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1.
Huang R  Li L  Guo H  Wang CL 《Biochemistry》2003,42(9):2513-2523
Smooth muscle caldesmon (CaD) binds F-actin and inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity. The inhibition is reversed by Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM). CaD is also phosphorylated upon stimulation at sites specific for mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). Because of these properties, CaD is thought to be involved in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. The molecular mechanism of the reversal of inhibition is not well understood. We have expressed His6-tagged fragments containing the sequence of the C-terminal region of human (from M563 to V793) and chicken (from M563 to P771) CaD as well as a variant of the chicken isoform with a Q766C point mutation. By cleavages with proteases, followed by high-speed cosedimentation with F-actin and mass spectrometry, we found that within the C-terminal region of CaD there are multiple actin contact points forming two clusters. Intramolecular fluorescence resonance energy transfer between probes attached to cysteine residues (the endogenous C595 and the engineered C766) located in these two clusters revealed that the C-terminal region of CaD is elongated, but it becomes more compact when bound to actin. Binding of CaM restores the elongated conformation and facilitates dissociation of the C-terminal CaD fragment from F-actin. When the CaD fragment was phosphorylated with a MAPK, only one of the two actin-binding clusters dissociated from F-actin, whereas the other remained bound. Taken together, these results demonstrate that while both Ca2+/CaM and MAPK phosphorylation govern CaD's function via a conformational change, the regulatory mechanisms are different.  相似文献   

2.
The interactions were analyzed between actin, myosin, and a recently discovered high molecular weight actin-binding protein (Hartwig, J. H., and Stossel, T. P. (1975) J. Biol Chem.250,5696-5705) of rabbit alveolar macrophages. Purified rabbit alveolar macrophage or rabbit skeletal muscle F-actins did not activate the Mg2+ATPase activity of purified rabbit alveolar macrophage myosin unless an additional cofactor, partially purified from macrophage extracts, was added. The Mg2+ATPase activity of cofactor-activated macrophage actomyosin was as high as 0.6 mumol of Pi/mg of myosin protein/min at 37 degrees. The macrophage cofactor increased the Mg2+ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin, and calcium regulated the Mg2+ATPase activity of cofactor-activited muscle actomyosin in the presence of muscle troponins and tropomyosin. However, the Mg2+ATPase activity of macrophage actomyosin in the presence of the cofactor was inhibited by muscle control proteins, both in the presence and absence of calcium. The Mg2+ATPase activity of the macrophage actomyosin plus cofactor, whether assembled from purified components or studied in a complex collected from crude macrophage extracts, was not influenced by the presence of absence of calcium ions. Therefore, as described for Acanthamoeba castellanii myosin (Pollard, T. D., and Korn, E. D. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 4691-4697), rabbit alveolar macrophage myosin requires a cofactor for activation of its Mg2+ATPase activity by F-actin; and no evidence was found for participation of calcium ions in the regulation of this activity.In macrophage extracts containing 0.34 M sucrose, 0.5 mM ATP, and 0.05 M KCl at pH 7.0,the actin-binding protein bound F-actin into bundles with interconnecting bridges. Purified macrophage actin-binding protein in 0.1 M KCl at pH 7.0 also bound purified macrophage F-actin into filament bundles. Macrophage myosin bound to F-actin in the absence but not the presence of Mg2+ATP, but the actin-binding protein did not bind to macrophage myosin in either the presence or absence of Mg2+ATP.  相似文献   

3.
Schroeter M  Chalovich JM 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13875-13882
Fesselin is a proline-rich actin-binding protein that was isolated from avian smooth muscle. Fesselin bundles actin and accelerates actin polymerization by facilitating nucleation. We now show that this polymerization of actin can be regulated by Ca(2+)-calmodulin. Fesselin was shown to bind to immobilized calmodulin in the presence of Ca(2+). The fesselin-calmodulin interaction was confirmed by a Ca(2+)-dependent increase in 2-(4-maleimidoanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid (MIANS) fluorescence upon addition of fesselin to MIANS-labeled wheat germ calmodulin. The affinity was estimated to be approximately 10(9) M(-1). The affinity of Ca(2+)-calmodulin to the fesselin F-actin complex was approximately 10(8) M(-1). Calmodulin binding to fesselin appeared to be functionally significant. In the presence of fesselin and calmodulin, the polymerization of actin was Ca(2+)-dependent. Ca(2+)-free calmodulin either had no effect or enhanced the ability of fesselin to accelerate actin polymerization. Ca(2+)-calmodulin not only reversed the stimulatory effect of fesselin but reduced the rate of polymerization below that observed in the absence of fesselin. While Ca(2+)-calmodulin had a large effect on the interaction of fesselin with G-actin, the effect on F-actin was small. Neither the binding of fesselin to F-actin nor the subsequent bundling of F-actin was greatly affected by Ca(2+)-calmodulin. Fesselin may function as an actin-polymerizing factor that is regulated by Ca(2+) levels.  相似文献   

