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.
Disulfide cross-linking of caldesmon to actin.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Treatment of a solution of actin and smooth muscle caldesmon with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) results in the formation of a disulfide cross-link between the C-terminal penultimate residue Cys-374 of actin and Cys-580 in caldesmon's C-terminal actin-binding region. Therefore, these 2 residues are close in the actin-caldesmon complex. Since myosin also binds to actin in the vicinity of Cys-374 and since caldesmon inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity by the reduction of myosin binding to actin, then the inhibition might be by caldesmon sterically hindering or blocking myosin's interaction with actin. [Ca2+]Calmodulin, which reverses the inhibition of the ATPase activity, decreases the yield of the cross-linked species, suggesting a weakening of the caldesmon-actin interaction in the cross-linked region. It is possible to maximally cross-link one caldesmon molecule/every three actin monomers, in the absence or presence of tropomyosin, clearly ruling out an elongated, end-to-end alignment of caldesmon on the actin filament in vitro, and raising the possibility that the N-terminal part of caldesmon projects out from the filament. Reaction of 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)-modified actin with caldesmon leads to the same disulfide cross-linked product between actin and caldesmon Cys-580, enabling the specific labeling of the other caldesmon cysteine, residue 153, in the N-terminal part of caldesmon with a spectroscopic probe.  相似文献   

2.
P Graceffa 《Biochemistry》1999,38(37):11984-11992
It has been proposed that during the activation of muscle contraction the initial binding of myosin heads to the actin thin filament contributes to switching on the thin filament and that this might involve the movement of actin-bound tropomyosin. The movement of smooth muscle tropomyosin on actin was investigated in this work by measuring the change in distance between specific residues on tropomyosin and actin by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) as a function of myosin head binding to actin. An energy transfer acceptor was attached to Cys374 of actin and a donor to the tropomyosin heterodimer at either Cys36 of the beta-chain or Cys190 of the alpha-chain. FRET changed for the donor at both positions of tropomyosin upon addition of skeletal or smooth muscle myosin heads, indicating a movement of the whole tropomyosin molecule. The changes in FRET were hyperbolic and saturated at about one head per seven actin subunits, indicating that each head cooperatively affects several tropomyosin molecules, presumably via tropomyosin's end-to-end interaction. ATP, which dissociates myosin from actin, completely reversed the changes in FRET induced by heads, whereas in the presence of ADP the effect of heads was the same as in its absence. The results indicate that myosin with and without ADP, intermediates in the myosin ATPase hydrolytic pathway, are effective regulators of tropomyosin position, which might play a role in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

3.
It has been shown that skeletal and smooth muscle myosin heads binding to actin results in the movement of smooth muscle tropomyosin, as revealed by a change in fluorescence resonance energy transfer between a fluorescence donor on tropomyosin and an acceptor on actin (Graceffa, P. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 11984-11992). In this work, tropomyosin movement was similarly monitored as a function of unphosphorylated and phosphorylated smooth muscle myosin double-headed fragment smHMM. In the absence of nucleotide and at low myosin head/actin ratios, only phosphorylated heads induced a change in energy transfer. In the presence of ADP, the effect of head phosphorylation was even more dramatic, in that at all levels of myosin head/actin, phosphorylation was necessary to affect energy transfer. It is proposed that the regulation of tropomyosin position on actin by phosphorylation of myosin heads plays a key role in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. In contrast, actin-bound caldesmon was not moved by myosin heads at low head/actin ratios, as uncovered by fluorescence resonance energy transfer and disulfide cross-linking between caldesmon and actin. At higher head concentration caldesmon was dissociated from actin, consistent with the multiple binding model for the binding of caldesmon and myosin heads to actin (Chen, Y., and Chalovich, J. M. (1992) Biophys. J. 63, 1063-1070).  相似文献   

