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1.
Polyclonal antibodies were raised in guinea pigs against troponin-T (TnT) isoforms purified from fast- and slow-twitch rabbit muscles. With the use of these antibodies and immunoblots of one- and two-dimensional electrophoreses, the distribution of fast and slow TnT isoforms was investigated in normal and chronically stimulated hindlimb muscles of the rabbit. According to differences in their apparent molecular masses, six fast TnT isoforms (TnTcf, TnT1f, TnT2f, TnT3f, TnT4f, TnT5f) were distinguished in normal tibialis anterior and extensor digitorum longus muscles. These muscles also contained low amounts of TnT1s and TnT2s which were the predominant TnT isoforms in slow-twitch soleus muscle. Fast and slow TnT isoforms were found to exist in several charge variants, i.e. one for TnTcf, three different charge forms for TnT1f, seven for TnT2f, four for TnT3f, three for TnT4f, one for TnT5f, four for TnT1s, and three for TnT2s. Some charge variants were phosphorylated isoforms because treatment with alkaline phosphatase reduced the number of the 19 fast and 7 slow variants to 12 and 3, respectively. The stimulation-induced fast-to-slow transition caused progressive decreases in fast and increases in slow isoforms. The decrease and the disappearance of the major fast isoforms followed a sequence of TnT2f, TnTcf, TnT4f, TnT1f, and TnT3f. This decrease in fast isoforms fits well with the reduction of fast TnT mRNAs assessed by Northern blot analysis. Prolonged stimulation ultimately created a TnT isoform pattern similar to that found in normal slow-twitch muscle. Stimulation also induced changes in the tropomyosin subunit pattern with a decrease in the fast and an increase in the slow alpha-tropomyosin subunit without altering the alpha/beta-tropomyosin subunit ratio. Similar to slow-twitch soleus muscle, long-term stimulated muscles contained appreciable amounts of the fast alpha-tropomyosin subunit, but only traces of fast TnT isoforms. This combination indicated that the predominant slow TnT isoforms may be capable of interacting with fast tropomyosin in these muscles.  相似文献   

2.
This study focuses on the effects ofmechanical unloading of rat soleus muscle on the isoform patterns ofthe three troponin (Tn) subunits: troponin T (TnT), troponin I (TnI),and troponin C (TnC). Mechanical unloading was achieved by hindlimbunloading (HU) for time periods of 7, 15, and 28 days. Relativeconcentrations of slow and fast TnT, TnI, and TnC isoforms wereassessed by electrophoretic and immunoblot analyses. HU inducedprofound slow-to-fast isoform transitions of all Tn subunits, althoughto different extents and with different time courses. The effectivenessof the isoform transitions was higher for TnT than for TnI and TnC.Indeed, TnI and TnC encompassed minor partial exchanges of slowisoforms with their fast counterparts, whereas the expression patternof fast TnT isoforms (TnTf) was largely increased after HU. Moreover, slow and fast isoforms of the different Tn were not affected in thesame manner by HU. This suggests that the slow and fast counterparts ofthe Tn subunit isoforms are regulated independently in response to HU.The changes in TnTf composition occurred in parallel with previouslydemonstrated transitions within the pattern of the fast myosin heavychains in the same muscles.

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3.
Striated muscle contraction is powered by actin-activated myosin ATPase. This process is regulated by Ca(2+) via the troponin complex. Slow- and fast-twitch fibers of vertebrate skeletal muscle express type I and type II myosin, respectively, and these myosin isoenzymes confer different ATPase activities, contractile velocities, and force. Skeletal muscle troponin has also diverged into fast and slow isoforms, but their functional significance is not fully understood. To investigate the expression of troponin isoforms in mammalian skeletal muscle and their functional relationship to that of the myosin isoforms, we concomitantly studied myosin, troponin T (TnT), and troponin I (TnI) isoform contents and isometric contractile properties in single fibers of rat skeletal muscle. We characterized a large number of Triton X-100-skinned single fibers from soleus, diaphragm, gastrocnemius, and extensor digitorum longus muscles and selected fibers with combinations of a single myosin isoform and a single class (slow or fast) of the TnT and TnI isoforms to investigate their role in determining contractility. Types IIa, IIx, and IIb myosin fibers produced higher isometric force than that of type I fibers. Despite the polyploidy of adult skeletal muscle fibers, the expression of fast or slow isoforms of TnT and TnI is tightly coupled. Fibers containing slow troponin had higher Ca(2+) sensitivity than that of the fast troponin fibers, whereas fibers containing fast troponin showed a higher cooperativity of Ca(2+) activation than that of the slow troponin fibers. These results demonstrate distinct but coordinated regulation of troponin and myosin isoform expression in skeletal muscle and their contribution to the contractile properties of muscle.  相似文献   

