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 31 毫秒
1.
1. The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of gizzard HMM increased in proportion to the square of the extent of LC phosphorylation. This result indicates that the LCs of HMM are randomly phosphorylated, and the phosphorylation of both heads of HMM is required for the activation of HMM Mg2+-ATPase by F-actin. 2. In 75 mM KCl, the Mg2+-ATPase activity of gizzard myosin was activated by F-actin only slightly when a half of the total LC was phosphorylated. From 1 to 2 mol LC phosphorylation, the activity was enhanced by F-actin almost linearly. In 30 mM KCl, the activity of acto-gizzard myosin increased sigmoidally with increase in the extent of LC phosphorylation. On electron microscopy, side-by-side aggregates of myosin filaments were observed in 30 mM KCl, but not in 75 mM KCl. It was suggested that the activation of the Mg2+-ATPase activity of acto-gizzard myosin LC phosphorylation is modified by formation of myosin filaments and their aggregates. 3. The relationship between the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of HMM or myosin and the extent of LC phosphorylation was unaffected by tropomyosin.  相似文献   

2.
It has been shown that in the absence of KCl, the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal myosin minifilaments with phosphorylated regulatory lights chains (LC2) exceeds 3-4-fold that of myosin minifilaments with dephosphorylated LC2. Addition of KCl leads to a decrease in the difference between the two ATPase activities. LC2 phosphorylation considerably increases the rate of ATPase reaction and only slightly decreases the affinity of myosin minifilaments for F-actin. It is suggested that the unusual effect of LC2 phosphorylation on the kinetic parameters of the actin-stimulated ATPase reaction of myosin minifilaments can be accounted for by its influence on the interaction between myosin heads which results in the ordered self-assembly of minifilaments.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of phosphorylation in skeletal myosin light chain (LC2) on the actomyosin and acto-heavymeromyosin (HMM) ATPase activities was investigated in the presence or absence of regulatory proteins (tropomyosin-troponin complex). Phosphorylation in LC2 did not modulate the actin-myosin and actin-HMM interactions over a wide range of KCl concentrations from 30 to 150 mM without regulatory proteins. In the presence of regulatory proteins, phosphorylation in myosin LC2 enhanced the ATPase activity of actomyosin with calcium ions, but the removal of calcium ions made little difference in the ATPase activity between phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosins. Ca2+-sensitivity of the regulated actomyosin was slightly changed by phosphorylation in myosin LC2. However, both the ATPase activity and Ca2+-sensitivity of the regulated acto-HMM were unaffected by phosphorylation in HMM LC2.  相似文献   

4.
The actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of filamentous Acanthamoeba myosin II is inhibited by phosphorylation of 3 serine residues at the tip of the tail of each heavy chain. From previous studies, it had been concluded that the activity of each molecule in the filament was regulated by the global state of phosphorylation of the filament and was independent of its own phosphorylation state. The actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of monomeric phosphorylated myosin II was not known because it polymerizes under the ionic conditions necessary for the expression of this activity. We have now found conditions to maintain myosin II monomeric and active during the enzyme assay. The actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activities of monomeric dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosin II were found to be the same as the activity of filamentous dephosphorylated myosin II. These results support the conclusion that phosphorylation regulates filamentous myosin II by affecting filament conformation. Consistent with their equivalent enzymatic activities, monomeric and filamentous dephosphorylated myosin II were equally active in an in vitro motility assay in which myosin adsorbed to a surface drives the movement of F-actin. In contrast to their very different enzymatic activities, however, filamentous and monomeric phosphorylated myosin II had similar activities in the in vitro motility assay; both were much less active than monomeric and filamentous dephosphorylated myosin II. One interpretation of these results is that the rate-limiting steps in the two assays are different and that, while the rate-limiting step for actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity is regulated only at the level of the filament, the rate-limiting step for motility can also be regulated at the level of the monomer.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of phosphorylation of light chains-2 (LC2) of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin on the interaction of myosin minifilaments with F-actin as well as on the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase of minifilaments was studied. It was shown that in the absence of KCl the degree of F-actin-induced stimulation of myosin minifilament Mg2+-ATPase with phosphorylated LC2 exceeds 2-4-fold that with unphosphorylated LC2. Phosphorylation of LC2 considerably increases the rate of actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase reaction of myosin minifilaments but exerts only a very weak influence on the affinity of minifilaments for F-actin. After addition of KCl the differences in the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase activity disappear in a great degree; in the presence of 50 mM KCl they do not exceed 50%. It was assumed that the observed specific influence of LC2 phosphorylation on the kinetic parameters of actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase reaction of myosin minifilaments is due to unique properties of the minifilaments (e.g., their ability to ordered self-assembly as a result of interaction between the heads of myosin molecules) which reflect their structural peculiarities.  相似文献   