4.
Caldesmon, calmodulin-, and actin-binding protein of chicken gizzard did not affect the process of polymerization of actin induced by 0.1 M KCl. Caldesmon binds to F-actin, thus inhibiting the gelation action of actin binding protein (ABP; filamin). Low shear viscosity and flow birefringence measurements revealed that in a system of calmodulin, caldesmon, ABP, and F-actin, gelation occurs in the presence of micromolar Ca2+ concentrations, but not in the absence of Ca2+. Electron microscopic observations showed the Ca2+-dependent formation of actin bundles in this system. These results were interpreted by the flip-flop mechanism: in the presence of Ca2+, a calmodulin-caldesmon complex is released from actin filaments on which ABP exerts its gelating action. On the other hand, in the absence of Ca2+, caldesmon remains bound to actin filaments, thus preventing the action of ABP.  相似文献   

5.
Calcium ions produce a 3-4-fold stimulation of the actin-activated ATPase activities of phosphorylated myosin from bovine pulmonary artery or chicken gizzard at 37 degrees C and at physiological ionic strengths, 0.12-0.16 M. Actins from either chicken gizzard or rabbit skeletal muscle stimulate the activity of phosphorylated myosin in a Ca2+-dependent manner, indicating that the Ca2+ sensitivity involves myosin or a protein associated with it. Partial loss of Ca2+ sensitivity upon treatment of phosphorylated gizzard myosin with low concentrations of chymotrypsin and the lack of any change on similar treatment of actin supports the above conclusion. Although both actins enhance ATPase activity, activation by gizzard actin exhibits Ca2+ dependence at higher temperatures or lower ionic strengths than does activation by skeletal muscle actin. The Ca2+ dependence of the activity of phosphorylated heavy meromyosin is about half that of myosin and is affected differently by temperature, ionic strength and Mg2+, being independent of temperature and optimal at lower concentrations of NaCl. Raising the concentration of Mg2+ above 2-3 mM inhibits the activity of heavy meromyosin but stimulates that of myosin, indicating that Mg2+ and Ca2+ activate myosin at different binding sites.  相似文献   

