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1.
To elucidate the difference between subfragment-1 and heavy meromyosin in their interaction with F-actin, we used limited tryptic digestion and cross-linking with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide. The binding of actin to subfragment-1 lowers the susceptibility of the 50K-20K junction of its heavy chain to tryptic digestion. At a molar ratio of one actin to one subfragment-1, all the sites were gradually cleaved by trypsin whereas the sites were completely protected in the presence of a 2-fold molar excess of actin over subfragment-1. In the case of heavy meromyosin, nearly half of the sites were protected completely by the presence of an equimolar amount of actin to its heads suggesting that the two heads of heavy meromyosin bound actin in a different manner. The rate of the cross-linking reaction between subfragment-1 heavy chain and actin with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino) propyl]carbodiimide also depended on the molar ratio of actin to subfragment-1. The rate was maximum at a molar ratio of about 5 actin to 1 subfragment-1. When heavy meromyosin was cross-linked to actin, the maximum rate was observed at a molar ratio of about 3 actin to 1 heavy meromyosin head, the level being about 60% that for subfragment-1 and actin. It was suggested that the presence of the subfragment-2 portion of heavy meromyosin caused these differences by restricting the motion of the two heads.  相似文献   

2.
The binding of 125I-labeled muscle tropomyosin to Acanthamoeba and muscle actin was studied by ultracentrifugation and by the effect of tropomyosin on the actin-activated muscle heavy meromyosin ATPase activity. Binding of muscle tropomyosin to Acanthamoeba actin was much weaker than its binding to muscle actin. For example, at 5 mM MgCl2, 2 mM ATP, and 5 micronM actin, tropomyosin bound strongly to muscle actin but not detectably to Acanthamoeba actin. When the concentration of actin was raised from 5 micronM to 24 micronM in the presence of 80 mM KCl, the binding of tropomyosin to Acanthamoeba actin approached its binding to muscle actin. As with muscle actin, the addition of muscle heavy meromyosin in the absence of ATP induced binding of tropomyosin in Acanthamoeba actin under conditions were binding would otherwise not have occurred. The most striking difference between the interactions of muscle tropomyosin with the two actins, however, was that under conditions where tropomyosin was found to both actins, its stimulated the Acanthamoeba actin-activated heavy meromyosin ATPase but inhibited the muscle actin-activated heavy meromyosin ATPase.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanism for the potentiation of the actin-activated ATPase of smooth muscle myosin by tropomyosin is investigated using smooth muscle actin, tropomyosin, and heavy meromyosin. In the presence of tropomyosin, an increase in Vmax occurs with no effect on KATPase and Kbinding at 20 mM ionic strength. Utilizing N-ethylmaleimide-treated subfragment-1, which forms rigor complexes with actin in the presence of ATP but does not have ATPase activity, experiments were carried out to determine if the tropomyosin-actin complex exists in both the turned-off and turned-on forms as in the skeletal muscle system. At both 60 and 100 mM ionic strengths, the presence of rigor complexes on the smooth muscle actin filament containing bound tropomyosin causes a 2-3-fold increase in Vmax and about a 3-fold increase in KATPase, resulting in about a 4-fold increase in ATPase activity at moderate actin concentration. The increase in KATPase is correlated with an increase in Kbinding. The finding that rigor complexes increase Vmax and the binding constant for heavy meromyosin to tropomyosin-actin at an ionic strength close to physiological conditions indicates that the tropomyosin-actin complex can be turned on by rigor complexes in a cooperative manner. However, in contrast to the situation in the skeletal muscle system, the increase in KATPase is associated with a corresponding increase in Kbinding. Furthermore, there is only a 3-fold increase in KATPase in the smooth muscle system rather than a 10-fold increase as in the skeletal muscle system.  相似文献   