6.
This study examines the steady state activity and in vitro motility of single-headed (S1) and double-headed (HMM) myosin VI constructs within the context of two putative modes of regulation. Phosphorylation of threonine 406 does not alter either the rate of actin filament sliding or the maximal actin-activated ATPase rate of S1 or HMM constructs. Thus, we do not observe any regulation of myosin VI by phosphorylation within the motor domain. Interestingly, in the absence of calcium, the myosin VI HMM construct moves in an in vitro motility assay at a velocity that is twice that of S1 constructs, which may be indicative of movement that is not based on a "lever arm" mechanism. Increasing calcium above 10 microm slows both the rate of ADP release from S1 and HMM actomyosin VI and the rates of in vitro motility. Furthermore, high calcium concentrations appear to uncouple the two heads of myosin VI. Thus, phosphorylation and calcium are not on/off switches for myosin VI enzymatic activity, although calcium may alter the degree of processive movement for myosin VI-mediated cargo transport. Lastly, calmodulin mutants reveal that the calcium effect is dependent on calcium binding to the N-terminal lobe of calmodulin.  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,101(5):1897-1902
In smooth muscles there is no organized sarcomere structure wherein the relative movement of myosin filaments and actin filaments has been documented during contraction. Using the recently developed in vitro assay for myosin-coated bead movement (Sheetz, M.P., and J.A. Spudich, 1983, Nature (Lond.)., 303:31-35), we were able to quantitate the rate of movement of both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin on ordered actin filaments derived from the giant alga, Nitella. We found that movement of turkey gizzard smooth muscle myosin on actin filaments depended upon the phosphorylation of the 20-kD myosin light chains. About 95% of the beads coated with phosphorylated myosin moved at velocities between 0.15 and 0.4 micron/s, depending upon the preparation. With unphosphorylated myosin, only 3% of the beads moved and then at a velocity of only approximately 0.01-0.04 micron/s. The effects of phosphorylation were fully reversible after dephosphorylation with a phosphatase prepared from smooth muscle. Analysis of the velocity of movement as a function of phosphorylation level indicated that phosphorylation of both heads of a myosin molecule was required for movement and that unphosphorylated myosin appears to decrease the rate of movement of phosphorylated myosin. Mixing of phosphorylated smooth muscle myosin with skeletal muscle myosin which moves at 2 microns/s resulted in a decreased rate of bead movement, suggesting that the more slowly cycling smooth muscle myosin is primarily determining the velocity of movement in such mixtures.  相似文献   

8.
Using the polarization microfluorimetry method, it was demonstrated that the increase in the degree of phosphorylation of myosin light chains (LC2) in extended single glycerinated fibers from rabbit psoas muscle changes the anisotropy of polarized fluorescence both tryptophan residue in the rod parts of the myosin molecule and the fluorescent label-N (iodoacetyl-aminoethyl)-5-naphthylamine-1-sulfonate (1,5-IAEDANS) bound to the SH1-group in myosin molecule heads. The changes in fluorescence anisotropy during LC2 phosphorylation were observed, when the measurements were performed only in the presence of 5 mM MgCl2. It was suggested that in the presence of MgCl2 the phosphorylation of LC2 associated with myosin heads changes their orientation and causes conformational shifts in the myosin filament core.  相似文献   