6.
R J Heaslip  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1985,24(11):2731-2736
There are conflicting reports on the effect of Ca2+ on actin activation of myosin adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) once the light chain is fully phosphorylated by a calcium calmodulin dependent kinase. Using thiophosphorylated gizzard myosin, Sherry et al. [Sherry, J. M. F., Gorecka, A., Aksoy, M. O., Dabrowska, R., & Hartshorne, D. J. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 4417-4418] observed that the actin activation of ATPase was not inhibited by the removal of Ca2+. Hence, it was suggested that the regulation of actomyosin ATPase activity of gizzard myosin by calcium occurs only via phosphorylation. In the present study, phosphorylated and thiophosphorylated myosins were prepared free of kinase and phosphatase activity; hence, the ATPase activity could be measured at various concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ without affecting the level of phosphorylation. The ATPase activity of myosin was activated either by skeletal muscle or by gizzard actin at various concentrations of Mg2+ and either at pCa 5 or at pCa 8. The activation was sensitive to Ca2+ at low Mg2+ concentrations with both actins. Tropomyosin potentiated the actin-activated ATPase activity at all Mg2+ and Ca2+ concentrations. The calcium sensitivity of phosphorylated and thiophosphorylated myosin reconstituted with actin and tropomyosin was most pronounced at a free Mg2+ concentration of about 3 mM. The binding of 125I-tropomyosin to actin showed that the calcium sensitivity of ATPase observed at low Mg2+ concentration is not due to a calcium-mediated binding of tropomyosin to F-actin. The actin activation of both myosins was insensitive to Ca2+ when the Mg2+ concentration was increased above 5 mM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Fibroblast caldesmon is a protein postulated to participate in the modulation of the actin cytoskeleton and the regulation of actin-based motility. The cDNAs encoding the NH2-terminal (aa.1-243, CaD40) and COOH-terminal (aa.244-538, CaD39) fragments of human caldesmon were subcloned into expression vectors and we previously reported that bacterially produced CaD39 protein retains its actin-binding properties as well as its ability to enhance low M(r) tropomyosin (TM) binding to actin and to inhibit TM-actin-activated HMM ATPase activity in vitro (Novy, R. E., J. R. Sellers, L.-F. Liu, and J. J.-C. Lin. 1993. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton. 26:248-261). Bacterially produced CaD40 does not bind actin. To study the in vivo effects of CaD39 expression on the stability of actin filaments in CHO cells, we isolated and characterized stable CHO transfectants which express varying amounts of CaD39. We found that expression of CaD39 in CHO cells stabilized microfilament bundles as well as endogenous TM. CaD39-expressing clones displayed an increased resistance to cytochalasin B and Triton X-100 treatments and yielded increased amounts of TM-containing actin filaments in microfilament isolation procedures. In addition, analysis of these clones with immunoblotting and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy with anti-TM antibody revealed that stabilized endogenous TM and enhanced TM-containing microfilament bundles parallel increased amounts of CaD39 expression. The increased TM observed corresponded to a decrease in TM turnover rate and did not appear to be due to increased synthesis of endogenous TM. Additionally, the phenomenon of stabilized TM did not occur in stable CHO clones expressing CaD40. Therefore, it is likely that CaD39 can enhance TM's binding to F-actin in vivo, thus reducing TM's rate of turnover and stabilizing actin microfilament bundles.  相似文献   

8.
Vascular smooth muscle caldesmon   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein, has been identified in diverse bovine tissues, including smooth and striated muscles and various nonmuscle tissues, by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of tissue homogenates and immunoblotting using rabbit anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon. Caldesmon was purified from vascular smooth muscle (bovine aorta) by heat treatment of a tissue homogenate, ion-exchange chromatography, and affinity chromatography on a column of immobilized calmodulin. The isolated protein shared many properties in common with chicken gizzard caldesmon: immunological cross-reactivity, Ca2+-dependent interaction with calmodulin, Ca2+-independent interaction with F-actin, competition between actin and calmodulin for caldesmon binding only in the presence of Ca2+, and inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin without affecting the phosphorylation state of myosin. Maximal binding of aorta caldesmon to actin occurred at 1 mol of caldesmon: 9-10 mol of actin, and binding was unaffected by tropomyosin. Half-maximal inhibition of the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase occurred at approximately 1 mol of caldesmon: 12 mol of actin. This inhibition was also unaffected by tropomyosin. Caldesmon had no effect on the Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin in the absence of actin. Bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmons differed in several respects: Mr (149,000 for bovine aorta caldesmon and 141,000 for chicken gizzard caldesmon), extinction coefficient (E1%280nm = 19.5 and 5.0 for bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmon, respectively), amino acid composition, and one-dimensional peptide maps obtained by limited chymotryptic and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. In a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, using anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon, a 174-fold molar excess of bovine aorta caldesmon relative to chicken gizzard caldesmon was required for half-maximal inhibition. These studies establish the widespread tissue and species distribution of caldesmon and indicate that vascular smooth muscle caldesmon exhibits physicochemical differences yet structural and functional similarities to caldesmon isolated from chicken gizzard.  相似文献   

9.
A caldesmon (CaD)-binding protein of about 65 kDa (by SDS-PAGE) was purified from smooth muscle of chicken gizzard. The 65-kDa protein prevented the inhibitory effect of CaD on the ATP-dependent interaction between actin and myosin. Unlike the case with calmodulin (CaM), Ca2+ was not required for this effect. As reported in the preceding communication, myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), another well characterized protein that binds CaM, has CaD-like activity that modulates the interaction by binding to actin. The 65-kDa protein was also effective in relieving the modulation, while leaving unaffected the kinase activity that phosphorylates the light chain of smooth muscle myosin.  相似文献   

