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1.
Smooth muscle myosin can be switched on by phosphorylation of Ser-19 of the regulatory light chain. Our previous photocross-linking results suggested that an element of the structural mechanism for the regulatory switch was a phosphorylation-induced motion of the regulatory light chain N terminus (Wahlstrom, J. L., Randall, M. A., Jr., Lawson, J. D., Lyons, D. E., Siems, W. F., Crouch, G. J., Barr, R., Facemyer, K. C., and Cremo, C. R. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 5123-5131). Here we used three different approaches to test this notion, which are reactivity of cysteine thiols, pyrene and acrylodan spectral analysis, and pyrene fluorescence quenching. All methods detected significant differences between the unphosphorylated and phosphorylated regulatory light chain N termini in heavy meromyosin, a double-headed subfragment with an intact regulatory switch. These differences were not observed for subfragment-1, a single-headed, unregulated subfragment. In the presence of either ATP or ADP, phosphorylation increased the solvent exposure and decreased the polarity of the environment about position 23 of the regulatory light chain of heavy meromyosin. These phosphorylation-induced structural changes were not as evident in the absence of nucleotides. Nucleotide binding to unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin caused a decrease in exposure and an increase in polarity of the N terminus, whereas the effects of nucleotide on phosphorylated heavy meromyosin were the opposite. We showed a direct correlation between the kinetics of nucleotide binding/turnover and the conformational change reported by acrylodan at position 23 of the regulatory light chain. Acrylodan-A23C also reports the heads up (extended) to flexed (folded) transition in unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin. This is the first demonstration of direct coupling of nucleotide binding to conformational changes in the N terminus of the regulatory light chain.  相似文献   

2.
Smooth muscle heavy meromyosin, a double-headed proteolytic fragment of myosin lacking the COOH-terminal two-thirds of the tail, has been shown previously to be regulated by phosphorylation. To examine phosphorylation-dependent structural changes near the head-tail junction, we prepared five well regulated heavy meromyosins containing single-cysteine mutants of the human smooth muscle regulatory light chain labeled with the photocross-linking reagent, benzophenone-iodoacetamide. For those mutants that generated cross-links, only one type of cross-linked species was observed, a regulatory light chain dimer. Irradiated mutants fell into two classes. First, for Q15C, A23C, and wild type (Cys-108), a regulatory light chain dimer was formed for dephosphorylated but not thiophosphorylated heavy meromyosin. These data provide direct chemical evidence that in the dephosphorylated state, Gln-15, Ala-23, and Cys-108 on one head are positioned near (within 8.9 A) the regulatory light chain of the partner head and that thiophosphorylation abolishes proximity. This behavior was also observed for the Q15C mutant on a truncated heavy meromyosin lacking both catalytic domains. For the actin-heavy meromyosin complex, cross-links were formed in both de- and thiophosphorylated states. S59C and T134C mutants were in a second mutant class, where regulatory light chain dimers were not detected in dephosphorylated or thiophosphorylated heavy meromyosin, suggesting positions outside the region of interaction of the regulatory light chains.  相似文献   

3.
In the presence of ATP, unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin can form a catalytically inactive monomer that sediments at 10 Svedbergs (10 S). The tail of 10 S bends into thirds and interacts with the regulatory domain. ADP-P(i) is "trapped" at the active site, and consequently the ATPase activity is extremely low. We are interested in the structural basis for maintenance of this off state. Our prior photocross-linking work with 10 S showed that tail residues 1554-1583 are proximal to position 108 in the C-terminal lobe of one of the two regulatory light chains ( Olney, J. J., Sellers, J. R., and Cremo, C. R. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 20375-20384 ). These data suggested that the tail interacts with only one of the two regulatory light chains. Here we present data, using a photocross-linker on position 59 on the N-terminal lobe of the regulatory light chain (RLC), demonstrating that both regulatory light chains of a single molecule can cross-link to the light meromyosin portion of the tail. Mass spectrometric data show four specific cross-linked regions spanning residues 1428-1571 in the light meromyosin portion of the tail, consistent with cross-linking two RLC to one light meromyosin. In addition, we find that position 59 can cross-link internally to residues 42-45 within the same RLC subunit. The internal cross-link only forms in 10 S and not in unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin (lacking the light meromyosin), suggesting a structural rearrangement within the RLC attributed to the interaction of the tail with the head.  相似文献   

