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1.
The beta-thymosins are intracellular monomeric (G-)actin sequestering proteins forming 1:1 complexes with G-actin. Here, we analysed the interaction of thymosin beta(4) with F-actin. Thymosin beta(4) at 200 microM was chemically cross-linked to F-actin. In the presence of phalloidin, the chemically cross-linked actin:thymosin beta(4) complex was incorporated into F-actin. These mixed filaments were of normal appearance when inspected by conventional transmission electron microscopy after negative staining. We purified the chemically cross-linked actin:thymosin beta(4) complex, which polymerised only when phalloidin and the gelsolin:2-actin complex were present simultaneously. Using scanning transmission electron microscopy, the mass-per-length of control and actin:thymosin beta(4) filaments was found to be 16.0(+/-0.8) kDa/nm and 18.0(+/-0.9) kDa/nm, respectively, indicating an increase in subunit mass of 5.4 kDa. Analysis of the helical parameters revealed an increase of the crossover spacing of the two right-handed long-pitch helical strands from 36.0 to 40.5 nm. Difference map analysis of 3-D helical reconstruction of control and actin:thymosin beta(4) filaments yielded an elongated extra mass. Qualitatively, the overall size and shape of the difference mass were compatible with published data of the atomic structure of thymosin beta(4). The deduced binding sites of thymosin beta(4) to actin were in agreement with those identified previously. However, parts of the difference map might represent subtle conformational changes of both proteins occurring upon complex formation.  相似文献   

2.
To evaluate the role of the hydration layer on the protein surface of actomyosin, we compared the effects of urea and guanidine-HCl on the sliding velocities and ATPase activities of the actin-heavy meromyosin (HMM) system. Both chemicals denature proteins, but only urea perturbs the hydration layer. Both the sliding velocity of actin filaments and actin-activated ATPase activity decreased with increasing urea concentrations. The sliding movement was completely inhibited at 1.0 M urea, while actin filaments were bound to HMM molecules fixed on the glass surface. Guanidine-HCl (0-0.05 M) drastically decreased both the sliding velocity and ATPase activation of acto-HMM complexes. Under this condition, actin filaments almost detached from HMM molecules. In contrast, the ATPase activity of HMM without actin filaments was almost independent of urea concentrations <1.0 M and guanidine-HCl concentrations <0.05 M. An increase in urea concentrations up to 2.0 M partly induced changes in the ternary structure of HMM molecules, while the actin filaments were stable in this concentration range. Hydration changes around such actomyosin complexes may alter both the stability of part of the myosin molecules, and the affinity for force transmission between actin filaments and myosin heads.  相似文献   

3.
Phalloidin increases F-actin microfilament content and actin-directed immunofluorescence in hepatocytes in vivo and also increases actin polymerization and the stability of F-actin in vitro. We studied the sensitivity of immunofluorescent staining of actin to an actin depolymerizing factor (ADF) as well as actin content, degree of polymerization, and turnover in livers of in vivo phalloidin-treated rats. Pretreatment with ADF abolished anti-actin antibody (AAA) staining of normal liver but did not modify staining of livers from phalloidin-treated animals. Plani-metric analyses of SDS-polyacrylamide gels snowed the percent actin of total protein was increased by approximately 40% and the absolute amount of actin by approximately 43%, ten days after daily phalloidin treatment (50 μg/100 gm body weight). Similar but smaller changes could be seen after one day of treatment. Ultracentrifugational analyses of liver extracts indicated no change in the amount or proportion of G-actin but a 194% increase in the proportion of F-actin in ten-day treated animals, changes also apparent in one day animals. Neither the relative fractional rate of actin synthesis nor its synthesis as a percent of total protein synthesis was altered either at one-day or ten-day post-phalloidin treatment. Dual-isotope experiments indicated that the rate of actin degradation was decreased selectively in the one- to three-day period -following drug treatment. Thus, phalloidin appears to stabilize actin against the depolymerizing actions of ADF, increases the proportion of F-actin without altering the size of the G-actin pool, and causes accumulation of actin by decreasing its relative rate of degradation.  相似文献   