10.
Mechanoelectrical transduction by a hair cell displays adaptation, which is thought to occur as myosin-based molecular motors within the mechanically sensitive hair bundle adjust the tension transmitted to transduction channels. To assess the enzymatic capabilities of the myosin isozymes in hair bundles, we examined the actin-dependent ATPase activity of bundles isolated from the bullfrog's sacculus. Separation of 32P-labeled inorganic phosphate from unreacted [gamma-32P]ATP by thin-layer chromatography enabled us to measure the liberation of as little as 0.1 fmol phosphate. To distinguish the Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of myosin isozymes from that of other hair-bundle enzymes, we inhibited the interaction of hair-bundle myosin with actin and determined the reduction in ATPase activity. N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) decreased neither physiologically measured adaptation nor the nucleotide-hydrolytic activity of a 120-kDa protein thought to be myosin 1 beta. The NEM-insensitive, actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin increased from 1.0 fmol x s-1 in 1 mM EGTA to 2.3 fmol x s-1 in 10 microM Ca2+. This activity was largely inhibited by calmidazolium, but was unaffected by the addition of exogenous calmodulin. These results, which indicate that hair bundles contain enzymatically active, Ca(2+)-sensitive myosin molecules, are consistent with the role of Ca2+ in adaptation and with the hypothesis that myosin forms the hair cell's adaptation motor.  相似文献   

11.
Application of the myosin competition test (Lehman, W., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1975) J. Gen. Physiol. 66, 1-30) to chicken gizzard actomyosin indicated that this smooth muscle contains a thin filament-linked regulatory mechanism. Chicken gizzard thin filaments, isolated as described previously (Marston, S. B., and Lehman, W. (1985) Biochem. J. 231, 517-522), consisted almost exclusively of actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon, and an unidentified 32-kilodalton polypeptide in molar ratios of 1:1/6:1/26:1/17, respectively. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, these thin filaments conferred Ca2+ sensitivity (67.8 +/- 2.1%; n = 5) on the myosin Mg2+-ATPase. On the other hand, no Ca2+ sensitivity of the myosin Mg2+-ATPase was observed when purified gizzard actin or actin plus tropomyosin was reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin. Native thin filaments were rendered essentially free of caldesmon and the 32-kilodalton polypeptide by extraction with 25 mM MgCl2. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, caldesmon-free thin filaments and native thin filaments exhibited approximately the same Ca2+ sensitivity (45.1 and 42.7%, respectively). The observed Ca2+ sensitivity appears, therefore, not to be due to caldesmon. Only trace amounts of two Ca2+-binding proteins could be detected in native thin filaments. These were identified as calmodulin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:733) and the 20-kilodalton light chain of myosin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:270). The Ca2+ sensitivity observed in an in vitro system reconstituted from gizzard thin filaments and either skeletal myosin or phosphorylated gizzard myosin is due, therefore, to calmodulin and/or an unidentified minor protein component of the thin filaments which may be an actin-binding protein involved in regulating actin filament structure in a Ca2+-dependent manner.  相似文献   

12.
Chicken gizzard caldesmon causes up to 40% inhibition of Mg2+-ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin. In the presence of chicken gizzard tropomyosin this inhibition is significantly increased, reaching a maximum (around 80%) at a molar ratio of caldesmon to actin monomer of 1 to 10-13. The inhibition of actomyosin ATPase takes place over a wide pH range (from 6.0 to 8.0) but is decreased with an increase in KCl and MgCl2 concentrations. Caldesmon, in the range of caldesmon/ actin ratios within which it inhibits actomyosin ATPase, forms bundles of parallelly aligned actin filaments. Calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ dissociates these bundles and restrains the inhibition of actomyosin ATPase, provided that it is used at a high molar excess over caldesmon.  相似文献   