4.
Crosslinking of F-actin by a bifunctional reagent glutaraldehyde resulted in a marked decrease of viscosity and length of F-actin filaments. The extent and rate of superprecipitation of actomyosin reconstituted from the modified actin were lower than those of unmodified actin-myosin complex, but activation of heavy meromyosin ATPase by the crosslinked actin was higher than by unmodified one. Heavy meromyosin ATPase activated by the crosslinked actin was distinctly less dependent on KCl concentration than that activated by unmodified actin. Turbidity of the modified acto-heavy meromyosin in the presence of ATP exceeded the sum of turbidities of actin and heavy meromyosin, whereas in the case of unmodified acto-heavy meromyosin the turbidity was comparable to that for noninteracting system. The difference in activation of heavy meromyosin. ATPase by the cross-linked and unmodified actin, clearly seen at room temperature, significantly diminished when temperature was lowered to 0 degrees C.  相似文献   

5.
Tropomyosin, cross-linked at cysteine 190, was found to bind more weakly to actin filaments than uncross-linked tropomyosin. Cross-linking of tropomyosin can cause actin filaments nearly completely covered with tropomyosin to be uncovered almost completely. The critical monomer concentration of actin is not significantly changed by binding of cross-linked or uncross-linked tropomyosin to actin filaments. The binding curves were analyzed quantitatively, thereby taking into account the polar end-to-end contact of tropomyosin molecules bound by actin and the overlap of the seven subunit binding sites along the actin filament. Under the conditions of the experiment (80 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, pH 7.5, 38-42 degrees C), the equilibrium constant for isolated binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments is in the range 1 x 10(3)-3 x 10(3) M-1. The equilibrium constants for binding of tropomyosin to binding sites along the actin filament with one or two neighbouring tropomyosin molecules are in the range of 10(6) or 10(8) to 10(9) M-1, respectively. The equilibrium constants for binding of tropomyosin to binding sites along the actin filament with one or two neighbouring tropomyosin molecules are in the range of 10(6) or 10(8) to 10(9) M-1, respectively. The equilibrium constants for cross-linked and uncross-linked tropomyosin differ by a factor of only about two. Owing to the highly cooperative binding, these differences are sufficient so that actin filaments nearly completely covered with uncross-linked tropomyosin are uncovered almost completely by cross-linking tropomyosin at cysteine 190.  相似文献   

6.
The action on muscle proteins of microbial transglutaminase (MTGase), which catalyzes the formation of a "zero-length" covalent cross-link between glutamine and lysine residues in peptides, was studied in order to define a basis for future application of MTGase cross-linking to the study of muscle protein interaction. We examined the cross-linking of skeletal muscle myosin, myosin subfragments, actin, and myofibrils by treatment with MTGase and the possible side-effects of the cross-linking on the enzymic activity of myosin, and found that the rod portions of myosin in myosin filaments were quickly cross-linked to each other by the action of MTGase, but myosin subfragment 1 was not cross-linked to actin. The MgATPase activities at 0.5 M KCl of myosin, heavy meromyosin, subfragment 1, and subfragment 1-actin were not significantly affected by the MTGase reaction. A very small fraction of the head portion of heavy meromyosin was cross-linked to actin in their rigor complexes by MTGase, and the ATPase activity at 0.5 M KCl of the cross-linked heavy meromyosin-actin complexes was slightly enhanced.  相似文献   