4.
Cofilin (ADF) affects lateral contacts in F-actin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effect of yeast cofilin on lateral contacts between protomers of yeast and skeletal muscle actin filaments was examined in solution. These contacts are presumably stabilized by the interactions of loop 262-274 of one protomer with two other protomers on the opposite strand in F-actin. Cofilin inhibited several-fold the rate of interstrand disulfide cross-linking between Cys265 and Cys374 in yeast S265C mutant F-actin, but enhanced excimer formation between pyrene probes attached to these cysteine residues. The possibility that these effects are due to a translocation of the C terminus of actin by cofilin was ruled out by measurements of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from tryptophan residues and ATP to acceptor probes at Cys374. Such measurements did not reveal cofilin-induced changes in FRET efficiency, suggesting that changes in Cys265-Cys374 cross-linking and excimer formation stem from the perturbation of loop 262-274 by cofilin. Changes in lateral interactions in F-actin were indicated also by the cofilin-induced partial release of rhodamine phalloidin. Disulfide cross-linking of S265C yeast F-actin inhibited strongly and reversibly the release of rhodamine phalloidin by cofilin. Overall, this study provides solution evidence for the weakening of lateral interactions in F-actin by cofilin.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Muscle contraction and other forms of cell motility occur as a result of cyclic interactions between myosin molecules and actin filaments. Force generation is generally attributed to ATP-driven structural changes in myosin, whereas a passive role is ascribed to actin. However, some results challenge this view, predicting structural changes in actin during motor activity, e.g., when the actin filaments slide on a myosin-coated surface in vitro. Here, we analyzed statistical properties of the sliding filament paths, allowing us to detect changes of this type. It is interesting to note that evidence for substantial structural changes that led to increased bending flexibility of the filaments was found in phalloidin-stabilized, but not in phalloidin-free, actin filaments. The results are in accordance with the idea that a high-flexibility structural state of actin is a prerequisite for force production, but not the idea that a low-to-high flexibility transition of the actin filament should be an important component of the force-generating step per se. Finally, our data challenge the general view that phalloidin-stabilized filaments behave as native actin filaments in their interaction with myosin. This has important implications, since phalloidin stabilization is a routine procedure in most studies of actomyosin function.  相似文献   

7.
When analyzing cytoskeletal proteins in Cucurbita pepo phloem exudate by immunoblotting, we detected actin in an amount comparable to that in some plant tissues and a small amount of -tubulin. Electron-microscopic examination of the exudate permitted us to observe filaments that were capable of interacting with the myosin subfragment S1 from rabbit skeletal muscle and with phalloidin conjugated with colloidal gold. The addition of 0.5 mM phalloidin to the exudate in the medium containing 20 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) resulted in an increased number of filaments. Since high DTT concentrations induce a breakdown of filaments of the phloem protein PP1, it seems likely that the produced filaments were composed of actin. The addition of 50 mM MgCl2 to the exudate resulted in the formation of dense bundles and paracrystals, which resembled those produced by muscle actin under similar conditions. Our results demonstrated that actin in phloem sap was capable of polymerization with filament formation.  相似文献   

8.
We recently refined the in vitro motility assay for studies of actomyosin function to achieve rectified myosin induced sliding of actin filaments. This paves the way, both for detailed functional studies of actomyosin and for nanotechnological applications. In the latter applications it would be desirable to use actin filaments for transportation of cargoes (e.g., enzymes) between different predetermined locations on a chip. We here describe how single quantum dot labelling of isolated actin filaments simultaneously provides handles for cargo attachment and bright and photostable fluorescence labels facilitating cargo detection and filament tracking. Labelling was achieved with preserved actomyosin function using streptavidin-coated CdSe quantum dots (Qdots). These nanocrystals have several unique physical properties and the present work describes their first use for functional studies of isolated proteins outside the cell. The results, in addition to the nanotechnology developments, open for new types of in vitro assays of isolated biomolecules.  相似文献   

9.
Summary We have observed the distribution of filamentous actin in growing hyphae of the oomyceteSaprolegnia ferax. The actin was stained by electroporating intact hyphae in the presence of 4×10–8 M rhodamine phalloidin. Hyphae quickly recovered from electroporation and showed an apical cap of densely packed actin filaments. The pores created by the electric shock resealed in 8–10min and within 1/2 h hyphae resumed growth and appeared normal. This technique allows us to observe actin arrays during growth and may prove to be a useful tool in determining the complex roles of actin in apical growth.Abbreviations RP rhodamine phalloidin - F-actin filamentous actin  相似文献   

