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1.
It is well documented that muscle contraction results from cyclic rotations of actin-bound myosin cross-bridges. The role of actin is hypothesized to be limited to accelerating phosphate release from myosin and to serving as a rigid substrate for cross-bridge rotations. To test this hypothesis, we have measured actin rotations during contraction of a skeletal muscle. Actin filaments of rabbit psoas fiber were labeled with rhodamine-phalloidin. Muscle contraction was induced by a pulse of ATP photogenerated from caged precursor. ATP induced a single turnover of cross-bridges. The rotations were measured by anisotropy of fluorescence originating from a small volume defined by a narrow aperture of a confocal microscope. The anisotropy of phalloidin-actin changed rapidly at first and was followed by a slow relaxation to a steady-state value. The kinetics of orientation changes of actin and myosin were the same. Extracting myosin abolished anisotropy changes. To test whether the rotation of actin was imposed by cross-bridges or whether it reflected hydrolytic activity of actin itself, we labeled actin with fluorescent ADP. The time-course of anisotropy change of fluorescent nucleotide was similar to that of phalloidin-actin. These results suggest that orientation changes of actin are caused by dissociation and rebinding of myosin cross-bridges, and that during contraction, nucleotide does not dissociate from actin.  相似文献   

2.
We have used transient phosphorescence anisotropy (TPA) to detect changes in actin structural dynamics associated with oxidative inhibition of muscle contraction. Contractility of skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers was inhibited by treatment with 50 mM H 2O 2, which induced oxidative modifications in the myosin head and in actin, as previously reported. Using proteins purified from oxidized and unoxidized muscle, we used TPA to measure the effects of weakly (+ATP) and strongly (no ATP) bound myosin heads (S1) on the microsecond dynamics of actin labeled at Cys374 with erythrosine iodoacetamide. Oxidative modification of S1 had no effect on actin dynamics in the absence of ATP (strong binding complex), but restricted the dynamics in the presence of ATP (weakly bound complex). In contrast, oxidative modification of actin did not have a significant effect on the weak-to-strong transitions. Thus, we concluded that (1) the effects of oxidation on the dynamics of actin in the actomyosin complex are predominantly determined by oxidation-induced changes in S1, and (2) changes in weak-to-strong structural transitions in actin and myosin are coupled to each other and are associated with oxidative inhibition of muscle contractility.  相似文献   

3.
Using polarized UV fluorescent microscopy it has been shown that phallotoxins (phalloidin-sulfone, phalloidin-sulfoxide-B, phalloidin-sulfoxide-A and dithio-phalloidin) cause an increase in tryptophan fluorescence anisotropy of F-actin myofilaments in myosin-free ghost muscle fibres of rabbit. The results obtained are considered to be evidence of conformational changes in F-actin, induced by phallotoxins. These changes are irreversible to a significant extent, which points to a high degree of actin binding to both toxic and nontoxic phallotoxins.  相似文献   

4.
Results of studies on the modulation of skeletal muscle contraction by phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains and by exchange of magnesium for calcium in myosin heads were reviewed. The polarized fluorescence method was used in these studies, and conformational changes of contractile proteins accompanying modulation of skeletal muscle contraction were investigated. It was found that both the exchange of bound magnesium for calcium on myosin heads and the phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains control the ability of myosin heads to induce, upon binding to actin, conformational changes of thin filament leading to decrease or increase of its flexibility. The changes in actin filament flexibility may be caused by alteration of both the inter- and the intramonomer structural organization.  相似文献   

5.
Thermal stability and internal dynamics of myosin heads in fiber bundles from rabbit psoas muscle has been studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Using ADP, ATP and orthovanadate (V(i)), three intermediate states of the ATP hydrolysis cycle were simulated in glycerinated muscle fibers. DSC transitions contained three overlapping endotherms in each state. Deconvolution showed that the transition temperature of 58.4 degrees C was almost independent of the intermediate state of myosin, while nucleotide binding shifted the melting temperatures of 54.0 and 62.3 degrees C, and changed the enthalpies. These changes suggest global rearrangements of the internal structure in myosin head. In the presence of ADP and ADP plus V(i), the conventional EPR spectra showed changes in the ordering of the probe molecules, suggesting local conformational and motional changes in the internal structure of myosin heads. Saturation transfer EPR measurements reported increased rotational mobility of spin labels in the presence of ATP plus orthovanadate corresponding to a weakly binding state of myosin to actin.  相似文献   