4.
To understand the domain requirements of phosphorylation-dependent regulation, we prepared three recombinant constructs of nonmuscle heavy meromyosin IIB containing 1) two complete heads, 2) one complete head and one head lacking the motor domain, and 3) one complete head and one head lacking both motor and regulatory domains. Steady-state ATPase measurements showed that phosphorylation did not alter the affinity for actin by more than a factor of 2 for any construct. Phosphorylation increased V(max) by a factor of 10 for construct 1 and 1.5-3 for construct 2 but had no effect for construct 3. Single turnover measurements, a better measure of slow rates inherent to unphosphorylated regulated myosins, showed that the single-headed construct 2, like construct 3 retains less than 1% of the regulatory properties of the double-headed construct 1 (300-fold activation). Therefore, a complete head cannot be down-regulated by a regulatory domain (without the motor domain) on the partner head. Two motor domains are required for regulation. This result is predicted by a structural model (Wendt, T., Taylor, D., Messier, T., Trybus, K. M., and Taylor, K. A. (1999) J. Cell Biol. 147, 1385-1390) showing interaction between the motor domains for unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin, if motor-motor interaction is the basis for down-regulation.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of ADP and phosphorylation upon the actin binding properties of heavy meromyosin was investigated using three fluorescence methods that monitor the number of heavy meromyosin heads that bind to pyrene-actin: (i) amplitudes of ATP-induced dissociation, (ii) amplitudes of ADP-induced dissociation of the pyrene-actin-heavy meromyosin complex, and (iii) amplitudes of the association of heavy meromyosin with pyrene-actin. Both heads bound to pyrene-actin, irrespective of regulatory light chain phosphorylation or the presence of ADP. This behavior was found for native regulated heavy meromyosin prepared by proteolytic digestion of chicken gizzard myosin with between 5 and 95% heavy chain cleavage at the actin-binding loop, showing that two-head binding is a property of heavy meromyosin with uncleaved heavy chains. These data are in contrast to a previous study using an uncleaved expressed preparation (Berger, C. E., Fagnant, P. M., Heizmann, S., Trybus, K. M., and Geeves, M. A. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 23240-23245), which showed that one head of the unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin-ADP complex bound to actin and that the partner head either did not bind or bound weakly. Possible explanations for the differences between the two studies are discussed. We have shown that unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin appears to adopt a special state in the presence of ADP based upon analysis of actin-heavy meromyosin association rate constants. Data were consistent with one head binding rapidly and the second head binding more slowly in the presence of ADP. Both heads bound to actin at the same rate for all other states.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphorylation of the 20,000 Mr light chain (L20) of gizzard myosin reversibly increased the mobility of myosin in pyrophosphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PP1 PAGE). Gizzard heavy meromyosin (HMM) with phosphorylated L20 also moved faster than that with unphosphorylated L20. This mobility increase of HMM is large enough to account for that of intact myosin. Scallop myosin, desensitized by removing its regulatory light chain, was combined with L20 and subjected to PPi PAGE. Hybrid myosin with the phosphorylated light chain moved faster than that with the unphosphorylated light chain. No such effect of light chain phosphorylation was observed with phosphorylatable light chain from breast or ventricular myosin. Thus, gizzard, but not breast or ventricular phosphorylatable light chain is furnished with the 'regulatory' property that is phosphorylation increases myosin mobility in PPi PAGE.  相似文献   

