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1.
Actin contains a single high-affinity cation-binding site, for which Ca2+ and Mg2+ can compete, and multiple low-affinity cation-binding sites, which can bind Ca2+, Mg2+, or K+. Binding of cations to the low-affinity sites causes polymerization of monomeric actin with either Ca2+ or Mg2+ at the high-affinity site. A rapid conformational change occurs upon binding of cations to the low-affinity sites (G----G) which is apparently associated with the initiation of polymerization. A much slower conformational change (G----G', or G----G' if the low-affinity sites are also occupied) follows the replacement of Ca2+ by Mg2+ at the high-affinity site. This slow conformational change is reflected in a 13% increase in the fluorescence of G-actin labeled with the fluorophore 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzene-2-oxadiazole (NBD-labeled actin). The rate of the ATP hydrolysis that accompanies elongation is slower with Ca-G-actin than with Mg-G'-actin (i.e. with Ca2+ rather than Mg2+ at the high-affinity site) although their rates of elongation are similar. The slow ATP hydrolysis on Ca-F-actin causes a lag in the increase in fluorescence associated with the elongation of actin labeled with the fluorophore N-pyrene iodoacetamide (pyrenyl-labeled actin), even though there is no lag in the elongation rate, because pyrenyl-labeled ATP-F-actin subunits have a lower fluorescence intensity than pyrenyl-labeled ADP-F-actin subunits. The effects of the cation bound to the high-affinity binding site must, therefore, be considered in quantitatively analyzing the kinetics of polymerization of NBD-labeled actin and pyrenyl-labeled actin. Although their elongation rates are not very different, the rate of nucleation is much slower for Ca-G-actin than for Mg-G'-actin, probably because of the slower rate of ATP hydrolysis when Ca2+ is bound to the high-affinity site.  相似文献   

2.
The role of tightly bound ADP on chloroplast ATPase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Isolated chloroplast coupling factor 1 ATPase is known to retain about 1 mol of tightly bound ADP/mol of enzyme. Some experimental results have given evidence that the bound ADP is at catalytic sites, but this view has not been supported by observations of a slow replacement of the bound ADP when CaATP or MgATP is added. The experiments reported in this paper show why a slow replacement of ADP bound at a catalytic site can occur. When coupling factor 1, labeled with tightly bound [3H]ADP, is exposed to Mg2+ or Ca2+ prior to the addition of MgATP or CaATP, a pronounced lag in the onset of ATP hydrolysis is observed, and only slow replacement of the [3H]ADP occurs. Mg2+ or Ca2+ can induce inhibition very rapidly, as if an inhibited form of the enzyme results whenever the enzyme with tightly bound ADP encounters Mg2+ or Ca2+ prior to ATP. The inhibited form can be slowly reactivated by incubation with EDTA, although some irreversible loss in activity is encountered. In contrast, when MgATP or CaATP is added to enzyme depleted of Mg2+ and Ca2+ by incubation with EDTA, a rapid onset of ATP hydrolysis occurs and most of the tightly bound [3H]ADP is released within a few seconds, as expected for binding at a catalytic site. The Mg2+-induced inhibition of both the ATPase activity and the lack of replacement of tightly bound [3H] ADP can be largely prevented by incubation with Pi under conditions favoring Pi addition to the site containing the tightly bound ADP. Our and other results can be explained if enzyme catalysis is greatly hindered when MgADP or CaADP without accompanying Pi is tightly bound at one of the three catalytic sites on the enzyme in a high affinity conformation.  相似文献   

