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1.
Plasma gelsolin formed a very tight 1:2 complex with G-actin in the presence of Ca2+, but no interaction between gelsolin and G-actin was detected in the presence of excess EGTA. However, the 1:2 complex dissociated into a 1:1 gelsolin:actin complex and monomeric actin when excess EGTA was added. Plasma gelsolin bound tightly to the barbed ends of actin filaments and also severed filaments in the presence of Ca2+ and bound weakly to the filament barbed end in the presence of EGTA. The 1:2 gelsolin-actin complex bound to the barbed ends of filaments but did not sever them. By blocking the barbed end of filaments with plasma gelsolin, we determined the critical concentration at the pointed end in 1 mM MgCl2 and 0.2 mM ATP to be 4 microM. The dissociation rate constant for ADP-G-actin from the pointed end was estimated to be about 0.4 s-1 and the association rate constant to be about 5 X 10(4) M-1 s-1. Finally, we obtained evidence that plasma gelsolin accelerates but does not bypass the nucleation step and, therefore, that the concentration of gelsolin does not directly determine the concentration of filaments polymerized in its presence. Thus, gelsolin-capped filaments may not provide an absolutely reliable method for determining the rate constant for the association of ATP-G-actin at the pointed ends of filaments, but a reasonable estimate would be 1 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 in 1 mM MgCl2 and 0.2 mM ATP.  相似文献   

2.
The rate of capping of actin filaments by the gelsolin-actin complex was measured by inhibition of elongation of the barbed ends of actin filaments. Polymeric actin (0.1-1.0 microM) was added to 0.5 microM monomeric actin and various concentrations of the gelsolin-actin complex (0.08-2.4 nM) to induce nucleated polymerization. As under the experimental conditions (2 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl, 37 degrees C, actin monomer concentration less than or equal to 0.5 microM) actin filaments treadmilled, filaments elongated only at the barbed ends and the gelsolin-actin complex did not nucleate actin filaments to polymerize towards the pointed ends. The rate of nucleated actin polymerization in the presence of the gelsolin-actin complex was quantitatively analyzed. The rate constant for capping of the barbed ends of actin filaments by the gelsolin-actin complex was found to be about 10(7) M-1 s-1.  相似文献   

3.
M Wanger  A Wegner 《Biochemistry》1985,24(4):1035-1040
Depolymerization of treadmilling actin filaments by a capping protein isolated from bovine brain was used for determination of the equilibrium constant for binding of the capping protein to the barbed ends of actin filaments. When the capping protein blocks monomer consumption at the lengthening barbed ends, monomers continue to be produced at the shortening pointed ends until a new steady state is reached in which monomer production at the pointed ends is balanced by monomer consumption at the uncapped barbed ends. In this way the ratio of capped to uncapped filaments could be determined as a function of the capping protein concentration. Under the experimental conditions (100 mM KCl and 2 mM MgCl2, pH 7.5, 37 degrees C) the binding constant was found to be about 2 X 10(9) M-1. Capping proteins effect the actin monomer concentration only at capping protein concentrations far above the reciprocal of their binding constant. Half-maximal increase of the monomer concentration requires capping of about 99% of the actin filaments. A low proportion of uncapped filaments has a great weight in determining the monomer concentration because association and dissociation reactions occur at the dynamic barbed ends with higher frequencies than at the pointed ends.  相似文献   

4.
The rate constant and equilibrium constant of association of an actin monomer with 1:1 gelsolin-actin complex isolated from chicken were measured by using fluorescently labeled actin. According to fluorescence stopped-flow experiments, the rate constant of formation of the 1:2 gelsolin-actin complex from 1:1 gelsolin-actin complex and actin was found to be about 2 x 10(7) M-1 s-1 under conditions where gelsolin binds Ca2+. The rate of dissociation of one actin molecule from the 1:2 gelsolin-actin complex was determined by exchange of actin for fluorescently labeled actin. The rate constant of dissociation was about 0.02 s-1. Thus, the equilibrium constant for association of actin with 1:1 gelsolin-actin complex can be calculated to be in the range of 10(9) M-1. The rate of dissociation of actin from 1:2 gelsolin-actin complex was independent of the Ca2+ concentration. Ca2+ affects only the rate of association of actin with 1:1 gelsolin-actin complex.  相似文献   

