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1.
2.
Fluorescence spectra of ANM-labeled, glycerinated rabbit psoas muscle fibers were recorded in relaxed, contracted, and rigor states. SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the ANM-labeled muscle fibers indicated that proteins labeled with ANM were myosin heavy chain, C protein, and actin. In a relaxed state in the presence of ATP, myosin heavy chain was mainly labeled. During the transition from rigor to the relaxed or contracted state, there was a blue shift (about 5 nm) of the ANM emission spectrum. Similar experiments with FAM (N-(3-fluoranthyl)-maleimide)-labeled muscle fibers showed that these fluorescence changes were not artifacts due to the movement of muscle fibers. The fibers labeled in the ATP relaxing solution showed a marked decrease in both isometric force and unloaded shortening velocity (Vo), while in the fibers labeled in the rigor solution isometric tension was not markedly suppressed, though Vo decreased to the same extent as in the fibers labeled in the ATP relaxing solution. Fluorescence spectra of ANM-labeled HMM in different states were also measured. A fluorescence enhancement and a blue shift (about 5 nm) of the emission maximum were observed in HMM + MgATP or HMM + MgATP + F-actin in comparison with HMM + F-actin. These results suggest that the fluorescence spectra of the ANM-labeled muscle fibers reflect their conformational changes between the rigor state (in the absence of MgATP) and the relaxed or contracted state (in the presence of MgATP).  相似文献   

3.
Hydrostatic compression in glycerinated rabbit muscle fibers.   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Glycerinated muscle fibers isolated from rabbit psoas muscle, and a number of other nonmuscle elastic fibers including glass, rubber, and collagen, were exposed to hydrostatic pressures of up to 10 MPa (100 Atm) to determine the pressure sensitivity of their isometric tension. The isometric tension of muscle fibers in the relaxed state (passive tension) was insensitive to increased pressure, whereas the muscle fiber tension in rigor state increased linearly with pressure. The tension of all other fiber types (except rubber) also increased with pressure; the rubber tension was pressure insensitive. The pressure sensitivity of rigor tension was 2.3 kN/m2/MPa and, in comparison with force/extension relation determined at atmospheric pressure, the hydrostatic compression in rigor muscle fibers was estimated to be 0.03% Lo/MPa. As reported previously, the active muscle fiber tension is depressed by increased pressure. The possible underlying basis of the different pressure-dependent tension behavior in relaxed, rigor, and active muscle is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The polarization properties of light diffracted from single-skinned fibers of skeletal muscles have been examined under conditions in which the bathing solution pH and the ionic strength are changed. For fibers in the relaxed state, we observe large decreases in both the total depolarization signal, r, and the total diffraction birefringence signal, delta nT, upon pH change from 7.0 to 8.0 at normal ionic strength. However, if the ionic strength is raised, then the r-value change as the pH changes from pH 7.0 to pH 8.0 is much smaller. If the rigor state is achieved at pH 8.0, and 0 mM ATP under either of the ionic strength conditions, the fiber can still be stretched. Rigor stiffness for this state is only approximately 20% that of the value of the stiffness at pH 7.0 rigor. Electron micrographs obtained under this pH 8.0 rigor state show that the overlap region can be decreased upon stretching the fiber, signifying a different kind of weaker-binding rigor state. Optically, the weaker-binding rigor state has a lower depolarization signal and larger form birefringence than the strong-binding rigor state. To convert from one type of rigor state (pH 7.0) to the other rigor state (pH 8.0), or vice versa, the fiber must first be relaxed. Apparently, either of the rigor states can block the full impact of the pH effect.  相似文献   

