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 797 毫秒
1.
The molecular regulation of striated muscle contraction couples the binding and dissociation of Ca2+ on troponin (Tn) to the movement of tropomyosin on actin filaments. In turn, this process exposes or blocks myosin binding sites on actin, thereby controlling myosin crossbridge dynamics and consequently muscle contraction. Using 3D electron microscopy, we recently provided structural evidence that a C-terminal extension of TnI is anchored on actin at low Ca2+ and competes with tropomyosin for a common site to drive tropomyosin to the B-state location, a constrained, relaxing position on actin that inhibits myosin-crossbridge association. Here, we show that release of this constraint at high Ca2+ allows a second segment of troponin, probably representing parts of TnT or the troponin core domain, to promote tropomyosin movement on actin to the Ca2+-induced C-state location. With tropomyosin stabilized in this position, myosin binding interactions can begin. Tropomyosin appears to oscillate to a higher degree between respective B- and C-state positions on troponin-free filaments than on fully regulated filaments, suggesting that tropomyosin positioning in both states is troponin-dependent. By biasing tropomyosin to either of these two positions, troponin appears to have two distinct structural functions; in relaxed muscles at low Ca2+, troponin operates as an inhibitor, while in activated muscles at high Ca2+, it acts as a promoter to initiate contraction.  相似文献   

2.
Tropomyosin (Tm) is a key factor in the molecular mechanisms that regulate the binding of myosin motors to actin filaments (F-Actins) in most eukaryotic cells. This regulation is achieved by the azimuthal repositioning of Tm along the actin (Ac):Tm:troponin (Tn) thin filament to block or expose myosin binding sites on Ac. In striated muscle, including involuntary cardiac muscle, Tm regulates muscle contraction by coupling Ca2 + binding to Tn with myosin binding to the thin filament. In smooth muscle, the switch is the posttranslational modification of the myosin. Depending on the activation state of Tn and the binding state of myosin, Tm can occupy the blocked, closed, or open position on Ac. Using native cryogenic 3DEM (three-dimensional electron microscopy), we have directly resolved and visualized cardiac and gizzard muscle Tm on filamentous Ac in the position that corresponds to the closed state. From the 8-Å-resolution structure of the reconstituted Ac:Tm filament formed with gizzard-derived Tm, we discuss two possible mechanisms for the transition from closed to open state and describe the role Tm plays in blocking myosin tight binding in the closed-state position.  相似文献   

3.
The Ca2+-dependent interaction of troponin I (TnI) with actin·tropomyosin (Tm) in muscle thin filaments is a critical step in the regulation of muscle contraction. Previous studies have suggested that, in the absence of Ca2+, TnI interacts with Tm and actin in reconstituted muscle thin filaments, maintaining Tm at the outer domain of actin and blocking myosin-actin interaction. To obtain direct evidence for this Tm-TnI interaction, we performed photochemical crosslinking studies using Tm labeled with 4-maleimidobenzophenone at position 146 or 174 (Tm*146 or Tm*174, respectively), reconstituted with actin and troponin [composed of TnI, troponin T (TnT), and troponin C] or with actin and TnI. After near-UV irradiation, SDS gels of the Tm*146-containing thin filament showed three new high-molecular-weight bands determined to be crosslinked products Tm*146-TnI, Tm*146-troponin C, and Tm*146-TnT using fluorescence-labeled TnI, mass spectrometry, and Western blot analysis. While Tm*146-TnI was produced only in the absence of Ca2+, the production of other crosslinked species did not show Ca2+ dependence. Tm*174 mainly crosslinked to TnT. In the absence of actin, a similar crosslinking pattern was obtained with a much lower yield. A tryptic peptide from Tm*146-TnI with a molecular mass of 2601.2 Da that was not present in the tryptic peptides of Tm*146 or TnI was identified using HPLC and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight. This was shown, using absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, to be the 4-maleimidobenzophenone-labeled peptide from Tm crosslinked to TnI peptide 157-163. These data, which show that a region in the C-terminal domain of TnI interacts with Tm in the absence of Ca2+, support the hypothesis that a TnI-Tm interaction maintains Tm at the outer domain of actin and will help efforts to localize troponin in actin·Tm muscle thin filaments.  相似文献   