7.
Incubation of rabbit skeletal myosin with an extract of light chain kinase plus ATP phosphorylated the L2 light chain and modified the steady state kinetics of the actomyosin ATPase. With regulated actin, the ATPase activity of phosphorylated myosin (P-myosin) was 35 to 181% greater than that of unphosphorylated myosin when assayed with 0.05 to 5 micro M Ca2+. Phosphorylation had no effect on the Ca2+ concentration required for half-maximal activity, but it did increase the ATPase activity at low Ca2+. With pure actin, the percentage of increase in the actomyosin ATPase activity correlated with the percentage of phosphorylation of myosin. Steady state kinetic analyses of the actomyosin system indicated that 50 to 82% phosphorylation of myosin decreased significantly the Kapp of actin for myosin with no significant effect on the Vmax. Phosphorylaton of heavy meromyosin similarly modified the steady state kinetics of the acto-heavy meromyosin system. Both the K+/EDTA- and Mg-ATPase activities of P-myosin and phosphorylated heavy meromyosin were within normal limits indicating that phosphorylaiion had not altered significantly the hydrolytic site. Phosphatase treatment of P-myosin decreased both the level of phosphorylation of L2 and the actomyosin ATPase activity to control levels for unphosphorylated myosin. It is concluded levels for unphosphorylated myosin. It is concluded from these results that the ability of P-myosin to modify the steady state kinetics of the actomyosin ATPase was: 1) specific for phosphorylation; 2) independent of the thin filament regulatory proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Previous reports have shown that papain-digested gizzard subfragment-1 (PAP-S1) has a cleaved regulatory light chain (LC20), and Vmax similar to phosphorylated heavy meromyosin (HMM) (Greene et al., Biochemistry 22:530-535, 1983; Sellers et al., J. Biol. Chem. 257:13880-13883, 1982; Umemoto et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264:1431-1436, 1989], while S. aureus protease-digested S-1 (SAP-S1) has intact LC20, but Vmax closer to that of unphosphorylated HMM [Ikebe and Hartshorne, 1985]. To determine whether intact LC20 inhibits ATPase activity for subfragment-1 (S1), we compared the kinetic properties and structures of unphosphorylated PAP-S1 and SAP-S1. SDS-PAGE showed that SAP-S1 had 68 and 24 KDa heavy chain and 20 and 17 KDa light chain components. PAP-S1 (15 minutes digestion at 20 degrees C) also had 68 and 17 KDa bands, but the single 24 KDa band (24HC) was replaced by a group of 22-24 KDa fragments and LC20 was cleaved to a 16 KDa fragment. At 13 mM ionic strength, both PAP-S1 and SAP-S1 had Vmax similar to phosphorylated HMM (1.1-1.5 s-1). SAP-S1 had the same KATPase as phosphorylated HMM (38 microM actin), but KATPase for PAP-S1 was 3-fold stronger (11 microM actin). Subsequent digestion of SAP-S1 with papain did not significantly change Vmax, but as LC20 and 24HC were cleaved, both KATPase and Kbinding strengthened 3- to 5-fold. Thus, intact LC20 did not inhibit, and cleavage of LC20 did not increase Vmax for S1. Rather, papain cleavage of LC20 and 24HC was associated with strengthened actin binding.  相似文献   

9.
Phosphorylation-dependent regulation of Limulus myosin   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Myosin from Limulus, the horseshoe crab, is shown to be regulated by a calcium-calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of its regulatory light chains. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of a Limulus myosin preparation reveals three light chain bands. Two of these light chains have been termed regulatory light chains based on their ability to bind to light chain-denuded scallop myofibrils (Sellers, J. R., Chantler, P. D., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 144, 223-245). Ths other light chain does not bind to these myofibrils and is thus termed the essential light chain. Both Limulus regulatory light chains can be phosphorylated with a highly purified turkey gizzard myosin light chain kinase or with a partially purified myosin light chain kinase which can be isolated from Limulus muscle by affinity chromatography on a calmodulin-Sepharose column. Phosphorylation with both of these enzymes requires calcium and calmodulin. Limulus myosin is isolated in an unphosphorylated form. The MgATPase of this unphosphorylated myosin is only slightly activated by rabbit skeletal muscle actin plus tropomyosin. The calcium-dependent phosphorylation of the myosin results in an increase in the actin-activated MgATPase rate. Once phosphorylated, the actin-activated MgATPase rate is only slightly modified by calcium. This suggests that calcium operates mainly at the level of the myosin kinase-calmodulin system.  相似文献   