9.
Regulation of the actin-activated ATPase of aorta smooth muscle myosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Phosphorylation of the 20,000-Da light chains, LC20, of vertebrate smooth muscle myosins is thought to be the primary mechanism for regulating the actin-activated ATPase activities of these myosins and consequently smooth muscle contraction. While actin stimulates the MgATPase activities of phosphorylated smooth muscle myosins, it is generally believed that the MgATPase activities of the unphosphorylated myosins are not stimulated by actin. However, under conditions where both unphosphorylated (5% phosphorylated LC20) and phosphorylated calf aorta myosins are mostly filamentous, the maximum rate, Vmax, of the actin-activated ATPase of the unphosphorylated myosin is one-half that of the phosphorylated myosin. While LC20 phosphorylation causes only a modest increase in Vmax, in the presence of tropomyosin, this phosphorylation does cause up to a 10-fold decrease in Kapp, the actin concentration required to achieve 1/2 Vmax. In the presence of low concentrations of tropomyosin/actin, a linear relationship is obtained between the fraction of LC20 phosphorylated and stimulation of the actin-activated ATPase. The relatively high actin-activated ATPase activity of unphosphorylated aorta myosin suggests that other proteins may be involved in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. In contrast to the results presented here for aorta myosin, it has been reported that actin does not activate the MgATPase activity of unphosphorylated gizzard myosin and that the actin-activated ATPase of gizzard myosin increases more slowly than LC20 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

10.
A simple method for obtaining glycerinated muscle fibres of m. psoas of rabbit containing regulatory myosin light chains (LC2) of different levels of phosphorylation. The glycerination conditions stimulated endogenic kinase LC2 or phosphatase LC2. Glycerinated muscle fibres contained phosphorylated and dephosphorylated (levels of phosphorylation are 95 +/- 5%, and 5 +/- 5%, respectively) LC2 of myosin. To determine the level of phosphorylation the method of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in 8 M urea was modified.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of myosin LC2 modifications (phosphorylation or selective proteolytic removal of a seven-residue N-terminal peptide) and partial or complete removal of the whole LC2 was studied under various conditions. (1) Actin binding in the absence of ATP is not influenced by the nature of the myosin species (phosphorylated, dephosphorylated or devoid of LC2). (2) A 50% inhibition of K+/EDTA-ATPase was obtained with actin concentrations hardly different when phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosins were compared (of the order of 5 microM), whereas both myosin devoid of LC2 and myosin in which the LC2 N-terminal peptide has been removed required significantly higher concentrations of actin (13.0 +/- 2 and 12.0 +/- 2.0 microM, respectively). (3) Dissociation of the actomyosin complex at high ionic strength with nucleotides is not influenced by phosphorylation. (4) Actin activation of Mg2+-ATPase is enhanced when LC2 is phosphorylated; no activation enhancement is observed with myosin devoid of LC2. (5) Translational diffusion coefficient measurements of myosin in high-ionic-strength solutions indicate a tendency for LC2-deprived myosin to form autoassociation oligomers. It thus appears that a structural modification (partial cleavage or removal of LC2) induces important structural changes in myosin, pointing to a role for LC2 in the intrinsic conformation of the molecule and its interaction potentialities. Effects of LC2 removal at high ionic strength are best explained by interactions bearing no relationship to physiological functions. A physiologically significant effect of LC2 phosphorylation requires a minimum degree of organization (actomyosin complex) to be expressed in which LC2 could play the role of a return-spring in the cross-bridge mechanism.  相似文献   

