of tarantula filaments is also likely to be very similar to that on Limulus filaments as suggested by the similarity between filtered images of the two types of filaments and the radial distance of the centers of mass of the cross-bridges from the surfaces of both types of filaments. Tarantula filaments, however, have smaller diameters than Limulus filaments, contain less paramyosin, and display structure that probably reflects the organization of the filament backbone which is not as apparent in images of Limulus filaments. We suggest that the similarities between Limulus and tarantula thick filaments may be governed, in part, by the close evolutionary relationship of the two species.  相似文献   

13.
SYNOPSIS. Electron microscopic studies are reported on glycerinatedskeletal and cardiac muscle of a benthic fish, Coryphaenoidesspecies. In white skeletal muscle, the sarcomeres have a restinglength of approximately 1.8 µ, with thick filaments 1.4µ and thin filaments 0.75 µ in length. These dimensionsare somewhat shorter than filament lengths of oilier vertebratemuscles, possibly due to the elfect of volume increase duringassembly of thick and thin filaments at high hydrostatic pressure.During ATP-induced contraction of Coryphaenoides muscle fromsarcomere lengths of 1.8 µ to 1.6 µ, there is acharacteristic interdigitation of thick and thin filaments,with decrease in I band length and no change in length of thickor thin filaments. However, in sarcomeres contracted to lengthsof 1.5 µ. to 1.2 µ, there is a slight shorteningof the A band, apparently due to shortening of thick filaments,that occurs despite the presence of residual I band in the samesarcomeres. There is no obvious crumpling or distortion of thickfilaments during contraction to sarcomere lengths as low as1.0 µ, but filament organization undergoes extensive disarrayat sarcomere lengths approaching 0.7 µ. Although effectsfrom heterogeneity of filament length cannot be excluded withcertainty, the present evidence does suggest that contractionot Coryphaenoides muscle from 1.6 µ to 1.0 µ sarcomerelengih is accompanied by shortening of thick filaments consequentto a structural change within the thick filament core.  相似文献   

14.
To clarify the extensibility of thin actin and thick myosin filaments in muscle, we examined the spacings of actin and myosin filament-based reflections in x-ray diffraction patterns at high resolution during isometric contraction of frog skeletal muscles and steady lengthening of the active muscles using synchrotron radiation as an intense x-ray source and a storage phosphor plate as a high sensitivity, high resolution area detector. Spacing of the actin meridional reflection at approximately 1/2.7 nm-1, which corresponds to the axial rise per actin subunit in the thin filament, increased about 0.25% during isometric contraction of muscles at full overlap length of thick and thin filaments. The changes in muscles stretched to approximately half overlap of the filaments, when they were scaled linearly up to the full isometric tension, gave an increase of approximately 0.3%. Conversely, the spacing decreased by approximately 0.1% upon activation of muscles at nonoverlap length. Slow stretching of a contracting muscle increased tension and increased this spacing over the isometric contraction value. Scaled up to a 100% tension increase, this corresponds to a approximately 0.26% additional change, consistent with that of the initial isometric contraction. Taken together, the extensibility of the actin filament amounts to 3-4 nm of elongation when a muscle switches from relaxation to maximum isometric contraction. Axial spacings of the layer-line reflections at approximately 1/5.1 nm-1 and approximately 1/5.9 nm-1 corresponding to the pitches of the right- and left-handed genetic helices of the actin filament, showed similar changes to that of the meridional reflection during isometric contraction of muscles at full overlap. The spacing changes of these reflections, which also depend on the mechanical load on the muscle, indicate that elongation is accompanied by slight changes of the actin helical structure possibly because of the axial force exerted by the actomyosin cross-bridges. Additional small spacing changes of the myosin meridional reflections during length changes applied to contracting muscles represented an increase of approximately 0.26% (scaled up to a 100% tension increase) in the myosin periodicity, suggesting that such spacing changes correspond to a tension-related extension of the myosin filaments. Elongation of the myosin filament backbone amounts to approximately 2.1 nm per half sarcomere. The results indicate that a large part (approximately 70%) of the sarcomere compliance of an active muscle is caused by the extensibility of the actin and myosin filaments; 42% of the compliance resides in the actin filaments, and 27% of it is in the myosin filaments.  相似文献   

15.
Myosin thick filaments have been shown tobe structurally labile in intact smooth muscles. Although the mechanismof thick filament assembly/disassembly for purified myosins in solution has been well described, regulation of thick filament formation inintact muscle is still poorly understood. The present study investigates the effect of resting calcium level on thick filament maintenance in intact airway smooth muscle and on thick filament formation during activation. Cross-sectional density of the thick filaments measured electron microscopically showed that the density increased substantially (144%) when the muscle was activated. Theabundance of filamentous myosins in relaxed muscle was calcium sensitive; in the absence of calcium (with EGTA), the filament densitydeceased by 35%. Length oscillation imposed on the muscle underzero-calcium conditions produced no further reduction in the density.Isometric force and filament density recovered fully after reincubationof the muscle in normal physiological saline. The results suggest thatin airway smooth muscle, filamentous myosins exist in equilibrium withmonomeric myosins; muscle activation favors filament formation, and theresting calcium level is crucial for preservation of the filaments inthe relaxed state.