5.
Rate of treadmilling of actin filaments in vitro   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Actin filaments capped at the barbed ends were formed by polymerizing monomeric actin onto a gelsolin-actin complex. The rate of depolymerization and polymerization of the pointed ends was determined by diluting gelsolin-capped actin filaments into various concentrations of monomeric actin. Under the conditions of the experiments (100 mM-KCl, 2 mM-MgCl2 at 37 degrees C) the rate constant of dissociation of subunits both from a shortening and a lengthening filament was found to be 0.21 s-1. As the rate of dissociation of subunits from the slow pointed end determines the rate of treadmilling, it is concluded that actin filaments treadmill with a rate of about 2 micron/h.  相似文献   

6.
An actin polymerization-retarding protein was isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle. This protein copurified with vinculin on DEAE-cellulose and gel filtration columns. The polymerization-retarding protein could be separated from vinculin by hydroxylapatite chromatography. The isolated polymerization-retarding protein lost its activity within a few days, but was stable for weeks when it was not separated from vinculin. We termed the polymerization-retarding protein "insertin". Because of the instability of the isolated insertin, we investigated the effect of insertin-vinculin on actin polymerization. Insertin-vinculin retarded nucleated actin polymerization maximally fivefold. Polymerization at the pointed ends of gelsolin-capped actin filaments was not affected by insertin-vinculin, suggesting that insertin-vinculin binds to the barbed ends, but not to the pointed ends, of actin filaments. Retarded polymerization was observed even if the actin monomer concentration was between the critical concentrations of the ends of treadmilling actin filaments. As at this low monomer concentration the pointed ends depolymerize, monomers appeared to be inserted at the barbed ends between the terminal subunit and barbed end-bound insertin molecules. Insertin-vinculin was found not to increase the actin monomer concentration to the value of the pointed ends. These observations support the conclusion that insertin is not a barbed end-capping protein but an actin monomer-inserting protein. According to a quantitative analysis of the kinetic data, all observations could be explained by a model in which two insertin molecules were assumed to bind co-operatively to the barbed ends of actin filaments. Actin monomers were found to be inserted between the barbed ends and barbed end-bound insertin molecules at a rate of about 1 x 10(6) M-1 s-1. Insertin may be an essential part of the machinery of molecules that permit treadmilling of actin filaments in living cells by insertion of actin molecules between membranes and actin filaments.  相似文献   

7.
The fraction of polymerized actin in human blood neutrophils increases after exposure to formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fmlp), is maximal 10 s after peptide addition, and decreases after 300 s. Most of the gelsolin (85 +/- 11%) in resting ficoll-hypaque (FH)-purified neutrophils is in an EGTA resistant, 1:1 gelsolin-actin complex, and, within 5 s after 10(-7) M fmlp activation, the amount of gelsolin complexed with actin decreases to 42 +/- 12%. Reversal of gelsolin binding to actin occurs concurrently with an increase in F-actin content, and the appearance of barbed-end nucleating activity. The rate of dissociation of EGTA resistant, 1:1 gelsolin-actin complexes is more rapid in cells exposed to 10(-7) M fmlp than in cells exposed to 10(-9) M fmlp, and the extent of dissociation 10 s after activation depends upon the fmlp concentration. Furthermore, 300 s after fmlp activation when F-actin content is decreasing, gelsolin reassociates with actin as evidenced by an increase in the amount of EGTA resistant, 1:1 gelsolin-actin complex. Since fmlp induces barbed end actin polymerization in neutrophils and since in vitro the gelsolin-actin complex caps the barbed ends of actin filaments and blocks their growth, the data suggests that in FH neutrophils fmlp-induced actin polymerization could be initiated by the reversal of gelsolin binding to actin and the uncapping of actin filaments or nuclei. The data shows that formation and dissociation of gelsolin-actin complexes, together with the effects of other actin regulatory proteins, are important steps in the regulation of actin polymerization in neutrophils. Finally, finding increased amounts of gelsolin-actin complex in basal FH cells and dissociation of the complex in fmlp-activated cells suggests a mechanism by which fmlp can cause actin polymerization without an acute increase in cytosolic Ca++.  相似文献   