12.
Calcium regulation of porcine aortic myosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Calcium regulation of actin-activated porcine aortic myosin MgATPase was studied. The MgATPase of the purified actomyosin was stimulated about 10-fold by 0.1 mM Ca2+. The 20,000 molecular weight light chain subunit (LC20) of myosin was phosphorylated by an endogenous kinase that required Ca2+. Half-maximal activation of both kinase and ATPase occurred at about 0.9 microM Ca2+. Phosphorylated and unphosphorylated myosins, free of actin, kinase, and phosphatase, were purified by gel filtration. The MgATPase of phosphorylated myosin was activated by rabbit skeletal muscle actin; unphosphorylated myosin was actin activated to a much lesser extent. Actin activation was maximal in the presence of Ca2+. Regulation of the aortic myosin MgATPase seems to involve both direct interaction of calcium with phosphorylated myosin and calcium activation of the myosin kinase. The MgATPase of trypsin-treated actomyosin did not require Ca2+ for full activity. The trypsin-treated actomyosin was devoid of LC20. When purified unphosphorylated aortic myosin was treated with trypsin, the LC20, was cleaved and the MgATPase, which was not appreciably actin activated before exposure to protease, was increased and was activated by skeletal muscle actin. After incubation of this light chain-depleted myosin with light chain from rabbit skeletal muscle myosin, the actin activation but not the increased activity, was abolished. Unphosphorylated LC20 seems to inhibit actin activation in this smooth muscle.  相似文献   

13.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain (LC) can be phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) at Ser19 and Thr18 and by protein kinase C (PKC) at Thr9 and Ser1 or Ser2 under the in vitro assay conditions. Conversion of PKC to the spontaneously active protein kinase M (PKM) by proteolysis resulted in a change in the substrate specificity of the kinase. PKM phosphorylated both sets of sites in LC recognized by MLCK and PKC as analyzed by peptide mapping analysis. The PKM-catalyzed phosphorylation of these sites was not greatly affected by a MLCK inhibitor, ML-9, nor by the activators of MLCK, Ca2+ and calmodulin.  相似文献   

14.
Mixing feed fibroblasts with soluble collagen and serum-supplemented culture medium at 37 degrees C results in the entrapment of cells within the polymerizing collagen matrix. This cellular-collagen complex is referred to as a fibroblast-populated collagen lattice (FPCL). In time, this FPCL undergoes a reduction in size called lattice contraction. The proposed mechanism for lattice contraction is cellular force produced by cytoplasmic microfilaments which organize collagen fibrils compacting the matrix. When the regulatory subunits of myosin, myosin light chains, are phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), myosin ATPase activity is increased and actin-myosin dynamic filament sliding occurs. Elevated levels of myosin ATPase are required for maximal lattice contraction. Cholera toxin inhibits lattice contraction by increasing intracellular levels of cAMP. It is proposed that increased cytoplasmic concentrations of cAMP promote phosphorylation of MLCK, the enzyme important for maximizing myosin ATPase activity. Phosphorylating MLCK in vitro inhibits activity by decreasing its sensitivity to calcium-calmodulin complex. A decrease in MLCK activity would result in lower levels of myosin ATPase activity. MLCK, purified from turkey gizzard, was subjected to limited proteolytic digestion to produce calmodulin-independent-MLCK. The partially digested kinase does not require calcium-calmodulin for activation. Independent-MLCK is not subject to inhibition by phosphorylation. The electroporetic inoculation of independent-MLCK into fibroblasts before FPCL manufacture produced enhanced lattice contraction. Lattice contraction, in the presence of cholera toxin, was restored to normal levels by the prior electroporetic introduction of independent-MLCK. These findings support the hypothesis that increases in cAMP hinder lattice contraction by a mechanism involving inhibition of MLCK and myosin ATPase.  相似文献   