7.
Q Li  J P Jin    H L Granzier 《Biophysical journal》1995,69(4):1508-1518
Titin is a striated muscle-specific giant protein (M(r) approximately 3,000,000) that consists predominantly of two classes of approximately 100 amino acid motifs, class I and class II, that repeat along the molecule. Titin is found inside the sarcomere, in close proximity to both actin and myosin filaments. Several biochemical studies have found that titin interacts with myosin and actin. In the present work we investigated whether this biochemical interaction is functionally significant by studying the effect of titin on actomyosin interaction in an in vitro motility assay where fluorescently labeled actin filaments are sliding on top of a lawn of myosin molecules. We used genetically expressed titin fragments containing either a single class I motif (Ti I), a single class II motif (Ti II), or the two motifs linked together (Ti I-II). Neither Ti I nor Ti II alone affected actin-filament sliding on either myosin, heavy meromyosin, or myosin subfragment-1. In contrast, the linked fragment (Ti I-II) strongly inhibited actin sliding. Ti I-II-induced inhibition was observed with full-length myosin, heavy meromyosin, and myosin subfragment-1. The degree of inhibition was largest with myosin subfragment-1, intermediate with heavy meromyosin, and smallest with myosin. In vitro binding assays and electrophoretic analyses revealed that the inhibition is most likely caused by interaction between the actin filament and the titin I-II fragment. The physiological relevance of the novel finding of motility inhibition by titin fragments is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The heavy chain of subfragment-1 prepared by chymotrypsin treatment had a molecular weight of about 96K. The heavy chain was split into 26 K, 50 K, and 21 K fragments by trypsin. When the trypsin-treated subfragment-1 was cross-linked with dimethyl suberimidate, cross-linked products of 26 K, 50 K, and 21 K fragments and of 50 K and 21 K fragments appeared, but there was little cross-linked product of 26 K and 50 K fragments or of 26 K and 21 K fragments. When the cross-linking experiments were carried out in the presence of actin, a new band appeared and the amount of cross-linked product of 26 K, 50 K, and 21 K fragments decreased by about 50%. The molecular weight of the new band was lower than that of the cross-linked product of 26 K, 50 K, and 21 K fragments, and higher than that of the dimer of actin. Based on this and some other results, we suggest that this band represented a cross-linked product of actin and the 50 K fragment. We also suggest that the decrease in the amount of cross-linked product of 26 K, 50 K, and 21 K fragments reflected the conformational change in subfragment-1 due to the binding of actin.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of the divalent cations Mg2+, Mn2+ and Ca2+ on the Brownian rotational motion of fluorescently labeled myosin, heavy meromyosin and myosin subfragment-1 were measured by the method of time-resolved fluorescence depolarization. When Mg2+ was added to solutions of myosin or heavy meromyosin and EDTA, their rotational mobility increased. Ca2+ had no effect. Mn2+ increased the mobility of heavy meromyosin but decreased that of myosin. None of these divalent cations effected the mobility of subfragment-1. The binding of heavy meromyosin to actin was affected very little by Mg2+ or EDTA over a wide range of conditions. Divalent cations appear to change the swivel about which the heads of myosin rotate, presumably by binding to light chain 2 (also called DTNB light chain). However, the heads are still able to bind actin in nearly the same way whether Mg2+ is present or not. The concentration of free Mg2+ for the mid-point of the change in heavy meromyosin mobility is in good agreement with that for EDTA activation of ATPase activity. This suggests that EDTA activation is due to removal of Mg2+ bound to myosin itself.  相似文献   

10.
In order to obtain information about the actin-induced conformational change around the subfragment-1/subfragment-2 link region of myosin, measurements of the fluorescence quenching by acrylamide were made on cardiac myosin and its heavy meromyosin, in which the reactive lysyl residue located in the link region was labeled with an extrinsic fluorophore, the N-methyl-2-anilino-6-naphthalenesulfonyl group. The results with the model compound indicated the involvement of a collisional quenching mechanism for the fluorophore. The quenching rate constant calculated from measured quenching constants using available lifetime data was extremely low for the labeled myosin (0.59 X 10(8) M-1 . S-1), suggesting that the fluorophore bound to myosin is surrounded by segments of proteins. This value was independent of the solvent viscosity, indicating that the quenching reaction is limited by fluctuations in the protein matrix, which produce the inward movement of acrylamide. Chymotryptic digestion of the labeled myosin, which yielded the light chain-2-deficient heavy meromyosin, made the bound fluorophore slightly exposed. Addition of F-actin resulted in about 40% reduction in the quenching rate constants for the labeled myosin and heavy meromyosin. The actin effect was reversed by adding ATP. These results suggest that the binding of actin to myosin makes the protein matrix around the subfragment-1/subfragment-2 link region less mobile.  相似文献   