8.
The assembly of gelsolin with actin was followed by the increase of the fluorescence intensity of a fluorescence label bound to actin. The time course of the formation of the gelsolin-actin complex in the presence of micromolar [Ca2+] could be quantitatively interpreted by a model in which one actin molecule binds slowly to gelsolin in a rate-determining step and subsequently a second actin molecule is bound at least 40 times more rapidly. The rate of binding of the first actin molecule to gelsolin was found to be remarkably slow and to depend on the pH. The rate constants of formation of the gelsolin-actin complex range from 1.5 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 at pH 8 to 7 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 at pH 6.  相似文献   

9.
ADP-ribosylated actin caps the barbed ends of actin filaments   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
The mode of action on actin polymerization of skeletal muscle actin ADP-ribosylated on arginine 177 by perfringens iota toxin was investigated. ADP-ribosylated actin decreased the rate of nucleated actin polymerization at substoichiometric ratios of ADP-ribosylated actin to monomeric actin. ADP-ribosylated actin did not tend to copolymerize with actin. Actin filaments were depolymerized by the addition of ADP-ribosylated actin. The maximal monomer concentration reached by addition of ADP-ribosylated actin was similar to the critical concentration of the pointed ends of actin filaments. ADP-ribosylated actin had no effect on the rate of polymerization of gelsolin-capped actin filaments which polymerize at the pointed ends. The results suggest that ADP-ribosylated actin acts as a capping protein which binds to the barbed ends of actin filaments to inhibit polymerization. Based on an analysis of the depolymerizing effect of ADP-ribosylated actin, the equilibrium constant for binding of ADP-ribosylated actin to the barbed ends of actin filaments was determined to be about 10(8) M-1. As actin is ADP-ribosylated by perfringens iota toxin and by botulinum C2 toxin, it appears that conversion of actin into a capping protein by ADP-ribosylation is a pathophysiological reaction catalyzed by bacterial toxins which ultimately leads to inhibition of actin assembly.  相似文献   

10.
Various concentrations of gelsolin (25-100 nM) were added to 2 microM polymerized actin. The concentrations of free calcium were adjusted to 0.05-1.5 microM by EGTA/Ca2+ buffer. Following addition of gelsolin actin depolymerization was observed that was caused by dissociation of actin subunits from the pointed ends of treadmilling actin filaments and inhibition by gelsolin of polymerization at barbed ends. The time course of depolymerization revealed an initial lag phase that was followed by slow decrease of the concentration of polymeric actin to reach the final steady state polymer and monomer concentration. The initial lag phase was pronounced at low free calcium and low gelsolin concentrations. On the basis of quantitative analysis the kinetics of depolymerization could be interpreted as capping, i.e. binding of gelsolin to the barbed ends of actin filaments and subsequent inhibition of polymerization, rather than severing. The main argument for this conclusion was that even gelsolin concentrations (100 nM) that exceed the concentration of filament ends ( approximately 2 nM), cause the filaments to depolymerize at a rate that is similar to the rate of depolymerization of the concentration of pointed ends existing before addition of gelsolin. The rate of capping is directly proportional to the free calcium concentration. These experiments demonstrate that at micromolar and submicromolar free calcium concentrations gelsolin acts as a calcium-regulated capping protein but not as an actin filament severing protein, and that the calcium binding sites of gelsolin which regulate the various functions of gelsolin (capping, severing and monomer binding), differ in their calcium affinity.  相似文献   

11.
Different calcium dependence of the capping and cutting activities of villin   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
The concentration of ionized calcium required for the capping of barbed filament ends by villin is about 4 orders of magnitude lower than that required for the cutting activity of villin. Capping was 50% complete at about 10-30 nM Ca2+, a level expected in resting cells, whereas the cutting rate was half-maximal at about 200 microM, making it possible to completely separate filament capping from filament cutting. Analysis of capping in terms of coupled equilibria between calcium binding to villin and calcium-villin binding to the barbed ends of actin filaments gives a value of 10(16)-10(17) M-2 for the product of the two binding constants. By comparison the binding constant reported for the rapidly exchanging calcium sites on villin is 2 X 10(5) M-1 and that for binding of calcium-saturated villin to barbed ends has a minimum value of 10(11) M-1 giving a product of 2 X 10(16) M-1. The close similarity of the two sets of values suggests that capping is regulated by the rapidly exchanging calcium sites on villin. In terms of coupled equilibria the calcium requirement for filament capping decreases with increasing concentrations of free villin. The scant information on the mechanism of cutting allows only an estimate of the maximal value for the calcium-binding constant of the site regulating cutting which is about 2-5 X 10(3) M-1. Cutting is followed by rapid capping of the newly released barbed ends.  相似文献   

