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1.
Mutations in the human TPM3 gene encoding gamma-tropomyosin (alpha-tropomyosin-slow) expressed in slow skeletal muscle fibers cause nemaline myopathy. Nemaline myopathy is a rare, clinically heterogeneous congenital skeletal muscle disease with associated muscle weakness, characterized by the presence of nemaline rods in muscle fibers. In one missense mutation the codon corresponding to Met-8, a highly conserved residue, is changed to Arg. Here, a rat fast alpha-tropomyosin cDNA with the Met8Arg mutation was expressed in Escherichia coli to investigate the effect of the mutation on in vitro function. The Met8Arg mutation reduces tropomyosin affinity for regulated actin 30- to 100-fold. Ca(2+)-sensitive regulatory function is retained, although activation of the actomyosin S1 ATPase in the presence of Ca(2+) is reduced. The poor activation may reflect weakened actin affinity or reduced effectiveness in switching the thin filament to the open, force-producing state. The presence of the Met8Arg mutation severely, but locally, destabilizes the tropomyosin coiled coil in a model peptide, and would be expected to impair end-to-end association between TMs on the thin filament. In muscle, the mutation may alter thin filament assembly consequent to lower actin affinity and altered binding of the N-terminus to tropomodulin at the pointed end of the filament. The mutation may also reduce force generation during activation.  相似文献   

2.
The relationship between tropomyosin thermal stability and thin filament activation was explored using two N-domain mutants of alpha-striated muscle tropomyosin, A63V and K70T, each previously implicated in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Both mutations had prominent effects on tropomyosin thermal stability as monitored by circular dichroism. Wild type tropomyosin unfolded in two transitions, separated by 10 degrees C. The A63V and K70T mutations decreased the melting temperature of the more stable of these transitions by 4 and 10 degrees C, respectively, indicating destabilization of the N-domain in both cases. Global analysis of all three proteins indicated that the tropomyosin N-domain and C-domain fold with a cooperative free energy of 1.0-1.5 kcal/mol. The two mutations increased the apparent affinity of the regulatory Ca2+ binding sites of thin filament in two settings: Ca2+-dependent sliding speed of unloaded thin filaments in vitro (at both pH 7.4 and 6.3), and Ca2+ activation of the thin filament-myosin S1 ATPase rate. Neither mutation had more than small effects on the maximal ATPase rate in the presence of saturating Ca2+ or on the maximal sliding speed. Despite the increased tropomyosin flexibility implied by destabilization of the N-domain, neither the cooperativity of thin filament activation by Ca2+ nor the cooperative binding of myosin S1-ADP to the thin filament was altered by the mutations. The combined results suggest that a more dynamic tropomyosin N-domain influences interactions with actin and/or troponin that modulate Ca2+ sensitivity, but has an unexpectedly small effect on cooperative changes in tropomyosin position on actin.  相似文献   

3.
The steric model of muscle regulation holds that at low Ca(2+) concentration, tropomyosin strands, running along thin filaments, are constrained by troponin in an inhibitory position that blocks myosin-binding sites on actin. Ca(2+) activation, releasing this constraint, allows tropomyosin movement, initiating actin-myosin interaction and contraction. Although the different positions of tropomyosin on the thin filament are well documented, corresponding information on troponin has been lacking and it has therefore not been possible to test the model structurally. Here, we show that troponin can be detected on thin filaments and demonstrate how its changing association with actin can control tropomyosin position in response to Ca(2+). To accomplish this, thin filaments were reconstituted with an engineered short tropomyosin, creating a favorable troponin stoichiometry and symmetry for three-dimensional analysis. We demonstrate that in the absence of Ca(2+), troponin bound to both tropomyosin and actin can act as a latch to constrain tropomyosin in a position on actin that inhibits actomyosin ATPase. In addition, we find that on Ca(2+) activation the actin-troponin connection is broken, allowing tropomyosin to assume a second position, initiating actomyosin ATPase and thus permitting contraction to proceed.  相似文献   

