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1.
Interaction between chicken gizzard caldesmon and tropomyosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Chicken gizzard muscle caldesmon has been examined for ability to interact with tropomyosin from chicken gizzard muscle by using fluorescence enhancement of tropomyosin labeled with dansyl chloride (DNS) and affinity chromatography. The binding of caldesmon to tropomyosin was regulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin, i.e., at low ionic strength most of the caldesmon bound to tropomyosin-Sepharose 4B was co-eluted by adding calmodulin only in the presence of Ca2+, but not in its absence. This regulation by Ca2+ and calmodulin was also suggested by fluorescence measurements. Actin- and calmodulin-binding sites on the caldesmon molecule were located in the 38K fragment (Fujii, T., Imai, M., Rosenfeld, G.C., & Bryan, J. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 2757-2763). When 38K-enriched fraction was applied to the tropomyosin-Sepharose, the 38K fragment was retained by the column and could be eluted by adding Ca2+ and calmodulin.  相似文献   

2.
Caldesmon, calmodulin and tropomyosin interactions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Binary complex interactions between caldesmon and tropomyosin, and calmodulin and tropomyosin, and ternary complex interaction involving the three proteins were studied using viscosity, electron microscopy, fluorescence and affinity chromatography techniques. In 10 mM NaCl, caldesmon decreased the viscosity of chicken gizzard tropomyosin by 7-8 fold with a concomitant increase in turbidity (A330nm). Electron micrographs showed spindle-shaped particles in the tropomyosin-caldesmon samples. These results suggest side-by-side aggregation of tropomyosin polymers induced by caldesmon. Binding studies in 10 mM NaCl between caldesmon and chicken gizzard tropomyosin labelled with the fluorescent probe N-(1-anilinonaphthyl-4)maleimide (ANM) gave association constants from 5.3.10(6) to 7.9.10(6) M-1 and stoichiometry from 1.0 to 1.4 tropomyosin per caldesmon. Similar binding was observed for rabbit cardiac tropomyosin and caldesmon. Removal of 18 and 11 residues from the COOH ends of the gizzard and cardiac tropomyosin by carboxypeptidase A, respectively, had no significant effect on their binding to caldesmon. In the presence of Ca2+, chicken gizzard tropomyosin bound to a calmodulin-Sepharose-4B column and was eluted with a salt concentration of 140 mM. This interaction was weakened in the absence of Ca2+, and the bound tropomyosin was eluted by 65 mM KCl. ANM-labelled tropomyosin bound calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ with a binding constant of 3.5.10(6) M-1 and a binding stoichiometry of 1 to 1.4 tropomyosin per calmodulin. In 10 mM NaCl, calmodulin reduced the specific viscosity of chicken gizzard tropomyosin in the presence of Ca2+ by 5 fold, while a 1.5-fold reduction in viscosity was observed in the absence of Ca2+. In either case, no significant increase in turbidity was observed suggesting that calmodulin reduced head-to-tail polymerization of tropomyosin. The interaction of caldesmon with the calmodulin-ANM-tropomyosin complex in the presence and absence of Ca2+ was also examined. The result is consistent with a model that in the absence of Ca2+, calmodulin binds weakly to either caldesmon or tropomyosin and has little effect on the tropomyosin-caldesmon interaction; whereas, Ca2(+)-calmodulin interacts with caldesmon and reduces its affinity to tropomyosin.  相似文献   

3.
Three major calmodulin-binding cyanogen bromide peptides (fragments A, B, and D) were isolated from chicken gizzard muscle caldesmon and their amino acid sequences were determined. The molecular masses of fragments A, B, and D were estimated to 16, 12, and 9 kDa, respectively, by SDS-urea polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Fragment A was composed of 102 amino acid residues and contained homoserine at the C terminus. The amino acid sequence from the 37th residue of fragment A corresponds to the N-terminal sequence of the 15 kDa peptide which was obtained by thrombin digestion [Mornet, D., Audemard, E., & Derancourt, J. (1988) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 154, 564-571]. Thrombin 15 kDa peptide binds to F-actin but does not bind to calmodulin. Thus the N-terminal 36 residues and the C-terminal part from the 37th residue of fragment A are supposed to bind to calmodulin and F-actin, respectively. The sequences of fragments B and D were identical, but fragment D was composed of 64 amino acid residues and ended with tryptophan, whereas fragment B was of 98 or 99 amino acid residues and ended with proline. Both fragments B and D are supposed to be the C-terminal peptides of chicken caldesmon. Fragment B had heterogeneous sequences at the C-terminal region. These results can explain the reported heterogeneity of chicken caldesmon in charge and molecular mass.  相似文献   