12.
To obtain kinetic information about the pointed ends of actin filaments, experiments were carried out in the presence of gelsolin which blocks all events at the kinetically dominant barbed ends. The 1:2 gelsolin-actin complex retains 1 mol/mol of actin-bound ATP, but it neither hydrolyzes the ATP nor exchanges it with ATP free in solution at a significant rate. On the other hand, the actin filaments with their barbed ends capped with gelsolin hydrolyze ATP relatively rapidly at steady state, apparently as a result of the continued interaction of ATP-G-actin with the pointed ends of the filaments. ATP hydrolysis during spontaneous polymerization of actin in the presence of relatively high concentrations of gelsolin lags behind filament elongation so that filaments consisting of as much as 50% ATP-actin subunits are transiently formed. Probably for this reason, during polymerization the actin monomer concentration transiently reaches a concentration lower than the final steady-state critical concentration of the pointed end. At steady state, however, there is no evidence for an ATP cap at the pointed ends of gelsolin-capped filaments, which differs from the barbed ends which do have an ATP cap in the absence of gelsolin. As there is no reason presently to think that gelsolin has any effect on events at the pointed ends of filaments, the properties of the pointed ends deduced from these experiments with gelsolin-capped filaments are presumably equally applicable to the pointed ends of filaments in which the barbed ends are free.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2747-2754
I measured the rate of elongation at the barbed and pointed ends of actin filaments by electron microscopy with Limulus sperm acrosomal processes as nuclei. With improvements in the mechanics of the assay, it was possible to measure growth rates from 0.05 to 280 s-1. At 22 degrees C in 1 mM MgCl2, 10 mM imidazole (pH 7), 0.2 mM ATP with 1 mM EGTA or 50 microM CaCl2 or with EGTA and 50 mM KCl, the elongation rates at both ends have a linear dependence on the ATP-actin concentration from the critical concentration to 20 microM. Consequently, over a wide range of subunit addition rates, the rate constants for association and dissociation of ATP-actin are constant. This shows that the nucleotide composition at or near the end of the growing filament is either the same over this range of growth rates or has no detectable effect on the rate constants. Under conditions where polymerization is fastest (MgCl2 + KCl + EGTA) the rate constants have these values: (table; see text) Compared with ATP-actin, ADP-actin associates slower at both ends, dissociates faster from the barbed end, but dissociates slower from the pointed end. Taking into account the events at both ends, these constants and a simple Oosawa-type model account for the complex three-phase dependence of the rate of polymerization in bulk samples on the concentration of ATP-actin monomers observed by Carlier, M.-F., D. Pantaloni, and E. D. Korn (1985, J. Biol. Chem., 260:6565-6571). These constants can also be used to predict the reactions at steady state in ATP. There will be slow subunit flux from the barbed end to the pointed end. There will also be minor fluctuations in length at the barbed end due to occasional rapid dissociation of strings of ADP subunits but the pointed end will be relatively stable.  相似文献   

15.
Actin binding proteins control actin assembly and disassembly by altering the critical concentration and by changing the kinetics of polymerization. All of these control mechanisms in some way or the other make use of the energy of hydrolysis of actin-bound ATP. Capping of barbed filament ends increases the critical concentration as long as ATP hydrolysis maintains a difference in the actin monomer binding constants of the two ends. A further increase in the critical concentration on adding a second cap, tropomodulin, to the other, pointed filament end also requires ATP hydrolysis as described by the model presented here. Changes in the critical concentration are amplified into much larger changes of the monomer pool by actin sequestering proteins, provided their actin binding equilibrium constants fall within a relatively narrow range around the values for the two critical concentrations of actin. Cofilin greatly speeds up treadmilling, which requires ATP hydroysis, by increasing the rate constant of depolymerization. Profilin increases the rate of elongation at the barbed filament end, coupled to a lowering of the critical concentration, only if ATP hydrolysis makes profilin binding to the barbed end independent of its binding constant for actin monomers.  相似文献   