11.
Smooth muscle contraction is controlled in part by the state of phosphorylation of myosin. A recently discovered actin and calmodulin-binding protein, named caldesmon, may also be involved in regulation of smooth muscle contraction. Caldesmon cross-links actin filaments and also inhibits actin-activated ATP hydrolysis by myosin, particularly in the presence of tropomyosin. We have studied the effect of caldesmon on the rate of hydrolysis of ATP by skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1, a system in which phosphorylation of the myosin is not important in regulation. Caldesmon is a very effective inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis giving up to 95% inhibition. At low ionic strength (approximately 20 mM) this effect does not require smooth muscle tropomyosin, whereas at high ionic strength (approximately 120 mM) tropomyosin enhances the inhibitory activity of caldesmon at low caldesmon concentrations. Cross-linking of actin is not essential for inhibition of ATP hydrolysis to occur since at high ionic strength there is very little cross-linking as determined by a low speed sedimentation assay. Under all conditions examined, the decrease in the rate of ATP hydrolysis is accompanied by a decrease in the binding of myosin subfragment-1 to actin. Furthermore, caldesmon weakens the equilibrium binding of myosin subfragment-1 to actin in the presence of pyrophosphate. We conclude that caldesmon has a general weakening effect on the binding of skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 to actin and that this weakening in binding may be responsible for inhibition of ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

12.
P D Wagner 《Biochemistry》1984,23(25):5950-5956
A low-speed centrifugation assay has been used to examine the binding of myosin filaments to F-action and to regulated actin in the presence of MgATP. While the cross-linking of F-actin by myosin was Ca2+ insensitive, much less regulated actin was cross-linked by myosin in the absence of Ca2+ than in its presence. Removal of the 19000-dalton, phosphorylatable light chain from myosin resulted in the loss of this Ca2+ sensitivity. Readdition of this light chain partially restored the Ca2+-sensitive cross-linking of regulated actin by myosin. Urea gel electrophoresis has been used to distinguish that fraction of heavy meromyosin which contains intact phosphorylatable light chain from that which contains a 17000-dalton fragment of this light chain. In the absence of Ca2+, heavy meromyosin which contained digested light chain bound to regulated actin in MgATP about 10-fold more tightly than did heavy meromyosin which contained intact light chain. The regulated actin-activated ATPases of heavy meromyosin also showed that cleavage of this light chain causes a substantial increase in the affinity of heavy meromyosin for regulated actin in the absence of Ca2+. Thus, the binding of both myosin and heavy meromyosin to regulated actin is Ca2+ sensitive, and this sensitivity is dependent on the phosphorylatable light chain.  相似文献   

13.
The conformational elasticity of the actin cytoskeleton is essential for its versatile biological functions. Increasing evidence supports that the interplay between the structural and functional properties of actin filaments is finely regulated by actin-binding proteins; however, the underlying mechanisms and biological consequences are not completely understood. Previous studies showed that the binding of formins to the barbed end induces conformational transitions in actin filaments by making them more flexible through long range allosteric interactions. These conformational changes are accompanied by altered functional properties of the filaments. To get insight into the conformational regulation of formin-nucleated actin structures, in the present work we investigated in detail how binding partners of formin-generated actin structures, myosin and tropomyosin, affect the conformation of the formin-nucleated actin filaments using fluorescence spectroscopic approaches. Time-dependent fluorescence anisotropy and temperature-dependent Förster-type resonance energy transfer measurements revealed that heavy meromyosin, similarly to tropomyosin, restores the formin-induced effects and stabilizes the conformation of actin filaments. The stabilizing effect of heavy meromyosin is cooperative. The kinetic analysis revealed that despite the qualitatively similar effects of heavy meromyosin and tropomyosin on the conformational dynamics of actin filaments the mechanisms of the conformational transition are different for the two proteins. Heavy meromyosin stabilizes the formin-nucleated actin filaments in an apparently single step reaction upon binding, whereas the stabilization by tropomyosin occurs after complex formation. These observations support the idea that actin-binding proteins are key elements of the molecular mechanisms that regulate the conformational and functional diversity of actin filaments in living cells.  相似文献   