4.
The major goal of this study was to elucidate how troponin T (TnT) dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) mutations in fetal TnT and fetal troponin affect the functional properties of the fetal heart that lead to infantile cardiomyopathy. The DCM mutations R141W and DeltaK210 were created in the TnT1 isoform, the primary isoform of cardiac TnT in the embryonic heart. In addition to a different TnT isoform, a different troponin I (TnI) isoform, slow skeletal TnI (ssTnI), is the dominant isoform in the embryonic heart. In skinned fiber studies, TnT1-wild-type (WT)-treated fibers reconstituted with cardiac TnI.troponin C (TnC) or ssTnI.TnC significantly increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development when compared with TnT3-WT-treated fibers at both pH 7.0 and pH 6.5. Porcine cardiac fibers treated with TnT1 that contained the DCM mutations (R141W and DeltaK210), when reconstituted with either cardiac TnI.TnC or ssTnI.TnC, significantly decreased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development compared with TnT1-WT at both pH values. The R141W mutation, which showed no significant change in the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development in the TnT3 isoform, caused a significant decrease in the TnT1 isoform. The DeltaK210 mutation caused a greater decrease in Ca(2+) sensitivity and maximal isometric force development compared with the R141W mutation in both the fetal and adult TnT isoforms. When complexed with cardiac TnI.TnC or ssTnI.TnC, both TnT1 DCM mutations strongly decreased maximal actomyosin ATPase activity as compared with TnT1-WT. Our results suggest that a decrease in maximal actomyosin ATPase activity in conjunction with decreased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development may cause a severe DCM phenotype in infants with the mutations.  相似文献   

5.
The present study examined Ca(2+) sensitivity of diaphragm muscle (Dia(m)) fibers expressing different myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms. We hypothesized that Dia(m) fibers expressing the MHC(slow) isoform have greater Ca(2+) sensitivity than fibers expressing fast MHC isoforms and that this fiber-type difference in Ca(2+) sensitivity reflects the isoform composition of the troponin (Tn) complex (TnC, TnT, and TnI). Studies were performed in single Triton-X-permeabilized Dia(m) fibers. The Ca(2+) concentration at which 50% maximal force was generated (pCa(50)) was determined for each fiber. SDS-PAGE and Western analyses were used to determine the MHC and Tn isoform composition of single fibers. The pCa(50) for Dia(m) fibers expressing MHC(slow) was significantly greater than that of fibers expressing fast MHC isoforms, and this greater Ca(2+) sensitivity was associated with expression of slow isoforms of the Tn complex. However, some Dia(m) fibers expressing MHC(slow) contained the fast TnC isoform. These results suggest that the combination of TnT, TnI, and TnC isoforms may determine Ca(2+) sensitivity in Dia(m) fibers.  相似文献   

