首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The amino acid sequence of troponin C obtained from horseshoe crab, Tachypleus tridentatus, striated muscle was determined by sequence analysis and alignments of chemically and enzymatically cleaved peptides. Troponin C is composed of 153 amino acid residues with a blocked N-terminus and contains no tryptophan or cysteine residue. The site I, one of the four Ca2+-binding sites, is considered to have lost its ability to bind Ca2+ owing to the replacements of certain amino acid residues.  相似文献   

2.
Amino acid sequences of the two major isoforms of troponin C from crayfish   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The primary structure of the two major isoforms (alpha and gamma) of troponin C (TnC) from crayfish tail muscle has been determined by the application of manual and automated Edman degradation procedures to fragments generated by suitable chemical and proteolytic cleavages. Both amino acid sequences commence with an acetylated methionyl residue and contain 150 amino acid residues, including a single proline residue at position 29 and 2 residues of tyrosine at positions 95 and 102. No cysteine or tryptophan are present. The molecular weights calculated for alpha- and gamma-TnC are 17,157 and 16,974, respectively. The two crayfish proteins are invariable at 129 positions and conserved at 11 others. Pairwise comparisons show that the two sequences are 33-39% identical with those of seven TnCs reported so far and 39% identical with that of bovine brain calmodulin. The N-terminal end of about 10 residues, found in vertebrate TnCs, is absent in crayfish TnCs. In the latter proteins, domains I and III appear as abortive Ca2+-binding sites due to nonconservative amino acid replacements at the key Ca2+-coordinating positions in their loops. The remaining two Ca2+-binding loops (II and IV) show a remarkable similarity with the Ca2+-specific loops (I and II) found in vertebrate TnCs. These findings are consistent with the Ca2+-binding data (Wnuk, W. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 18240-18246) which indicate the presence of two Ca2+-specific sites in crayfish TnCs. These two sites display the same affinity for Ca2+ (log KCa = 4.3) on gamma-TnC but differ in their affinity (log KCa = 6.0 and 4.1) on alpha-TnC. The only structural difference between the dodecapeptide loops II and IV in both alpha- and gamma-TnC, which correlates with the existence of the high affinity (log KCa = 6.0) Ca2+-specific site on alpha-TnC, is position 11 occupied by a methionyl residue in the loop IV of alpha-TnC as opposed to negatively charged residues found in the other three loops. This suggests that the high affinity Ca2+-specific site on alpha-TnC is located in domain IV. Since the Ca2+-binding studies show that the formation of the complex of crayfish troponin I (TnI) with alpha- and gamma-TnC increases significantly the affinity of only one of their two Ca2+-specific sites and this TnI-sensitive site is not the high affinity Ca2+-specific site on alpha-TnC, we conclude that the binding of Ca2+ to site II controls the Ca2+-dependent interaction between crayfish TnCs and TnI.  相似文献   

3.
Troponin I is the putative molecular switch for Ca(2+)-activated contraction within the myofilament of striated muscles. To gain insight into functional troponin I domain(s) in the context of the intact myofilament, adenovirus-mediated gene transfer was used to replace endogenous cardiac troponin I within the myofilaments of adult cardiac myocytes with the slow skeletal isoform or a chimera of the slow skeletal and cardiac isoforms. Efficient expression and myofilament incorporation were observed in myocytes with each exogenous troponin I protein without detected changes in the stoichiometry of other contractile proteins and/or sarcomere architecture. Contractile function studies in single, permeabilized myocytes expressing exogenous troponin I provided support for the presence of a Ca(2+)-sensitive regulatory domain in the carboxyl terminus of troponin I and a second, newly defined Ca(2+)-sensitive domain residing in the amino terminus of troponin I. Additional experiments demonstrated that the isoform-specific, acidic pH-induced contractile dysfunction in myocytes appears to lie in the carboxyl terminus of troponin I. Functional results obtained from adult cardiac myocytes expressing the chimera or isoforms of troponin I now define multiple troponin I regulatory domains operating in the intact myofilament and provide new insight into the Ca(2+)-sensitive properties of troponin I during contraction.  相似文献   