5.
Radial forces within muscle fibers in rigor   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Considering the widely accepted cross-bridge model of muscle contraction (Huxley. 1969. Science [Wash. D. C.]. 164:1356-1366), one would expect that attachment of angled cross-bridges would give rise to radial as well as longitudinal forces in the muscle fiber. These forces would tend, in most instances, to draw the myofilaments together and to cause the fiber to decrease in width. Using optical techniques, we have observed significant changes in the width of mechanically skinned frog muscle fibers when the fibers are put into rigor by deleting ATP from the bathing medium. Using a high molecular weight polymer polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP-40; number average mol. wt. (Mn) = 40,000) in the bathing solution, we were able to estimate the magnitude of the radial forces by shrinking the relaxed fiber to the width observed with rigor induction. With rigor, fiber widths decreased up to approximately 10%, with shrinking being greater at shorter sarcomere spacing and at lower PVP concentrations. At higher PVP concentrations, some fibers actually swelled slightly. Radial pressures seen with rigor in 2 and 4% PVP ranged up to 8.9 x 10(3) N/m2. Upon rigor induction, fibers exerted a longitudinal force of approximately 1 x 10(5) N/m2 that was inhibited by high PVP concentrations (greater than or equal to 13%). In very high PVP concentrations (greater than or equal to 20%), fibers exerted an anomalous force, independent of ATP, which ranged up to 6 x 10(4) N/m2 at 60% PVP. Assuming that all the radial force is the result of cross- bridge attachment, we calculated that rigor cross-bridges exert a radial force of 0.2 x 1.2 x 10(-9) N per thick filament in sarcomeres near rest length. This force is of roughly the same order of magnitude as the longitudinal force per thick filament in rigor contraction or in maximal (calcium-activated) contraction of skinned fibers in ATP- containing solutions. Inasmuch as widths of fibers stretched well beyond overlap of thick and thin filaments decreased with rigor, other radially directed forces may be operating in parallel with cross-bridge forces.  相似文献   

6.
S Xu  L C Yu    M Schoenberg 《Biophysical journal》1998,74(3):1110-1114
Using x-ray diffraction and mechanical stiffness, the response of N-phenylmaleimide (NPM)-reacted cross-bridges to solutions containing different amounts of ATP and Mg2+ has been studied. In relaxing solution containing greater than millimolar amounts of ATP and Mg2+, NPM-treated muscle fibers give x-ray diffraction patterns and stiffness records, which are nearly indistinguishable from those of untreated relaxed fibers. In a solution devoid of added ATP, but with Mg2+ (rigor(+Mg) solution), the muscle fibers still give x-ray diffraction patterns and mechanical responses characteristic of relaxed muscle. The new finding reported here is that in a solution devoid of both ATP and Mg2+ (rigor(-Mg) solution containing EDTA with no added ATP), NPM-reacted cross-bridges do give rigor-like behavior. This is the first report that NPM-reacted cross-bridges, at least in the presence of EDTA, are capable of going into a strongly binding conformation.  相似文献   

7.
The intensity of light scattered by chemically skinned rabbit psoas fibers in relaxed, rigor, and activated states was monitored at 90 degrees to the incident beam. In the relaxed state, scattering varied in proportion to the volume of muscle in the beam. Scattering increased to 2.3 times the resting value when rigor was induced by withdrawal of MgATP or when the myofibrils were activated by the caffeine-induced release of Ca from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The rigor-induced increase in scattering decreased monotonically when MgATP was reintroduced stepwise (0-100 microM). This decrease in scattering was accompanied by an increase in tension up to an optimum MgATP level of approximately 10 microM, and then tension decreased at higher concentrations (10-100 microM). The increase in scattering during both rigor and activation was dependent upon fiber length. At lengths when thick-thin filament overlap was near zero, the light signal due to rigor and activation fell to within 10% of the signal for the relaxed fiber at that length. The signal during rigor increased only minimally (approximately 10%) when stretch (approximately 1%) was applied. This increase in signal was small despite a measured 5- to 10-fold increase in tension and an estimated twofold increase in stiffness. Thus, the increased light scattering caused by rigor and activation depends on filament overlap and not tension, stiffness, or substrate binding.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of ATP-induced rigor cross-bridge detachment were studied by initiating relaxation in chemically skinned trabeculae of the guinea pig heart using photolytic release of ATP in the absence of calcium ions (pCa > 8). The time course of the fall in tension exhibited either an initial plateau phase of variable duration with little change in tension or a rise in tension, followed by a decrease to relaxed levels. The in-phase component of tissue stiffness initially decreased. The rate then slowed near the end of the tension plateau, indicating transient cross-bridge rebinding, before falling to relaxed levels. Estimates of the apparent second-order rate constant for ATP-induced detachment of rigor cross-bridges based on the half-time for relaxation or on the half-time to the convergence of tension records to a common time course were similar at 3 x 10(3) M-1 s-1. Because the characteristics of the mechanical transients observed during relaxation from rigor were markedly similar to those reported from studies of rabbit psoas fibers in the presence of MgADP (Dantzig, J. A., M. G. Hibberd, D. R. Trentham, and Y. E. Goldman. 1991. Cross-bridge kinetics in the presence of MgADP investigated by photolysis of caged ATP in rabbit psoas muscle fibres. J. Physiol. 432:639-680), direct measurements of MgADP using [3H]ATP in cardiac tissue in rigor were made. Results indicated that during rigor, nearly 18% of the cross-bridges in skinned trabeculae had [3H]MgADP bound. Incubation of the tissue during rigor with apyrase, an enzyme with both ADPase and ATPase activity, reduced the level of [3H]MgADP to that measured following a 2-min chase in a solution containing 5 mM unlabeled MgATP. Apyrase incubation also significantly reduced the tension and stiffness transients, so that both time courses became monotonic and could be fit with a simple model for cross-bridge detachment. The apparent second-order rate constant for ATP-induced rigor cross-bridge detachment measured in the apyrase treated tissue at 4 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 was faster than that measured in untreated tissue. Nevertheless, this rate was still over an order of magnitude slower than the analogous rate measured in previous studies of isolated cardiac actomyosin-S1. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the presence of MgADP bound cross-bridges suppresses the inhibition normally imposed by the thin filament regulatory system in the absence of calcium ions and allows cross-bridge rebinding and force production during relaxation from rigor.  相似文献   