4.
Orientation and mobility of acrylodan fluorescent probe specifically bound to caldesmon Cys580 incorporated into muscle ghost fibers decorated with myosin S1 and containing tropomyosin was studied in the presence or absence of MgADP, MgAMP-PNP, MgATPgammaS or MgATP. Modeling of various intermediate states of actomyosin has shown discrete changes in orientation and mobility of the dye dipoles which is the evidence for multistep changes in the structural changes of caldesmon during the ATPase hydrolysis cycle. It is suggested that S1 interaction with actin results in nucleotide-dependent displacement of the C-terminal part of caldesmon molecule and changes in its mobility. Thus inhibition of the actomyosin ATPase activity may be due to changes in caldesmon position on the thin filament and its interaction with actin. Our new findings described in the present paper as well as those published recently elsewhere might conciliate the two existing models of molecular mechanism of inhibition of the actomyosin ATPase by caldesmon.  相似文献   

5.
Caldesmon inhibits actomyosin ATPase and filament sliding in vitro, and therefore may play a role in modulating smooth and non-muscle motile activities. A bacterially expressed caldesmon fragment, 606C, which consists of the C-terminal 150 amino acids of the intact molecule, possesses the same inhibitory properties as full-length caldesmon and was used in our structural studies to examine caldesmon function. Three-dimensional image reconstruction was carried out from electron micrographs of negatively stained, reconstituted thin filaments consisting of actin and smooth muscle tropomyosin both with and without added 606C. Helically arranged actin monomers and tropomyosin strands were observed in both cases. In the absence of 606C, tropomyosin adopted a position on the inner edge of the outer domain of actin monomers, with an apparent connection to sub-domain 1 of actin. In 606C-containing filaments that inhibited acto-HMM ATPase activity, tropomyosin was found in a different position, in association with the inner domain of actin, away from the majority of strong myosin binding sites. The effect of caldesmon on tropomyosin position therefore differs from that of troponin on skeletal muscle filaments, implying that caldesmon and troponin act by different structural mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
Caldesmon, an actin/calmodulin binding protein, inhibits acto-heavy meromyosin (HMM) ATPase, while it increases the binding of HMM to actin, presumably mediated through an interaction between the myosin subfragment 2 region of HMM and caldesmon, which is bound to actin. In order to study the mechanism for the inhibition of acto-HM ATPase, we utilized the chymotryptic fragment of caldesmon (38-kDa fragment), which possesses the actin/calmodulin binding region but lacks the myosin binding portion. The 38-kDa fragment inhibits the actin-activated HMM ATPase to the same extent as does the intact caldesmon molecule. In the absence of tropomyosin, the 38-kDa fragment decreased the KATPase and Kbinding without any effect on the Vmax. However, when the actin filament contained bound tropomyosin, the caldesmon fragment caused a 2-3-fold decrease in the Vmax, in addition to lowering the KATPase and the Kbinding. The 38-kDa fragment-induced inhibition is partially reversed by calmodulin at a 10:1 molar ratio to caldesmon fragment; the reversal was more remarkable in 100 mM ionic strength at 37 degrees C than in 20 or 50 mM at 25 degrees C. Results from these experiments demonstrate that the 38-kDa domain of caldesmon fragment of myosin head to actin; however, when the actin filament contains bound tropomyosin, caldesmon fragment affects not only the binding of HMM to/actin but also the catalytic step in the ATPase cycle. The interaction between the 38-kDa domain of caldesmon and tropomyosin-actin is likely to play a role in the regulation of actomyosin ATPase and contraction in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