4.
The muscle thin filament protein troponin (Tn) regulates contraction of vertebrate striated muscle by conferring Ca2+ sensitivity to the interaction of actin and myosin. Troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+ binding subunit of Tn contains two homologous domains and four divalent cation binding sites. Two structural sites in the C-terminal domain of TnC bind either Ca2+ or Mg2+, and two regulatory sites in the N-terminal domain are specific for Ca2+. Interactions between TnC and the inhibitory Tn subunit troponin I (TnI) are of central importance to the Ca2+ regulation of muscle contraction and have been intensively studied. Much remains to be learned, however, due mainly to the lack of a three-dimensional structure for TnI. In particular, the role of amino acid residues near the C-terminus of TnI is not well understood. In this report, we prepared a mutant TnC which contains a single Trp-26 residue in the N-terminal, regulatory domain. We used fluorescence lifetime and quenching measurements to monitor Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent changes in the environment of Trp-26 in isolated TnC, as well as in binary complexes of TnC with a Trp-free mutant of TnI or a truncated form of this mutant, TnI(1-159), which lacked the C-terminal 22 amino acid residues of TnI. We found that full-length TnI and TnI(1-159) affected Trp-26 similarly when all four binding sites of TnC were occupied by Ca2+. When the regulatory Ca2+-binding sites in the N-terminal domain of TnC were vacant and the structural sites in the C-terminal domain of were occupied by Mg2+, we found significant differences between full-length TnI and TnI(1-159) in their effect on Trp-26. Our results provide the first indica- tion that the C-terminus of TnI may play an important role in the regulation of vertebrate striated muscle through Ca2+-dependent interactions with the regula- tory domain of TnC.  相似文献   

5.
1. The formation of a complex between troponin I and troponin C that is stable in 6M-urea and dependent on Ca2+ was demonstrated in extracts of vertebrate striated and smooth muscles. 2. A method using troponin I coupled to Sepharose is described for the rapid isolation of troponin C from striated and smooth muscles of vertebrates. 3. Troponin C of rabbit cardiac muscle differs significantly in amino acid composition from troponin C of skeletal muscle. The primary structures of troponin C of red and white skeletal muscle are very similar. 4. The troponin C-like protein isolated from rabbit uterus muscle has a slightly different amino acid composition, but possess many similar properties to the forms of troponin C isolated from other muscle types. 5. The electrophoretic mobilities of the I-troponin C complexes formed from components isolated from different muscle types are determined by the troponin I component.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The covalent structure of Acanthamoeba actobindin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Actobindin is a protein from Acanthamoeba castellanii with bivalent affinity for monomeric actin. Because it can bind two molecules of actin, actobindin is a substantially more potent inhibitor of the early phase of actin polymerization than of F-actin elongation. The complete amino acid sequence of 88 residues has been deduced from the determined sequences of overlapping peptides obtained by cleavage with trypsin, Staphylococcus V8 protease, endoproteinase Asp-N, and CNBr. Actobindin contains 2 trimethyllysine residues and an acetylated NH2 terminus. About 76% of the actobindin molecule consists of two nearly identical repeated segments of approximately 33 residues each. This could explain actobindin's bivalent affinity for actin. The circular dichroism spectrum of actobindin is consistent with 15% alpha-helix and 22% beta-sheet structure. A hexapeptide with sequence LKHAET, which occurs at the beginning of each of the repeated segments of actobindin, is very similar to sequences found in tropomyosin, muscle myosin heavy chain, paramyosin, and Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. A longer stretch in each repeated segment is similar to sequences in mammalian and amoeba profilins. Interestingly, the sequences around the trimethyllysine residues in each of the repeats are similar to the sequences flanking the trimethyllysine residue of rabbit reticulocyte elongation factor 1 alpha, but not to the sequences around the trimethyllysine residues in Acanthamoeba actin and Acanthamoeba profilins I and II.  相似文献   