9.
Two attached non-rigor crossbridge forms in insect flight muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have performed thin-section electron microscopy on muscle fibers fixed in different mechanically monitored states, in order to identify structural changes in myosin crossbridges associated with force production and maintenance. Tension and stiffness of fibers from glycerinated Lethocerus flight muscle were monitored during a sequence of conditions using AMPPNP and then AMPPNP plus increasing concentrations of ethylene glycol, which brought fibers through a graded sequence from rigor relaxation. Two intermediate crossbridge forms distinct from the rigor or relaxed forms were observed. The first was produced by AMPPNP at 20 degrees C, which reduced isometric tension 60 to 70% below rigor level without reducing rigor stiffness. Electron microscopy of these fibers showed that, in spite of the drop in tension, no obvious change from the 45 degrees crossbridge angle characteristic of rigor occurred. However, the thick filament ends of the crossbridges were altered from their rigor positions, so that they now marked a 14.5 nm repeat, and formed four separate origins at each crossbridge level. The bridges were also less slewed and bent than rigor bridges, as seen in transverse sections. The second crossbridge form was seen in glycol-AMPPNP at 4 degrees C, just below the glycol concentration that produced mechanical relaxation. These fibers retained 90% of rigor stiffness at 40 Hz oscillation, but would not bear sustained tension. Stiffness was also high in the presence of calcium at room temperature under similar conditions. Electron microscopy showed crossbridges projecting from the thick filaments at an angle that centered around 90 degrees, rather than the 45 degree angle familiar from rigor. This coupling of relaxed appearance with persistent stiffness suggests that the 90 degree form may represent a weakly attached crossbridge state like that proposed to precede force development in current models of the crossbridge power stroke.  相似文献   

10.
Properties of the rigor state in muscle can be explained by a simple cross-bridge model, of the type which has been suggested for active muscle, in which detachment of cross-bridges by ATP is excluded. Two attached cross-bridge states, with distinct force vs. distortion relationships, are required, in addition to a detached state, but the attached cross-bridge states in rigor muscle appear to differ significantly from the attached cross-bridge states in active muscle. The stability of the rigor force maintained in muscle under isometric conditions does not require exceptional stability of the attached cross-bridges, if the positions in which attachment of cross-bridges is allowed are limited so that the attachment of cross-bridges in positions which have minimum free energy is excluded. This explanation of the stability of the rigor state may also be applicable to the maintenance of stable rigor waves on flagella.  相似文献   