4.
A wide range of values has been reported for the subunit and molecular weights of smooth muscle caldesmon. There have also been conflicting reports concerning whether caldesmon is a monomer or dimer. We attempted to resolve these uncertainties by determining the molecular weight of chicken gizzard smooth muscle caldesmon using the technique of sedimentation equilibrium in the analytical ultracentrifuge. Unlike previous methods that have been used to estimate the molecular weight of caldesmon, the molecular weight determined by equilibrium sedimentation does not depend upon assumptions about the shape of the molecule. We concluded that caldesmon in solution is monomeric with a molecular mass of 93 +/- 4 kDa, a value that is much less than those previously reported in the literature. This new value, in conjunction with sedimentation velocity experiments, led to the conclusion that caldesmon is a highly asymmetric molecule with an apparent length of 740 A in solution. The mass of a cyanogen bromide fragment, with an apparent mass of 37 kDa from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, was determined to be 25.1 +/- 0.6 kDa using sedimentation equilibrium. These results imply that the reported molecular weights of other fragment(s) of caldesmon have also been overestimated. We have determined an optical extinction coefficient for caldesmon (E1%(280 nm) = 3.3) by determining its concentration from its refractive index which was measured in the analytical ultracentrifuge. From the above values of the molecular weight and the extinction coefficient, we redetermined that the caldesmon molecule has two cysteines and recalculated the stoichiometric molar ratio of actin/tropomyosin/caldesmon in the smooth muscle thin filament to be 28:4:1.  相似文献   

5.
Vascular smooth muscle caldesmon   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein, has been identified in diverse bovine tissues, including smooth and striated muscles and various nonmuscle tissues, by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of tissue homogenates and immunoblotting using rabbit anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon. Caldesmon was purified from vascular smooth muscle (bovine aorta) by heat treatment of a tissue homogenate, ion-exchange chromatography, and affinity chromatography on a column of immobilized calmodulin. The isolated protein shared many properties in common with chicken gizzard caldesmon: immunological cross-reactivity, Ca2+-dependent interaction with calmodulin, Ca2+-independent interaction with F-actin, competition between actin and calmodulin for caldesmon binding only in the presence of Ca2+, and inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin without affecting the phosphorylation state of myosin. Maximal binding of aorta caldesmon to actin occurred at 1 mol of caldesmon: 9-10 mol of actin, and binding was unaffected by tropomyosin. Half-maximal inhibition of the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase occurred at approximately 1 mol of caldesmon: 12 mol of actin. This inhibition was also unaffected by tropomyosin. Caldesmon had no effect on the Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin in the absence of actin. Bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmons differed in several respects: Mr (149,000 for bovine aorta caldesmon and 141,000 for chicken gizzard caldesmon), extinction coefficient (E1%280nm = 19.5 and 5.0 for bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmon, respectively), amino acid composition, and one-dimensional peptide maps obtained by limited chymotryptic and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. In a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, using anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon, a 174-fold molar excess of bovine aorta caldesmon relative to chicken gizzard caldesmon was required for half-maximal inhibition. These studies establish the widespread tissue and species distribution of caldesmon and indicate that vascular smooth muscle caldesmon exhibits physicochemical differences yet structural and functional similarities to caldesmon isolated from chicken gizzard.  相似文献   