14.
1. Two moles of 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl group bound selectively to one mole of heavy meromyosin when it was treated with 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide, a specific reagent for tryptophanyl residues. The binding with ADP, the size of the initial burst of Pi liberation and the difference absorption spectrum with and without ADP of the bound 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl groups were measured with heavy meromyosin modified with various amounts of reagent. The properties of the modified heavy meromyosin did not change until the molar binding ratio of the reagent, rH, was about 1, but the properties changed remarkably when rH increased from 1 to 2. 2. Subfragment-1 was prepared from the modified heavy meromyosin by trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4] digestion. The molar binding ratio of the reagent in subfragment-1, rS, was found to be less than 0.1 when rH of the starting heavy meromyosin was less than 0.8. However, rS was about 0.5 in subfragment-1 prepared from heavy meromyosin of rH about 2. The results indicate that only one mole of 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl group, which was bound with lower reactivity than the other, was bound to a head part of heavy meromyosin. 3. Subfragment-1 fraction prepared from the modified heavy meromyosin could be separated into two fractions by DE-32 cellulose column chromatography; the subfragment-1 portion which eluted later showed a higher rS than that eluted in front. The binding with ADP, the size of the initial burst of Pi liberation and the difference absorption spectrum induced by ATP were measured with the modified subfragment-1 separated by DE-32 cellulose column chromatography. The ADP-binding ability and the size of the initial burst were not dependent on rS, and coincided with those of subfragment-1 prepared from unmodified heavy meromyosin. 4. The results of ADP binding studies suggest that heavy meromyosin is constituted from nonidentical subunits, and that there is an interaction between them which controls the ADP binding. Two tryptophanyl residues having specific reactivity toward 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide are assumed to be involved in the interaction.  相似文献   

15.
Kovács M  Tóth J  Nyitray L  Sellers JR 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4219-4226
The enzymatic and motor function of smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin II is activated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains located in the head portion of myosin. Dimerization of the heads, which is brought about by the coiled-coil tail region, is essential for regulation since single-headed fragments are active regardless of the state of phosphorylation. Utilizing the fluorescence signal on binding of myosin to pyrene-labeled actin filaments, we investigated the interplay of actin and nucleotide binding to thiophosphorylated and unphosphorylated recombinant nonmuscle IIA heavy meromyosin constructs. We show that both heads of either thiophosphorylated or unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin bind very strongly to actin (K(d) < 10 nM) in the presence or absence of ADP. The heads have high and indistinguishable affinities for ADP (K(d) around 1 microM) when bound to actin. These findings are in line with the previously observed unusually loose coupling between nucleotide and actin binding to nonmuscle myosin IIA subfragment-1 (Kovács et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 38132.). Furthermore, they imply that the structure of the two heads in the ternary actomyosin-ADP complex is symmetrical and that the asymmetrical structure observed in the presence of ATP and the absence of actin in previous investigations (Wendt et al. (2001) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 98, 4361) is likely to represent an ATPase intermediate that precedes the actomyosin-ADP state.  相似文献   