11.
We show prolonged contraction of permeabilized muscle fibers of the frog during which structural order, as judged from low-angle x-ray diffraction, was preserved by means of partial cross-linking of the fibers using the zero-length cross-linker 1-ethyl-3-[3-dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide. Ten to twenty percent of the myosin cross-bridges were cross-linked, allowing the remaining 80-90% to cycle and generate force. These fibers displayed a well-preserved sarcomeric order and mechanical characteristics similar to those of intact muscle fibers. The intensity of the brightest meridional reflection at 14.5 nm, resulting from the projection of cross-bridges evenly spaced along the myofilament length, decreased by 60% as a relaxed fiber was deprived of ATP and entered the rigor state. Upon activation of a rigorized fiber by the addition of ATP, the intensity of this reflection returned to 97% of the relaxed value, suggesting that the overall orientation of cross-bridges in the active muscle was more perpendicular to the filament axis than in rigor. Following a small-amplitude length step applied to the active fibers, the reflection intensity decreased for both releases and stretches. In rigor, however, a small stretch increased the amplitude of the reflection by 35%. These findings show the close link between cross-bridge orientation and tension changes.  相似文献   

12.
This paper presents the results of simultaneous measurements of the electron paramagnetic resonance signal of spin-label bound to myosin cross-bridges and the mechanical response of glycerol-treated rabbit psoas fibers under isometric contraction. No observable change has been detected in vitro in the local motion of spin-label bound to myosin-ATP with conventional electron paramagnetic resonance techniques when F-actin is added, even under conditions where more than 30% of the myosin is expected to be in an attached state. In contrast, a clear change in the spin-label mobility is observed when cross-bridges are attached to thin filaments. Similar spectra are also observed when cross-bridges are in the rigor state or in an attached state in the presence of 5′-adenylyl imidodiphosphate in place of ATP. A good proportionality is found between the change in the electron paramagnetic resonance signal and the tension when substrate concentration is varied under conditions where no appreciable amount of rigor complex is present. Thus, by assuming 0 and 100% attachment in the relaxed and rigor states, respectively, the extent of cross-bridge attachment can be estimated; it is about 80% at a relatively low ATP concentration where the maximum tension is observed, while it is about 35% in the millimolar range of ATP concentration. A consistent explanation can be given for the spectra obtained both in solution and in the fiber, provided that two distinct states, the preactive and active states, exist in cross-bridges attached to thin filaments. The contribution of intermediate complexes to the force generation is discussed. The effect of Ca2+ control on cross-bridge attachment is also studied at various concentrations of substrate.  相似文献   

13.
Two rigor states in skinned crayfish single muscle fibers   总被引:8,自引:3,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
We studied the tension and stiffness of crayfish skinned single muscle fibers during and after the induction of rigor by removal of MgATP (substrate). We found that the rigor state is not unique but depends on the condition of the muscle before rigor. Fibers induced into rigor with a minimum of activation (low rigor) develop a small tension and moderate stiffness, while those entering rigor during maximum activation (high rigor) maintain near peak tension (80%) and develop a high stiffness. These rigor states are insensitive to Ca addition or deletion but they are partially interconvertible by length change. Stiffness changes when the rigor muscle length is varied, a condition in which the number of attached cross-rigor muscle length is varied, a condition in which the number of attached cross-bridges cannot change, and high-rigor muscle becomes less stiff than low-rigor muscle when the former is brought to the same tension by length release. The sensitivity of low, high, or length-released high-rigor muscles to trace substrate concentration (less than muM) differs, and rigor at lower strain is more suscepitible to substrate.  相似文献   