10.
Hydrolysis of the triphosphate moiety of ATP, catalyzed by myosin, induces alterations in the affinity of the myosin heads for actin filaments via conformational changes, thereby causing motility of the actomyosin complexes. To elucidate the contribution of the triphosphate group attached to adenosine, we examined the enzymatic activity of heavy meromyosin (HMM) with actin filaments for inorganic tripolyphosphate (3PP) using a Malachite green method and evaluated using fluorescence microscopy the effects of 3PP on actin filament motility on HMM-coated glass slides. In the presence of MgCl2, HMM hydrolyzed 3PP at a maximum rate of 0.016 s−1 HMM−1, which was four times lower than the hydrolysis rate of ATP. Tetrapolyphosphate (4PP) was hydrolyzed at a rate similar to that of 3PP hydrolysis. The hydrolysis rates of 3PP and 4PP were enhanced by roughly 10-fold in the presence of actin filaments. In motility assays, the presence of polyphosphates did not lead to the sliding movement of actin filaments. Moreover, in the presence of ATP at low concentrations, the sliding velocity of actin filaments decreased as the concentration of added polyphosphate increased, indicating a competitive binding of polyphosphate to myosin heads with ATP. These results suggested that the energy produced by standalone triphosphate hydrolysis did not induce the unidirectional motion of actomyosin and that the link between triphosphate and adenosine was crucial for motility.  相似文献   

11.
Myosin II controls the viscoelastic behavior of actin filaments, interacting with actin in an energy-dependent manner. Replacing adenosine triphosphate with adenosine diphosphate changes actomyosin sliding to cross-linking. Rheological measurements show a 3-4-fold increase of the elastic portion G' in actin filaments when myosin II is present at a molar ratio r(MA)=1:200. This observation is supported by the demonstration of inactive myosin heads along actin filaments using atomic force microscopy.  相似文献   

12.
利用原子力显微镜(atomic force microscope,AFM)技术,研究了肌动蛋白体外通过自组织过程形成的纤维结构及其多态性。肌动蛋白在体外通过自组织过程能够聚合形成离散的树状分支的纤维丛和具有不同直径的长纤维等高级纤维结构,表现出明显的结构多态性;与微丝工具药物鬼笔环肽干预下自装配形成的主要由单根微丝和微丝束等纤维成份构成的连续网络结构明显不同。  相似文献   

13.
Numerous studies have described the F-actin cytoskeleton; however, little information relevant to C-actin is available. The actin pools of bovine aortic endothelial cells were examined using in situ and in vitro conditions and fluorescent probes for G-(deoxyribonuclease I.0.3 μM) or F-actin (phalloidin, 0.2 μM). Cells in situ displayed a diffuse G-actin distribution, while F-actin was concentrated in the cell periphery and in fine stress fibers that traversed some cells. Cells of subconfluent or just confluent cultures demonstrated intense fluorescence, with many F-actin stress fibers. Postconfluent cultures resembled the condition in situ; peripheral F-actin was prominent, traversing actin stress fibers were greatly reduced and fluorescent intensity was diminished. Postconfluency had little influence on G-actin. with only an enhancement in the intensity of G-actin punctate fluorescence. When post-confluent cultures were incubated with cytochalasin D (15 min; 10--4 M), F-actin networks were disrupted and actin punctate and diffuse fluorescence increased. G-actin fluorescence was not altered by the incubation. Although its unstructured nature may account for the minor changes observed, the stability of the G-actin pool in the presence of notable F-actin modulations suggested that filamentous actin was the key constituent involved in these actin cytoskeletal alterations. A separate finding illustrated that the concomitant use of actin probes with image enhancement and fluorescent microscopy could reveal simultaneously the G- and F-actin pools within the same cell.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of chemical modifications of myosin's reactive cysteines on actomyosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activities and sliding velocities in the in vitro motility assays were examined in this work. The three types of modifications studied were 4-[N-[(iodoacetoxy)ethyl]-N-methylamino]-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3- diazole labeling of SH2 (based on Ajtai and Burghart. 1989. Biochemistry. 28:2204-2210.), phenylmaleimide labeling of SH1, and phenylmaleimide labeling of myosin in myofibrils under rigor conditions. Each type of modified myosin inhibited the sliding of actin in motility assays. The sliding velocities of actin over copolymers of modified and unmodified myosins in the motility assay were slowest with rigor-modified myosin and most rapid with SH2-labeled myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of similarly copolymerized myosins were lowest with SH2-labeled myosin and highest with rigor-modified myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of myosin subfragment-1 obtained from these modified myosins decreased in the same linear manner with the fraction of modified heads. These results are interpreted using a model in which the sliding of actin filaments over myosin filaments decreases the probability of myosin activation by actin. The sliding velocity of actin over monomeric rigor-modified myosin exceeded that over the filamentous form, which suggests for this myosin that filament structure is important for the inhibition of actin sliding in motility assays. The fact that all cysteine modifications examined inhibited the actomyosin ATPase activities and sliding velocities of actin over myosin poses questions concerning the information about the activated crossbridge obtained from probes attached to SH1 or SH2 on myosin.  相似文献   