13.
Actin, myosin, and "native" tropomyosin (NTM) were separately isolated from chicken gizzard muscle and rabbit skeletal muscle. With various combinations of the isolated contractile proteins, Mg-ATPase activity and superprecipitation activity were measured. It was thus found that gizzard myosin and gizzard NTM behaved differently from skeletal myosin and skeletal NTM, whereas gizzard actin functioned in the same wasy as skeletal actin. It was also found that gizzard myosin preparations were often Ca-sensitive, that is, that the two activities of gizzard myosin plus actin without NTM were activated by low concentrations of Ca2+. The Mg-ATPase activity of a Ca-insensitive preparation of gizzard myosin was not activated by actin even in the presence of Ca2+. When Ca-sensitive gizzard myosin was incubated with ATP (and Mg2+) in the presence of Ca2+, a light-chain component of gizzard myosin was phosphorylated. The light-chain phosphorylation also occurred when Ca-insensitive myosin was incubated with gizzard NTM and ATP (plus Mg2+) in the presence of Ca2+. In either case, the light-chain phosphorylation required Ca2+. Phosphorylated gizzard myosin in combination with actin was able to exhibit superprecipitation, and Mg-ATPase of the phosphorylated gizzard myosin was activated by actin; the actin activation and superprecipitation were found to occur even in the absence of Ca2+ and NTM or tropomyosin. The phosphorylated light-chain component was found to be dephosphorylated by a partially purified preparation of gizzard myosin light-chain phosphatase. Gizzard myosin thus dephosphorylated behaved exactly like untreated Ca-insensitive gizzard myosin; in combination with actin, it did not superprecipitate either in the presence of Ca2+ or in its absence, but did superprecipitated in the presence of NTM and Ca2+. Ca-activated hydrolysis of ATP catalyzed by gizzard myosin B proceeded at a reduced rate after removal of Ca2+ (by adding EGTA), whereas that catalyzed by a combination of actin, gizzard myosin, and gizzard NTM proceeded at the same rate even after removal of Ca2+. However, addition of a partially purified preparation of gizzard myosin light-chain phosphatase was found to make the recombined system behave like myosin B. Based on these findings, it appears that myosin light-chain kinase and myosin light-chain phosphatase can function as regulatory proteins for contraction and relaxation, respectively, of gizzard muscle.  相似文献   

14.
Cross-linking of actin filaments (F-actin) into bundles and networks was investigated with three different isoforms of the dumbbell-shaped alpha-actinin homodimer under identical reaction conditions. These were isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle, Acanthamoeba, and Dictyostelium, respectively. Examination in the electron microscope revealed that each isoform was able to cross-link F-actin into networks. In addition, F-actin bundles were obtained with chicken gizzard and Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin, but not Dictyostelium alpha-actinin under conditions where actin by itself polymerized into disperse filaments. This F-actin bundle formation critically depended on the proper molar ratio of alpha-actinin to actin, and hence F-actin bundles immediately disappeared when free alpha-actinin was withdrawn from the surrounding medium. The apparent dissociation constants (Kds) at half-saturation of the actin binding sites were 0.4 microM at 22 degrees C and 1.2 microM at 37 degrees C for chicken gizzard, and 2.7 microM at 22 degrees C for both Acanthamoeba and Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. Chicken gizzard and Dictyostelium alpha-actinin predominantly cross-linked actin filaments in an antiparallel fashion, whereas Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin cross-linked actin filaments preferentially in a parallel fashion. The average molecular length of free alpha-actinin was 37 nm for glycerol-sprayed/rotary metal-shadowed and 35 nm for negatively stained chicken gizzard; 46 and 44 nm, respectively, for Acanthamoeba; and 34 and 31 nm, respectively, for Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. In negatively stained preparations we also evaluated the average molecular length of alpha-actinin when bound to actin filaments: 36 nm for chicken gizzard and 35 nm for Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin, a molecular length roughly coinciding with the crossover repeat of the two-stranded F-actin helix (i.e., 36 nm), but only 28 nm for Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. Furthermore, the minimal spacing between cross-linking alpha-actinin molecules along actin filaments was close to 36 nm for both smooth muscle and Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin, but only 31 nm for Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. This observation suggests that the molecular length of the alpha-actinin homodimer may determine its spacing along the actin filament, and hence F-actin bundle formation may require "tight" (i.e., one molecule after the other) and "untwisted" (i.e., the long axis of the molecule being parallel to the actin filament axis) packing of alpha-actinin molecules along the actin filaments.  相似文献   