4.
Contraction of many muscles is activated in part by the binding of Ca2+ to, or phosphorylation of, the myosin heads on the surface of the thick filaments. In relaxed muscle, the myosin heads are helically ordered and undergo minimal interaction with actin. On Ca2+ binding or phosphorylation, the head array becomes disordered, reflecting breakage of the head-head and other interactions that underlie the ordered structure. Loosening of the heads from the filament surface enables them to interact with actin filaments, bringing about contraction. On relaxation, the heads return to their ordered positions on the filament backbone. In scallop striated adductor muscle, the disordering that takes place on Ca2+ binding occurs on the millisecond time scale, suggesting that it is a key element of muscle activation. Here we have studied the reverse process. Using time-resolved negative staining electron microscopy, we show that the rate of reordering on removal of Ca2+ also occurs on the same physiological time scale. Direct observation of images together with analysis of their Fourier transforms shows that activated heads regain their axial ordering within 20 ms and become ordered in their final helical positions within 50 ms. This rapid reordering suggests that reformation of the ordered structure, and the head-head and other interactions that underlie it, is a critical element of the relaxation process.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the functions of troponin T (CeTnT-1) in Caenorhabditis elegans embryonic body wall muscle. TnT tethers troponin I (TnI) and troponin C (TnC) to the thin filament via tropomyosin (Tm), and TnT/Tm regulates the activation and inhibition of myosin-actin interaction in response to changes in intracellular [Ca2+]. Loss of CeTnT-1 function causes aberrant muscle trembling and tearing of muscle cells from their exoskeletal attachment sites (Myers, C.D., P.-Y. Goh, T. StC. Allen, E.A. Bucher, and T. Bogaert. 1996. J. Cell Biol. 132:1061–1077). We hypothesized that muscle tearing is a consequence of excessive force generation resulting from defective tethering of Tn complex proteins. Biochemical studies suggest that such defective tethering would result in either (a) Ca2+-independent activation, due to lack of Tn complex binding and consequent lack of inhibition, or (b) delayed reestablishment of TnI/TnC binding to the thin filament after Ca2+ activation and consequent abnormal duration of force. Analyses of animals doubly mutant for CeTnT-1 and for genes required for Ca2+ signaling support that CeTnT-1 phenotypes are dependent on Ca2+ signaling, thus supporting the second model and providing new in vivo evidence that full inhibition of thin filaments in low [Ca2+] does not require TnT.  相似文献   

6.
The molecular switching mechanism governing skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction couples the binding of Ca2+ on troponin to the movement of tropomyosin on actin filaments. Despite years of investigation, this mechanism remains unclear because it has not yet been possible to directly assess the structural influence of troponin on tropomyosin that causes actin filaments, and hence myosin-crossbridge cycling and contraction, to switch on and off. A C-terminal domain of troponin I is thought to be intimately involved in inducing tropomyosin movement to an inhibitory position that blocks myosin-crossbridge interaction. Release of this regulatory, latching domain from actin after Ca2+ binding to TnC (the Ca2+ sensor of troponin that relieves inhibition) presumably allows tropomyosin movement away from the inhibitory position on actin, thus initiating contraction. However, the structural interactions of the regulatory domain of TnI (the “inhibitory” subunit of troponin) with tropomyosin and actin that cause tropomyosin movement are unknown, and thus, the regulatory process is not well defined. Here, thin filaments were labeled with an engineered construct representing C-terminal TnI, and then, 3D electron microscopy was used to resolve where troponin is anchored on actin-tropomyosin. Electron microscopy reconstruction showed how TnI binding to both actin and tropomyosin at low Ca2+ competes with tropomyosin for a common site on actin and drives tropomyosin movement to a constrained, relaxing position to inhibit myosin-crossbridge association. Thus, the observations reported reveal the structural mechanism responsible for troponin-tropomyosin-mediated steric interference of actin-myosin interaction that regulates muscle contraction.  相似文献   