8.
We have determined the sequence of a partial cDNA clone encoding the C-terminal region of bovine cartilage aggregating proteoglycan core protein. The deduced amino acid sequence contains a cysteine-rich region which is homologous with chicken hepatic lectin. This lectin-homologous region has previously been identified in rat and chicken cartilage proteoglycan. The bovine sequence presented here is highly homologous with the rat and chicken amino acid sequences in this apparently globular region. A region containing clusters of Ser-Gly sequences is located N-terminal to the lectin homology domain. These Ser-Gly-rich segments are arranged in tandemly repeated, approx. 100-residue-long, homology domains. Each homology domain consists of an approx. 75-residue-long Ser-Gly-rich region separated by an approx. 25-residue-long segment lacking Ser-Gly dipeptides. These dipeptides are arranged in 10-residue-long segments in the 100-residue-long homology domains. The shorter homologous segments are tandemly repeated some six times in each 100-residue-long homology domain. Serine residues in these repeats are potential attachment sites for chondroitin sulphate chains.  相似文献   

9.
The relaxation and contraction in vertebrate skeletal muscle are regulated by Ca2+ through troponin and tropomyosin, which are located in the thin filament. Troponin is composed of three components, troponins C, I and T. In this review article, the Ca2+-regulatory mechanism is discussed with particular reference to the regulatory properties of troponin T.  相似文献   

10.
Troponin and tropomyosin on actin filaments constitute a Ca2+-sensitive switch that regulates the contraction of vertebrate striated muscle through a series of conformational changes within the actin-based thin filament. Troponin consists of three subunits: an inhibitory subunit (TnI), a Ca2+-binding subunit (TnC), and a tropomyosin-binding subunit (TnT). Ca2+-binding to TnC is believed to weaken interactions between troponin and actin, and triggers a large conformational change of the troponin complex. However, the atomic details of the actin-binding sites of troponin have not been determined. Ternary troponin complexes have been reconstituted from recombinant chicken skeletal TnI, TnC, and TnT2 (the C-terminal region of TnT), among which only TnI was uniformly labelled with 15N and/or 13C. By applying NMR spectroscopy, the solution structures of a "mobile" actin-binding domain (approximately 6.1 kDa) in the troponin ternary complex (approximately 52 kDa) were determined. The mobile domain appears to tumble independently of the core domain of troponin. Ca2+-induced changes in the chemical shift and line shape suggested that its tumbling was more restricted at high Ca2+ concentrations. The atomic details of interactions between actin and the mobile domain of troponin were defined by docking the mobile domain into the cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) density map of thin filament at low [Ca2+]. This allowed the determination of the 3D position of residue 133 of TnI, which has been an important landmark to incorporate the available information. This enabled unique docking of the entire globular head region of troponin into the thin filament cryo-EM map at a low Ca2+ concentration. The resultant atomic model suggests that troponin interacted electrostatically with actin and caused the shift of tropomyosin to achieve muscle relaxation. An important feature is that the coiled-coil region of troponin pushed tropomyosin at a low Ca2+ concentration. Moreover, the relationship between myosin and the mobile domain on actin filaments suggests that the latter works as a fail-safe latch.  相似文献   