6.
Using a procedure developed to purify calcyclin from mouse Ehrlich ascites tumor cells calcyclin was purified from smooth muscle of chicken gizzard. Chicken gizzard calcyclin bound to phenyl-Sepharose in a calcium dependent manner as did mouse EAT cells and rabbit lung calcyclin but appeared to be more acidic than its mammalian counterparts as revealed by ion exchange chromatography on Mono Q. Chicken gizzard calcyclin bound 45Ca2+ on nitrocellulose filters and exhibited a shift in electrophoretic mobility on urea-PAGE depending on Ca2+ concentration. Crosslinking experiments with BS3 showed that chicken gizzard calcyclin was able to form noncovalent dimers. As indicated by a decrease in maximum tryptophan fluorescence emission of caldesmon (about 14% at 1:1 molar ratio) and displacement of calmodulin from its complex with caldesmon, chicken gizzard calcyclin binds caldesmon. This binding was, however, much weaker than that of calmodulin and could not influence the interaction of caldesmon with actin. In consequence, calcyclin was unable to reverse the inhibitory effect of caldesmon on actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
A pair of 10-kDa peptides, designated CB-a and CB-b, was isolated by calmodulin-Sepharose chromatography from a total CNBr digest of turkey gizzard caldesmon. CB-a encompasses the COOH-terminal segment of residues 659-756, according to the sequence of adult chicken gizzard caldesmon (Bryan, J., Imai, M., Lee, R., Moore, P., Cook, R.G., and Lin, W.G. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 13873-13879), whereas CB-b comprises the same structure but was a few amino acids shorter at its COOH terminus. Both peptides cosedimented with F-actin, and their binding was increased by smooth muscle tropomyosin. The Kd values were 1.3 and 0.5 microM, in the absence and presence of tropomyosin, respectively, with a maximum binding capacity of 6.9 actins/mol of peptides. The CB-a/CB-b fragments inhibited, in a tropomyosin-sensitive and Ca2(+)-calmodulin-dependent manner, the skeletal actomyosin subfragment 1 ATPase activity to a level close but not identical to that observed for the parent caldesmon. Ca2(+)-calmodulin was selectively cross-linked to either caldesmon or the CNBr peptides with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide producing 1:1 covalent complexes that were retained neither by phenyl-Sepharose nor by immobilized calmodulin. Moreover, the cross-linked caldesmon bound weakly to F-actin and did not inhibit the actomyosin subfragment 1 ATPase in the absence of Ca2+. The results suggest that the CB-a/CB-b peptide region contains major regulatory determinants of caldesmon.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Caldesmon is an F-actin cross-linking protein of chicken gizzard smooth muscle whose F-actin binding activity can be regulated in vitro by Ca2+-calmodulin (Sobue, K., Y. Muramoto, M. Fujita, and S. Kakiuchi, 1981, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 78:5652-5655). It is a rod-shaped, heat-stable, F-actin bundling protein and is the most abundant F-actin cross-linking protein of chicken gizzard smooth muscle presently known (Bretscher, A., 1984, J. Biol. Chem., 259:12873-12880). We report the use of polyclonal antibodies to caldesmon to investigate its distribution and localization in other cells. Using immune blotting procedures, we have detected immunoreactive, heat-stable forms of caldesmon in cultured cells having either approximately the same apparent polypeptide molecular weight as gizzard caldesmon (120,000-140,000) or a substantially lower molecular weight (71,000-77,000). Through use of affinity-purified antibodies in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, we have localized the immunoreactive forms to the terminal web of the brush border of intestinal epithelial cells and to the stress fibers and ruffling membranes of cultured cells. At the light microscope level caldesmon is distributed in a periodic fashion along stress fibers that is coincident with the distribution of tropomyosin and complementary to the distribution of alpha-actinin.  相似文献   

10.
A simple and rapid procedure for the purification of the native form of chicken gizzard myosin light-chain kinase (Mr 136000) is described which eliminates problems of proteolysis previously encountered. During this procedure, a calmodulin-binding protein of Mr 141000, which previously co-purified with the myosin light-chain kinase, is removed and shown to be a distinct protein on the basis of lack of kinase activity, different chymotryptic peptide maps, lack of cross-reactivity with a monoclonal antibody to turkey gizzard myosin light-chain kinase, and lack of phosphorylation by the purified catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. This Mr-141000 calmodulin-binding protein is identified as caldesmon on the basis of Ca2+-dependent interaction with calmodulin, subunit Mr, Ca2+-independent interaction with skeletal-muscle F-actin, Ca2+-dependent competition between calmodulin and F-actin for caldesmon, and tissue content.  相似文献   