15.
In cytokinesis, the contractile ring constricts the cleavage furrow. However, the formation and properties of the contractile ring are poorly understood. Fimbrin has two actin-binding domains and two EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding motifs. Ca(2+) binding to the EF-hand motifs inhibits actin-binding activity. In Tetrahymena, fimbrin is localized in the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. In a previous study, Tetrahymena fimbrin was purified with an F-actin affinity column. However, the purified Tetrahymena fimbrin was broken in to a 60 kDa fragment of a 70 kDa full length fimbrin. In this study, we investigated the properties of recombinant Tetrahymena fimbrin. In an F-actin cosedimentation assay, Tetrahymena fimbrin bound to F-actin and bundled it in a Ca(2+)-independent manner, with a K(d) of 0.3 micro M and a stoichiometry at saturation of 1:1.4 (Tetrahymena fimbrin: actin). In the presence of 1 molecule of Tetrahymena fimbrin to 7 molecules of actin, F-actin was bundled. Immunofluorecence microscopy showed that a dotted line of Tetrahymena fimbrin along the cleavage furrow formed a ring structure. The properties and localization of Tetrahymena fimbrin suggest that it bundles actin filaments in the cleavage furrow and plays an important role in contractile ring formation during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

16.
The actin-binding protein caldesmon (CaD) reversibly inhibits smooth muscle contraction. In non-muscle cells, a shorter CaD isoform co-exists with microfilaments in the stress fibers at the quiescent state, but the phosphorylated CaD is found at the leading edge of migrating cells where dynamic actin filament remodeling occurs. We have studied the effect of a C-terminal fragment of CaD (H32K) on the kinetics of the in vitro actin polymerization by monitoring the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled actin. Addition of H32K or its phosphorylated form either attenuated or accelerated the pyrene emission enhancement, depending on whether it was added at the early or the late phase of actin polymerization. However, the CaD fragment had no effect on the yield of sedimentable actin, nor did it affect the actin ATPase activity. Our findings can be explained by a model in which nascent actin filaments undergo a maturation process that involves at least two intermediate conformational states. If present at early stages of actin polymerization, CaD stabilizes one of the intermediate states and blocks the subsequent filament maturation. Addition of CaD at a later phase accelerates F-actin formation. The fact that CaD is capable of inhibiting actin filament maturation provides a novel function for CaD and suggests an active role in the dynamic reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

17.
Actin, myosin, and a high molecular weight actin-binding protein were extracted from rabbit alveolar macrophages with low ionic strength sucrose solutions containing ATP, EDTA, and dithiothreitol, pH 7.0. Addition of KCl, 75 to 100 mM, to sucrose extracts of macrophages stirred at 25 degrees caused actin to polymerize and bind to a protein of high molecualr weight. The complex precipitated and sedimented at low centrifugal forces. Macrophage actin was dissociated from the binding protein with 0.6 M KCl, and purified by repetitive depolymerization and polymerization. Purified macrophage actin migrated as a polypeptide of molecular weight 45,000 on polyacrylamide gels with dodecyl sulfate, formed extended filaments in 0.1 M KCl, bound rabbit skeletal muscle myosin in the absence of Mg-2+ATP and activated its Mg-2+ATPase activity. Macrophage myosin was bound to actin remaining in the macrophage extracts after removal of the actin precipitated with the high molecular weight protein by KCl. The myosin-actin complex and other proteins were collected by ultracentrifugation. Macrophage myosin was purified from this complex or from a 20 to 50% saturated ammonium sulfate fraction of macrophage extracts by gel filtration on agarose columns in 0.6 M Kl and 0.6 M Kl solutions. Purified macrophage myosin had high specific K-+- and EDTA- and K-+- and Ca-2+ATPase activities and low specific Mg-2+ATPase activity. It had subunits of 200,000, 20,000, and 15,000 molecular weight, and formed bipolar filaments in 0.1 M KCl, both in the presence and absence of divalent cations. The high molecular weight protein that precipitated with actin in the sucrose extracts of macrophages was purified by gel filtration in 0.6 M Kl-0.6 M KCl solutions. It was designated a macrophage actin-binding protein, because of its association with actin at physiological pH and ionic strength. On polyacrylamide gels in dodecyl sulfate, the purified high molecular weight protein contained one band which co-migrated with the lighter polypeptide (molecular weight 220,000) of the doublet comprising purified rabbit erythrocyte spectrin. The macrophage protein, like rabbit erythrocyte spectrin, was soluble in 2 mM EDTA and 80% ethanol as well as in 0.6 M KCl solutions, and precipitated in 2 mM CaCl2 or 0.075 to 0.1 M KCl solutions. The macrophage actin-binding protein and rabbit erythrocyte spectrin eluted from agarose columns with a KAV of 0.24 and in the excluded volumes. The protein did not form filaments in 0.1 M KCl and had no detectable ATPase activity under the conditions tested.  相似文献   