7.
To examine the role of two light chains (LCs) of the myosin II on Ca2+ regulation, we produced hybrid heavy meromyosin (HMM) having LCs from Physarum and/or scallop myosin using the smooth muscle myosin heavy chain. Ca2+ inhibited motility and ATPase activity of hybrid HMMs with LCs from Physarum myosin but activated those of hybrid HMM with LCs from scallop myosin, indicating an active role of LCs. ATPase activity of hybrid HMMs with LCs from different species showed the same effect by Ca2+ even though they did not support motility. Our results suggest that communication between the original combinations of LC is important for the motor function.  相似文献   

8.
α-Tropomyosin (αTm) is central to Ca2+-regulation of cardiac muscle contraction. The familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation αTm E180G enhances Ca2+-sensitivity in functional assays. To investigate the molecular basis, we imaged single molecules of human cardiac αTm E180G by direct probe atomic force microscopy. Analyses of tangent angles along molecular contours yielded persistence length corresponding to ∼35% increase in flexibility compared to wild-type. Increased flexibility of the mutant was confirmed by fitting end-to-end length distributions to the worm-like chain model. This marked increase in flexibility can significantly impact systolic and possibly diastolic phases of cardiac contraction, ultimately leading to hypertrophy.  相似文献   

9.
Small-angle X-ray scattering experiments were carried out to investigate the structural changes of cardiac thin filaments induced by the cardiomyopathy-causing E244D mutation in troponin T (TnT). We examined native thin filaments (NTF) from a bovine heart, reconstituted thin filaments containing human cardiac wild-type Tn (WTF), and filaments containing the E244D mutant of Tn (DTF), in the absence and presence of Ca2+. Analysis by model calculation showed that upon Ca2+-activation, tropomyosin (Tm) and Tn in the WTF and NTF moved together in a direction to expose myosin-binding sites on actin. On the other hand, Tm and Tn of the DTF moved in the opposite directions to each other upon Ca2+-activation. These movements caused Tm to expose more myosin-binding sites on actin than the WTF, suggesting that the affinity of myosin for actin is higher for the DTF. Thus, the mutation-induced structural changes in thin filaments would increase the number of myosin molecules bound to actin compared with the WTF, resulting in the force enhancement observed for the E244D mutation.  相似文献   

10.
Akazara scallop (Chlamys nipponensis akazara) troponin C (TnC) of striated adductor muscle binds only one Ca2+ ion at the C-terminal EF-hand motif (Site IV), but it works as the Ca2+-dependent regulator in adductor muscle contraction. In addition, the scallop troponin (Tn) has been thought to regulate muscle contraction via activating mechanisms that involve the region spanning from the TnC C-lobe (C-lobe) binding site to the inhibitory region of the TnI, and no alternative binding of the TnI C-terminal region to TnC because of no similarity between second TnC-binding regions of vertebrate and the scallop TnIs. To clarify the Ca2+-regulatory mechanism of muscle contraction by scallop Tn, we have analyzed the Ca2+-binding properties of the complex of TnC C-lobe and TnI peptide, and their interaction using isothermal titration microcalorimetry, nuclear magnetic resonance, circular dichroism, and gel filtration chromatography. The results showed that single Ca2+-binding to the Site IV leads to a structural transition not only in Site IV but also Site III through the structural network in the C-lobe of scallop TnC. We therefore assumed that the effect of Ca2+-binding must lead to a change in the interaction mode between the C-lobe of TnC and the TnI peptide. The change should be the first event of the transmission of Ca2+ signal to TnI in Tn ternary complex.  相似文献   