7.
Hybrid contractile apparatus was reconstituted in skeletal muscle ghost fibers by incorporation of skeletal muscle myosin subfragment 1 (S1), smooth muscle tropomyosin and caldesmon. The spatial orientation of FITC-phalloidin-labeled actin and IAEDANS-labeled S1 during sequential steps of the acto-S1 ATPase cycle was studied by measurement of polarized fluorescence in the absence or presence of nucleotides conditioning the binding affinity of both proteins. In the fibers devoid of caldesmon addition of nucleotides evoked unidirectional synchronous changes in the orientation of the fluorescent probes attached to F-actin or S1. The results support the suggestion on the multistep rotation of the cross-bridge (myosin head and actin monomers) during the ATPase cycle. The maximal cross-bridge rotation by 7 degrees relative to the fiber axis and the increase in its rigidity by 30% were observed at transition between A**.M**.ADP.Pi (weak binding) and A--.M--.ADP (strong binding) states. When caldesmon was present in the fibers (OFF-state of the thin filament) the unidirectional changes in the orientation of actin monomers and S1 were uncoupled. The tilting of the myosin head and of the actin monomer decreased by 29% and 90%, respectively. It is suggested that in the "closed" position caldesmon "freezes" the actin filament structure and induces the transition of the intermediate state of actomyosin towards the weak-binding states, thereby inhibiting the ATPase activity of the actomyosin.  相似文献   

8.
Caldesmon binds equally to both gizzard actin and actin containing stoichiometric amounts of bound tropomyosin. The binding of caldesmon to actin inhibits the actin-activation of the Mg-ATPase activity of phosphorylated myosin only when the actin contains bound tropomyosin. The reversal of this inhibition requires Ca2+-calmodulin; but it occurs without complete release of bound caldesmon. Although phosphorylation of the caldesmon occurs during the ATPase assay, a direct correlation between caldesmon phosphorylation and the release of the inhibited actomyosin ATPase is not consistently observed.  相似文献   

9.
Tropomyosin and caldesomon reciprocally control the actomyosin system in smooth muscle and some non-muscle cells. To compare this mechanism between arterial smooth muscle and platelets, we carried out extensive exchange experiments. Actin, myosin, tropomyosin from arterial smooth muscle cells and platelets were recombined and the effects of two species of caldesmon ('caldesmon77' and 'caldesmon140') on the ATPase activities of both systems were examined and analyzed by the method of analysis of variance. (a) The actomyosin system itself is different between artery and platelets, the difference being determined by myosin (P less than 0.05) and not by actin. (b) Platelet tropomyosin differentiates platelet actin from arterial actin (P less than 0.01), while arterial tropomyosin does not. Neither does tropomyosin differentiate myosin. (c) The effect of caldesmon77 differentiates the origins of myosin (P less than 0.01), actin (P less than 0.05) and tropomyosin (P less than 0.05). The effect of caldesmon140 differentiates the origin of myosin (P less than 0.05) and the actin-myosin 'interaction' (combination) (P less than 0.01), but not the origin of tropomyosin (P greater than 0.1). (1) It is concluded that actomyosin/tropomyosin-caldesmon system is distinguishable between platelets and artery. (2) It is suggested that caldesmon is an actomyosin inhibitor which may interact with myosin, in addition to actin and tropomyosin.  相似文献   

10.
We studied the effects of caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein found in a variety of muscle and non-muscle tissues, on the various ATPase activities of skeletal-muscle myosin. Caldesmon inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase, and this inhibition was enhanced by tropomyosin. In the presence of the troponin complex and tropomyosin, caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-dependent actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase; this inhibition could be partly overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon, phosphorylated to the extent of approximately 4 mol of Pi/mol of caldesmon, inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase to the same extent as did non-phosphorylated caldesmon. Both inhibitions could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon also inhibited the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the absence of actin; this inhibition also could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the presence or absence of actin, at both low (0.1 M-KCl) and high (0.3 M-KCl) ionic strength. Finally, caldesmon inhibited the skeletal-muscle myosin K+/EDTA-ATPase at 0.1 M-KCl, but not at 0.3 M-KCl. Addition of actin resulted in no inhibition of this ATPase by caldesmon at either 0.1 M- or 0.3 M-KCl. These observations suggest that caldesmon may function in the regulation of actin-myosin interactions in striated muscle and thereby modulate the contractile state of the muscle. The demonstration that caldesmon inhibits a variety of myosin ATPase activities in the absence of actin indicates a direct effect of caldesmon on myosin. The inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin (the physiological activity) may not be due therefore simply to the binding of caldesmon to the actin filament causing blockage of myosin-cross-bridge-actin interaction.  相似文献   