4.
Slow skeletal muscle troponin I (ssTnI) expressed predominantly in perinatal heart confers a marked resistance to acidic pH on Ca(2+) regulation of cardiac muscle contraction. To explore the molecular mechanism underlying this phenomenon, we investigated the roles of TnI isoforms (ssTnI and cardiac TnI (cTnI)) in the thin filament activation by strongly binding cross-bridges, by exchanging troponin subunits in cardiac permeabilized muscle fibers. Fetal cardiac muscle showed a marked resistance to acidic pH in activation of the thin filament by strongly binding cross-bridges compared to adult muscle. Exchanging ssTnI into adult fibers altered the pH sensitivity from adult to fetal type, indicating that ssTnI also confers a marked resistance to acidic pH on the cross-bridge-induced thin filament activation. However, the adult fibers containing ssTnI or cTnI but lacking TnC showed no pH sensitivity. These findings provide the first evidence for the coupling between strongly binding cross-bridges and a pH-sensitive interaction of TnI with TnC in cardiac muscle contraction, as a molecular basis of the mechanism conferring the differential pH sensitivity on Ca(2+) regulation.  相似文献   

5.
The indirect flight muscles (IFM) of Drosophila melanogaster provide a good genetic system with which to investigate muscle function. Flight muscle contraction is regulated by both stretch and Ca(2+)-induced thin filament (actin + tropomyosin + troponin complex) activation. Some mutants in troponin-I (TnI) and troponin-T (TnT) genes cause a "hypercontraction" muscle phenotype, suggesting that this condition arises from defects in Ca(2+) regulation and actomyosin-generated tension. We have tested the hypothesis that missense mutations of the myosin heavy chain gene, Mhc, which suppress the hypercontraction of the TnI mutant held-up(2) (hdp(2)), do so by reducing actomyosin force production. Here we show that a "headless" Mhc transgenic fly construct that reduces the myosin head concentration in the muscle thick filaments acts as a dose-dependent suppressor of hypercontracting alleles of TnI, TnT, Mhc, and flightin genes. The data suggest that most, if not all, mutants causing hypercontraction require actomyosin-produced forces to do so. Whether all Mhc suppressors act simply by reducing the force production of the thick filament is discussed with respect to current models of myosin function and thin filament activation by the binding of calcium to the troponin complex.  相似文献   

6.
To understand the molecular mechanism by which the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-causing Asp175Asn and Glu180Gly mutations in α-tropomyosin alter contractile regulation, we labeled recombinant wild type and mutant α-tropomyosins with 5-iodoacetamide-fluorescein and incorporated them into the ghost muscle fibers. The orientation and mobility of the probe were studied by polarized fluorimetry at different stages of the ATPase cycle. Multistep alterations in the position and mobility of wild type tropomyosin on the thin filaments during the ATP cycle were observed. Both mutations were found to shift tropomyosin strands further towards the open position and to change the affinity of tropomyosin for actin, with the effect of the Glu180Gly mutation being greater than Asp175Asn, showing an increase in the binding strong cross-bridges to actin during the ATPase cycle. These structural changes to the thin filament are likely to underlie the observed increased Ca2+-sensitivity caused by these mutations which initiates the disease remodeling.  相似文献   

7.
Initial studies on molluscan muscle regulation indicated that thin filaments do not confer Ca2+-dependence on vertebrate myosin ATPase, and hence that molluscan muscles do not possess thin filament-linked regulatory systems. Subsequently it was shown that molluscan thin filaments do, in fact, impart Ca2+-sensitivity but only at Mg2+ concentrations greater than those used in the earlier studies. In the present study it is shown that Mg2+ prevents significant dissociation of tropomyosin and troponin subunits from thin filaments at the low monovalent ion concentrations typically employed to assay actomyosin ATPase; as a result Mg2+ allows expression of the molluscan thin filament regulatory system under these conditions.  相似文献   