11.
The two sulfhydryl groups of chicken gizzard caldesmon were specifically labeled with a photoreactive crosslinker, benzophenone-maleimide, to study its interactions with calmodulin and/or actin. When incubated with F-actin caldesmon crosslinks to a single actin monomer; it can, however, crosslink to up to two calmodulin molecules in the presence, but not in the absence, of Ca2+. Thus caldesmon may have two calmodulin-binding sites, each containing, or being near, one of the two thiol residues. One of these two sites may also be adjacent to the actin-binding site. A calmodulin-binding fragment of caldesmon resulting from cyanogen bromide digestion crosslinks to a single calmodulin molecule, also in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Crosslinking of calmodulin to caldesmon does not prevent the latter from binding F-actin, suggesting that calmodulin and actin do not compete with each other for the same binding site(s) on the caldesmon molecule.  相似文献   

12.
Actin-based gels were prepared from clarified high-salt extracts of human platelets by dialysis against physiological salt buffers. The gel was partially solubilized with 0.3 M KCl. Mice were immunized with the 0.3 M KCl extract of the actin gel, and hybridomas were produced by fusion of spleen cells with myeloma cells. Three hybridomas were generated that secrete antibodies against an 80-kD protein. These monoclonal antibodies stained stress fibers in cultured cells and cross-reacted with proteins in several tissue types, including smooth muscle. The cross-reacting protein in chicken gizzard smooth muscle had an apparent molecular weight of 140,000 and was demonstrated to be caldesmon, a calmodulin and actin-binding protein (Sobue, K., Y. Muramoto, M. Fujita, and S. Kakiuchi, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 78:5652-5655). No proteins of molecular weight greater than 80 kD were detectable in platelets by immunoblotting using the monoclonal antibodies. The 80-kD protein is heat stable and was purified using modifications of the procedure reported by Bretscher for the rapid purification of smooth muscle caldesmon (Bretscher, A., 1985, J. Biol. Chem., 259:12873-12880). The 80-kD protein bound to calmodulin-Sepharose in a Ca++-dependent manner and sedimented with actin filaments, but did not greatly increase the viscosity of F-actin solutions. The actin-binding activity was inhibited by calmodulin in the presence of calcium. Except for the molecular weight difference, the 80-kD platelet protein appears functionally similar to 140-kD smooth muscle caldesmon. We propose that the 80-kD protein is platelet caldesmon.  相似文献   

13.
Application of the myosin competition test (Lehman, W., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1975) J. Gen. Physiol. 66, 1-30) to chicken gizzard actomyosin indicated that this smooth muscle contains a thin filament-linked regulatory mechanism. Chicken gizzard thin filaments, isolated as described previously (Marston, S. B., and Lehman, W. (1985) Biochem. J. 231, 517-522), consisted almost exclusively of actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon, and an unidentified 32-kilodalton polypeptide in molar ratios of 1:1/6:1/26:1/17, respectively. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, these thin filaments conferred Ca2+ sensitivity (67.8 +/- 2.1%; n = 5) on the myosin Mg2+-ATPase. On the other hand, no Ca2+ sensitivity of the myosin Mg2+-ATPase was observed when purified gizzard actin or actin plus tropomyosin was reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin. Native thin filaments were rendered essentially free of caldesmon and the 32-kilodalton polypeptide by extraction with 25 mM MgCl2. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, caldesmon-free thin filaments and native thin filaments exhibited approximately the same Ca2+ sensitivity (45.1 and 42.7%, respectively). The observed Ca2+ sensitivity appears, therefore, not to be due to caldesmon. Only trace amounts of two Ca2+-binding proteins could be detected in native thin filaments. These were identified as calmodulin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:733) and the 20-kilodalton light chain of myosin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:270). The Ca2+ sensitivity observed in an in vitro system reconstituted from gizzard thin filaments and either skeletal myosin or phosphorylated gizzard myosin is due, therefore, to calmodulin and/or an unidentified minor protein component of the thin filaments which may be an actin-binding protein involved in regulating actin filament structure in a Ca2+-dependent manner.  相似文献   