6.
H C Cheung  C K Wang  N A Malik 《Biochemistry》1987,26(18):5904-5907
We have determined the free energy of formation of the binary complexes formed between skeletal troponin C and troponin T (TnC.TnT) and between troponin T and troponin I (TnT.TnI). This was accomplished by using TnC fluorescently modified at Cys-98 with N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine for the first complex and TnI labeled at Cys-133 with the same probe for the other complex. The free energy of the ternary complex formed between troponin C and the binary complex TnT.TnI [TnC.(TnT.TnI)] was also measured by monitoring the emission of 5-(iodoacetamido)eosin attached to Cys-133 of the troponin I in TnT.TnI. The free energies were -9.0 kcal.mol-1 for TnC.TnT, -9.2 kcal.mol-1 for TnT.TnI, and -8.7 kcal.mol-1 for TnC.(TnT.TnI). In the presence of Mg2+ the free energies of TnC.TnT and TnC.(TnT.TnI) were -10.3 and -10.9 kcal.mol-1, respectively; in the presence of Ca2+ the corresponding free energies were -10.6 and -13.5 kcal.mol-1. Mg2+ and Ca2+ had negligible effect on the free energy of TnT.TnI. From these results the free energies of the formation of troponin from the three subunits were found to be -16.8 kcal.mol-1, -18.9 kcal.mol-1, and -21.6 kcal.mol-1 in the presence of EGTA, Mg2+, and Ca2+, respectively. Most of the free energy decrease caused by Ca2+ binding to the Ca2+-specific sites is derived from stabilization of the TnI-TnC linkage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The interactions between troponin subunits have been studied by intrinsic fluorescence and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The tryptophan fluorescence of troponin T (TnT) and troponin I (TnI) when complexed with troponin C (TnC) undergoes a Ca2+-dependent transition. The midpoints of such spectral changes occur at pCa approximately equal to 6, suggesting that the conformational change of TnT and TnI is induced by Ca2+ binding to the low-affinity sites of TnC. When TnC is labelled at Cys-98 with a maleimide spin probe (MSL), the spin signal is sensitive to Ca2+ binding to both the high and the low-affinity sites of TnC in the presence of either or both of the other two troponin subunits. Since Cys-98 is located in the vicinity of one of the high-affinity sites, these results are indicative of a long-range interaction between the two halves of the TnC molecule. Our earlier kinetic studies [Wang, C.-L. A., Leavis, P. C. & Gergely, J. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9175-9177] have shown such interactions in TnC alone. Since the ESR spectral change associated with metal binding to the low-affinity sites is only observed when MSL-TnC is complexed with TnT and/or TnI, this long-range interaction within TnC appears to be mediated through the other troponin subunits.  相似文献   

8.
J Leszyk  J H Collins  P C Leavis  T Tao 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):6983-6987
The sulfhydryl-specific, heterobifunctional, photoactivatable cross-linker 4-maleimidobenzophenone (BPMal) was used to study the interaction of rabbit skeletal muscle troponin subunits TnC, TnT, and TnI. TnC was labeled at Cys-98 by the maleimide moiety of BPMal and then mixed with either TnT alone or TnI plus TnT, in the presence of Ca2+. Upon photolysis, TnI and/or TnT formed covalent cross-links with TnC. The cross-linked TnC-TnT heterodimer obtained from the binary complex was digested into progressively smaller cross-linked peptides that were purified by HPLC and then characterized by amino acid analysis and sequencing. An initial cross-linked CNBr fraction contained the expected peptide CB9 (residues 84-135) of TnC, plus CNBr peptides spanning residues 152-230 of TnT. Results from a peptic digest of the CNBr cross-linked fraction permitted the identification of residues 159-197 as the most highly cross-linked region in TnT. A final subtilisin digest yielded a heterogeneous cross-linked fraction, which suggested that an especially high degree of cross-links was formed in the vicinity of residues 175-178 (Met-Lys-Lys-Lys) of TnT. Although this region of TnT had previously been implicated in binding, we show here for the first time that it is close to Cys-98 of TnC. In an analogous study on the binary complex of TnC and TnI [Leszyk, J., Collins, J. H., Leavis, P. C., & Tao, T. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 7042-7047], we previously showed that Cys-98 of TnC was cross-linked mainly to CN4, the "inhibitory region", of TnI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Numerous troponin T (TnT) isoforms are produced by alternative splicing from three genes characteristic of cardiac, fast skeletal, and slow skeletal muscles. Apart from the developmental transition of fast skeletal muscle TnT isoforms, switching of TnT expression during muscle development is poorly understood. In this study, we investigated precisely and comprehensively developmental changes in chicken cardiac and slow skeletal muscle TnT isoforms by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting with specific antisera. Four major isoforms composed of two each of higher and lower molecular weights were found in cardiac TnT (cTnT). Expression of cTnT changed from high- to low-molecular-weight isoforms during cardiac muscle development. On the other hand, such a transition was not found and only high-molecular-weight isoforms were expressed in the early stages of chicken skeletal muscle development. Two major and three minor isoforms of slow skeletal muscle TnT (sTnT), three of which were newly found in this study, were expressed in chicken skeletal muscles. The major sTnT isoforms were commonly detected throughout development in slow and mixed skeletal muscles, and at developmental stages until hatching-out in fast skeletal muscles. The expression of minor sTnT isoforms varied from muscle to muscle and during development.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction sites of rabbit skeletal troponin I (TnI) with troponin C (TnC), troponin T (TnT), tropomyosin (Tm) and actin were mapped systematically using nine single cysteine residue TnI mutants with mutation sites at positions 6, 48, 64, 89, 104, 121, 133, 155 or 179 (TnI6, TnI48 etc.). Each mutant was labeled with the heterobifunctional photocrosslinker 4-maleimidobenzophenone (BP-Mal), and incorporated into the TnI.TnC binary complex, the TnI.TnC.TnT ternary troponin (Tn) complex, and the Tn.Tm.F-actin synthetic thin filament. Photocrosslinking reactions carried out in the presence and absence of Ca(2+) yielded the following results: (1) BP-TnI6 photocrosslinked primarily to TnC with a small degree of Ca(2+)-dependence in all the complex forms. (2) BP-TnI48, TnI64 and TnI89 photocrosslinked to TnT with no Ca(2+)-dependence. Photocrosslinking to TnC was reduced in the ternary versus the binary complex. BP-TnI89 also photocrosslinked to actin with higher yields in the absence of Ca(2+) than in its presence. (3) BP-TnI104 and TnI133 photocrosslinked to actin with much higher yields in the absence than in the presence of Ca(2+). (4) BP-TnI121 photocrosslinked to TnC with a small degree of Ca(2+)-dependence, and did not photocrosslink to actin. (5) BP-TnI155 and TnI179 photocrosslinked to TnC, TnT and actin, but all with low yields. All the labeled mutants photocrosslinked to TnC with varying degrees of Ca(2+)-dependence, and none to Tm. These results, along with those published allowed us to construct a structural and functional model of TnI in the Tn complex: in the presence of Ca(2+), residues 1-33 of TnI interact with the C-terminal domain hydrophobic cleft of TnC, approximately 48-89 with TnT, approximately 90-113 with TnC's central helix, approximately 114-125 with TnC's N-terminal domain hydrophobic cleft, and approximately 130-150 with TnC's A-helix. In the absence of Ca(2+), residues approximately 114-125 move out of TnC's N-terminal domain hydrophobic cleft and trigger the movements of residues approximately 89-113 and approximately 130-150 away from TnC and towards actin.  相似文献   