8.
H Miyata  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1986,25(9):2725-2729
The binding of gizzard tropomyosin to gizzard F-actin is highly dependent on free Mg2+ concentration. At 2 mM free Mg2+, a concentration at which actin-activated ATPase activity was shown to be Ca2+ sensitive, a molar ratio of 1:3 (tropomyosin:actin monomer) is required to saturate the F-actin with tropomyosin to the stoichiometric ratio of 1 mol of tropomyosin to 7 mol of actin monomer. Increasing the Mg2+ could decrease the amount of tropomyosin required for saturating the F-actin filament to the stoichiometric level. Analysis of the binding of smooth muscle tropomyosin to smooth muscle actin by the use of Scatchard plots indicates that the binding exhibits strong positive cooperativity at all Mg2+ concentrations. Calcium has no effect on the binding of tropomyosin to actin, irrespective of the free Mg2+ concentration. However, maximal activation of the smooth muscle actomyosin ATPase in low free Mg2+ requires the presence of Ca2+ and stoichiometric binding of tropomyosin to actin. The lack of effect of Ca2+ on the binding of tropomyosin to actin shows that the activation of actomyosin ATPase by Ca2+ in the presence of tropomyosin is not due to a calcium-mediated binding of tropomyosin to actin.  相似文献   

9.
Caldesmon is known to inhibit actomyosin ATPase and filament sliding in vitro, and may play a role in modulating smooth muscle contraction as well as in diverse cellular processes including cytokinesis and exocytosis. However, the structural basis of caldesmon action has not previously been apparent. We have recorded electron microscope images of negatively stained thin filaments containing caldesmon and tropomyosin which were isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle in EGTA. Three-dimensional helical reconstructions of these filaments show actin monomers whose bilobed shape and connectivity are very similar to those previously seen in reconstructions of frozen-hydrated skeletal muscle thin filaments. In addition, a continuous thin strand of density follows the long-pitch actin helices, in contact with the inner domain of each actin monomer. Gizzard thin filaments treated with Ca2+/calmodulin, which dissociated caldesmon but not tropomyosin, have also been reconstructed. Under these conditions, reconstructions also reveal a bilobed actin monomer, as well as a continuous surface strand that appears to have moved to a position closer to the outer domain of actin. The strands seen in both EGTA- and Ca2+/calmodulin-treated filaments thus presumably represent tropomyosin. It appears that caldesmon can fix tropomyosin in a particular position on actin in the absence of calcium. An influence of caldesmon on tropomyosin position might, in principle, account for caldesmon's ability to modulate actomyosin interaction in both smooth muscles and non-muscle cells.  相似文献   

10.
Tropomyosin polymerizes along actin filaments and together with troponin regulates muscle contraction in a Ca-dependent manner. Actin-binding periods are homologous residues, which repeat along tropomyosin sequence, form tropomyosin-actin interface and determine regulatory functions. To learn how period 3 is involved in tropomyosin functions we examined effects of two mutations in Tpm1.1, I92T and V95A, which have been linked to dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathies characterized respectively by hyper- and hypocontractile phenotypes. In this work the functional consequences of both mutations were studied in vitro by using actin thin filaments reconstituted in the presence of mutant Tpm1.1 homodimers carrying the substitutions in both tropomyosin chains, Tpm1.1 heterodimers with substitution only in one Tpm1.1 chain, and Tpm1.1/Tpm2.2 heterodimers with substitution in Tpm1.1 chain and wild type Tpm2.2 in the second chain. The presence of the substitution I92T decreased the tropomyosin affinity for actin, abolished Ca2+-dependent activation of the actomyosin ATPase, decreased the sensitivity of the tropomyosin-troponin complex to subsaturating Ca2+ concentrations and reduced the cooperativity of the myosin-induced transition of the thin filament to a fully active state. The substitution V95A had opposite effects: increased actin affinity, increased the actomyosin ATPase activity above the level observed for wild type Tpm and increased cooperativity of myosin-induced activation of the thin filaments reconstructed with homo- and heterodimers of tropomyosin. Substitutions I92T and V95A were dominant, but the formation of heterodimers modified the effects observed for homodimers.  相似文献   

