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1.
F-Actin (FA) and pyruvate kinase (PK) [EC 2.7.1.40] were immobilized on PAB-cellulose. HMM-Subfragment-1 (S-1) was applied to a column of immobilized FA and PK, and eluted with 1-1.5 muM ATP and 1 mM PEP in 50 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, and 10 mM Tris-HCl at pH 7.8 and 4 degrees. The size of the initial burst of Pi liberation of S-1 applied to the column was 0.5 mole/mole S-1. The burst size of S-1 decreased with increase in the fraction number, and S-1 in later fractions showed a burst size of 0.1-0.3 mole/mole. On the other hand, the rate of the ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reaction in the steady state was almost independent of the burst size, and increased slightly with increase in the fraction number. The ATPase activity of S-1 with a burst size of less than 0.2 mole/mole was scarcely activated by FA. Usually, the dependence on the burst size of S-1 of its ATPase activity in the presence of FA was sigmoidal, and marked activation by FA was observed when the burst size was larger than 0.3-0.4 mole/mole. Similar results were obtained with S-1 fractions separated by the ultracentrifugation method described in our previous paper ((1976) J. Biochem. 79, 419-434).  相似文献   

2.
Subfragment-1 of HMM was prepared by tryptic [EC 3.4.21.4] digestion of HMM, which had been modified with 1 mole of CMB per mole of HMM at a specific SH group, SHr. S-1(T) obtained from CMB-HMM retained almost all the CMB, and the amount of bound CMB was about 0.8-0.9 mole per 2 moles of S-1(T). S-2 of CMB-HMM contained no bound CMB. The ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] activity of HMM increased gradually with increase in the concentration of FA, and the acto-HMM ATPase was inhibited by excess substrate or removal of Ca2+ ions in the presence of RP. The ATPase activity of CMB-HMM increased to a maximum level on adding a small amount of FA, and the acto-CMB-HMM ATPase showed neither substrate inhibition nor Ca2+ sensitivity in the presence of RP. On the other hand, the dependence on the concentration of FA of the ATPase activity of acto-S-1(T) was unaffected by modification of S-1 with CMB. The Ca2+ sensitivity of the ATPase activity of acto-S-1(T) in the presence of RP was also unaffected by the modification. Acto-S-1(T) dissociated almost completely, while acto-CMB-S-1(T) was only 50% dissociated on adding ATP. More than 80% of the bound CMB was contained in S-1(T) undissociated from FA. Furthermore, superprecipitation of actomyosin induced by ATP was completely inhibited by adding about 2 moles of CMB-S-1(T) per mole of actin monomer. On the other hand, about 90% of the burst size of Pi liberation was retained in S-1(T) dissociated from FA. It was concluded that the two heads of the myosin molecule are different: one shows the initial burst of Pi liberation, and does not contain the SHr group which binds CMB (head B), and the other does not show the initial burst and contains the SHr group (head A). It was also concluded that modification of head A of HMM or myosin with CMB increases its binding strength to FA, and consequently the substrate inhibition and Ca2+ sensitivity of acto-HMM or actomyosin ATPase at head B are lost on modification of head A with CMB. CMB-S-1(CT) was prepared by chymotryptic [EC 3.4.21.1] digestion of CMB-myosin, and separated into two fractions by ultracentrifugation of acto-CMB-S-1(CT) in the presence of ATP. Three components of CMB-S-1(CT) with molecular weights of 9, 2.4, and 1.2 X 10(4) were separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The ratios of the peak areas of the three components in electrophoretograms were the same in CMB-S-1(CT) and in the two fractions (1 : 0.18 : 0.09), indicating that heads A and B have the same subunit structure.  相似文献   

3.
The initial burst of Pi liberation during the hydrolysis of Mn(II)-ATP by heavy meromyosin from rabbit psoas muscle was investigated. Below 10 degrees, the initial burst of Pi liberation was inhibited by the pre-addition of ADP without any change in the steady-state activity, but it was not inhibited above 10 degrees. The burst size was about one mole per mole of heavy meromyosin. The initial burst of Pi liberation in Mg-ATP hydrolysis at 8 degrees, however, was not inhibited by the pre-addition of ADP. These results, obtained with psoas muscle heavy meromyosin, were almost the same as those obtained with heavy meromyosin from rabbit leg and back muscles (Hozumi and Tawada (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 376, 1-12) and, therefore, indicate that in Mn-ATP above 10 degrees there is at the burst site a predominant myosin -product complex generated by ATP hydrolysis. Similarly, below 10 degrees there is a myosin-product complex identical with the one generated by adding ADP (and Pi) to myosin.  相似文献   