10.
Actin-activated MgATPase of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin is activated by thiophosphorylation of two regulatory light chains, one on each head domain. To understand cooperativity between heads, we examined the kinetics of heavy meromyosin (HMM) with one thiophosphorylated head. Proteolytic gizzard heavy meromyosin regulatory light chains were partially exchanged with recombinant thiophosphorylated His-tagged light chains, and HMM with one thiophosphorylated head was isolated by nickel-affinity chromatography. In vitro motility was observed. By steady-state kinetic analysis, one-head thiophosphorylated heavy meromyosin had a similar K(m) value for actin but a V(max) value of approximately 50% of the fully thiophosphorylated molecule. However, single turnover analysis, which is not sensitive to small amounts of active heads, showed that one-head thiophosphorylated heavy meromyosin was 46-120 times more active than unphosphorylated HMM but only 7-19% as active as the fully thiophosphorylated molecule. Discrepancy between the single turnover and steady-state values could be explained by a small fraction of rigor heads. These rigor heads would have a large effect on the steady-state kinetics of one-head thiophosphorylated HMM. In summary, thiophosphorylation of one head leads to a molecule with unique intermediate kinetics suggesting that thiophosphorylation of one head cooperatively alters the kinetics of the partner head and vice versa.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphorylation of the 20,000-dalton light chains of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) from turkey gizzards results in a large increase in the actin-activated MgATPase activity over that observed with unphosphorylated HMM. In an attempt to define which step in the kinetic cycle is affected by phosphorylation, we have measured the binding of both unphosphorylated and phosphorylated HMM to actin in the presence of ATP using sedimentation. There was only a 4-fold difference in the actin binding constants of unphosphorylated HMM (5.35 x 10(3) M-1) and fully phosphorylated HMM (2.35 x 10(4) M-1). In contrast, the maximum rate of the actin-activated MgATPase activity (Vmax) of phosphorylated HMM was 25 times greater than that for unphosphorylated HMM. These data rule out a mechanism whereby the unphosphorylated light chain of myosin regulates actin-myosin interaction by directly or indirectly blocking the binding of HMM to actin. This implies that some step in the kinetic cycle other than the binding of HMM to actin must be regulated. We have also measured the rate constant for ATP hydrolysis (the initial phosphate burst) under the same conditions and found that this step was very fast compared to the steady state ATPase rate and was unaffected by phosphorylation. This suggests that the step which is regulated by phosphorylation is either phosphate release or a step preceding phosphate release but following ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

12.
Smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) can serve as a substrate for the Ca2+-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) as well as for the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase, myosin light chain kinase. When turkey gizzard HMM is incubated with protein kinase C, 1.7-2.2 mol of phosphate are incorporated per mol of HMM, all of it into the 20,000-Da light chain of HMM. Two-dimensional peptide mapping following tryptic hydrolysis revealed that protein kinase C phosphorylated a different site on the 20,000-Da HMM light chain than did myosin light chain kinase. Moreover, sequential phosphorylation of HMM by myosin light chain kinase and protein kinase C resulted in the incorporation of 4 mol of phosphate/mol of HMM, i.e. 2 mol of phosphate into each 20,000-Da light chain. When unphosphorylated HMM was phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase, its actin-activated MgATPase activity increased from 4 nmol to 156 nmol of phosphate released/mg of HMM/min. Subsequent phosphorylation of this phosphorylated HMM by protein kinase C decreased the actin-activated MgATPase activity of HMM to 75 nmol of phosphate released/mg of HMM/min.  相似文献   

13.
We examined the regulatory importance of interactions between regulatory light chain (RLC), essential light chain (ELC), and adjacent heavy chain (HC) in the regulatory domain of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin. After mutating the HC, RLC, and/or ELC to disrupt their predicted interactions (using scallop myosin coordinates), we measured basal ATPase, V(max), and K(ATPase) of actin-activated ATPase, actin-sliding velocities, rigor binding to actin, and kinetics of ATP binding and ADP release. If unphosphorylated, all mutants were similar to wild type showing turned-off behaviors. In contrast, if phosphorylated, mutation of RLC residues smM129Q and smG130C in the F-G helix linker, which interact with the ELC (Ca(2+) binding in scallop), was sufficient to abolish motility and diminish ATPase activity, without altering other parameters. ELC mutations within this interacting ELC loop (smR20M and smK25A) were normal, but smM129Q/G130C-R20M or -K25A showed a partially recovered phenotype suggesting that interaction between the RLC and ELC is important. A molecular dynamics study suggested that breaking the RLC/ELC interface leads to increased flexibility at the interface and ELC-binding site of the HC. We hypothesize that this leads to hampered activation by allowing a pre-existing equilibrium between activated and inhibited structural distributions (Vileno, B., Chamoun, J., Liang, H., Brewer, P., Haldeman, B. D., Facemyer, K. C., Salzameda, B., Song, L., Li, H. C., Cremo, C. R., and Fajer, P. G. (2011) Broad disorder and the allosteric mechanism of myosin II regulation by phosphorylation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 108, 8218-8223) to be biased strongly toward the inhibited distribution even when the RLC is phosphorylated. We propose that an important structural function of RLC phosphorylation is to promote or assist in the maintenance of an intact RLC/ELC interface. If the RLC/ELC interface is broken, the off-state structures are no longer destabilized by phosphorylation.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of calcium ions on conformational changes of F-actin initiated by decoration of thin filaments with phosphorylated and dephosphorylated heavy meromyosin from smooth muscles was studied by fluorescence polarization spectroscopy. It is shown that heavy meromyosin with phosphorylated regulatory light chains (pHMM) promotes structural changes of F-actin which are typical for the "strong" binding of actin to the myosin heads. Heavy meromyosin with dephosphorylated regulatory light chains (dpHMM) causes conformational changes of F-actin which are typical for the "weak" binding of actin to the myosin heads. The presence of calcium enhances the pHMM effect and attenuates the dpHMM effect. We propose that a Ca2+-dependent mechanism exists in smooth muscles which modulates the regulation of actin--myosin interaction occurring via phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains.  相似文献   