14.
Muscle cross-bridge kinetics in rigor and in the presence of ATP analogues.   总被引:11,自引:6,他引:5  
Recently we reported preliminary mechanical experiments on freshly skinned rabbit psoas fibers that suggested that while almost all of the cross-bridges are attached to actin in the presence of 4 mM adenyl-5'-yl-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) (ionic strength, 0.13 M), there is an equilibrium between the attached and detached states, so that, in the presence of 4 mM AMP-PNP, fibers should not be able to maintain tension (Schoenberg, et al., 1984, in Contractile Mechanisms in Muscle, Pollack and Sugi, editors., Plenum Publishing Corp., NY). Since this suggestion was at variance with published results of Clarke and Tregear (1982, FEBS [Fed. Eur. Biochem. Soc.] Lett, 143:217), we reinvestigated the ability of rabbit psoas fibers to support tension following a 2-nm stretch in rigor and in the presence of the nucleotide analogues, PPi and AMP-PNP, for analogue concentrations ranging from 0.25 to 4 mM. We find that, whereas in rigor there is very little tension decay following a stretch, in 4 mM nucleotide analogue solution, the force generated by stretch quickly decays to zero. The force decay is not exponential; rather, it can be described by rate constants that range from approximately 0.1 to 100 s-1 in 4 mM PPi, and 0.01 to 10 s-1 in 4 mM AMP-PNP. This large range of decay rate constants may be partially related to the dependence of either analogue binding or cross-bridge dissociation upon strain, since we find that the rate constants for force decay decrease with decreasing size of stretch or with decrease of analogue concentration below the maximum studied (4 mM).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
K Ajtai  T P Burghardt 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6203-6207
The fluorescence polarization from rhodamine labels specifically attached to the fast-reacting thiol of the myosin cross-bridge in glycerinated muscle fibers has been measured to determine the angular distribution of the cross-bridges in different physiological states of the fibers as a function of temperature. To investigate the fibers at temperatures below 0 degree C, we have added glycerol to the bathing solution as an anti-freezing agent. We find that the fluorescence polarization from the rhodamine probe detects distinct angular distributions of the cross-bridges in isometric-active, rigor, MgADP, and low ionic strength relaxed fibers at 4 degrees C. We also find that the rigor cross-bridges in the presence of glycerol can maintain at least two distinct orientations relative to the actin filament, one dominant at temperatures T greater than 2 degrees C and another dominant at T less than -10 degrees C. MgADP cross-bridges in the presence of glycerol maintain approximately the same orientation for all temperatures investigated. The rigor cross-bridge orientation at T less than -10 degrees C is similar to both the MgADP cross-bridge orientation in the presence of glycerol and the active muscle cross-bridge orientation at 4 degrees C. These findings show that the rigor cross-bridge in the presence of glycerol has at least two distinct orientations while attached to actin: one of them dominant at high temperature, the other dominant at low temperature or when MgADP is present. The latter orientation resembles that present in isometric-active fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Previous work with tetanized and relaxed muscle has shown a correlation between active tension and the structure of the Z-band. This suggests that there is a correlation between the cross-bridge binding in the A-band and the structure of the Z-band. Using electron microscopy and optical diffraction we have examined this correlation in glycerinated muscle in rigor and in unstimulated intact muscle. We have found that the Z-bands of muscles in rigor always show the basketweave form, while those of the unstimulated muscles always show the small square form. The basketweave form found in rigor muscles is similar in form and dimension to that found in tetanized muscle. Thus it appears that the small square form of the Z-band is found in physiological states with little cross-bridge binding and the basketweave form is found in states with a high degree of cross-bridge binding.  相似文献   

17.
Radial stiffness in various conditions of mechanically skinned fibers of semitendinosus muscle of Rana catesbeiana was determined by compressing the fiber with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP K-30, Mr = 40,000) in incubating solution. The change in width (D) of fibers with increasing and decreasing PVP concentrations was highly reproducible at a range 0-6% PVP. Radial stiffness of relaxed fibers was almost independent of the sarcomere length. On the other hand, radial stiffness of rigor fibers showed a linear relation against the sarcomere length. These results indicate that cross-bridge attachment would be a major factor in the increase of the radial stiffness. Radial stiffness of relaxed and rigor fibers was (2.14 +/- 0.52) X 10(4) N/m2 (mean +/- SD) and (8.76 +/- 2.04) X 10(4) N/m2, respectively, at the relative fiber width (D/D0) of 0.92, where D0 denotes the fiber width in the rigor solution at 0% PVP. Radial stiffness of a fiber in a rigor solution containing pyrophosphate (PPi) was between those of relaxed and rigor fibers, i.e., (4.76 +/- 0.86) X 10(4) N/m2 at D/Do of 0.92. In PPi and rigor solutions, radial stiffness reversibly increased to around 150 and 130%, respectively, in the presence of 10(-6) M Ca2+. To explain these results, especially the Ca2+-induced change in the radial stiffness, some factor in addition to the number of attached cross-bridges has to be taken into account. The variation of radial stiffness under various conditions will be discussed in relation to the possible manner of cross-bridge attachment.  相似文献   