4.
1. The myosin content of myofibrils was found to be 51% by SDS-gel electrophoresis. 2. The initial burst of Pi liberation of the ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] of a solution of myofibrils in 1 M KCl was measured in 0.5 M KCl, and found to be 0.93 mole/mole of myosin. 3. The amount of ADP bound to myofibrils during the ATPase reaction and the ATPase activity were measured by coupling the myofibrillar ATPase reaction with sufficient amounts of pyruvate kinase [EC 2.7.1.40] and PEP to regenerate ATP. The maximum amount of ADP bound to myofibrils in 0.05M KCl and in the relaxed state was about 1.5 mole/mole of myosin. On the other hand, the ATPase activity exhibited substrate inhibition, and the amount of ATP required for a constant level of ATPase activity was smaller than that required for the maximum binding of ADP to myofibrils. 4. The maximum amount of ADP bound to myofibrils in 0.5 M KCl was about 1.9 mole/mole of myosin. When about one mole of ADP was found to 1 mole of myosin in myofibrils, the myofibrillar ATPase activity reached the saturated level, and with further increase in the concentration of ATP one more mole of ADP was found per mole of myosin.  相似文献   

5.
During Mn(II)-ATP hydrolysis by myosin, the predominant intermediate formed at the burst site of the enzyme below 10 degrees is the myosin-ADP complex formed by adding ADP to myosin, while above 10 degrees it is the myosin -ADP-P1 complex generated by ATP hydroolysis (Yazawa, Morita, & Yagi (1973) J. Biochem. 74, 1107; Hozumi & Tawada (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 376, 1; Tawada & Yoshida (1975) J. Biochem. 78, 293). It is suggested that the second (non-burst) site of myosin predominantly forms the myosin-ATP complex (Hozumi & Tawada, ibid.). From these findings, it is expected that (i) myosin subfragment 1 (S1) having the burst site is bound to actin in Mn(II)-ATP solution containing ADP below 10 degrees, because it forms the S1-ADP complex even in the presence of ATP; (ii) the other S1, i.e., that having the non-burst site, is dissociated from actin, because it forms the S1-ATP complex. These two expectations were confirmed by viscosity measurements of acto-S1 solutions, giving a basis for the separation of S1 into two fractions: one having the burst site and the other having the non-burst site. S1 having the non-burst site could be extracted from partially papain [EC 3.4.22.2]-digested myofibrils of rabbit skeletal muscle with a solution containing MnCl2, ATP, and ADP at 0 degrees. S1 having the burst site was extracted from myofibrils already used for the extraction of S1 having the non-burst site, with a solution containing MgCl2 and ATP at 20 degrees. The former S1 fraction had Mg-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] activity, but scarcely showed any initial burst of Pi liberation. The latter S1 showed a Pi burst of more than 0.5 (M/M). The steady state ATPase activity of the former S1 was slightly higher than that of the latter. The burst size of normal S1, i.e., that extracted from papain-digested myofibrils with Mg-PPi or Mg-ATP, was 0.5 (M/M). The ultraviolet absorption spectrum of the non-burst type S1 was not changed by ADP but was changed by ATP, though the difference spectrum was distinct from that of normal S1 and the difference molar extinction coefficient at 289 nm was only 20% of that of normal S1. No significant difference was seen in the compositions of these two S1's and normal S1, as determined by SDS gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