11.
The Glu40Lys and Glu54Lys mutations in α-tropomyosin cause dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Functional analysis has demonstrated that both mutations decrease thin filament Ca2+-sensitivity and that Glu40Lys reduces maximum activation. To understand the molecular mechanism underlying these changes, we labeled wild type α-tropomyosin and both mutants at Cys190 with 5-iodoacetamide-fluorescein and incorporated the labeled proteins into ghost muscle fibers. Using the polarized fluorimetry, the position of the labeled tropomyosins on the thin filament and their affinity for actin were measured and the change in these parameters at different stages of the ATPase cycle determined. Both DCM mutations were found to shift tropomyosin towards the periphery of thin filament and to change the affinity of tropomyosin for actin; during the ATPase cycle the amplitude of tropomyosin movement was reduced and at some stages of the cycle even reversed. The correlation of these structural changes with the observed function effects is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
We have previously reported a Met9Arg mutation in the human skeletal muscle alpha tropomyosin gene (TPM3) associated with autosomal dominant nemaline myopathy [Nat. Genet. 9 (1995) 75]. We describe here the generation of wild-type (Wt-tpm3) and Met9Arg (M9R-tpm3) mutant human skeletal muscle slow alpha tropomyosin using the Baculovirus expression vector system (BEVS). This system produces correct posttranslationally modified recombinant tropomyosin proteins in insect cells. We show that the interactions of Wt-tpm3 with actin and tropomyosin are comparable to those of fast alpha tropomyosin isolated from chicken striated muscle. However, the recombinant M9R-tpm3 is at least 100 times less effective at binding actin than Wt-tpm3. This paper represents the first study of this mutation directly on the human isoform of tropomyosin that is involved in nemaline myopathy. It also represents the first time that human tpm3 has been produced using BEVS. This system can now be used to accurately demonstrate the effect of this (and other disease-associated tropomyosin mutations) on the interactions of tpm3 with the other protein components of the muscle thin filament, including those responsible for differing forms of nemaline myopathy.  相似文献   

13.
Tropomyosin (TM), an integral component of the thin filament, is encoded by three striated muscle isoforms: alpha-TM, beta-TM, and TPM 3. Although the alpha-TM and beta-TM isoforms are well characterized, less is known about the function of the TPM 3 isoform, which is predominantly found in the slow-twitch musculature of mammals. To determine its functional significance, we ectopically expressed this isoform in the hearts of transgenic mice. We generated six transgenic mouse lines that produce varying levels of TPM 3 message with ectopic TPM 3 protein accounting for 40-60% of the total striated muscle tropomyosin. The transgenic mice have normal life spans and exhibit no morphological abnormalities in their sarcomeres or hearts. However, there are significant functional alterations in cardiac performance. Physiological assessment of these mice by using closed-chest analyses and a work-performing model reveals a hyperdynamic effect on systolic and diastolic function. Analysis of detergent-extracted fiber bundles demonstrates a decreased sensitivity to Ca(2+) in force generation and a decrease in length-dependent Ca(2+) activation with no detectable change in interfilament spacing as determined by using X-ray diffraction. Our data are the first to demonstrate that TM isoforms can affect sarcomeric performance by decreasing sensitivity to Ca(2+) and influencing the length-dependent Ca(2+) activation.  相似文献   