16.
Gelsolin is a calcium binding protein that shortens actin filaments. This effect occurs in the presence but not in the absence of micromolar calcium ion concentrations and is partially reversed following removal of calcium ions. Once two actin molecules have bound to gelsolin in solutions containing Ca2+, one of the actins remains bound following chelation of calcium, so that the reversal of gelsolin's effect cannot be accounted for simply by its dissociation from the ends of the shortened filaments to allow for elongation. In this paper, the interactions with actin of the ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) stable 1:1 gelsolin-actin complexes are compared with those of free gelsolin. The abilities of free or complexed gelsolin to sever actin filaments, nucleate filament assembly, bind to the fast growing (+) filament ends, and lower the filament size distribution in the presence of either Ca2+ or EGTA were examined. The results show that both free gelsolin and gelsolin-actin complexes are highly dependent on Ca2+ concentration when present in a molar ratio to actin less than 1:50. The gelsolin-actin complexes, however, differ from free gelsolin in that they have a higher affinity for (+) filament ends in EGTA and they cannot sever filaments in calcium. The limited reversal of actin-gelsolin binding following removal of calcium and the calcium sensitivity of nucleation by complexes suggest an alternative to reannealing of shortened filaments that involves redistribution of actin monomers and may account for the calcium-sensitive functional reversibility of the solation of actin by gelsolin.  相似文献   

17.
Phalloidin enhances actin assembly by preventing monomer dissociation   总被引:20,自引:11,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Incubation of the isolated acrosomal bundles of Limulus sperm with skeletal muscle actin results in assembly of actin onto both ends of the bundles. These cross-linked bundles of actin filaments taper, thus allowing one to distinguish directly the preferred end for actin assembly from the nonpreferred end; the preferred end is thinner. Incubation with actin in the presence of equimolar phalloidin in 100 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2 and 0.5 mM ATP at pH 7.5 resulted in a slightly smaller association rate constant at the preferred end than in the absence of the drug (3.36 +/- 0.14 X 10(6) M-1 s-1 vs. 2.63 +/- 0.22 X 10(6) M-1 s- 1, control vs. experimental). In the presence of phalloidin, the dissociation rate constant at the preferred end was reduced from 0.317 +/- 0.097 s-1 to essentially zero. Consequently, the critical concentration at the preferred end dropped from 0.10 microM to zero in the presence of the drug. There was no detectable change in the rate constant of association at the nonpreferred end in the presence of phalloidin (0.256 +/- 0.015 X 10(6) M-1 s-1 vs. 0.256 +/- 0.043 X 10(6) M-1 s-1, control vs. experimental); however, the dissociation rate constant was reduced from 0.269 +/- 0.043 s-1 to essentially zero. Thus, the critical concentration at the nonpreferred end changed from 1.02 microM to zero in the presence of phalloidin. Dilution-induced depolymerization at both the preferred and nonpreferred ends was prevented in the presence of phalloidin. Thus, phalloidin enhances actin assembly by lowering the critical concentration at both ends of actin filaments, a consequence of reducing the dissociation rate constants at each end.  相似文献   