16.
J Borejdo 《Biopolymers》1979,18(11):2807-2820
The rates of the translational motion of myosin fragments, heavy meromyosin (HMM), and heavy meromyosin subfragment-1 (HMM S-1) were measured during actin-activated ATPase reaction by the method of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. This technique monitors the random fluctuations in the concentration of fluorescent molecules in an open volume which result from the translational diffusion of the molecular species under observation. The statistical behavior of the fluctuations is represented in the form of the autocorrelation function, which is related to the translational diffusion coefficient of the fluorescent molecules. The translational motion of fluorescently labeled myosin fragments was progressively slowed down after additions of increasing amounts of actin in the presence of excess MgATP. When these results are interpreted according to a simple binding scheme, the extent of the retardation can be used to obtain the apparent association constant for binding of S-1 and HMM to actin in the presence of MgATP. In 0.1M KCl and at 23°C, the apparent association constants were determined as KappHMM = 2.2 × 104M?1 and KappS-1 = 8.8 × 103 for HMM and S-1, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of caldesmon on the rotational dynamics of actin filaments alone or conjugated with heavy meromyosin and/or tropomyosin has been measured by the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) technique using a maleimide spin label rigidly bound to Cys374 of actin. The rotation of actin protomers in filaments and the angular distribution of spin probes on actin were determined by conventional EPR spectroscopy, while torsional motions within actin filaments were detected by saturation transfer EPR measurements. Binding of caldesmon to F-actin resulted in the reduction of torsional mobility of actin filaments. The maximum effect was produced at a ratio of about one molecule of caldesmon/seven actin protomers. Smooth muscle tropomyosin enhanced the effect of caldesmon, i.e. caused further slowing down of internal motions within actin filaments. Caldesmon increased the degree of order of spin labels on F-actin in macroscopically oriented pellets in the presence of tropomyosin but not in its absence. Computer analysis of the spectra revealed that caldesmon alone slightly changed the orientation of spin probes relative to the long axis of the filament. In the presence of tropomyosin this effect of caldesmon was potentiated and then approximately every twentieth protomer along the actin filament was affected. Caldesmon weakened the effect of heavy meromyosin both on the polarity of environment of the spin label attached to F-actin and on the degree of order of labels on actin in macroscopically oriented pellets. Whereas the former effect of caldesmon was independent of tropomyosin, the latter one was observed only in the absence of tropomyosin.  相似文献   

18.
Separation of heavy meromyosin subfragment-1 treated with N-ethyl maleimide (MalNEt) into native -SH1- and -(SH1, SH2)-blocked protein populations could be achieved by affinity chromatography on agarose-ATP columns in the presence of Mg2+ or Ca2+. Covalent bridging of the two -SH groups by p-phenylenedimaleimide gave a product which has the same affinity of binding to ATP columns as the doubly blocked MalNEt preparation. Treatment with p-phenylenedimaleimide abolished binding to immobilized F-actin columns, whereas modifications by MalNEt did not affect adsorption by this chromatographic medium. Affinity chromatography on immobilized nucleotide and actin columns is suggested as an analytical tool in the study of the involvement of thiol groups in the myosin active site and its conformation.  相似文献   

19.
M proteins are antiphagocytic molecules on the surface of group A streptococci having physical characteristics similar to those of mammalian tropomyosin. Both are alpha-helical coiled-coil fibrous structures with a similar seven-residue periodicity of nonpolar and charged amino acids. To determine if M protein is functionally similar to tropomyosin we studied the interaction of M protein with F-actin. At low ionic strength, M protein binds to actin weakly with a stoichiometry different from that of tropomyosin. M protein does not compete with tropomyosin for the binding to actin, indicating that it is functionally different from tropomyosin. M protein does compete with myosin subfragment-1 for binding to actin and induces the formation of bundles of actin filaments. The formation of actin aggregates is associated with a sharp reduction in the rate of ATP hydrolysis by subfragment-1. Intact streptococci having M protein on their surface are shown to bind to actin.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction of C-protein with heavy meromyosin and subfragment-2.   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
C-protein has previously been shown to bind to the light-meromyosin region of the myosin tail. Examination of mixtures of C-protein with heavy meromyosin or subfragment-2 or subfragment-1 in the analytical ultracentrifuge shows that there is also a binding site for C-protein in the subfragment-2 region of the tail.  相似文献   

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