15.
Contractile activity of myosin II in smooth muscle and non-muscle cells requires phosphorylation of myosin by myosin light chain kinase. In addition, these cells have the potential for regulation at the thin filament level by caldesmon and calponin, both of which bind calmodulin. We have investigated this regulation using in vitro motility assays. Caldesmon completely inhibited the movement of actin filaments by either phosphorylated smooth muscle myosin or rabbit skeletal muscle heavy meromyosin. The amount of caldesmon required for inhibition was decreased when tropomyosin is present. Similarly, calponin binding to actin resulted in inhibition of actin filament movement by both smooth muscle myosin and skeletal muscle heavy meromyosin. Tropomyosin had no effect on the amount of calponin needed for inhibition. High concentrations of calmodulin (10 microM) in the presence of calcium completely reversed the inhibition. The nature of the inhibition by the two proteins was markedly different. Increasing caldesmon concentrations resulted in graded inhibition of the movement of actin filaments until complete inhibition of movement was obtained. Calponin inhibited actin sliding in a more "all or none" fashion. As the calponin concentration was increased the number of actin filaments moving was markedly decreased, but the velocity of movement remained near control values.  相似文献   

16.
We have partially purified myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) from Dictyostelium discoideum. MLCK was purified 4,700-fold with a yield of approximately 1 mg from 350 g of cells. The enzyme is very acidic as suggested by its tight binding to DEAE. Dictyostelium MLCK has an apparent native molecular mass on HPLC G3000SW of approximately 30,000 D. Mg2+ is required for enzyme activity. Ca2+ inhibits activity and this inhibition is not relieved by calmodulin. cAMP or cGMP have no effect on enzyme activity. Dictyostelium MLCK is very specific for the 18,000-D light chain of Dictyostelium myosin and does not phosphorylate the light chain of several other myosins tested. Myosin purified from log-phase amebas of Dictyostelium has approximately 0.3 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain as assayed by glycerol-urea gel electrophoresis. Dictyostelium MLCK can phosphorylate this myosin to a stoichiometry approaching 1 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain. MLCP, which was partially purified, selectively removes phosphate from the 18,000-D light chain but not from the heavy chain of Dictyostelium myosin. Phosphatase-treated Dictyostelium myosin has less than or equal to 0.01 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain. Phosphatase-treated myosin could be rephosphorylated to greater than or equal to 0.96 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain by incubation with MLCK and ATP. We found myosin thick filament assembly to be independent of the extent of 18,000-D light-chain phosphorylation when measured as a function of ionic strength. However, actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of Dictyostelium myosin was found to be directly related to the extent of phosphorylation of the 18,000-D light chain. MLCK-treated myosin moved in an in vitro motility assay (Sheetz, M. P., and J. A. Spudich, 1983, Nature (Lond.), 305:31-35) at approximately 1.4 micron/s whereas phosphatase-treated myosin moved only slowly or not at all. The effects of phosphatase treatment on the movement were fully reversed by subsequent treatment with MLCK.  相似文献   

17.
We previously reported (Berlot, C. H., Spudich, J. A., and Devreotes, P. N. (1985) Cell 43, 307-314) that cAMP stimulation of chemotactically competent Dictyostelium amoebae causes transient increases in phosphorylation of the myosin heavy chain and 18,000-dalton light chain in vivo and in vitro. In this report we investigate the mechanisms involved in these changes in phosphorylation. In the case of heavy chain phosphorylation, the amount of substrate available for phosphorylation appears to be the major factor regulating the in vitro phosphorylation rate. Almost all heavy chain kinase activity is insoluble in Triton X-100, and the increase in the heavy chain phosphorylation rate in vitro parallels an increase in Triton insolubility of myosin. Changes in heavy chain phosphatase activity are not involved in the changes in the in vitro phosphorylation rate. In the case of light chain phosphorylation, increases in the vitro phosphorylation rate occur under conditions where the amount of substrate available for phosphorylation is constant and phosphatase activity is undetectable, implicating light chain kinase activation as the means of regulation. The specificity of the myosin kinases operating in vivo and in vitro was explored using phosphoamino acid and chymotryptic phosphopeptide analysis. The light chain is phosphorylated on serine both in vivo and in vitro, and phosphopeptide maps of the light chain phosphorylated in vivo and in vitro are indistinguishable. In the case of the heavy chain, both serine and threonine are phosphorylated in vivo and in vitro, although the cAMP-stimulated increases in phosphorylation occur primarily on threonine. Phosphopeptide maps of the heavy chain show that the peptides phosphorylated in vitro represent a major subset of those phosphorylated in vivo. The kinetics of the transient increases in myosin phosphorylation rates observed in vitro can be predicted quantitatively from the in vivo myosin phosphorylation data assuming that there is a constant phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