11.
Kobayashi T  Zhao X  Wade R  Collins JH 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5386-5391
We have mutated eight conserved, charged amino acid residues in the N-terminal, regulatory domain of troponin C (TnC) so we could investigate their role in troponin-linked Ca2+ regulation of muscle contraction. These residues surround a hydrophobic pocket in the N-terminal domain of TnC which, when Ca2+ binds to regulatory sites in this domain, is exposed and interacts with the inhibitory region of troponin I (TnI). We constructed three double mutants (E53A/E54A, E60A/E61A, and E85A/D86A) and two single mutants (R44A and R81A) of rabbit fast skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) in which the charged residues were replaced with neutral alanines. All five of these mutants retained TnC's ability to bind TnI in a Ca2+-dependent manner, to neutralize TnI's inhibition of actomyosin S1 ATPase activity, and to form a ternary complex with TnI and troponin T (TnT). Ternary complexes formed with TnC(R44A) or TnC(R81A) regulated actomyosin S1 ATPase activity normally, with TnI-based inhibition in the absence of Ca2+ and TnT-based activation in the presence of Ca2+. TnC(E53A/E54A) and TnC(E85A/D86A) interacted weakly with TnT, as judged by native gel electrophoresis. Ternary complexes formed with these mutants inhibited actomyosin S1 ATPase activity in both the presence and absence of Ca2+, and did not undergo Ca2+-dependent structural changes in TnI which can be detected by limited chymotryptic digestion. TnC(E60A/E61A) interacted normally with TnT. Its ternary complex showed Ca2+-dependent structural changes in TnI, inhibited actomyosin S1 ATPase in the absence of Ca2+, but did not activate ATPase in the presence of Ca2+. This is the first demonstration that selective mutation of TnC can abolish the activating effect of troponin while its inhibitory function is retained. Our results suggest the existence of an elaborate network of protein-protein interactions formed by TnI, TnT, and the N-terminal domain of TnC, all of which are important in the Ca2+-dependent regulation of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