11.
Caldesmon is a component of smooth muscle thin filaments that inhibits the actomyosin ATPase via its interaction with actin-tropomyosin. We have performed a comprehensive transient kinetic characterization of the actomyosin ATPase in the presence of smooth muscle caldesmon and tropomyosin. At physiological ratios of caldesmon to actin (1 caldesmon/7 actin monomers) actomyosin ATPase is inhibited by about 75%. Inhibitory caldesmon concentrations had little effect upon the rate of S1 binding to actin, actin-S1 dissociation by ATP, and dissociation of ADP from actin-S1 x ADP; however the rate of phosphate release from the actin-S1 x ADP x P(i) complex was decreased by more than 80%. In addition the transient of phosphate release displayed a lag of up to 200 ms. The presence of a lag phase indicates that a step on the pathway prior to phosphate release has become rate-limiting. Premixing the actin-tropomyosin filaments with myosin heads resulted in the disappearance of the lag phase. We conclude that caldesmon inhibition of the rate of phosphate release is caused by the thin filament being switched by caldesmon to an inactive state. The active and inactive states correspond to the open and closed states observed in skeletal muscle thin filaments with no evidence for the existence of a third, blocked state. Taken together these data suggest that at physiological concentrations, caldesmon controls the isomerization of the weak binding complex to the strong binding complex, and this causes the inhibition of the rate of phosphate release. This inhibition is sufficient to account for the inhibition of the steady state actomyosin ATPase by caldesmon and tropomyosin.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of caldesmon with the COOH terminus of actin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Caldesmon interacts with the NH2-terminal region of actin. It is now shown in airfuge centrifugation experiments that modification of the penultimate cysteine residue of actin significantly weakens its binding to caldesmon both in the presence and absence of tropomyosin. Furthermore, as revealed by fluorescence measurements, caldesmon increases the exposure of the COOH-terminal region of actin to the solvent. This effect of caldesmon, like its inhibitory effect on actomyosin ATPase activity, is enhanced in the presence of tropomyosin. Proteolytic removal of the last three COOH-terminal residues of actin, containing the modified cysteine residue, restores the normal binding between caldesmon and actin. These results establish a correlation between the binding of caldesmon to actin and the conformation of the COOH-terminal region of actin and suggest an indirect rather than direct interaction between caldesmon and this part of actin.  相似文献   

13.
Interactions of the components of reconstituted thin filaments were investigated using a tropomyosin internal deletion mutant, D234, in which actin-binding pseudo-repeats 2, 3, and 4 are missing. D234 retains regions of tropomyosin that bind troponin and form end-to-end tropomyosin bonds, but has a length to span only four instead of seven actin monomers. It inhibits acto-myosin subfragment 1 ATPase (acto-S-1 ATPase) and filament sliding in vitro in both the presence and absence of Ca(2+) (, J. Biol. Chem. 272:14051-14056) and lowers the affinity of S-1.ADP for actin while increasing its cooperative binding. Electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction of reconstituted thin filaments containing actin, troponin, and wild-type or D234 tropomyosin were carried out to determine if Ca(2+)-induced movement of D234 occurred in the filaments. In the presence and absence of Ca(2+), the D234 position was indistinguishable from that of the wild-type tropomyosin, demonstrating that the mutation did not affect normal tropomyosin movement induced by Ca(2+) and troponin. These results suggested that, in the presence of Ca(2+) and troponin, D234 tropomyosin was trapped on filaments in the Ca(2+)-induced position and was unable to undergo a transition to a completely activated position. By adding small amounts of rigor-bonded N-ethyl-maleimide-treated S-1 to mutant thin filaments, thus mimicking the myosin-induced "open" state, inhibition could be overcome and full activation restored. This myosin requirement for full activation provides support for the existence of three functionally distinct thin filament states (off, Ca(2+)-induced, myosin-induced; cf.;, J. Mol. Biol. 266:8-14). We propose a further refinement of the three-state model in which the binding of myosin to actin causes allosteric changes in actin that promote the binding of tropomyosin in an otherwise energetically unfavorable "open" state.  相似文献   