18.
J R Petithory  W P Jencks 《Biochemistry》1988,27(23):8626-8635
The binding of Ca2+ and the resulting change in catalytic specificity that allows phosphorylation of the calcium ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum by ATP were examined by measuring the amount of phosphoenzyme formation from [32P]ATP, or 45Ca incorporation into vesicles, after the simultaneous addition of ATP and EGTA at different times after mixing enzyme and Ca2+ (25 degrees C, pH 7.0, 5 mM MgSO4, 0.1 M KCl). A "burst" of calcium binding in the presence of high [Ca2+] gives approximately 12% phosphorylation and internalization of two Ca2+ at very short times after the addition of Ca2+ with this assay. This shows that calcium binding sites are available on the cytoplasmic-facing side of the free enzyme. Calcium binding to these sites induces the formation of cE.Ca2, the stable high-affinity form of the enzyme, with k = 40 s-1 at saturating [Ca2+] and a half-maximal rate at approximately 20 microM Ca2+ (from Kdiss = 7.4 X 10(-7) M for Ca.EGTA). The formation of cE.Ca2 through a "high-affinity" pathway can be described by the scheme E 1 in equilibrium cE.Ca1 2 in equilibrium cE.Ca2, with k1 = 3 X 10(6) M-1 s-1, k2 = 4.3 X 10(7) M-1 s-1, k-1 = 30 s-1, k-2 = 60 s-1, K1 = 9 X 10(-6) M, and K2 = 1.4 X 10(-6) M. The approach to equilibrium from E and 3.2 microM Ca2+ follows kobsd = kf + kr = 18 s-1 and gives kf = kr = 9 s-1. The rate of exchange of 45Ca into the inner position of cE.Ca2 shows an induction period and is not faster than the approach to equilibrium starting with E and 45Ca. The dissociation of 45Ca from the inner position of cE.45Ca.Ca in the presence of 3.2 microM Ca2+ occurs with a rate constant of 7 s-1. These results are inconsistent with a slow conformational change of free E to give cE, followed by rapid binding-dissociation of Ca2+.  相似文献   

19.
We used a fluorescence method to measure the rate constants for the elongation of pyrene-labeled actin filaments in a number of different solvents. The absolute values of the rate constants were established by electron microscopy. Using glycerol, sucrose, or ethylene glycol to vary the solution viscosity, the association rate constant (k+) was 10(7) M-1 s-1 viscosity-1 (in centipoise). Consequently, plots of 1/k+ versus viscosity are linear and extrapolate to near the origin as expected for a diffusion-limited reaction where the rate constant approaches infinity at zero viscosity. By electron microscopy, we found that this inhibitory effect of glycerol is almost entirely at the fast growing, barbed end. For the pointed end, plots of 1/k+ versus viscosity extrapolate to a maximum rate of about 10(6) M-1 s-1 at zero viscosity, so that elongation at the pointed is not limited by diffusion. In contrast to these small molecules, polyethylene glycol, dextran, and ovalbumin all cause a concentration (and therefore viscosity)-dependent increase in k+. At any given viscosity, their effects are similar to each other. For example, at 3 centipoise, k+ = 2.2 X 10(7) M-1 s-1. We presume that this is due to an excluded volume effect that causes an increase in the thermodynamic activity of the actin. If the proteins in the cytoplasmic matrix have a similar effect, the association reactions of actin in cells may be much faster than expected from experiments done in dilute buffers.  相似文献   

20.
The dissociation of the complex between 1:N6-ethenoadenosine, 5'-triphosphate (xiATP) and G-actin was initiated by dilution to concentrations between 1 micronM and 5 nM and monitored by the fluorescence change of xiATP. The results were quantitatively explained by a two-step mechanism: a reversible dissociation of the actin-nucleotide complex followed by a fast irreversible inactivation of nucleotide-free G-actin. Under normal conditions (0.8 mM CaCl2, pH 8.2,21 degrees C), the rate-limiting step was the dissociation of the nucleotide-G-actin complex. The half-time of the dissociation of xiATP from G-actin was 290 s as compared to only 13 s for the following denaturation step of nucleotide-free actin. 1 mM EDTA highly accelerated the dissociation step and, regardless of its concentration, the complex dissociated quantitatively within 1 min. Addition of Ca2+ within 20 s after EDTA addition induced a re-association of xiATP with nucleotide-free but still native G-actin. This reversal was kinetically resolved by means of a multimixing stopped-flow apparatus. The association rate constant was 6 X 10(6) M-1s-1. From the association and dissociation rate constant, a value of 2.5 X (10(9) M-1 was calculated for the binding constant of xiATP to G-actin. The binding constant of ATP (1.4 X 10(10) M-1) was derived from the relative binding constant of xiATP and ATP as determined by fluorescence titration of xiATP-G-actin with ATP. These binding constants are 10(3)-10(4) times higher than values reported earlier on the basis of more indirect data.  相似文献   

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