12.
The response of permeabilized rabbit fast skeletal muscle fibers to calcium is determined by the troponin T (TnT) and tropomyosin (Tm) isoforms they express. Fibers expressing primarily TnT2f and alpha 2 Tm exhibit steeper pCa/tension relations than those in which either TnT1f or TnT3f and alpha beta Tm predominate. Troponin C extraction studies show that lower slopes do not result from a less concerted transition on the thin filament: the Tn-Tm regulatory strand activates as a unit in all fast fibers. Because the TnT variants differ in their N-terminal segments, and this region overlaps adjacent Tms on the regulatory strand, we propose that both the end-to-end overlap of Tm and the effect of TnT on that interaction are the basis of the concerted transition of the regulatory strand to the active state that occurs in the presence of calcium. Moreover, the effect of different Tn-Tm combinations on the ratio of the affinities of TnC for calcium in the relaxed and active states appears to be a significant determinant of the contractile properties of fast fibers in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of the NH2-terminal region of troponin T (TnT) to the COOH-terminal region of tropomyosin (Tm) and the head-to-tail overlap between Tm molecules is thought to provide a pivotal link between troponin (Tn) and Tm (White, S.P., Cohen, C., and Phillips, G.N., Jr. (1987) Nature 325, 826-828). To further explore the structure-function relationship of the NH2-terminal region of TnT, we studied the binding of a 26,000-dalton TnT fragment (26K-TnT, Ohtsuki, I., Shiraishi, F., Suenaga, N., Miyata, T., and Tanokura, M.J. (1984) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 95, 1337-1342) which corresponds to residues 46-259 of TnT2f, the major isoform of TnT in rabbit fast twitch muscle, to immobilized alpha-Tm. Both 26K-TnT and TnT2f were retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column in the presence of 150 mM NaCl. However, upon increasing the NaCl concentration 26K-TnT was eluted from the column at a higher ionic strength than was TnT. When applied alone, the binary complex of TnI and TnC (TnC.TnI) was not retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column. When applied subsequently to prebound TnT2f or 26K-TnT, TnI.TnC was retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column and eluted together with TnT2f or 26K-TnT as ternary troponin complexes. Whether Ca2+ was present or not, Tn containing 26K-TnT was eluted at a higher ionic strength than was Tn containing TnT2f, indicating that removal of the first 45 residues of TnT2f strengthens the binding of Tn to Tm. In the presence of Tm, reconstituted Tn containing 26K-TnT conferred Ca2+ sensitivity on actomyosin-S1 MgATPase, and the steepness of the pCa-ATPase relation was unchanged with respect to the actoS1 ATPase regulated by TnT2f. It is concluded that the first 45 residues of TnT2f are not essential for anchoring the troponin complex to the thin filament and do not play a crucial role in the cooperative response of regulated actoS1 ATPase to Ca2+.  相似文献   

14.
The fluorescence titration curve of skeletal muscle troponin containing TnI with 2-[4'-iodoacetamido)anilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid-labeled Cys-48 and/or Cys-64 was composed of two transition curves. One transition occurred at the pCa region higher than 8.0, and the other between pCa 8.0 and 6.0. The transition at the lower pCa region had a midpoint of pCa 6.85, and the midpoint did not depend on Mg2+. The time course of the fluorescence change subsequent to the rapid pCa-jump of the solution was biphasic. The fast phase was due to the transition at the lower pCa region, and the rate constant of the process was characteristic of the conformational change of the protein induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. The slow phase was from the transition at the higher pCa region, and its rate constant was characteristic of the conformational change of the protein induced by Ca2+ binding to the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. Therefore we can conclude that the fluorescence probe bound to Cys-48 and/or Cys-64 of TnI detects the conformational change of the Tn complex induced by Ca2+ binding to both the low and high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. The fluorescence probe bound to Cys-133 of TnI or Met residues of TnT detected the conformational change of the Tn complex induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC.  相似文献   