14.
Caldesmon is known to inhibit actomyosin ATPase and filament sliding in vitro, and may play a role in modulating smooth muscle contraction as well as in diverse cellular processes including cytokinesis and exocytosis. However, the structural basis of caldesmon action has not previously been apparent. We have recorded electron microscope images of negatively stained thin filaments containing caldesmon and tropomyosin which were isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle in EGTA. Three-dimensional helical reconstructions of these filaments show actin monomers whose bilobed shape and connectivity are very similar to those previously seen in reconstructions of frozen-hydrated skeletal muscle thin filaments. In addition, a continuous thin strand of density follows the long-pitch actin helices, in contact with the inner domain of each actin monomer. Gizzard thin filaments treated with Ca2+/calmodulin, which dissociated caldesmon but not tropomyosin, have also been reconstructed. Under these conditions, reconstructions also reveal a bilobed actin monomer, as well as a continuous surface strand that appears to have moved to a position closer to the outer domain of actin. The strands seen in both EGTA- and Ca2+/calmodulin-treated filaments thus presumably represent tropomyosin. It appears that caldesmon can fix tropomyosin in a particular position on actin in the absence of calcium. An influence of caldesmon on tropomyosin position might, in principle, account for caldesmon's ability to modulate actomyosin interaction in both smooth muscles and non-muscle cells.  相似文献   

15.
Smooth muscle thin filaments have been reconstituted in muscle ghost fibers by incorporation of smooth muscle actin, tropomyosin and caldesmon. For the first time, rotation of subdomain-1 and changes of its mobility in IAEDANS-labeled actin during the ATP hydrolysis cycle simulated using nucleotides and non-hydrolysable ATP analogs have been demonstrated directly. Binding of caldesmon altered the mobility and inhibited the rotation of actin subdomain-1 during the transition from AM∗∗·ADP·Pi to AM state, resulting in inhibition of both strong and weak-binding intermediate states. These new results imply that regulation of actomyosin interaction by caldesmon during the ATPase cycle is fulfilled via the inhibition of actin subdomain-1 rotation toward the periphery of the thin filament, which decreases the area of the specific binding between actin and myosin molecules and is likely to underlie at least in part the mechanism of caldesmon-induced contractility suppression.  相似文献   

16.
New data on the movements of tropomyosin singly labeled at alpha- or beta-chain during the ATP hydrolysis cycle in reconstituted ghost fibers have been obtained by using the polarized fluorescence technique which allowed us following the azimuthal movements of tropomyosin on actin filaments. Pronounced structural changes in tropomyosin evoked by myosin heads suggested the "rolling" of the tropomyosin molecule on F-actin surface during the ATP hydrolysis cycle. The movements of actin-bound tropomyosin correlated to the strength of S1 to actin binding. Weak binding of myosin to actin led to an increase in the affinity of the tropomyosin N-terminus to actin with simultaneous decrease in the affinity of the C-terminus. On the contrary, strong binding of myosin to actin resulted in the opposite changes of the affinity to actin of both ends of the tropomyosin molecule. Caldesmon inhibited the "rolling" of tropomyosin on the surface of the thin filament during the ATP hydrolysis cycle, drastically decreased the affinity of the whole tropomyosin molecule to actin, and "freezed" tropomyosin in the position characteristic of the weak binding of myosin to actin.  相似文献   