18.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is known to bind to thin filaments and myosin filaments. Telokin, an independently expressed protein with an identical amino acid sequence to that of the C-terminal domain of MLCK, has been shown to bind to unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin. Thus, the functional significance of the C-terminal domain and the molecular morphology of MLCK were examined in detail. The C-terminal domain was removed from MLCK by alpha-chymotryptic digestion, and the activity of the digested MLCK was measured using myosin or the isolated 20-kDa light chain (LC20) as a substrate. The results showed that the digestion increased K(m) for myosin 3-fold whereas it did not change the value for LC20. In addition, telokin inhibited the phosphorylation of myosin by MLCK by increasing K(m) but only slightly increased K(m) for LC20. Electron microscopy indicated that MLCK was an elongated molecule but was flexible so as to form folded conformations. MLCK was crosslinked to unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide in the absence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM), and electron microscopic observation of the products revealed that the MLCK molecule bound to the head-tail junction of heavy meromyosin. These results suggest that MLCK binds to the head-tail junction of unphosphorylated myosin through its C-terminal domain, where LC20 can be promptly phosphorylated through its catalytic domain following the Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent activation.  相似文献   

19.
Myosins are a superfamily of actin-dependent molecular motor proteins, among which the bipolar filament forming myosins II have been the most studied. The activity of smooth muscle/non-muscle myosin II is regulated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains, that in turn is modulated by the antagonistic activity of myosin light chain kinase and myosin light chain phosphatase. The phosphatase activity is mainly regulated through phosphorylation of its myosin binding subunit MYPT. To identify the function of these phosphorylation events, we have molecularly characterized the Drosophila homologue of MYPT, and analyzed its mutant phenotypes. We find that Drosophila MYPT is required for cell sheet movement during dorsal closure, morphogenesis of the eye, and ring canal growth during oogenesis. Our results indicate that the regulation of the phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains, or dynamic activation and inactivation of myosin II, is essential for its various functions during many developmental processes.  相似文献   

20.
Actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin from Physarum polycephalum decreases when it binds Ca2+ and increases when it loses Ca2+. This Ca-inhibition is observed with phosphorylated myosin [Kohama, K. (1990) Trend, Pharmacol. Sci. 11, 433-435]. The activity of dephosphorylated myosin remained at a low level both in the presence and absence of Ca2+, although Ca(2+)-binding ability was much the same as that of the phosphorylated myosin. The effect of phosphorylation has been studied at a conventional actin concentration, which is comparable with that of myosin by weight. When the concentration of actin was increased by 10 times, the dephosphorylated myosin became actin-activatable in the absence of Ca2+, and Ca-inhibition was recovered. As actin exists quite abundantly in non-muscle cells of Physarum, myosin phosphorylation plays virtually no role in regulating actin-myosin-ATP interaction in vivo. Physiologically the interaction may be regulated by Ca2+ by binding to and subsequent release from myosin. Latex beads coated by either phosphorylated or dephosphorylated myosin moved ATP-dependently on the actin cables of Characeae cells to the same extent in the absence of Ca2+, but the movement was abolished by increasing Ca2+. When the interaction was examined by monitoring the movement of actin filaments on myosin fixed on a coverslip, the movement and Ca-inhibition of the movement were detected with phosphorylated, not dephosphorylated, myosin [Okagaki, T., Higashi-Fujime, S., & Kohama, K. (1989) J. Biochem. 106, 955-957].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  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