14.
We have previously shown that p21-activated kinase, PAK, induces Ca(2+)-independent contraction of Triton-skinned smooth muscle with concomitant increase in phosphorylation of caldesmon and desmin but not myosin-regulatory light chain (Van Eyk, J. E., Arrell, D. K., Foster, D. B., Strauss, J. D., Heinonen, T. Y., Furmaniak-Kazmierczak, E., Cote, G. P., and Mak, A. S. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 23433-23439). In this study, we provide biochemical evidence implicating a role for PAK in Ca(2+)-independent contraction of smooth muscle via phosphorylation of caldesmon. Mass spectroscopy data show that stoichiometric phosphorylation occurs at Ser(657) and Ser(687) abutting the calmodulin-binding sites A and B of chicken gizzard caldesmon, respectively. Phosphorylation of Ser(657) and Ser(687) has an important functional impact on caldesmon. PAK-phosphorylation reduces binding of caldesmon to calmodulin by about 10-fold whereas binding of calmodulin to caldesmon partially inhibits PAK phosphorylation. Phosphorylated caldesmon displays a modest reduction in affinity for actin-tropomyosin but is significantly less effective in inhibiting actin-activated S1 ATPase activity in the presence of tropomyosin. We conclude that PAK-phosphorylation of caldesmon at the calmodulin-binding sites modulates caldesmon inhibition of actin-myosin ATPase activity and may, in concert with the actions of Rho-kinase, contribute to the regulation of Ca(2+) sensitivity of smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

15.
We have developed a simple and conventional purification method for caldesmon and MLC kinase from bovine arterial smooth muscle, and compared the arterial and gizzard proteins. Arterial caldesmon shares the alternative binding to calmodulin or F-actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner and the antigenic determinants with the gizzard protein. Both caldesmons have the same association constant with F-actin (1.3-1.7 X 10(7) M-1) and the same maximum binding (1 caldesmon per 12-14 actins). However, the molecular weight of arterial caldesmon (dimer of a 148 kDa polypeptides) was slightly different from that of gizzard caldesmon (heterodimer of 150/147 kDa polypeptides). The molecular weight of arterial MLC kinase (160 kDa) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (135 kDa). The enzyme activities of both MLC kinases were comparable (Km = 9.5 microM, Vmax = 12.5 mumol/min X mg). The association constant of the arterial enzyme to F-actin (5.1 X 10(6) M-1) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (9.0 X 10(5) M-1) but the maximum binding was the same (1 enzyme per 12-13 actins). Immunocytochemical examinations showed that caldesmon and MLC kinase in cultured arterial cells have a restricted localization along the stress fibers, suggesting functional linkages between both proteins and actin filaments in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Caldesmon, an actin- and calmodulin-binding protein of smooth muscle, is a protein serine/threonine kinase capable of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent autophosphorylation [Scott-Woo & Walsh (1988) Biochem. J. 252, 463-472]. Phosphorylation nullifies the inhibitory effect of caldesmon on the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth-muscle myosin [Ngai & Walsh (1987) Biochem. J. 244, 417-425]. We have characterized the kinase activity of caldesmon of chicken gizzard smooth muscle. Autophosphorylation requires Ca2+/calmodulin, but is unaffected by other second messengers (Ca2+/phospholipid/diacylglycerol, cyclic AMP or cyclic GMP), and is inhibited by the calmodulin antagonists chlorpromazine and compound 48/80, with 50% inhibition at 39.8 microM and 12.0 ng/ml respectively. Half-maximal activation of autophosphorylation occurs at 60-80 nM-Ca2+ and 0.14 microM-calmodulin, and maximal activity at 0.14-0.18 microM-Ca2+ and 1 microM-calmodulin; activation is gradually lost at higher Ca2+ and calmodulin concentrations. Autophosphorylation is pH-dependent, with maximal activity over the range pH 7-9, and requires free Mg2+ in addition to the MgATP2- substrate. The Km for ATP is 15.6 +/- 4.1 microM (mean +/- S.D., n = 4), and kinase activity is inhibited by increasing ionic strength [half-maximal inhibition at I = 0.094 +/- 0.009 M (mean +/- S.D., n = 4)]. Autophosphorylation does not affect the rate of hydrolysis of caldesmon (free or bound to calmodulin) by alpha-chymotrypsin. However, a slight difference in peptides generated from phospho- and dephospho-forms of caldesmon is observed. The binding of phospho- or dephospho-caldesmon to F-actin protects the protein against chymotryptic digestion, but does not alter the pattern of peptide generation. Characterization of proteolytic fragments of caldesmon generated by alpha-chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease enables localization of the phosphorylation sites and the kinase active site within the caldesmon molecule.  相似文献   