14.
Troponin and its components from ascidian smooth muscle   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Troponin was isolated from the thin filaments of ascidian smooth muscle and separated into three components by ion-exchange chromatography, the molecular weights of which were 33,000, 24,000, and 18,000, respectively. The three components were designated as troponin t (TN-T), troponin I (TN-I), and troponin C (TN-C) in order of molecular weight, since each component had properties similar to those of the respective components of vertebrate skeletal-muscle troponin. The ascidian troponin or the mixture of the three components conferred Ca2+-sensitivity on reconstituted rabbit actomyosin in the presence of tropomyosin. One of the characteristics of the ascidian troponin was Ca2+-dependent activation of actin-myosin interaction in collaboration with tropomyosin, whereas its inhibitory action on the actomyosin ATPase in the absence of Ca2+ was less remarkable. From this, it is concluded that in the ascidian smooth muscle actin-myosin interaction is regulated by an actin-linked troponin-tropomyosin system, but the ascidian troponin acts as a Ca2+-dependent activator of an actomyosin system.  相似文献   

15.
From the four known vertebrate tropomyosin genes (designated TPM1, TPM2, TPM3, and TPM4) over 20 isoforms can be generated. The predominant TPM1 isoform, TPM1alpha, is specifically expressed in both skeletal and cardiac muscles. A newly discovered alternatively spliced isoform, TPM1kappa, containing exon 2a instead of exon 2b contained in TPM1alpha, was found to be cardiac specific and developmentally regulated. In this work, we transfected quail skeletal muscle cells with green fluorescent proteins (GFP) coupled to chicken TPM1alpha and chicken TPM1kappa and compared their localizations in premyofibrils and mature myofibrils. We used the technique of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) to compare the dynamics of TPM1alpha and TPM1kappa in myotubes. TPM1alpha and TPM1kappa incorporated into premyofibrils, nascent myofibrils, and mature myofibrils of quail myotubes in identical patterns. The two tropomyosin isoforms have a higher exchange rate in premyofibrils than in mature myofibrils. F-actin and muscle tropomyosin are present in the same fibers at all three stages of myofibrillogenesis (premyofibrils, nascent myofibrils, mature myofibrils). In contrast, the tropomyosin-binding molecule nebulin is not present in the initial premyofibrils. Nebulin is gradually added during myofibrillogenesis, becoming fully localized in striated patterns by the mature myofibril stage. A model of thin filament formation is proposed to explain the increased stability of tropomyosin in mature myofibrils. These experiments are supportive of a maturing thin filament and stepwise model of myofibrillogenesis (premyofibrils to nascent myofibrils to mature myofibrils), and are inconsistent with models that postulate the immediate appearance of fully formed thin filaments or myofibrils.  相似文献   

16.
The following arguments are presented for the observation that curves relating free Ca2+ and force development of thin filament regulated myofilaments of skinned muscle fibers have Hill coefficient (n) greater than 4, which is the number of Ca2+ binding sites on troponin: Activation of the myofilaments is a process relaxing to a nonequilibrium steady state or stationary state. Systems operating at nonequilibrium stationary states are known to display Hill coefficients greater than the number of interacting sites and similar results have been obtained for Ca2+ activation of myofilament isometric force. The size of the basic subunit of thin filament regulated muscle may be the entire thin filament rather than seven actins, one tropomyosin, and one troponin. In this case the number of interacting sites may be on the order of hundreds. Hysteresis in the Ca2+ activation of isometric force might result from multiple stationary states and also might give rise to Hill coefficients greater than 4.  相似文献   

17.
Intrinsic troponin C (TnC) was extracted from small bundles of rabbit psoas fibers and replaced with TnC labeled with dansylaziridine (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl). The flourescence of incorporated dansylaziridine-labeled TnC was enhanced by the binding of Ca2+ to the Ca2+-specific (regulatory) sites of TnC and was measured simultaneously with force (Zot, H.G., Güth, K., and Potter, J.D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15883-15890). Various myosin cross-bridge states also altered the fluorescence of dansylaziridine-labeled TnC in the filament, with cycling cross-bridges having a greater effect than rigor cross-bridges; and in both cases, there was an additional effect of Ca2+. The paired fluorescence and tension data were used to calculate the apparent Ca2+ affinity of the regulatory sites in the thin filament and were shown to increase at least 10-fold during muscle activation presumably due to the interaction of cycling cross-bridges with the thin filament. The cross-bridge state responsible for this enhanced Ca2+ affinity was shown to be the myosin-ADP state present only when cross-bridges are cycling. The steepness of the pCa force curves (where pCa represents the -log of the free Ca2+ concentration) obtained in the presence of ATP at short and long sarcomere lengths was the same, suggesting that cooperative interactions between adjacent troponin-tropomyosin units may spread along much of the actin filament when cross-bridges are attached to it. In contrast to the cycling cross-bridges, rigor bridges only increased the Ca2+ affinity of the regulatory sites 2-fold. Taken together, the results presented here indicate a strong coupling between the Ca2+ regulatory sites and cross-bridge interactions with the thin filament.  相似文献   