15.
We have applied differential scanning calorimetry to investigate thermal unfolding of F-actin. It has been shown that the thermal stability of F-actin strongly depends on ADP concentration. The transition temperature, T(m), increases with increasing ADP concentration up to 1 mM. The T(m) value also depends on the concentration of F-actin: it increases by almost 3 degrees C as the F-actin concentration is increased from 0.5 to 2.0 mg/ml. Similar dependence of the T(m) value on protein concentration was demonstrated for F-actin stabilized by phalloidin, whereas it was much less pronounced in the presence of AlF4(-). However, T(m) was independent of protein concentration in the case of monomeric G-actin. The results suggest that at least two reversible stages precede irreversible thermal denaturation of F-actin; one of them is dissociation of ADP from actin subunits, and another is dissociation of subunits from the ends of actin filaments. The model explains why unfolding of F-actin depends on both ADP and protein concentration.  相似文献   

16.
A novel approach is described for classification of filaments as stationary or moving and for extraction of velocity data for smooth actin filament sliding in vitro. Moving and stationary filaments were effectively classified using four discriminating variables in a multivariate statistical analysis. The variables were (1) two different measures of the average filament distance from its starting point, (2) a measure of the variability in sliding direction, and (3) the coefficient of variation (CV) of the frame-to-frame sliding velocity (v(mean)). On the basis of this multivariate analysis we obtained correct classification of 98% of the stationary filaments and 94% of the moving filaments in a cross-validation data set. The same classification functions were useful throughout despite a 10-fold variation in the average sliding velocity in the cross-validation data. Further analysis of motile filaments suggested that the velocity of smooth sliding should, ideally, be obtained from the intercept on the velocity axis of a plot of v(mean) against CV. The velocity, so obtained, was between 10 and 30% (mean 20+/-3%; n=7; p<0.001) higher than if average sliding velocity was obtained for all moving filaments with CV<0.5.  相似文献   

17.
Cooperative interaction between myosin and actin filaments has been detected by a number of different methods, and has been suggested to have some role in force generation by the actomyosin motor. In this study, we observed the binding of myosin to actin filaments directly using fluorescence microscopy to analyze the mechanism of the cooperative interaction in more detail. For this purpose, we prepared fluorescently labeled heavy meromyosin (HMM) of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin and Dictyostelium myosin II. Both types of HMMs formed fluorescent clusters along actin filaments when added at substoichiometric amounts. Quantitative analysis of the fluorescence intensity of the HMM clusters revealed that there are two distinct types of cooperative binding. The stronger form was observed along Ca2+-actin filaments with substoichiometric amounts of bound phalloidin, in which the density of HMM molecules in the clusters was comparable to full decoration. The novel, weaker form was observed along Mg2+-actin filaments with and without stoichiometric amounts of phalloidin. HMM density in the clusters of the weaker form was several-fold lower than full decoration. The weak cooperative binding required sub-micromolar ATP, and did not occur in the absence of nucleotides or in the presence of ADP and ADP-Vi. The G680V mutant of Dictyostelium HMM, which over-occupies the ADP-Pi bound state in the presence of actin filaments and ATP, also formed clusters along Mg2+-actin filaments, suggesting that the weak cooperative binding of HMM to actin filaments occurs or initiates at an intermediate state of the actomyosin-ADP-Pi complex other than that attained by adding ADP-Vi.  相似文献   