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16.
Intensity fluctuation spectroscopy has been used successfully as a probe that can detect an increase in high-frequency internal motions of isolated thick filaments of Limulus muscle upon the addition of calcium ions. We have attributed such motions to cross-bridge motion instead of to an increase in the flexibility of the filament backbone. Here we show that after cleavage of the S-1 and then the S-2 moieties with papain, cross-linking the myosin heads to the filament backbone, or heat denaturation (42 degrees C, 10 min), the increase in the high frequency internal motions in the thick filaments no longer occurs. Congo Red, which has been shown to induce shortening of isolated myofibrils, also increases the high-frequency motions of the isolated filaments. Furthermore, the increase is suppressed by treating the filaments with a myosin ATPase inhibitor such as vanadate ions (10 mM) or by replacing ATP with either an equimolar CrADP or the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue beta, gamma-imido-adenine-5'-triphosphate (AMP-PNP). Calcium ions have a similar effect on isolated thick filaments from scallop muscle, where the myosin is known to be regulatory. Calcium ions have no such effect on thick filaments isolated from frog muscle, which is believed not to be regulated by calcium binding to myosin. These results confirm our earlier supposition that the additional high frequency internal motions of the thick filaments isolated from striated muscle of Limulus are related to the energy dependent, active cross-bridge motions.  相似文献   

17.
Eukaryotic cells contain three cytoskeletal filament systems that exhibit very distinct assembly properties, supramolecular architectures, dynamic behaviour and mechanical properties. Microtubules and microfilaments are relatively stiff polar structures whose assembly is modulated by the state of hydrolysis of the bound nucleotide. In contrast, intermediate filaments (IFs) are more flexible apolar structures assembled from a approximately 45 nm long coiled-coil dimer as the elementary building block. The differences in flexibility that exist among the three filament systems have been described qualitatively by comparing electron micrographs of negatively stained dehydrated filaments and by directly measuring the persistence length of F-actin filaments (approximately 3-10 microm) and microtubules (approximately 1-8 mm) by various physical methods. However, quantitative data on the persistence length of IFs are still missing. Toward this goal, we have carried out atomic force microscopy (AFM) in physiological buffer to characterise the morphology of individual vimentin IFs adsorbed to different solid supports. In addition, we compared these images with those obtained by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of negatively stained dehydrated filaments. For each support, we could accurately measure the apparent persistence length of the filaments, yielding values ranging between 0.3 microm and 1 microm. Making simple assumptions concerning the adsorption mechanism, we could estimate the persistence length of an IF in a dilute solution to be approximately 1 microm, indicating that the lower measured values reflect constraints induced by the adsorption process of the filaments on the corresponding support. Based on our knowledge of the structural organisation and mechanical properties of IFs, we reason that the lower persistence length of IFs compared to that of F-actin filaments is caused by the presence of flexible linker regions within the coiled-coil dimer and by postulating the occurrence of axial slipping between dimers within IFs.  相似文献   

18.
The long functional range of some types of smooth muscle has been the subject of recent study. It has been proposed that the muscle filament lattice adapts to longer lengths by placing more filaments in series and that lattice plasticity is facilitated by myosin filament evanescence, with filaments dissociating during relaxation and reforming upon activation. Support for these dynamic changes in the filament lattice has been provided partly by changes in contractile parameters at different times in the contraction-relaxation cycle at different lengths. If the changes in contractile parameters result from filament formation and dissociation, these structural changes must occur on the time scale of tension development and relaxation. To assess whether thick-filament formation could account for the contractile changes, we measured birefringence continuously during activation and relaxation and compared these optical changes with the time course of force development and relaxation. Birefringence is a well-known property of muscle; striations in skeletal and cardiac muscle result from the A-bands being anisotropic, i.e., birefringent, and it is now known that this optical property is due to the presence of myosin thick filaments in the A-bands. Thus, the strength of birefringence is expected to represent the density of thick filaments. Here, we describe the principle of the method, the techniques for recording the optical signals, some initial results, and discuss the interpretation of results and some limitations of the method.  相似文献   

19.
It is believed that the contractile filaments in smooth muscle are organized into arrays of contractile units (similar to the sarcomeric structure in striated muscle), and that such an organization is crucial for transforming the mechanical activities of actomyosin interaction into cell shortening and force generation. Details of the filament organization, however, are still poorly understood. Several models of contractile filament architecture are discussed here. To account for the linear relationship observed between the force generated by a smooth muscle and the muscle length at the plateau of an isotonic contraction, a model of contractile unit is proposed. The model consists of 2 dense bodies with actin (thin) filaments attached, and a myosin (thick) filament lying between the parallel thin filaments. In addition, the thick filament is assumed to span the whole contractile unit length, from dense body to dense body, so that when the contractile unit shortens, the amount of overlap between the thick and thin filaments (i.e., the distance between the dense bodies) decreases in exact proportion to the amount of shortening. Assembly of the contractile units into functional contractile apparatus is assumed to involve a group of cells that form a mechanical syncytium. The contractile apparatus is assumed malleable in that the number of contractile units in series and in parallel can be altered to accommodate strains on the muscle and to maintain the muscle's optimal mechanical function.  相似文献   

20.
A marine Beggiatoa sp. was cultured in semi-solid agar with opposing oxygen-sulfide gradients. Growth pattern, breakage of filaments for multiplication, and movement directions of Beggiatoa filaments in the transparent agar were investigated by time-lapse video recording. The initial doubling time of cells was 15.7 +/- 1.3 h (mean +/- SD) at room temperature. Filaments grew up to an average length of 1.7 +/- 0.2 mm, but filaments of up to approximately 6 mm were also present. First breakages of filaments occurred approximately 19 h after inoculation, and time-lapse movies illustrated that a parent filament could break into several daughter filaments within a few hours. In >20% of the cases, filament breakage occurred at the tip of a former loop. As filament breakage is accomplished by the presence of sacrificial cells, loop formation and the presence of sacrificial cells must coincide. We hypothesize that sacrificial cells enhance the chance of loop formation by interrupting the communication between two parts of one filament. With communication interrupted, these two parts of one filament can randomly move toward each other forming the tip of a loop at the sacrificial cell.  相似文献   

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