11.
The contractile and enzymatic activities of myosin VI are regulated by calcium binding to associated calmodulin (CaM) light chains. We have used transient phosphorescence anisotropy to monitor the microsecond rotational dynamics of erythrosin-iodoacetamide-labeled actin with strongly bound myosin VI (MVI) and to evaluate the effect of MVI-bound CaM light chain on actin filament dynamics. MVI binding lowers the amplitude but accelerates actin filament microsecond dynamics in a Ca2+- and CaM-dependent manner, as indicated from an increase in the final anisotropy and a decrease in the correlation time of transient phosphorescence anisotropy decays. MVI with bound apo-CaM or Ca2+-CaM weakly affects actin filament microsecond dynamics, relative to other myosins (e.g., muscle myosin II and myosin Va). CaM dissociation from bound MVI damps filament rotational dynamics (i.e., increases the torsional rigidity), such that the perturbation is comparable to that induced by other characterized myosins. Analysis of individual actin filament shape fluctuations imaged by fluorescence microscopy reveals a correlated effect on filament bending mechanics. These data support a model in which Ca2+-dependent CaM binding to the IQ domain of MVI is linked to an allosteric reorganization of the actin binding site(s), which alters the structural dynamics and the mechanical rigidity of actin filaments. Such modulation of filament dynamics may contribute to the Ca2+- and CaM-dependent regulation of myosin VI motility and ATP utilization.  相似文献   

12.
Troponin (Tn), in association with tropomyosin (Tm), plays a central role in the calcium regulation of striated muscle contraction. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between probes attached to the Tn subunits (TnC, TnI, TnT) and to Tm was measured to study the spatial relationship between Tn and Tm on the thin filament. We generated single-cysteine mutants of rabbit skeletal muscle α-Tm, TnI and the β-TnT 25-kDa fragment. The energy donor was attached to a single-cysteine residue at position 60, 73, 127, 159, 200 or 250 on TnT, at 98 on TnC and at 1, 9, 133 or 181 on TnI, while the energy acceptor was located at 13, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271 or 279 on Tm. FRET analysis showed a distinct Ca2+-induced conformational change of the Tm-Tn complex and revealed that TnT60 and TnT73 were closer to Tm13 than Tm279, indicating that the elongated N-terminal region of TnT extends beyond the beginning of the next Tm molecule on the actin filament. Using the atomic coordinates of the crystal structures of Tm and the Tn core domain, we searched for the disposition and orientation of these structures by minimizing the deviations of the calculated FRET efficiencies from the observed FRET efficiencies in order to construct atomic models of the Tn-Tm complex with and without bound Ca2+. In the best-fit models, the Tn core domain is located on residues 160-200 of Tm, with the arrowhead-shaped I-T arm tilting toward the C-terminus of Tm. The angle between the Tm axis and the long axis of TnC is ∼ 75° and ∼ 85° with and without bound Ca2+, respectively. The models indicate that the long axis of TnC is perpendicular to the thin filament without bound Ca2+, and that TnC and the I-T arm tilt toward the filament axis and rotate around the Tm axis by ∼ 20° upon Ca2+ binding.  相似文献   

13.
Residue Ser151 of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) is known to be phosphorylated by p21-activated kinase 3 (PAK3). It has been found that PAK3-mediated phosphorylation of cTnI induces an increase in the sensitivity of myofilament to Ca2+, but the detailed mechanism is unknown. We investigated how the structural and kinetic effects mediated by pseudo-phosphorylation of cTnI (S151E) modulates Ca2+-induced activation of cardiac thin filaments. Using steady-state, time-resolved Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and stopped-flow kinetic measurements, we monitored Ca2+-induced changes in cTnI-cTnC interactions. Measurements were done using reconstituted thin filaments, which contained the pseudo-phosphorylated cTnI(S151E). We hypothesized that the thin filament regulation is modulated by altered cTnC-cTnI interactions due to charge modification caused by the phosphorylation of Ser151 in cTnI. Our results showed that the pseudo-phosphorylation of cTnI (S151E) sensitizes structural changes to Ca2+ by shortening the intersite distances between cTnC and cTnI. Furthermore, kinetic rates of Ca2+ dissociation-induced structural change in the regulatory region of cTnI were reduced significantly by cTnI (S151E). The aforementioned effects of pseudo-phosphorylation of cTnI were similar to those of strong crossbridges on structural changes in cTnI. Our results provide novel information on how cardiac thin filament regulation is modulated by PAK3 phosphorylation of cTnI.  相似文献   