18.
Nuclei of Xenopus laevis oocytes grow 100 000‐fold larger in volume than a typical somatic nucleus and require an unusual intranuclear F‐actin scaffold for mechanical stability. We now developed a method for mapping F‐actin interactomes and identified a comprehensive set of F‐actin binders from the oocyte nuclei. Unexpectedly, the most prominent interactor was a novel kinesin termed NabKin (Nuclear and meiotic actin‐bundling Kinesin). NabKin not only binds microtubules but also F‐actin structures, such as the intranuclear actin bundles in prophase and the contractile actomyosin ring during cytokinesis. The interaction between NabKin and F‐actin is negatively regulated by Importin‐β and is responsive to spatial information provided by RanGTP. Disconnecting NabKin from F‐actin during meiosis caused cytokinesis failure and egg polyploidy. We also found actin‐bundling activity in Nabkin's somatic paralogue KIF14, which was previously shown to be essential for somatic cell division. Our data are consistent with the notion that NabKin/KIF14 directly link microtubules with F‐actin and that such link is essential for cytokinesis.  相似文献   

19.
Intrastrand cross-linking of actin filaments by ANP, N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl) putrescine, between Gln-41 in subdomain 2 and Cys-374 at the C-terminus, was shown to inhibit force generation with myosin in the in vitro motility assays [Kim et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 17801-17809]. To clarify the immobilization of which of these two sites inhibits the actomyosin motor, the properties of actins with partially overlapping cross-linked sites were examined. pPDM (N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide) and ABP [N-(4-azidobenzoyl) putrescine] were used to obtain actin filaments cross-linked ( approximately 50%) between Cys-374 and Lys-191 (interstrand) and Gln-41 and Lys-113 (intrastrand), respectively. ANP, ABP, and pPDM cross-linked filaments showed similar inhibition of their sliding speeds and force generation with myosin ( approximately 25%) in the in vitro motility assays. In analogy to ANP cross-linking of actin, pPDM and ABP cross-linkings did not change the strong S1 binding to actin and the V(max) and K(m) parameters of actomyosin ATPase. The similar effects of these three cross-linkings reveal the tight coupling between structural elements of the subdomain 2/subdomain 1 interface and show the importance of its dynamic flexibility to force generation with myosin. The possibility that actin cross-linkings inhibit rate-limiting steps in motion and force generation during myosin cross-bridge cycle was tested in stopped-flow experiments. Measurements of the rates of mantADP release from actoS1 and ATP-induced dissociation of actoS1 did not reveal any differences between un-cross-linked and ANP cross-linked actin in these complexes. These findings are discussed in terms of the uncoupling between force generation and other aspects of actomyosin interactions due to a constrained dynamic flexibility of the subdomain 2/subdomain 1 interface in cross-linked actin filaments.  相似文献   

20.
Actin filaments and chloroplasts in guard cells play roles in stomatal function. However, detailed actin dynamics vary, and the roles that they play in chloroplast localization during stomatal movement remain to be determined. We examined the dynamics of actin filaments and chloroplast localization in transgenic tobacco expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP)-mouse talin in guard cells by time-lapse imaging. Actin filaments showed sliding, bundling and branching dynamics in moving guard cells. During stomatal movement, long filaments can be severed into small fragments, which can form longer filaments by end-joining activities. With chloroplast movement, actin filaments near chloroplasts showed severing and elongation activity in guard cells during stomatal movement. Cytochalasin B treatment abolished elongation, bundling and branching activities of actin filaments in guard cells, and these changes of actin filaments, and as a result, more chloroplasts were localized at the centre of guard cells. However, chloroplast turning to avoid high light, and sliding of actin fragments near the chloroplast, was unaffected following cytochalasin B treatment in guard cells. We suggest that the sliding dynamics of actin may play roles in chloroplast turning in guard cells. Our results indicate that the stochastic dynamics of actin filaments in guard cells regulate chloroplast localization during stomatal movement.  相似文献   

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