11.
Troponin from the myocardium and skeletal muscles: structure and properties   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The literary and experimental data on the structure and properties of cardiac and skeletal muscle troponin are reviewed. The cation--binding sites of cardiac and skeletal muscle troponin C are distinguished by specificity; the sites localized in the C-terminal part of the protein molecule can bind both Ca2+ and Mg2+, whereas the sites localized at the N-end specifically bind Ca2+. The use of bifunctional reagents revealed a number of helical sites within the structure of cardiac troponin C (residues 84-92 and 150-158) and of skeletal muscle troponin C (residues 90-98 and 125-136). A comparison of experimental data with the results of an X-ray analysis testifies to the presence in the central part of the troponin C molecule of a long alpha-helical sequence responsible for troponin C interaction with the inhibiting peptide of troponin I. The efficiency of interaction of troponin components depends on Ca2+ concentration; the integrity of the overall troponin complex is mainly provided for by troponin C interaction with troponin I and by troponin I interaction with troponin T. The interaction between troponins T and C is relatively weak, especially in the case of cardiac troponin components. Both skeletal and cardiac muscles synthesize several troponin T isoforms differing in length and amino acid composition of N-terminal 40-60 member peptides. Troponin T isoforms can undergo phosphorylation by several protein kinases. The single site of troponin T which exists in a phosphorylated state in vivo (residue Ser-1) undergoes phosphorylation by specific protein kinase (troponin T kinase) related to casein kinases II. It was assumed that the phosphorylation of Ser-1 residue of troponin T as well as the synthesis of troponin T isoforms differing in the structure of the N-terminal peptide, provides for the regulation of interaction between two neighbouring tropomyosin molecules.  相似文献   

12.
Bovine cardiac troponin containing approximately 3 mol P/mol protein could be separated into its subunits without loss of phosphate. Troponin I and troponin T each contain about 1.5 mol P/mol protein. In troponin I two phosphorylated serine residues could be localized in the N-terminal region by conversion of phosphoserine to S-ethylcysteine. They are located in adjacent positions in the following sequence: -Arg-Arg-Ser(P)-Ser(P)-Ala-Asn-Tyr-Tyr-Arg-Ala-Tyr-Ala-Thr-Glu-Pro- His-Ala-Lys. This sequence shows that the first phosphoserine residue in bovine cardiac troponin I occupies a homologous position to phosphoserine-20 of rabbit cardiac troponin I.  相似文献   

13.
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an autosomal dominant disorder of the myocardium which is hypertrophied resulting in arrhythmias and heart failure leading to sudden cardiac death (SCD). Several sarcomeric proteins and modifier genes have been implicated in this disease. Troponin I, being a part of the Troponin complex (troponin I, troponin C, troponin T), is an important gene for sarcomeric function. Four mutations (1 novel) were identified in Indian HCM cases, namely, Pro82Ser, Arg98Gln, Arg141Gln and Arg162Gln in Troponin I protein, which are in functionally significant domains. In order to analyse the effect of the mutations on protein stability and protein-protein interactions within the Troponin complex, an in silico study was carried out. The freely available X-ray crystal structure (PDB ID: 1JIE) was used as the template to model the protein followed by loop generation and development of troponin complex for both the troponin I wild type and four mutants (NCBI ID: PRJNA194382). The structural study was carried out to determine the effect of mutation on the structural stability and protein-protein interactions between three subunits in the complex. These mutations, especially the arginine to glutamine substitutions were found to result in local perturbations within the troponin complex by creating/removing inter/intra molecular hydrogen bonds with troponin T and troponin C. This has led to a decrease in the protein stability and loss of important interactions between the three subunits. It could have a significant impact on the disease progression when coupled with allelic heterogeneity which was observed in the cases carrying these mutations. However, this can be further confirmed by functional studies on protein levels in the identified cases.  相似文献   

14.
Amino acid sequence of porcine cardiac muscle troponin C   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Troponin C is the Ca2+-receptive protein located on the thin filament of striated and cardiac muscle. We have determined the amino acid sequence of troponin C obtained from porcine cardiac muscle by sequencing and aligning the lysyl endopeptidase and Staphylococcus aureus V-8 protease peptides. It was composed of 161 amino acid residues with a blocked N-terminus. The sequence of porcine cardiac troponin C was identical with that of bovine cardiac troponin C.  相似文献   