14.
To establish α-tropomyosin (Tm)'s structure–function relationships in cooperative regulation of muscle contraction, thin filaments were reconstituted with a variety of Tm mutants (Δ2Tm, Δ3Tm, Δ6Tm, P2sTm, P3sTm, P2P3sTm, P1P5Tm, and wtTm), and force and sliding velocity of the thin filament were studied using an in vitro motility assay. In the case of deletion mutants, Δ indicates which of the quasi-equivalent repeats in Tm was deleted. In the case of period (P) mutants, an Ala cluster was introduced into the indicated period to strengthen the Tm–actin interaction. In P1P5Tm, the N-terminal half of period 5 was substituted with that of period 1 to test the quasi-equivalence of these two Tm periods. The reconstitution included bovine cardiac troponin. Deletion studies revealed that period 3 is important for the positive cooperative effect of Tm on actin filament regulation and that period 2 also contributes to this effect at low ionic strength, but to a lesser degree. Furthermore, Tm with one extra Ala cluster at period 2 (P2s) or period 3 (P3s) did not increase force or velocity, whereas Tm with two extra Ala clusters (P2P3s) increased both force and velocity, demonstrating interaction between these periods. Most mutants did not move in the absence of Ca2+. Notable exceptions were Δ6Tm and P1P5Tm, which moved near at the full velocity, but with reduced force, which indicate impaired relaxation. These results are consistent with the mechanism that the Tm–actin interaction cooperatively affects actin to result in generation of greater force and velocity.  相似文献   

15.
To identify the interaction sites of Tm, we measured the rotational motion of a spin-label covalently bound to the side chain of a cysteine that was genetically incorporated into rabbit skeletal muscle tropomyosin (Tm) at positions 13, 36, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271, or 279. Most of the Tm residues were immobilized on actin filaments with myosin-S1 bound to them. The residues in the mid-portion of Tm, namely, 146, 174, 190, 209, and 230, were mobilized when the troponin (Tn) complex bound to the actin-Tm-S1 filaments. The addition of Ca2+ ions partially reversed the Tn-induced mobilization. In contrast, residues at the joint region of Tm, 13, 36, 271, and 279 were unchanged or oppositely changed. All of these changes were detected using a maleimide spin label and less obviously using a methanesulfonate label. These results indicated that Tm was fixed on thin filaments with myosin bound to them, although a small change in the flexibility of the side chains of Tm residues, presumably interfaced with Tn, actin and myosin, was induced by the binding of Tn and Ca2+. These findings suggest that even in the myosin-bound (open) state, Ca2+ may regulate actomyosin contractile properties via Tm.  相似文献   

16.
To identify the interaction sites of Tm, we measured the rotational motion of a spin-label covalently bound to the side chain of a cysteine that was genetically incorporated into rabbit skeletal muscle tropomyosin (Tm) at positions 13, 36, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271, or 279. Most of the Tm residues were immobilized on actin filaments with myosin-S1 bound to them. The residues in the mid-portion of Tm, namely, 146, 174, 190, 209, and 230, were mobilized when the troponin (Tn) complex bound to the actin-Tm-S1 filaments. The addition of Ca2+ ions partially reversed the Tn-induced mobilization. In contrast, residues at the joint region of Tm, 13, 36, 271, and 279 were unchanged or oppositely changed. All of these changes were detected using a maleimide spin label and less obviously using a methanesulfonate label. These results indicated that Tm was fixed on thin filaments with myosin bound to them, although a small change in the flexibility of the side chains of Tm residues, presumably interfaced with Tn, actin and myosin, was induced by the binding of Tn and Ca2+. These findings suggest that even in the myosin-bound (open) state, Ca2+ may regulate actomyosin contractile properties via Tm.  相似文献   