6.
21S Dynein ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] from axonemes of a Japanese sea urchin, Pseudocentrotus depressus, and its subunit fractions were studied to determine their kinetic properties in the steady state, using [gamma-32P]ATP at various concentrations, 5 mM divalent cations, and 20 mM imidazole at pH 7.0 and 0 degrees C. The following results were obtained. 1. 21S Dynein had a latent ATPase activity of about 0.63 mumol Pi/(mg . min) in 1 mM ATP, 100 mM KCl, 4 mM MgSO4, 0.5 mM EDTA, and 30 mM Tris-HCl at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C. Its exposure to 0.1% Triton X-100 for 5 min at 25 degrees C induced an increase in the ATPase activity to about 3.75 mumol Pi/(mg . min) and treatment at 40 degrees C for 5 min also induced a similar activation. 2. The double-reciprocal plot for the ATPase activity of dynein activated by the treatment at 40 degrees C consisted of two straight lines, while that of nonactivated 21S dynein fitted a single straight line. 3. In low ionic strength solution, the Mg- and Mn-ATPase of 21S dynein showed substrate inhibition at ATP concentrations above 0.1 mM; the inhibition decreased with increasing ionic strength. Ca- and Sr-ATPase showed no substrate inhibition. 4. Both the Vmax and Km values of dynein ATPase decreased reversibly upon addition of about 40% (v/v) glycerol. In the presence of glycerol, the dynein ATPase showed an initial burst of Pi liberation. The apparent Pi-burst size was 1.0 mol/(10(6) g protein) and the true size was calculated to be 1.6 mol/1,250 K after correcting for the effect of Pi liberation in the steady state and the purity of our preparation. 5. One of the subunit fractions of 21S dynein which was obtained by the method of Tang et al. showed substrate inhibition and an initial burst of Pi liberation of 1.4 mol/(10(6) g protein) in the presence of 54% (v/v) glycerol.  相似文献   

7.
The rates of the ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reaction of the H-meromyosin-F-actin-relaxing protein system were measured in 2 mM MgCl2, 50mM KC1, and 10mM Tris-HC1 at pH 7.8 and 20 degrees in the presence and absence of 0.05-0.1 mM Ca2+ ions. The concentrations of H-meromyosin (HMM) and the F-actin-relaxing protein (F-A-PR) complex were 3.4 and 3 mg/ml, respectively, and the ATPase reaction was coupled with 4 mg/ml of pyruvate kinase [EC 2.7.1.40] and 1 or 20 mM phosphoenolpyruvate to regenerate ATP. The amount of ADP bound to HMM during the ATPase reaction was determined by measuring the amount of ADP remaining in the reaction mixture. The amount of ATP bound to HMM was determined by subtracting the amount of bound ADP from the total amount of nucleotides bound to HMM, which was measured by a rapid flow-dialysis method. The following results were obtained. 1. The ATPase activity of the HMM-F-A-RP system increased linearly with increase in the amount of ATP added, and was independent of the presence of 0.05 mM Ca2+, when the amount of ATP added was less than 1 mole/mole of HMM. In the presence of 0.05 mM Ca2+, the ATPase activity reached a maximal level when 1.2-1.5 mole of ATP was added per mole of HMM, and maintained this level even at 3 moles of added ATP/mole of HMM. In the presence of 3mM EGTA, the ATPase activity decreased with increase in the amount of ATP added, from 1.5 to 3 moles of ATP/mole of HMM, and reached the level of the HMM ATPase reaction at 3 moles of added ATP/mole of HMM. Similar results were observed when the concentration of HMM was maintained at 3.4 mg/ml and the concentration of the F-A-RP complex was decreased from 3 to 1 or 0.5 mg/ml.  相似文献   

8.
Kinetic measurement of the reaction of dynein ATPase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) extracted from the gills of Mytilus edulis shows that in the presence of Mg2+ there is a very rapid initial liberation of Pi from the dynein-ATP system, followed by a slower liberation in the steady state. In view of following results, we have confirmed that this phenomenon is not due to the accumulation of end products, a fall in substrate concentration, nor to the presence of labile impurities in ATP but is due to the catalytic activity of dynein ATPase. 1. The replacement of native dynein by heat denatured dynein or other kinds of Mg2+-ATPase could not produce such a burst phenomenon under the same condition. 2. Both the rate of initial burst and that of steady state were proportional to enzyme content over a wide range under our standard condition. 3. Initial burst was also observed under the constant ATP level by using a ATP generate system. 4. Preincubation of dynein with Pi prior to initiation of the reaction did not eliminate the initial burst. Some properties of the initial rapid liberation of dynein ATPase were also examined. These are shown below. 5. The free ADP liberation did not show any initial burst though the Pi liberation did in the initial phase and the rate of free ADP liberation was almost equal to that of Pi liberation of the steady state. 6. Mg2+ was more effective than Ca2+ for the appearance of the initial burst while the liberation of Pi in the steady state was activated more by Ca2+ than by Mg2+. The addition of K+ in the presence of Mg2+ resulted in a marked increase of Pi liberation in the steady state but not in the initial state. 7. The activation energy of the initial burst was 9.7 kcal, which is slightly smaller than that of myosin ATPase.  相似文献   