17.
We have determined the amino acid sequence of a 35 kDa proteolytic fragment ("CaD35") derived from the C-terminus of turkey gizzard caldesmon. This 239-residue peptide contains binding sites for actin and calmodulin. Residues 1-96 of CaD35 comprise "CaD15", an actin-binding subfragment which we previously showed to resemble the tropomyosin-binding segment of troponin T. The remainder of the CaD35 sequence shows no significant similarity to other proteins. Residues 111-128 may form a basic, amphipathic helix which interacts with calmodulin.  相似文献   

18.
E H Ball  T Kovala 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):6093-6098
Caldesmon is a widely distributed contractile protein that occurs in both a high molecular weight [120-150-kilodalton (kDa)] and a low molecular weight (71-80-kDa) form, depending on the tissue. The structural relationship between these two forms was examined by mapping techniques. Partial cyanogen bromide cleavage in conjunction with sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis was used to construct a map of the cleavage points and determine the relative position of the fragments in a high molecular weight caldesmon from chicken gizzard (caldesmon125). By use of this map, markers for different regions of the protein were obtained: Antibodies directed toward certain areas were prepared by affinity purification, and specific 125I-labeled tryptic peptides were found to originate from terminal cyanogen bromide fragments. Mapping of a lower molecular weight form of caldesmon (caldesmon72 from chicken liver) revealed the presence of sequences located in both ends of caldesmon125. A terminal 38-kDa fragment of both proteins was apparently identical on the basis of arrangement of cleavage sites, antibody reactivity, and iodopeptide mapping. Fragments from the other end of both proteins exhibited an identical pattern of peptides. These results show that it is sequences located in the central area of caldesmon125 which are missing in caldesmon72, indicating that the smaller molecule is not simply a proteolytic product of the larger. The two forms of caldesmon may be derived from separate genes or by alternative splicing from a single gene.  相似文献   

19.
R S Mani  W D McCubbin  C M Kay 《Biochemistry》1992,31(47):11896-11901
Caldesmon from chicken gizzard muscle has been examined for its ability to interact with caltropin using affinity chromatography and the fluorescent probe acrylodan. The action of caltropin on the inhibitory effect of caldesmon on actomyosin ATPase was also studied. Like calmodulin, caltropin could release the inhibitory effect of caldesmon in the presence of Ca2+. Complete reversal was obtained when 1 mol of caltropin was added per mol of caldesmon. When caldesmon was applied to caltropin-Sepharose in the presence of Ca2+, most of the caldesmon was bound to the column and could be eluted with EGTA, indicating that there is a direct interaction between caldesmon and caltropin. Acrylodan-labeled caldesmon, when excited at 375 nm, had an emission maximum at 504 nm. Addition of caltropin in the presence of Ca2+ resulted in a nearly 50% increase in fluorescence intensity, and this was accompanied by a blue shift in the emission maximum (i.e., lambda em,max 492 nm), suggesting that the probe now occupies a more nonpolar environment. Titration of caltropin with labeled caldesmon indicated a strong affinity for this protein (Kd was in the order of 8 x 10(-8)-2 x 10(-7) M). However, when caltropin was added to labeled caldesmon in the presence of EGTA, there was no indication of any interaction. Caltropin was at least as potent as calmodulin, if not better, in reversing the inhibitory effect of caldesmon in the presence of calcium, making it a potential Ca2+ factor in regulating caldesmon in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorylation of caldesmon by protein kinase C   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Protein kinase C catalyzes phosphorylation of caldesmon, an F-actin binding protein of smooth muscle, in the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid. Protein kinase C incorporates about 8 mol of phosphate/mol of chicken gizzard caldesmon. When calmodulin was added in the medium, there was an inhibition of phosphorylation. The fully phosphorylated, but not unphosphorylated, caldesmon inhibited myosin light chain kinase activity. The possibility that protein kinase C plays some role in smooth muscle contractile system through caldesmon, warrants further attention.  相似文献   

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