18.
Substitution of 2'-deoxy ATP (dATP) for ATP as substrate for actomyosin results in significant enhancement of in vitro parameters of cardiac contraction. To determine the minimal ratio of dATP/ATP (constant total NTP) that significantly enhances cardiac contractility and obtain greater understanding of how dATP substitution results in contractile enhancement, we varied dATP/ATP ratio in porcine cardiac muscle preparations. At maximum Ca(2+) (pCa 4.5), isometric force increased linearly with dATP/ATP ratio, but at submaximal Ca(2+) (pCa 5.5) this relationship was nonlinear, with the nonlinearity evident at 2-20% dATP; force increased significantly with only 10% of substrate as dATP. The rate of tension redevelopment (k(TR)) increased with dATP at all Ca(2+) levels. k(TR) increased linearly with dATP/ATP ratio at pCa 4.5 and 5.5. Unregulated actin-activated Mg-NTPase rates and actin sliding speed linearly increased with the dATP/ATP ratio (p < 0.01 at 10% dATP). Together these data suggest cardiac contractility is enhanced when only 10% of the contractile substrate is dATP. Our results imply that relatively small (but supraphysiological) levels of dATP increase the number of strongly attached, force-producing actomyosin cross-bridges, resulting in an increase in overall contractility through both thin filament activation and kinetic shortening of the actomyosin cross-bridge cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Regulation of muscle contraction is a very cooperative process. The presence of tropomyosin on the thin filament is both necessary and sufficient for cooperativity to occur. Data recently obtained with various tropomyosin isoforms and mutants help us to understand better the structural requirements in the thin filament for cooperative protein interactions. Forming an end-to-end overlap between neighboring tropomyosin molecules is not necessary for the cooperativity of the thin filament activation. When direct contacts between tropomyosin molecules are disrupted, the conformational changes in the filament are most probably transmitted cooperatively through actin subunits, although the exact nature of these changes is not known. The function of tropomyosin ends, alternatively expressed in various isoforms, is to confer specific actin affinity. Tropomyosin's affinity or actin is directly related to the size of the apparent cooperative unit defined as the number of actin subunits turned into the active state by binding of one myosin head. Inner sequences of tropomyosin, particularly actin-binding periods 3 to 5, play crucial role in myosin-induced activation of the thin filament. A plausible mechanism of tropomyosin function in this process is that inner tropomyosin regions are either specifically recognized by myosin or they define the right actin conformation required for tropomyosin movement from its blocking position.  相似文献   

20.
Direct evidence that caldesmon is the Ca2+-regulated inhibitory component of native smooth muscle thin filaments is provided by studies using caldesmon-specific antibodies as antagonists. The antibodies reverse caldesmon inhibition of actomyosin ATPase and abolish Ca2+-regulation of native aorta thin filament activation of myosin ATPase. This effect is a result of antibody binding to the caldesmon on the filament thereby inactivating it and not due to antibody-induced caldesmon dissociation from the filament. The antibodies, however, neutralise caldesmon only in systems using skeletal muscle myosin and not in those using smooth muscle myosin; this implies that smooth muscle myosin prevents appropriate antibody binding to caldesmon perhaps because smooth muscle myosin binds to caldesmon thus preventing access of antibody to antigenic sites.  相似文献   

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