9.
Two reaction intermediates of H-meromyosin (HMM) ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3], E2AT32P, and (see article), were formed by mixing excess HMM with AT32P. Then a large excess of unlabelled ATP was added, and the amount of AT32P liberated from E2AT32P was measured as the difference between the total amount of AT32P in the reaction mixture and the amount of AT32P bound to HMM, obtained by filtering the mixture after adding charcoal to adsorb nucleotides (charcoal-filtration method). The amount of free AT32P was also measured as the amount of glucose-6-32P formed within 15 sec after adding large excesses of hexokinase [EC 2.7.1.1] and glucose to the reaction mixture. The rate constant, k-2, for the step E2ATP yields E plus ATP was calculated at various KCl concentrations from the time-course of liberation of AT32P. The intermediate, (see article), was formed by mixing HMM with AT32P in a molar ratio of 1:2, and the rate constant, k-6, for the step (see article) was also determined by the same procedures used for k-2. In 0.5 M KCl and 2 mM MgCl2 at pH 7.8 and 0 degrees, k-2 and k-6 were 0.002 sec-1 and 0.1 sec-1 or more, respectively. From the rate constants determined in this work and the rate and equilibrium constants which we reported previously, the standard free energy changes (kcal/mole) for formation of various reaction intermediates in the reaction of HMM ATPase in 0.5 M KCl and 2 mM MgCl2 at pH 7.8 and 0 degrees were calculated to be as follows: (see article).  相似文献   

10.
1. Two moles of 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl group bound selectively to one mole of heavy meromyosin when it was treated with 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide, a specific reagent for tryptophanyl residues. The binding with ADP, the size of the initial burst of Pi liberation and the difference absorption spectrum with and without ADP of the bound 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl groups were measured with heavy meromyosin modified with various amounts of reagent. The properties of the modified heavy meromyosin did not change until the molar binding ratio of the reagent, rH, was about 1, but the properties changed remarkably when rH increased from 1 to 2. 2. Subfragment-1 was prepared from the modified heavy meromyosin by trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4] digestion. The molar binding ratio of the reagent in subfragment-1, rS, was found to be less than 0.1 when rH of the starting heavy meromyosin was less than 0.8. However, rS was about 0.5 in subfragment-1 prepared from heavy meromyosin of rH about 2. The results indicate that only one mole of 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl group, which was bound with lower reactivity than the other, was bound to a head part of heavy meromyosin. 3. Subfragment-1 fraction prepared from the modified heavy meromyosin could be separated into two fractions by DE-32 cellulose column chromatography; the subfragment-1 portion which eluted later showed a higher rS than that eluted in front. The binding with ADP, the size of the initial burst of Pi liberation and the difference absorption spectrum induced by ATP were measured with the modified subfragment-1 separated by DE-32 cellulose column chromatography. The ADP-binding ability and the size of the initial burst were not dependent on rS, and coincided with those of subfragment-1 prepared from unmodified heavy meromyosin. 4. The results of ADP binding studies suggest that heavy meromyosin is constituted from nonidentical subunits, and that there is an interaction between them which controls the ADP binding. Two tryptophanyl residues having specific reactivity toward 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide are assumed to be involved in the interaction.  相似文献   