18.
Huang R  Wang CL 《FEBS letters》2006,580(1):63-66
Caldesmon (CaD) is thought to regulate smooth muscle contraction, because it binds actin and inhibits actomyosin interactions. A synthetic actin-binding peptide (GS17C) corresponding to Gly666-Ser682 of chicken gizzard CaD has been shown to induce force development in permeabilized smooth muscle cells. The mechanism of GS17C's action remains unclear, although a structural effect was postulated. By photo-crosslinking and fluorescence quenching experiments with a gizzard CaD fragment (H32K; Met563-Pro771) and its mutants, we showed that GS17C indeed dissociated the C-terminal region of H32K from actin, in a manner similar to extracellular signal-regulated kinase-mediated phosphorylation, thereby reversing the CaD-imposed inhibition and enabling the actomyosin interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Calcium ion-regulated thin filaments from vascular smooth muscle.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Myosin and actin competition tests indicated the presence of both thin-filament and myosin-linked Ca2+-regulatory systems in pig aorta and turkey gizzard smooth-muscle actomyosin. A thin-filament preparation was obtained from pig aortas. The thin filaments had no significant ATPase activity [1.1 +/- 2.6 nmol/mg per min (mean +/- S.D.)], but they activated skeletal-muscle myosin ATPase up to 25-fold [500 nmol/mg of myosin per min (mean +/- S.D.)] in the presence of 10(-4) M free Ca2+. At 10(-8) M-Ca2+ the thin filaments activated myosin ATPase activity only one-third as much. Thin-filament activation of myosin ATPase activity increased markedly in the range 10(-6)-10(-5) M-Ca2+ and was half maximal at 2.7 x 10(-6) M (pCa2+ 5.6). The skeletal myosin-aorta-thin-filament mixture gave a biphasic ATPase-rate-versus-ATP-concentration curve at 10(-8) M-Ca2+ similar to the curve obtained with skeletal-muscle thin filaments. Thin filaments bound up to 9.5 mumol of Ca2+/g in the presence of MgATP2-. In the range 0.06-27 microM-Ca2+ binding was hyperbolic with an estimated binding constant of (0.56 +/- 0.07) x 10(6) M-1 (mean +/- S.D.) and maximum binding of 8.0 +/- 0.8 mumol/g (mean +/- S.D.). Significantly less Ca2+ bound in the absence of ATP. The thin filaments contained actin, tropomyosin and several other unidentified proteins. 6 M-Urea/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis at pH 8.3 showed proteins that behaved like troponin I and troponin C. This was confirmed by forming interspecific complexes between radioactive skeletal-muscle troponin I and troponin C and the aorta thin-filament proteins. The thin filaments contained at least 1.4 mumol of a troponin C-like protein/g and at least 1.1 mumol of a troponin I-like protein/g.  相似文献   

20.
A 110-kDa protein present in chicken intestinal brush-border microvilli is believed to laterally link the actin filament bundle that forms the structural core of the microvilli with the microvillar plasma membrane. We have purified a 110-kDa protein to greater than 95% homogeneity by extraction of brush borders with solution containing 0.6 M KCl and 5 mM ATP, followed by gel filtration chromatography, sedimentation as a complex with exogenous actin, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The 110-kDa protein-calmodulin complex bound F-actin in the absence but not the presence of ATP and had K+,EDTA-ATPase (0.2 mumol/min/mg) and Ca2+-ATPase (0.2 mumol/min/mg) activities and Mg2+-ATPase activity (0.03 mumol/min/mg) that was not activated by F-actin. The actin-binding and ATPase activities of the complex were similar to those of purified brush-border myosin. However, immunoblot analysis showed no reactivity between the 110-kDa protein and polyclonal antibody against purified chicken brush-border myosin. Also, peptide maps of 110-kDa protein and myosin obtained by limited proteolysis with chymotrypsin and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease had few, if any, peptides in common. Immunoblot analysis also showed that myosin heavy chain was stable under the conditions of the preparation.  相似文献   

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