15.
Troponin contains a globular Ca(2+)-binding domain and an elongated tail domain composed of the N terminus of subunit troponin T (TnT). The tail domain anchors troponin to tropomyosin and actin, modulates myosin function, and is a site of cardiomyopathy-inducing mutations. Critical interactions between tropomyosin and troponin are proposed to depend on tail domain residues 112-136, which are highly conserved across phyla. Most cardiomyopathy mutations in TnT flank this region. Three such mutations were examined and had contrasting effects on peptide TnT-(1-156), promoting folding and thermal stability assessed by circular dichroism (F110I) or weakening folding and stability (T104V and to a small extent R92Q). Folding of both TnT-(1-156) and whole troponin was promoted by replacing bovine TnT Thr-104 with human TnT Ala-104, further indicating the importance of this cardiomyopathy site residue for protein folding. Mutation F110I markedly stabilized the troponin tail but weakened binding of holo-troponin to actin-tropomyosin 8-fold, suggesting that loss of flexibility impairs troponin tail function. The effect of the F110I mutation on troponin-tropomyosin binding to actin was much less, indicating this flexibility is particularly important for the interactions of troponin with tropomyosin. We suggest that most cardiomyopathic mutations in the troponin tail alter muscle function indirectly, by perturbing interactions between troponin and tropomyosin requisite for the complex effects of these proteins on myosin.  相似文献   

16.
Troponin C molecules from fast skeletal muscle of the following fish species (trout, whiting, lungfish, tilapia, and cod) have been purified to homogeneity. Upon binding of Ca2+ or Mg2+, lungfish troponin C is the only troponin C from fish white muscle to show the typical increase of tyrosine fluorescence emission quantum yield reported for rabbit fast skeletal muscle troponin C. The increase of tyrosine fluorescence signal occurring upon Ca2+ and Mg2+ titration of lungfish troponin C has been used to determine the corresponding affinity constants. With K(Ca) = 7.0 107 M−1 and K(Mg) = 3.6 103 M−1, the sites probed by the tyrosine residue of lungfish troponin C are typical of the COOH-terminal domain of fast skeletal troponin C's. The amino acid sequencing of the tyrosine containing tryptic peptides has allowed us to position the single tyrosine residue at position 7 in the Ca2+ binding loop of the third site, in identical position to Tyr109 of troponin C from rabbit fast skeletal muscle. Metal ion binding studies followed by intrinsic fluorescence or Tb3+ luminescence indicate that the conformation of the structural domain of lungfish troponin C with one metal ion bound is close to the physiological conformation of this domain.  相似文献   

17.
To systematically evaluate the contribution of each amino acid residue of the troponin I (TnI) inhibitory region (104-115), 14 synthetic analogs were synthesized by the solid-phase method. The analogs consisted of either single glycine or multiglycine replacements. The importance of the substituted amino acid(s) was determined from the extent of inhibition of the acto-S1 ATPase activity and the strength of binding to a troponin C (TnC) high pressure liquid chromatography affinity column of each synthetic analog. Every residue of the TnI sequence (104-115) is necessary to achieve maximum inhibition of the ATPase activity. However, the analogs quantitatively differed in the amount of inhibition induced. The TnI analogs bound less tightly to the TnC affinity column than the native synthetic peptide indicating that all residues in the TnI sequence contribute to the binding of TnC in the presence of Mg2+ or Ca2+. In the presence of Ca2+, there is a definite increase in the strength of the interaction between most analogs and TnC. This is accompanied with a shift toward a more specific interaction with the C terminus of the TnI inhibitory sequence.  相似文献   

18.
Calmodulin, a calcium-binding protein with no known enzymatic activity but multiple, in vitro effector activities, has been purified to apparent homogeneity from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and compared to calmodulin from vertebrates and higher plants. Chlamydomonas calmodulin was characterized in terms of electrophoretic mobility, amino acid composition, limited amino acid sequence analysis, immunoreactivity, and phosphodiesterase activation. Chlamydomonas calmodulin has two histidine residues similar to calmodulin from the protozoan Tetrahymena. However, unlike the protozoan calmodulin, only one of the histidinyl residues of Chlamydomonas calmodulin is found in the COOH-terminal third of the molecule. Chlamydomonas calmodulin lacks trimethyllysine but does have a lysine residue at the amino acid sequence position corresponding to the trimethyllysine residue in bovine brain and spinach calmodulins. The lack of this post-translational modification does not prevent Chlamydomonas calmodulin from quantitatively activating bovine brain phosphodiesterase. These studies also demonstrate that this unique calmodulin from a phylogenetically earlier eukaryote may be as similar to vertebrate calmodulin as it is to higher plant calmodulins, and suggest that Chlamydomonas calmodulin may more closely approximate the characteristics of a putative precursor of the calmodulin family than any calmodulin characterized to date.  相似文献   