17.
In regulated myosin, motor and enzymatic activities are toggled between the on-state and off-state by a switch located on its lever arm domain, here called the regulatory domain (RD). This region consists of a long α-helical “heavy chain” stabilized by a “regulatory” light chain (RLC) and an “essential” light chain (ELC). The on-state is activated by phosphorylation of the RLC of vertebrate smooth muscle RD or by direct binding of Ca2+ to the ELC of molluscan RD. Crystal structures are available only for the molluscan RD. To understand in more detail the pathway between the on-state and the off-state, we have now also determined the crystal structure of a molluscan (scallop) RD in the absence of Ca2+. Our results indicate that loss of Ca2+ abolishes most of the interactions between the light chains and may increase the flexibility of the RD heavy chain. We propose that disruption of critical links with the C-lobe of the RLC is the key event initiating the off-state in both smooth muscle myosins and molluscan myosins.  相似文献   

18.
Interaction of myosin with actin in striated muscle is controlled by Ca2+ via thin filament associated proteins: troponin and tropomyosin. In cardiac muscle there is a whole pattern of myosin and tropomyosin isoforms. The aim of the current work is to study regulatory effect of tropomyosin on sliding velocity of actin filaments in the in vitro motility assay over cardiac isomyosins. It was found that tropomyosins of different content of α- and β-chains being added to actin filament effects the sliding velocity of filaments in different ways. On the other hand the velocity of filaments with the same tropomyosins depends on both heavy and light chains isoforms of cardiac myosin.  相似文献   

19.
The preparation and characterization of a Ca2+-sensitive actomyosin from chicken gizzard is described. The pH curve of the Mg2+ ATPase activity of the actomyosin was dominated by the activity of the myosin component, and this gave rise to the acid and alkaline optima. Skeletal muscle myosin showed a similar curve. Both the activation of myosin ATPase by actin, and the Ca2+ sensitivity were confined to the neutral pH region. The subunit composition of the Ca2+-sensitive actomyosin was interesting in that no components corresponding to skeletal muscle troponin were obvious. It is suggested that the activity of gizzard actomyosin is regulated by a protein on the thin filaments with a subunit weight of ~130,000.  相似文献   

20.
Calmodulin and the regulation of smooth muscle contraction   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Calmodulin, the ubiquitous and multifunctional Ca2+-binding protein, mediates many of the regulatory effects of Ca2+, including the contractile state of smooth muscle. The principal function of calmodulin in smooth muscle is to activate crossbridge cycling and the development of force in response to a [Ca2+]i transientvia the activation of myosin light-chain kinase and phosphorylation of myosin. A distinct calmodulin-dependent kinase, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, has been implicated in modulation of smooth-muscle contraction. This kinase phosphorylates myosin light-chain kinase, resulting in an increase in the calmodulin concentration required for half-maximal activation of myosin light-chain kinase, and may account for desensitization of the contractile response to Ca2+. In addition, the thin filament-associated proteins, caldesmon and calponin, which inhibit the actin-activated MgATPase activity of smooth-muscle myosin (the cross-bridge cycling rate), appear to be regulated by calmodulin, either by the direct binding of Ca2+/calmodulin or indirectly by phosphorylation catalysed by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Another level at which calmodulin can regulate smooth-muscle contraction involves proteins which control the movement of Ca2+ across the sarcolemmal and sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes and which are regulated by Ca2+/calmodulin, e.g. the sarcolemmal Ca2+ pump and the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+ release channel, and other proteins which indirectly regulate [Ca2+]i via cyclic nucleotide synthesis and breakdown, e.g. NO synthase and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase. The interplay of such regulatory mechanisms provides the flexibility and adaptability required for the normal functioning of smooth-muscle tissues.  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