17.
Regulation of muscle contraction is a very cooperative process. The presence of tropomyosin on the thin filament is both necessary and sufficient for cooperativity to occur. Data recently obtained with various tropomyosin isoforms and mutants help us to understand better the structural requirements in the thin filament for cooperative protein interactions. Forming an end-to-end overlap between neighboring tropomyosin molecules is not necessary for the cooperativity of the thin filament activation. When direct contacts between tropomyosin molecules are disrupted, the conformational changes in the filament are most probably transmitted cooperatively through actin subunits, although the exact nature of these changes is not known. The function of tropomyosin ends, alternatively expressed in various isoforms, is to confer specific actin affinity. Tropomyosin's affinity or actin is directly related to the size of the apparent cooperative unit defined as the number of actin subunits turned into the active state by binding of one myosin head. Inner sequences of tropomyosin, particularly actin-binding periods 3 to 5, play crucial role in myosin-induced activation of the thin filament. A plausible mechanism of tropomyosin function in this process is that inner tropomyosin regions are either specifically recognized by myosin or they define the right actin conformation required for tropomyosin movement from its blocking position.  相似文献   

18.
Tropomyosin movements on thin filaments are thought to sterically regulate muscle contraction, but have not been visualized during active filament sliding. In addition, although 3-D visualization of myosin crossbridges has been possible in rigor, it has been difficult for thick filaments actively interacting with thin filaments. In the current study, using three-dimensional reconstruction of electron micrographs of interacting filaments, we have been able to resolve not only tropomyosin, but also the docking sites for weak and strongly bound crossbridges on thin filaments. In relaxing conditions, tropomyosin was observed on the outer domain of actin, and thin filament interactions with thick filaments were rare. In contracting conditions, tropomyosin had moved to the inner domain of actin, and extra density, reflecting weakly bound, cycling myosin heads, was also detected, on the extreme periphery of actin. In rigor conditions, tropomyosin had moved further on to the inner domain of actin, and strongly bound myosin heads were now observed over the junction of the inner and outer domains. We conclude (1) that tropomyosin movements consistent with the steric model of muscle contraction occur in interacting thick and thin filaments, (2) that myosin-induced movement of tropomyosin in activated filaments requires strongly bound crossbridges, and (3) that crossbridges are bound to the periphery of actin, at a site distinct from the strong myosin binding site, at an early stage of the crossbridge cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Caldesmon, a calmodulin and actin binding protein, has been shown to exist in platelet. In this report, it is shown that caldesmon specifically inhibits the effect of tropomyosin to enhance the actomyosin ATPase activity in platelet. Platelet tropomyosin enhances the MgATPase activity of platelet actomyosin. This effect is abolished by platelet caldesmon. In the absence of tropomyosin, however, caldesmon has no effect on the ATPase activity. The inhibition is not due to displacement of the binding of tropomyosin to F-actin by caldesmon. The result indicates that caldesmon is the specific inhibitor of tropomyosin in resting platelet.  相似文献   

20.
Comparison of two types of Ca2+-regulated thin filament, reconstructed in ghost fibers by incorporating either caldesmon-gizzard tropomyosin-calmodulin or skeletal muscle troponin-tropomyosin complex, was performed by polarized microphotometry. The changes in actin structure under the influence of these regulatory complexes, as well as those upon the binding of the myosin heads, were followed by measurements of F-actin intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and the fluorescence of phalloidin-rhodamine complex attached to F-actin. The results show that in the presence of smooth muscle tropomyosin and calmodulin, caldesmon causes Ca2+-dependent alterations of actin conformation and flexibility similar to those induced by skeletal muscle troponin-tropomyosin complex. In both cases, transferring of the fiber from '-Ca2+' to '+Ca2+' solution increases the number of turned-on actin monomers. However, whereas troponin in the absence of Ca2+ potentiates the effect of skeletal muscle tropomyosin, caldesmon-calmodulin complex inhibits the effect of smooth muscle tropomyosin. This difference seems to be due to the qualitatively different alterations in the structure and flexibility of F-actin in ghost fibers evoked by smooth and skeletal muscle tropomyosins. Troponin can bind to F-actin-smooth muscle tropomyosin-caldesmon complex and, in the presence of Ca2+, release the restraint by caldesmon for S-1-induced alterations of conformation, and reduce that for flexibility of actin in ghost fibers. This effect seems to be related to the abolishment by troponin of the potentiating effect of tropomyosin on caldesmon-induced inhibition of actomyosin ATPase activity.  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