6.
E Prochniewicz  D D Thomas 《Biochemistry》1999,38(45):14860-14867
We have used spectroscopic probes ErIA and IAEDANS attached to Cys374 to compare the structural dynamics of yeast actin filaments with that of muscle actin, to understand the structural basis of the less productive interaction of yeast actin with myosin. Time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy (TPA) of ErIA and steady-state fluorescence of IAEDANS were measured. TPA indicated more rapid rotational motion and more restricted angular amplitude in yeast actin. The fluorescence spectrum was less intense and more red-shifted in yeast actin, suggesting more exposure of the probe to solvent. These results indicate that the two actins differ substantially in the conformational dynamics of the C-terminal region. Binding of myosin S1 induced significantly different spectroscopic changes in TPA and fluorescence of muscle and yeast actin. As a result, the spectroscopic differences between the two actins were decreased by the addition of S1. These results suggest that yeast actin is less effective at activating myosin because of larger changes required in the structure of actin upon strong myosin binding. These results provide insight into the relationship between actomyosin dynamics and function, and they provide a useful framework for structure-function analysis of mutant yeast actin.  相似文献   

7.
The internal dynamics and thermal unfolding of fibre bundles prepared from rabbit psoas muscle has been studied in the presence of nucleotides by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Using ADP, adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP), AMP.PNP and inorganic phosphate analogue orthovanadate (V(i)), AlF(4)(-) and BeF(3)(-), three intermediate states of the ATP hydrolysis cycle were simulated in glycerinated muscle fibres. In the main transition of the DSC pattern, three overlapping endotherms were detected in rigor, four in strongly as well as weakly binding state of myosin to actin. Deconvolution procedure showed that the transition temperature of 67.5 degrees C was the same for rigor and strong binding state of myosin. In contrast, nucleotide binding induced shift of the melting temperatures of 52 degrees C and 67.5 degrees C, appeared a new fourth peak at 74 and 77 degrees C and produced changes in the calorimetric enthalpies. The changes of the parameters of the peak functions suggest global rearrangements of the internal structure in myosin heads in the intermediate states. In the presence of ADP or ATP plus phosphate analogue orthovanadate or beryllium fluoride, aluminium fluoride, the conventional EPR spectra of spin-labeled muscle fibres showed large changes in the ordering of the probe molecules, and a new distribution of spin labels appeared. ATP plus orthovanadate induced the orientation disorder of myosin heads; the random population of spin labels gave evidence of large local conformational and motional changes in the internal structure of myosin heads. Saturation transfer EPR measurements reported increased rotational mobility of spin labels in the presence of ATP plus phosphate analogues corresponding to weakly binding state of myosin to actin.  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.
The effects of caldesmon and smooth muscle tropomyosin on the motility of myosin subfragment I (SI) modified by N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(1-naphtyl-5-sulfo)-ethylenediamine (1.5-IAEDANS) was studied in myosin-, troponin- and tropomyosin-free rabbit ghost muscle fibers using the polarized microphotometry technique. It was found that the fluorescence anisotropy initiated by the 1.5-IAEDANS-SI arrangement in the fibers is higher in the presence of tropomyosin than in its absence. Caldesmon diminishes the fluorescence anisotropy of the fibers. Data from a kinetic analysis suggest that the motility of fluorophores in the presence of tropomyosin in thin filaments is markedly decreased. Caldesmon weakens the effect of tropomyosin on the fluorescent label motility. It was supposed that caldesmon and tropomyosin initiate conformational changes in myosin heads which are accompanied by loosening or strengthening of their bonds with F-actin, respectively. Caldesmon inhibits the effect induced by tropomyosin.  相似文献   

10.
The mode of tryptophan residue orientation in myosin and action myofilaments of the muscle fiber was studied using polarized ultraviolet (UV) fluorescent microscopy of the muscle fiber was studied using polarized ultraviolet (UV) fluorescent microscopy technique. During an elective extraction of proteine from thick and thin myofillaments changes in UV fluorescence anisotropy of muscle fibers were detected, thus suggesting that tryptophanil residues in myosin may be oriented by their own short axes mostly parallel, but in actin--perpendicular to the muscle fiber axis. The use of acrylamide, an UV fluorescence quencher, is proposed for the control of extraction electivity of proteins from muscle fibers.  相似文献   