11.
In the rapid “quench” kientics of myosin, the “initial phosphate burst” is the excess inorganic phosphate that is produced during the early time-course of ATP hydrolysis by myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) or HMM. In general, the existence of a Pi burst implies a rapid (i.e., generally an order of magnitude faster than the steady-state hydrolysis rate) lysis of the phospho-anhydride bond within the ATP molecule, followed by one or more slower steps that are rate limiting for the process. Thus, the presence of a Pi burst can provide an important clue to the mechanism of the reaction. However, in the case of actomyosin, this clue as long been the subject of controversy and misunderstanding. To measure the (initial) Pi burst, myosin S-1 (or HMM) is rapidly mixed with ATP and then the mixture is acid quenched after a specific time period. The medium produced contains free Pi generated from hydrolysis of the ATP. The quantitative measure of the phosphate generated in this way has always been significantly greater than that expected by steady-state “release” of Pi alone, and it is that very difference between this measured Pi after the quench and that amount of Pi expected to be released by steady-state considerations in that same time period that has been referred to as the “initial Pi burst”. Recent investigations of the kinetics of Pi release have used an entirely new method that directly measures the release of Pi from the enzyme-product complex. These studies have made reference to the properties of the “initial Pi burst” in the presence of actin, as well as to a new kinetic entity: the “burst of Pi release”, and have been often vague concerning the true nature of the initial Pi burst, as well as the properties of Pi release as predicted by the current models of the actin activation of the myosin ATPase activity. The purpose of the current article is to correct this oversight, to discuss the “burst” in some detail, and to display the kinetics predicted by the current models for the actin activation of myosin. Furthermore, predictions for the kinetics of the new “burst of Pi release” are discussed in terms of its ability to discriminate between the two current competing models for actin activation of the myosin ATPase activity.  相似文献   

12.
The initial burst of Pi liberation was found in the hydrolysis of beta-naphthyl triphosphate (beta-NapP3) by heavy meromyosin (HMM) in the presence of Mg ions as well as in the hydrolysis of ATP. However, unlike that of ATP, the steady-state hydrolysis of beta-NapP3 by HMM was inhibited by the addition of F-actin to the reaction solution. Although the possession of an initial burst-like property during interaction of a substrate and myosin is believed by many investigators to be a key factor in F-actin activation of substrate hydrolysis in vitro and in the molecular mechanism of muscle contraction, the above results suggest that this is not generally true. beta-NaP3 did not induce superprecipitation of actomyosin solution and suppressed ATP-induced superprecipitation.  相似文献   