15.
Saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to investigate the rotational motion of the head domains of native and desensitized scallop myosin and its proteolytic subfragments. Scallop myosin was spin-labelled with 4-(2-iodoacetamido)-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinooxyl, which reacted with a heavy chain residue in the subfragment 1 domain. As previously shown for rabbit skeletal muscle myosin (Thomas et al., 1975), the two head domains of native scallop myosin appear to have independent motion (rotational correlation time, pi, = 0.8 X 10(-7) s for subfragment 1; 1.4 X 10(-7) s for myosin). However, removal of a regulatory light chain, to effect desensitization of the actin-activated ATPase, was associated with an increase in pi for myosin to a value of 2.4 X 10(-6) s. The Ca2+ sensitivity and initial correlation time were restored on recombination of the regulatory light chain in the presence of Mg2+. Sedimentation velocity profiles in an analytical ultracentrifuge indicated that the desensitized myosin preparations were largely monomeric and therefore the change in pi appears to reflect an intramolecular event. Addition of EDTA to spin-labelled scallop heavy meromyosin caused an immediate 2.5 to 4-fold increase in pi and a partial desensitization of the ATPase activity. Comparable experiments with subfragment 1 yielded a barely detectable increase in pi (1.5-fold) in the first ten minutes. The restricted rotational motion observed in desensitized myosin and heavy meromyosin could arise by a conformational change in the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 hinge region or by an association of one head with its partner. The latter mechanism, involving the exposed light chain binding site, would also explain the preferential release of one regulatory light chain from scallop myosin, and might account for some other co-operative effects observed in this molecule (Bagshaw, 1980).  相似文献   

16.
Li XD  Saito J  Ikebe R  Mabuchi K  Ikebe M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(9):2254-2260
Recent findings have suggested that the interaction between the two heads is critical for phosphorylation-dependent regulation of smooth muscle myosin. We hypothesized that the interaction between the two regulatory light chains on two heads of myosin dictates the regulation of myosin motor function. To evaluate this notion, we engineered and characterized smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM), which is composed of one entire HMM heavy chain and one motor domain truncated heavy chain containing the S2 rod and regulatory light chain (RLC) binding site, as well as the bound RLC (SMDHMM). SMDHMM was inactive for both actin-translocating activity and actin-activated ATPase activity in the dephosphorylated state, demonstrating that the interaction between the two RLC domains on the two heads and/or a motor domain and a RLC domain in a distinct head is sufficient for the inhibition of smooth muscle myosin motor activity. When phosphorylated, SMDHMM was activated for both actin-translocating activity and actin-activated ATPase activity; however, these activities were lower than those of double-headed HMM, implying partial release of inhibition by phosphorylation in SMDHMM and/or cooperativity between the two heads of smooth muscle myosin. The present results indicate that the RLC domain is critical for phosphorylation-dependent regulation of smooth muscle myosin motor activity. On the other hand, similar to double-headed HMM, SMDHMM showed both "folded" and "extended" conformations, and the ratio of those conformations is dependent on ionic strength, suggesting that the RLC domain is sufficient to regulate the conformational transition in myosin.  相似文献   