11.
Fluorescence spectra of ANM-labeled, glycerinated rabbit psoas muscle fibers were recorded in relaxed, contracted, and rigor states. SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the ANM-labeled muscle fibers indicated that proteins labeled with ANM were myosin heavy chain, C protein, and actin. In a relaxed state in the presence of ATP, myosin heavy chain was mainly labeled. During the transition from rigor to the relaxed or contracted state, there was a blue shift (about 5 nm) of the ANM emission spectrum. Similar experiments with FAM (N-(3-fluoranthyl)-maleimide)-labeled muscle fibers showed that these fluorescence changes were not artifacts due to the movement of muscle fibers. The fibers labeled in the ATP relaxing solution showed a marked decrease in both isometric force and unloaded shortening velocity (Vo), while in the fibers labeled in the rigor solution isometric tension was not markedly suppressed, though Vo decreased to the same extent as in the fibers labeled in the ATP relaxing solution. Fluorescence spectra of ANM-labeled HMM in different states were also measured. A fluorescence enhancement and a blue shift (about 5 nm) of the emission maximum were observed in HMM + MgATP or HMM + MgATP + F-actin in comparison with HMM + F-actin. These results suggest that the fluorescence spectra of the ANM-labeled muscle fibers reflect their conformational changes between the rigor state (in the absence of MgATP) and the relaxed or contracted state (in the presence of MgATP).  相似文献   

12.
Fluorescence polarization was used to examine orientational changes of Rhodamine probes in single, skinned muscle fibers from rabbit psoas muscle following either photolysis of caged nucleotides or rapid length changes. Fibers were extensively and predominantly labeled at SH1 (Cys-707) of the myosin heavy chain with either the 5- or the 6-isomer of iodoacetamidotetramethylrhodamine. Results from spectroscopic experiments utilizing the two Rhodamine isomers were quite similar. Following photolysis of either caged ATP or caged ADP, probes promptly reoriented toward the muscle fiber axis. Changes in the fluorescence polarization signals with transients elicited by the photolysis of caged ATP in the presence of saturating Ca2+ greatly preceded active force generation. Photolysis of caged ADP caused only a small, rapid decrease in force but elicited changes in the fluorescence polarization signals with time course and amplitude similar to those following photolysis of caged ATP. Fluorescence polarization signals were virtually unchanged by rapid length steps in both rigor and active muscle fibers. These results indicate that structural changes monitored by Rhodamine probes at SH1 are not associated directly with the force-generating event of muscle contraction. However, the fluorescence polarization transients were slightly faster than the estimated rate of cross-bridge detachment following photolysis of caged ATP, suggesting that the observed structural changes at SH1 may be involved in the communication pathway between the nucleotide- and actin-binding sites of myosin.  相似文献   

13.
Calponin, an actin-linked regulatory protein in smooth muscle, caused a remarkable change in the fluorescence intensity of pyrene-labeled actin in the filamentous form. Calponin, an equimolar ratio to actin, decreased the fluorescence intensity of pyrene-labeled F-actin by some 60% to the level near monomeric actin. This change was partially reversed by Ca2+, when calmodulin was present. Thus it appears that calponin causes conformational changes in actin molecules in an actin filament so as to inhibit their interactions with myosin.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of subtilisin cleavage of actin between residues 47 and 48 on the conformation of F-actin and on its changes occurring upon binding of myosin subfragment-1 (S1) were investigated by measuring polarized fluorescence from rhodamine-phalloidin- or 1, 5-IAEDANS-labeled actin filaments reconstructed from intact or subtilisin-cleaved actin in myosin-free muscle fibers (ghost fibers). In separate experiments, polarized fluorescence from 1, 5-IAEDANS-labeled S1 bound to non-labeled actin filaments in ghost fibers was measured. The measurements revealed differences between the filaments of cleaved and intact actin in the orientation of rhodamine probe on the rhodamine-phalloidin-labeled filaments, orientation and mobility of the C-terminus of actin, filament flexibility, and orientation and mobility of the myosin heads bound to F-actin. The changes in the filament flexibility and orientation of the actin-bound fluorophores produced by S1 binding to actin in the absence of ATP were substantially diminished by subtilisin cleavage of actin. The results suggest that loop 38-52 plays an important role, not only in maintaining the F-actin structure, but also in the conformational transitions in actin accompanying the strong binding of the myosin heads that may be essential for the generation of force and movement during actin-myosin interaction.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
AMP deaminase was completely solubilized from rat skeletal muscle with 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.0) containing KCl at a concentration of 0.3 M or more. The purified enzyme was found to be bound to rat muscle myosin or actomyosin, but not to F-actin at KCl concentrations of less than 0.3 M. Kinetic analysis indicated that 1 mol of AMP deaminase was bound to 3 mol of myosin and that the dissociation constant (Kd) of this binding was 0.06 micrometer. It was also shown that AMP deaminase from muscle interacted mainly with the light meromyosin portion of the myosin molecule. This finding differs from that of Ashby and coworkers on rabbit muscle AMP deaminase, probably due to a difference in the properties of rat and rabbit muscle AMP deaminase. AMP deaminase isozymes from rat liver, kidney and cardiac muscle did not interact with rat muscle myosin. The physiological significance of this binding of AMP deaminase to myosin is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The motor protein myosin uses energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to produce force and motion. Important conserved components (P-loop, switch I, and switch II) help propagate small conformational changes at the active site into large scale conformational changes in distal regions of the protein. Structural and biochemical studies have indicated that switch I may be directly responsible for the reciprocal opening and closing of the actin and nucleotide-binding pockets during the ATPase cycle, thereby aiding in the coordination of these important substrate-binding sites. Smooth muscle myosin has displayed the ability to simultaneously bind tightly to both actin and ADP, although it is unclear how both substrate-binding clefts could be closed if they are rigidly coupled to switch I. Here we use single tryptophan mutants of smooth muscle myosin to determine how conformational changes in switch I are correlated with structural changes in the nucleotide and actin-binding clefts in the presence of actin and ADP. Our results suggest that a closed switch I conformation in the strongly bound actomyosin-ADP complex is responsible for maintaining tight nucleotide binding despite an open nucleotide-binding pocket. This unique state is likely to be crucial for prolonged tension maintenance in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