13.
E W Taylor 《Biochemistry》1977,16(4):732-739
The transient phase of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis (early burst) was investigated for myosin, heavy meromyosin (HMM), and subfragment 1 (S-1) over a range of temperatures and pH's. The burst size at pH 8,20 degrees C, is 0.8-0.85, based on steady-state and transient measurements. The equilibrium constant for the enzyme-substrate to enzyme-product transition is 0.85 +/- 0.05. It is concluded that both myosin heads undergo the rapid hydrolysis step and that there are no significant differences for S-1 vs. HMM or myosin. The transient data are fitted reasonably well by a single rate process, but available evidence is consistent with some heterogeneity and a range of rate constants differing by a factor of two. At pH 6.9 and 3 degrees C, the burst size is 0.5 and the hydrolysis is slower than the configuration change measured by fluorescence. The results are consistent with the kinetic scheme (see article). The lower burst at low temperature and pH can be partly explained by a reduction in the equilibrium constant, K3, and ATP can be synthesized on the enzyme by a pH-temperature jump.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated the steps in the actomyosin ATPase cycle that determine the maximum ATPase rate (Vmax) and the binding between myosin subfragment one (S-1) and actin which occurs when the ATPase activity is close to Vmax. We find that the forward rate constant of the initial ATP hydrolysis (initial Pi burst) is about 5 times faster than the maximum turnover rate of the actin S-1 ATPase. Thus, another step in the cycle must be considerably slower than the forward rate of the initial Pi burst. If this slower step occurs only when S-1 is complexed with actin, as originally predicted by the Lymn-Taylor model, the ATPase activity and the fraction of S-1 bound to actin in the steady state should increase almost in parallel as the actin concentration is increased. As measured by turbidity determined in the stopped-flow apparatus, the fraction of S-1 bound to actin, like the ATPase activity, shows a hyperbolic dependence on actin concentration, approaching 100% asymptotically. However, the actin concentration required so that 50% of the S-1 is bound to actin is about 4 times greater than the actin concentration required for half-maximal ATPase activity. Thus, as previously found at 0 degrees C, at 15 degrees C much of the S-1 is dissociated from actin when the ATPase is close to Vmax, showing that a slow first-order transition which follows the initial Pi burst (the transition from the refractory to the nonrefractory state) must be the slowest step in the ATPase cycle. Stopped-flow studies also reveal that the steady-state turbidity level is reached almost instantaneously after the S-1, actin, and ATP are mixed, regardless of the order of mixing. Thus, the binding between S-1 and actin which is observed in the steady state is due to a rapid equilibrium between S-1--ATP and acto--S-1--ATP which is shifted toward acto-S-1--ATP at high actin concentration. Furthermore, both S-1--ATP and S-1--ADP.Pi (the state occurring immediately after the initial Pi burst) appear to have the same binding constant to actin. Thus, at high actin concentration both S-1--ATP and S-1--ADP.Pi are in rapid equilibrium with their respective actin complexes. Although at very high actin concentration almost complete binding of S-1--ATP and S-1--ADP.Pi to actin occurs, there is no inhibition of the ATPase activity at high actin concentration. This strongly suggests that both the initial Pi burst and the slow rate-limiting transition which follows (the transition from the refractory to the nonrefractory state) occur at about the same rates whether the S-1 is bound to or dissociated from actin. We, therefore, conclude that S-1 does not have to dissociate from actin each time an ATP molecule is hydrolyzed.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetic properties of the hydrolyses of 8-Br ATP and 8-SCH3 ATP by myosin [EC 3.6.1.3] and actomyosin were compared with those of ATP, and the following results were obtained. The Ca-NTPase activities of myosin using these two ATP analogs as substrates were smaller than that of ATPase, and the NTPase activities toward these analogs were strongly suppressed by EDTA. The Mg-NTPase activities toward these analogs were higher in a medium of high ionic strength than in a medium of low ionic strength, in contrast to the activity of Mg-ATPase. These analogs did not produce any initial burst of Pi liberation, activation of myosin NTPase by F-actin, or superprecipitation of actomyosin. The interactions between 8-Br ATP and HMM, acto-HMM, actomyosin, and myofibrils were studied in detail in the presence of Mg2+ in medium of low ionic strength. The Michaelis constant, Km, and the maximum rate, Vm, of 8-Br ATPase of HMM were 27 muM and 21 min-1, respectively. The fluorescence change of HMM induced by 8-Br ATP also followed the Michaelis-Menten equation, and the Michaelis constant, Kf1, was as low as 4 muM. Acto-HMM and acto-S-1 were fully dissociated by the addition of 8-Br ATP. The relation between the extent of dissociation of acto-HMM and the concentration of 8-Br ATP followed the Michaelis-Menten equation, and the apparent dissociation constant, Kd, was 22 muM. This Kd value is almost equal to the Km value of 8-Br ATPase of HMM described above. Myofibrillar contraction was not supported by 8-Br ATP. It was concluded that in the myosin NTPase reaction with 8-Br ATP as a substrate, M2NTP but not MNDPP is formed in route (1), while MNTP is formed in route (2). It was also concluded that the key intermediate for the actomyosin NTPase reaction is MNDPP, and that dissociation of acto-HMM is induced by the formation of M2NTP and MNTP in routes (1) and (2), respectively.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the effect of limited trypsin digestion of chymotryptic myosin Subfragment-1 (S-1) on its kinetic properties. We find that Vmax (i.e., the extrapolated maximal ATPase activity at infinite actin) remains approximately constant, independent of the period of digestion. We also find that the apparent actin activation constant, KATPase, and the apparent dissociation constant, Kbinding, are both significantly weakened by trypsin digestion of S-1, and that these kinetic parameters change in concert. In addition, we investigated the effect of limited trypsin digestion on the initial phosphate burst. We find that trypsin digestion has no effect on the rate of the tryptophan fluorescence enhancement that occurs after ATP binds to digested S-1, but that the magnitude of the fluorescence enhancement falls approximately 40% with digestion. Digested S-1 also showed anomalous behavior in that the fluorescence magnitude increased and the fluorescence rate dropped in the presence of actin. Trypsin digestion also decreased the magnitude of the chemically measured Pi burst approximately 35%, but this magnitude was essentially unaffected by actin. A possible explanation for this behavior is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of D2O on the elementary steps in the contractile and transport ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reactions were studied, and the following results were obtained: 1. The rate of H-meromyosin ATPase in the steady state decreased in D2O to 60% of that in H2O. Deuterium oxide did not affect the size or rate of the initial burst of Pi liberation, i.e. the amount or rate of formation of the reactive myosin-phosphate-ADP complex, MADPP. Moreover, neither the rate of change in the fluorescence spectrum of H-meromyosin induced by ATP (the rate of formation of the second enzyme-ATP complex, M2ATP) nor the rate constant of decomposition of MADPP into M degrees + ADP + Pi was affected by D2O. However, the equilibrium constant of the step M2ATP in equilibrium MADPP decreased in D2O to about 1/2 the value in H2O. 2. In the case of the Na+-K+-dependent ATPase reactin, neither the rate constant of formation of the second enzyme-ATP complex, E2ATP, nor that of decomposition of a phosphorylated intermediate, EADP approximately P, was affected by D2O. However, the equilibrium constant of the step E2ATP in equilibrium EADP approximately P decreased in D2O to about 1/2.5-1/4 of the value in H2O. These results suggest a similarity between the modes of binding of phosphate in MADPP in the myosin ATPase reaction and in EADP approximatley P in the Na+-K+-dependent ATPase reaction.  相似文献   