18.
When skeletal muscle fibers are subjected to a hydrostatic pressure of 10 MPa (100 atmospheres), reversible changes in tension occur. Passive tension from relaxed muscle is unaffected, rigor tension rises, and active tension falls. The effects of pressure on muscle structure are unknown: therefore a pressure-resistant cell for x-ray diffraction has been built, and this paper reports the first study of the low-angle equatorial patterns of pressurized relaxed, rigor, and active muscle fibers, with direct comparisons from the same chemically skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers at 0.1 and 10 MPa. Relaxed and rigor fibers show little change in the intensity of the equatorial reflections when pressurized to 10 MPa, but there is a small, reversible expansion of the lattice of 0.7 and 0.4%, respectively. This shows that the order and stability of the myofilament lattice is undisturbed by this pressure. The rise in rigor tension under pressure is thus probably due to axial shortening of one or more components of the sarcomere. Initial results from active fibers at 0.1 MPa show that when phosphate is added the lattice spacing and equatorial intensities change toward their relaxed values. This indicates cross-bridge detachment, as expected from the reduction in tension that phosphate induces. 10 MPa in the presence of phosphate at 11 degrees C causes tension to fall by a further 12%, but not change is detected in the relative intensity of the reflections, only a small increase in lattice spacing. Thus pressure appears to increase the proportion of attached cross-bridges in a low-force state.  相似文献   

19.
The activity and role of creatine kinase (CK) associated with contractile proteins of smooth muscle have been investigated using skinned guinea-pig taenia coli fibers. Total CK activity was 163 +/- 22 IU/g (ww) and agarose electrophoresis showed BB, MB, and MM isoforms (BB-CK being the predominant isoenzyme). After skinning for 1 h with Triton X-100, BB-CK was specifically associated with the myofibrils, representing 22% of the preskinned CK activity. When relaxed fibers were exposed to pCa 9 in the presence of 250 microM ADP, 0 ATP and 12 mM PCr, tension was not significantly different from resting tension, but changing to pCa 4.5 caused the fibers to generate 59.1 +/- 5.2 percent of maximal tension. When a high-tension rigor state was achieved (250 microM ADP, 0 ATP, 0 PCr, and pCa 9), the addition of 12 mM PCr effected significant relaxation. These observations implicate an endogenous form of BB-CK, associated with the myofilaments and capable of producing enough ATP for submaximal tension generation and significant relaxation from rigor conditions. It was also shown that ADP is bound to the myofibrils and available for rephosphorylation by BB-CK. These results suggest co-localization of ATPase, MLCK and CK on the contractile proteins of the taenia coli. This enzymic association may play a role in the compartmentation of adenine nucleotides in smooth muscle.  相似文献   

20.
Julian Borejdo  Susan Putnam 《BBA》1977,459(3):578-595
Single skinned glycerinated muscle fibers were labelled with the fluorescent dye N-(iodoacetylamino)-1-naphthylamine-5-sulfonic acid (1,5-IAEDANS). The heavy chain of myosin (EC 3.6.1.3) was labelled predominantly when the reaction was carried out in relaxation at 0 °C. Mechanical properties of skinned fibers were little affected by labelling with the fluorophore. Rigor tension developed upon transferring native or labelled skinned fibers from relaxing to rigor solutions lacking Ca2+ was very small but could be enhanced by progressively increasing Ca2+ concentration; the rigor tension decreased with increasing sarcomere length.Polarization of fluorescence of skinned fibers reacted with 1,5-IAEDANS was measured along the line of excitation as well as at 90° to it. The mean values of parallel and perpendicular components of polarization of labelled fibers measured at 0° were close to the values obtained for native fibers irrigated with 1,5-IAEDANS-labelled heavy meromyosin, fiber “ghosts” irrigated with labelled heavy meromyosin, and oriented bundles of myofibrils reacted with the same fluorophore. Skinned fibers stretched above the rest length and then irrigated with 1,5-IAEDANS-labelled heavy meromyosin gave rise to polarized fluorescence close to the values theoretically predicted for an assembly of helically arranged fluorophores. Using 90° detection system a satisfactory fit to the theory could be obtained from single fibers labelled with 1,5-IAEDANS and measured in rigor. The angle between the fiber axis and the direction of the emission dipole of 1,5-IAEDANS attached to subfragment-1 was estimated to be near 40°.  相似文献   

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