15.
Recent structural studies of the troponin (Tn) core complex have shown that the regulatory head containing the N-lobe of TnC is connected to the IT arm by a flexible linker of TnC. The IT arm is a long coiled-coil formed by alpha-helices of TnI and TnT, plus the C-lobe of TnC. The TnT is thought to play a pivotal role in the linking of Ca(2+) -triggered conformational changes in thin filament regulatory proteins to the activation of cross-bridge cycling. However, a functional domain at the C-terminus of TnT is missing from the Tn core complex. In this study, we intended to determine the proximity relationship between the central helix of TnC and the TnT C-terminus in the binary and the ternary complex with and without Ca2+ by using pyrene excimer fluorescence spectroscopy and fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Chicken fast skeletal TnC contains a Cys102 at the E helix, while TnT has a Cys264 at its C-terminus. These two cysteines were specifically labeled with sulfhydryl-reactive fluorescence probes. The measured distance in the binary complex was about 19 Angstroms and slightly increased when they formed the ternary complex with TnI (20 Angstroms). Upon Ca2+ binding the distance was not affected in the binary complex but increased by approximately 4 Angstroms in the ternary complex. These results suggest that TnI plays an essential role in the Ca(2+) -mediated change in the spatial relationship between the C-lobe of TnC and the C-terminus of TnT.  相似文献   

16.
Luo Y  Leszyk J  Li B  Gergely J  Tao T 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15306-15315
Skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) adopts an extended conformation when crystallized alone and a compact one when crystallized with an N-terminal troponin I (TnI) peptide, TnI(1-47) [Vassylyev et al. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 4847-4852]. The N-terminal region of TnI (residues 1-40) was suggested to play a functional role of facilitating the movement of TnI's inhibitory region between TnC and actin [Tripet et al. (1997) J. Mol. Biol. 271, 728-750]. To test this hypothesis and to investigate the conformation of TnC in the intact troponin complex and in solution, we attached fluorescence and photo-cross-linking probes to a mutant TnI with a single cysteine at residue 6. Distances from this residue to residues of TnC were measured by the fluorescence resonance energy transfer technique, and the sites of photo-cross-linking in TnC were determined by microsequencing and mass spectrometry following enzymatic digestions. Our results show that in the troponin complex neither the distance between TnI residue 6 and TnC residue 89 nor the photo-cross-linking site in TnC, Ser133, changes with Ca(2+), in support of the notion that this region plays mainly a structural rather than a regulatory role. The distances to residues 12 and 41 in TnC's N-domain are both considerably longer than those predicted by the crystal structure of TnC.TnI(1-47), supporting an extended rather than a compact conformation of TnC. In the binary TnC.TnI complex and the presence of Ca(2+), Met43 in TnC's N-domain was identified as the photo-cross-linking site, and multiple distances between TnI residue 6 and TnC residue 41 were detected. This was taken to indicate increased flexibility in TnC's central helix and that TnC dynamically changes between a compact and an extended conformation when troponin T (TnT) is absent. Our results further emphasize the difference between the binary TnC.TnI and the ternary troponin complexes and the importance of using intact proteins in the study of structure-function relationships of troponin.  相似文献   

17.
Cardiac muscle contraction is regulated by Ca(2+) through the troponin complex consisting of three subunits: troponin C (TnC), troponin T (TnT), and troponin I (TnI). We reported previously that the abnormal splicing of cardiac TnT in turkeys with dilated cardiomyopathy resulted in a greater binding affinity to TnI. In the present study, we characterized a polymorphism of cardiac TnI in the heart of wild turkeys. cDNA cloning and sequencing of the novel turkey cardiac TnI revealed a single amino acid substitution, R111C. Arg(111) in avian cardiac TnI corresponds to a Lys in mammals. This residue is conserved in cardiac and skeletal muscle TnIs across the vertebrate phylum, implying a functional importance. In the partial crystal structure of cardiac troponin, this amino acid resides in an alpha-helix that directly contacts with TnT. Structural modeling indicates that the substitution of Cys for Arg or Lys at this position would not disrupt the global structure of troponin. To evaluate the functional significance of the different size and charge between the Arg and Cys side chains, protein-binding assays using purified turkey cardiac TnI expressed in Escherichia coli were performed. The results show that the R111C substitution lowered binding affinity to TnT, which is potentially compensatory to the increased TnI-binding affinity of the cardiomyopathy-related cardiac TnT splicing variant. Therefore, the fixation of the cardiac TnI Cys(111) allele in the wild turkey population and the corresponding functional effect reflect an increased fitness value, suggesting a novel target for the treatment of TnT myopathies.  相似文献   