18.
The hydrolysis of [gamma-32P]ATP by porcine brain (Na+ + K+)-stimulated ATP phosphohydrolase (EC 3.6.1.3) has been studied at 28 degree C in a rapid mixing quenched-flow apparatus. An "early burst" in the release of Pi from ATP has been observed when the enzyme is mixed with ATP, Na+ and a relatively high concentration of K+ (10 mM) but the burst is less pronounced with 0.5 mM K+. This "early burst" of Pi release is suppressed when the enzyme is pre-mixed with 10 mM K+ or 20% (v/v) dimethylsulphoxide before mixing with ATP and Na+, and premixing of enzyme with Na+ antagonizes this effect of dimethylsulphoxide. The results have been analysed by a non-linear least squares regression treatment and are consistent with a mechanism involving three steps, one of which may be a relatively slow change in enzyme conformation following release of Pi from its covalent linkage with the enzyme, in addition to formation of the enzyme-substrate complex. Rate constants (and S.E.) for these steps have been calculated and the roles of phospho-enzyme and other intermediates in the reaction mechanism of the transport ATPase are dicussed.  相似文献   

19.
Two different HMM species of gizzard myosin were prepared under conditions such that the phosphorylation of light chain was fully maintained. They were different in the N-terminal structure of the heavy chain but not in the light chain composition. A significant decrease in the Mg2+-ATPase activity was observed in one class of HMM which was proteolytically cleaved intramolecularly at site 1, 5 K daltons from the masked N terminus. Another class of HMM without the cleavage at site 1 showed ATPase activity similar to that of myosin. The decrease in ATPase activity was not caused by denaturation since similar amounts of initial burst of Pi liberation were observed with both HMMs and myosin. Kinetic and substructure analyses of HMM revealed that the activity change depended solely on the cleavage at site 1. The N-terminal region of gizzard myosin heavy chain may thus have an important role in maintaining the active site structure.  相似文献   

20.
1. Dynein was extracted with 0.5 M KCl from Tetrahymena axonemes. SDS-gel electrophoresis of the extract indicated that about 50% of the extracted protein had a molecular weight of about 3.5 X 10(5), and that 90% of the proteins with this weight had been extracted. 2. The ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reaction of the KCl-extracted dynein fraction was enhanced by 60-80% by addition of the outer doublet fraction. It showed an initial burst of Pi liberation of about 1 mol per mol of proteins with a molecular weight of 3.5 X 10(5). 3. We examined the interaction of the dynein-tubulin system from Tetrahymena cilia with ten ATP analogs [2'-dATP, 3'-dATP, epsilonATP, FTP, 8-NH(CH3)-ATP, 8,3'-S-cyclo-ATP, 8-Br-ATP, 8-OCH3-ATP, 8-SCH3-ATP, and AMPPNP]. Among them, 2'-dATP and 3'-dATP were good substrates for dynein ATPase, as they induced the dissociation of dynein arms from the B-tubule of outer doublets, the sliding movement between outer doublets, and the bending movement of axonemes. The other analogs did not induce the dissociation or the sliding movement. 4. Among the ATP analogs tested, only 2'-dATP and 3'-dATP induced the reorientation of cilia on the Triton model of Tetrahymena; the reorientation rates were smaller than that induced by ATP.  相似文献   

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