17.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is known to bind to thin filaments and myosin filaments. Telokin, an independently expressed protein with an identical amino acid sequence to that of the C-terminal domain of MLCK, has been shown to bind to unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin. Thus, the functional significance of the C-terminal domain and the molecular morphology of MLCK were examined in detail. The C-terminal domain was removed from MLCK by alpha-chymotryptic digestion, and the activity of the digested MLCK was measured using myosin or the isolated 20-kDa light chain (LC20) as a substrate. The results showed that the digestion increased K(m) for myosin 3-fold whereas it did not change the value for LC20. In addition, telokin inhibited the phosphorylation of myosin by MLCK by increasing K(m) but only slightly increased K(m) for LC20. Electron microscopy indicated that MLCK was an elongated molecule but was flexible so as to form folded conformations. MLCK was crosslinked to unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide in the absence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM), and electron microscopic observation of the products revealed that the MLCK molecule bound to the head-tail junction of heavy meromyosin. These results suggest that MLCK binds to the head-tail junction of unphosphorylated myosin through its C-terminal domain, where LC20 can be promptly phosphorylated through its catalytic domain following the Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent activation.  相似文献   

18.
The vertebrate genetic locus, coding for a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent enzyme myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), the key regulator of smooth muscle contraction and cell motility, reveals a complex organization. Two MLCK isoforms are encoded by the MLCK genetic locus. Recently identified M(r) 210 kDa MLCK contains a sequence of smooth muscle/non-muscle M(r) 108 kDa MLCK and has an additional N-terminal sequence (Watterson et al., 1995. FEBS Lett. 373 : 217). A gene for an independently expressed non-kinase product KRP (telokin) is located within the MLCK gene (Collinge et al., 1992. Mol. Cell. Biol. 12 : 2359). KRP binds to and regulates the structure of myosin filaments (Shirinsky et al., 1993. J. Biol. Chem. 268 : 16578). Here we compared biochemical properties of MLCK-210 and MLCK-108 and studied intracellular localization of MLCK-210. MLCK-210 was isolated from extract of chicken aorta by immunoprecipitation using specific antibody and biochemically analysed in vitro. MLCK-210 phosphorylated myosin regulatory light chain and heavy meromyosin. The Ca(2+)-dependence and specific activity of MLCK-210 were similar to that of MLCK-108 from turkey gizzard. Using sedimentation assay we demonstrated that MLCK-210 as well as MLCK-108 binds to both actin and myosin filaments. MLCK-210 was localized in smooth muscle cell layers of aortic wall and was found to co-localize with microfilaments in cultured aortic smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of magnesium-for-calcium exchange and phosphorylation of regulatory light chain (LC2) on structural organization of rabbit skeletal myosin head was studied by limited tryptic digestion. In the presence of actin, exchange of magnesium bound to LC2 by calcium in dephosphorylated myosin accelerates the digestion of myosin and heavy meromyosin heavy chain and increases the accumulation of a 50 kDa fragment. This effect is significantly diminished in the case of phosphorylated myosin. Thus, both phosphorylation and cation exchange influences the effect of actin binding on the structural organization of myosin head.  相似文献   

20.
We have shown that the phosphorylation of smooth muscle regulatory myosin light chain (L20) with myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) produces faster moving bands (GMP1: heterodimer myosin with 1 unphosphorylated L20 and 1 mono-phosphorylated L20, GMP2: homodimer myosin with 2 mono-phosphorylated L20S) on native pyrophosphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PP1 PAGE) (J. Biochem. 100, 259-268, 1986; J. Biochem. 100, 1681-1684, 1986). However, the mobility of the myosin phosphorylated, at its L20, with protein kinase C (PK-C) was the same that of the unphosphorylated myosin (GM) on PPi PAGE. When the myosin prephosphorylated with MLCK was further phosphorylated with PK-C, PPi PAGE analysis showed only one band comigrating with GM, i.e., GMP1 and GMP2 migrated to the same position as GM. Conversely, when the myosin prephosphorylated with PK-C was further phosphorylated with MLCK, GMP1 and GMP2 were not produced. Thus the effect of L20 phosphorylated with PK-C is quite the opposite of that with MLCK, and the former predominated over the latter. We speculate that phosphorylation of L20 with PK-C "freezes" myosin in the inactive state.  相似文献   

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