18.
The maximal ATP-induced enhancement of fluorescence and the dependence of this enhancement on ATP concentration were determined for myosins from fast and slow skeletal and cardiac muscle of the rabbit. With myosins from slow and cardiac muscle modifications in the preparative procedure and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex were required to obtain preprations which were free of actin, which exhibited the maximal fluorescence enhancement and which bound two moles of ATP per mole of myosin. Since the fluorescence enhancement of cardiac and slow muscle myosins is labile at slightly alkaline pH, it was also necessary to minimize incubation at pH greater than 7 in order to attain the maximal enhancement. With fast muscle myosin the changes in preparative procedure, together with chromatography, led to a 50 to 100% increase in the steady-state rate of ATP hydrolysis and fluorescence enhancement, without changing the maximal binding of ATP. From a comparison of the rate of steady-state hydrolysis of ATP with the rate of decay of the enhanced fluorescence, it appears that for all three myosins, both ATP binding sites have the same enzymatic activity, the steady-state rate per site being slower for cardiac and slow muscle myosins than for fast muscle myosin.  相似文献   

19.
A. Mü  hlrad  F. F  bi  n 《BBA》1970,216(2):422-427
The effects of ATP, ATP analogues, Mg2+ and actin on the trinitrophenylation of myosin and on the enzymic properties of trinitrophenylated samples were studied.

1. 1. Trinitrophenylation of myosin was inhibited by the presence of ATP and its analogues during the treatment in the order ADP > ATP > pyrophosphate > AMP.

2. 2. The alteration of the enzymic properties due to trinitrophenylation of myosin was prevented by the presence of ATP or ADP and somewhat less by that of pyrophosphate and AMP during trinitrophenylation, but only if Mg2+ was also present.

3. 3. Neither the degree of trinitrophenylation nor the enzymic properties of the trinitrophenylated myosin were influenced by the presence of actin during the treatment of myosin.

Abbreviations: TBS; 2; 4; 6-trinitrobenzene sulphonate  相似文献   


20.
The mode and degree of tryptophanyl orientation relative to muscle fiber axes within hydrophobic and hydrophylic sites of myosin macromolecule in the presence of a fluorescence quencher (acrylamide, NO-3) during rigor and relaxation of glycerinated muscle fibers were studied using the polarized ultraviolet fluorescent microscopy. It was shown that myosin tryptophanyls both in LMM and HMM are oriented with their short axes along the longer axis of muscle fiber. Tryptophanyls in LMM have a more pronounced anisotropy of orientation in comparison with the fluorophore orientation anisotropy in hydrophobic sites of HMM. During the muscle fiber relaxation, conformational changes in HMM take place owing to which a section of polypeptide chain with a hydrophilic fluorophore is probably submerged deep into the macromolecule and becomes unapprochable to the quencher.  相似文献   

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