18.
Troponin I (TnI) is the inhibitory component of the striated muscle Ca2+ regulatory protein troponin (Tn). The other two components of Tn are troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+-binding component, and troponin T (TnT), the tropomyosin-binding component. We have used limited chymotryptic digestion to probe the local conformation of TnI in the free state, the binary TnC*TnI complex, the ternary TnC*. TnI*TnT (Tn) complex, and in the reconstituted Tn*tropomyosin*F-actin filament. The digestion of TnI alone or in the TnC*TnI complex produced initially two major fragments via a cleavage of the peptide bond between Phe100 and Asp101 in the so-called inhibitory region. In the ternary Tn complex cleavage occurred at a new site between Leu140 and Lys141. In the absence of Ca2+ this was followed by digestion of the 1-140 fragment at Leu122 and Met116. In the reconstituted thin filament the same fragments as in the case of the ternary complex were produced, but the rate of digestion was slower in the absence than in the presence of Ca2+. These results indicate firstly that in both free TnI and TnI complexed with TnC there is an exposed and flexible site in the inhibitory region. Secondly, TnT affects the conformation of TnI in the inhibitory region and also in the region that contains the 140-141 bond. Thirdly, the 140-141 region of TnI is likely to interact with actin in the reconstituted thin filament when Ca2+ is absent. These findings are discussed in terms of the role of TnI in the mechanism of thin filament regulation, and in light of our previous results [Y. Luo, J.-L. Wu, J. Gergely, T. Tao, Biochemistry 36 (1997) 13449-13454] on the global conformation of TnI.  相似文献   

19.
In striated muscle the force generating acto-myosin interaction is sterically regulated by the thin filament proteins tropomyosin and troponin (Tn), with the position of tropomyosin modulated by calcium binding to troponin. Troponin itself consists of three subunits, TnI, TnC, and TnT, widely characterized as being responsible for separate aspects of the regulatory process. TnI, the inhibitory unit is released from actin upon calcium binding to TnC, while TnT performs a structural role forming a globular head region with the regulatory TnI- TnC complex with a tail anchoring it within the thin filament. We have examined the properties of TnT and the TnT(1) tail fragment (residues 1-158) upon reconstituted actin-tropomyosin filaments. Their regulatory effects have been characterized in both myosin S1 ATPase and S1 kinetic and equilibrium binding experiments. We show that both inhibit the actin-tropomyosin-activated S1 ATPase with TnT(1) producing a greater inhibitory effect. The S1 binding data show that this inhibition is not caused by the formation of the blocked B-state but by significant stabilization of the closed C-state with a 10-fold reduction in the C- to M-state equilibrium, K(T), for TnT(1). This suggests TnT has a modulatory as well as structural role, providing an explanation for its large number of alternative isoforms.  相似文献   

20.
Fast skeletal troponin C (sTnC) has two low affinity Ca(2+)-binding sites (sites I and II), whereas in cardiac troponin C (cTnC) site I is inactive. By modifying the Ca2+ binding properties of sites I and II in cTnC it was demonstrated that binding of Ca2+ to an activated site I alone is not sufficient for triggering contraction in slow skeletal muscle fibers (Sweeney, H.L., Brito, R. M.M., Rosevear, P.R., and Putkey, J.A. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 9538-9542). However, a similar study using sTnC showed that Ca2+ binding to site I alone could partially activate force production in fast skeletal muscle fibers (Sheng, Z., Strauss, W.L., Francois, J.M., and Potter, J.D. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 21554-21560). The purpose of the current study was to examine the functional characteristics of modified cTnC derivatives in fast skeletal muscle fibers to assess whether or not either low affinity site can mediate force production when coupled to fast skeletal isoforms of troponin (Tn) I and TnT. Normal cTnC and sTnC were compared with engineered derivatives of cTnC having either both sites I and II active, or only site I active. In contrast to what is seen in slow muscle, binding of Ca2+ to site I alone recovered about 15-20% of the normal calcium-activated force and ATPase activity in skinned fast skeletal muscle fibers and myofibrils, respectively. This is most likely due to structural differences between TnI and/or TnT isoforms that allow for partial recognition and translation of the signal represented by binding Ca2+ to site I of TnC when associated with fast skeletal but not slow skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

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