19.
Cloning and expression of a smooth muscle caldesmon   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Caldesmon is a smooth muscle and nonmuscle regulatory protein that interacts with actin, myosin, tropomyosin, and calmodulin. Two overlapping clones, isolated from a chicken oviduct cDNA plasmid library and a chicken gizzard cDNA lambda NM1149 library, were used to generate a 4108-base pair sequence coding for one caldesmon. Expression of the coding sequence confirms this is one of the large smooth muscle caldesmons. The deduced protein molecular weight is 86.974, significantly less than the molecular weights estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The protein has a high content of Gly, Lys, Arg, and Ala; there are two cysteine residues, one at either end of the molecule. Comparison with the Protein Identification Resource database demonstrates a similarity with a tropomyosin binding domain of troponin T, but none with any calmodulin or actin binding proteins. The center of the protein has an 8-fold repeat of a 13 amino acid sequence whose general motif is -Glu3-(Lys/Arg)2-Ala2-Glu2-(Lys/Arg)1-X-(Lys/Arg)1-Ala1-, where X is Glu, Gln, or Ala. Comparison with peptide sequences from a chymotryptic fragment that binds actin and calmodulin places this domain on the C terminus of caldesmon adjacent to the troponin T similarity. A tentative map of the major binding domains is proposed on the basis of available data.  相似文献   

20.
Troponin of asynchronous flight muscle   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Troponin has been prepared from the asynchronous flight muscle of Lethocerus (water bug) taking special care to prevent proteolysis. The regulatory complex contained tropomyosin and troponin components. The troponin components were Tn-C (18,000 Mr), Tn-T (apparent Mr 53,000) and a heavy component, Tn-H (apparent Mr 80,000). The troponin was tightly bound to tropomyosin and could not be dissociated from it in non-denaturing conditions. A complex of Tn-T, Tn-H and tropomyosin inhibited actomyosin ATPase activity and the inhibition was relieved by Tn-C from vertebrate striated muscle in the presence of Ca2+. However, unlike vertebrate Tn-I, Tn-H by itself was not inhibitory. Monoclonal antibodies were obtained to Tn-T and Tn-H. Antibody to Tn-T was used to screen an expression library of Drosophila cDNA cloned in lambda phage. The sequence of cDNA coding for the protein was determined and hence the amino acid sequence. The Drosophila protein has a sequence similar to that of vertebrate skeletal and cardiac Tn-T. The sequence extends beyond the carboxyl end of the vertebrate sequences, and the last 40 residues are acidic. Part of the sequence of Drosophila Tn-T is homologous to the carboxyl end of the Drosophila myosin light chain MLC-2 and one anti-Tn-T antibody cross-reacted with the light chain. Lethocerus Tn-H is related to the large tropomyosins of Drosophila flight muscle, for which the amino acid sequence is known, since antibodies that recognize this component also recognize the large tropomyosins. Tn-H is easily digested by calpain, suggesting that part of the molecule has an extended configuration. Electron micrographs of negatively stained specimens showed that Lethocerus thin filaments have projections at about 39 nm intervals, which are not seen on thin filaments from vertebrate striated muscle and are probably due to the relatively large troponin complex. Decoration of the thin filaments with myosin subfragment-1 in rigor conditions appeared not to be affected by the troponin. The troponin of asynchronous flight muscle lacks the Tn-I component of vertebrate striated muscle. Tn-H occurs only in the flight muscle and may be involved in the activation of this muscle by stretch.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号