3.
Mechanism for nucleotide exchange in monomeric actin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
C Frieden  K Patane 《Biochemistry》1988,27(10):3812-3820
Rabbit skeletal muscle G-actin has been treated to obtain ADP, 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate (epsilon-ADP), or 1,N6-ethenoadenosine triphosphate (epsilon-ATP) at the nucleotide binding site and either Mg2+ or Ca2+ at high- and moderate-affinity metal binding sites. Apparent rates or rate constants for the displacement of the actin-bound nucleotides by epsilon-ATP or ATP have been obtained by stopped-flow measurements at pH 8 and 20 degrees C of the fluorescence difference between bound and free epsilon-ATP or epsilon-ADP. In the presence of Ca2+, displacement of ADP by epsilon-ATP or epsilon-ADP by ATP is a biphasic process, but in the presence of low (less than 10 microM) Mg2+ concentrations, it is a slow first-order process. At high levels of Mg2+ (greater than 50 microM), low ADP concentrations displace epsilon-ATP from G-actin as a consequence of Mg2+ binding to moderate-affinity sites on the actin. Displacement of epsilon-ATP by ATP in the presence of either Ca2+ or Mg2+ is slow at low ATP concentrations, but the rate is increased by high ATP concentrations. Using ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, we find that nucleotide exchange is affected differently by the removal of Ca2+ from the high-affinity site compared to Ca2+ removal from moderate-affinity sites. A mechanism for the displacement reaction is proposed in which there are two forms of an actin-ADP complex and metal binding influences the ratio of these forms as well as the binding of ATP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
D Wu  P D Boyer 《Biochemistry》1986,25(11):3390-3396
When the heat-activated chloroplast F1 ATPase hydrolyzes [3H, gamma-32P]ATP, followed by the removal of medium ATP, ADP, and Pi, the enzyme has labeled ATP, ADP, and Pi bound to it in about equal amounts. The total of the bound [3H]ADP and [3H]ATP approaches 1 mol/mol of enzyme. Over a 30-min period, most of the bound [32P]Pi falls off, and the bound [3H]ATP is converted to bound [3H]ADP. Enzyme with such remaining tightly bound ADP will form bound ATP from relatively high concentrations of medium Pi with either Mg2+ or Ca2+ present. The tightly bound ADP is thus at a site that retains a catalytic capacity for slow single-site ATP hydrolysis (or synthesis) and is likely the site that participates in cooperative rapid net ATP hydrolysis. During hydrolysis of 50 microM [3H]ATP in the presence of either Mg2+ or Ca2+, the enzyme has a steady-state level of about one bound [3H]ADP per mole of enzyme. Because bound [3H]ATP is also present, the [3H]ADP is regarded as being present on two cooperating catalytic sites. The formation and levels of bound ATP, ADP, and Pi show that reversal of bound ATP hydrolysis can occur with either Ca2+ or Mg2+ present. They do not reveal why no phosphate oxygen exchange accompanies cleavage of low ATP concentrations with Ca2+ in contrast to Mg2+ with the heat-activated enzyme. Phosphate oxygen exchange does occur with either Mg2+ or Ca2+ present when low ATP concentrations are hydrolyzed with the octyl glucoside activated ATPase. Ligand binding properties of Ca2+ at the catalytic site rather than lack of reversible cleavage of bound ATP may underlie lack of oxygen exchange under some conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were phosphorylated with [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of external Ca2+ without added Mg2+. The phosphoenzyme (EP) formed had tightly bound Ca2+ and was dephosphorylated by ADP. When the external Ca2+ was chelated after phosphorylation, Ca2+ dissociated from the EP and ADP addition no longer induced dephosphorylation. Subsequent addition of CaCl2 caused rapid recombination of Ca2+ and restoration of the ADP sensitivity. These findings show that the dissociation and recombination of Ca2+ took place on the outer surface of the membranes, indicating the existence of EP with bound Ca2+ which was exposed to the external medium (Caout.EP). The Ca2+ affinity of the Ca2+ binding site in Caout.EP was comparable to that of the high affinity Ca2+ binding site in the dephosphoenzyme (E). This shows that phosphorylation is not accompanied by an appreciable reduction in the Ca2+ affinity of the Ca2+ binding site, provided this site is exposed to the external medium. The transition from ADP-sensitive EP to ADP-insensitive induced by Ca2+ chelation was unaffected by Mg2+ in the medium. Mg2+ did not activate hydrolysis of the ADP-sensitive EP with bound Ca2+, whereas it markedly accelerated hydrolysis of the ADP-insensitive EP without bound Ca2+.  相似文献   

6.
Conformational changes in subdomain 2 of actin were investigated using fluorescence probes dansyl cadaverine (DC) or dansyl ethylenediamine (DED) covalently attached to Gln41. Examination of changes in the fluorescence emission spectra as a function of time during Ca2+/Mg2+ and ATP/ADP exchange at the high-affinity site for divalent cation-nucleotide complex in G-actin confirmed a profound influence of the type of nucleotide but failed to detect a significant cation-dependent difference in the environment of Gln41. No significant difference between Ca- and Mg-actin was also seen in the magnitude of the fluorescence changes resulting from the polymerization of these two actin forms. Evidence is presented that earlier reported cation-dependent differences in the conformation of the loop 38-52 may be related to time-dependent changes in the conformation of subdomain 2 in DED- or DC-labeled G-actin, accelerated by substitution of Mg2+ for Ca2+ in CaATP-G-actin and, in particular, by conversion of MgATP- into MgADP-G-actin. These spontaneous changes are associated with a denaturation-driven release of the bound nucleotide that is promoted by two effects of DED or DC labeling: lowered affinity of actin for nucleotide and acceleration of ATP hydrolysis on MgATP-G-actin that converts it into a less stable MgADP form. Evidence is presented that the changes in the environment of Gln41 accompanying actin polymerization result in part from the release of Pi after the hydrolysis of ATP on the polymer. A similarity of this change to that accompanying replacement of the bound ATP with ADP in G-actin is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The binding and conformational properties of the divalent cation site required for H+,K(+)-ATPase catalysis have been explored by using Ca2+ as a substitute for Mg2+. 45Ca2+ binding was measured with either a filtration assay or by passage over Dowex cation exchange columns on ice. In the absence of ATP, Ca2+ was bound in a saturating fashion with a stoichiometry of 0.9 mol of Ca2+ per active site and an apparent Kd for free Ca2+ of 332 +/- 39 microM. At ATP concentrations sufficient for maximal phosphorylation (10 microM), 1.2 mol of Ca2+ was bound per active site with an apparent Kd for free Ca2+ of 110 +/- 22 microM. At ATP concentrations greater than or equal to 100 microM, 2.2 mol of Ca2+ were bound per active site, suggesting that an additional mole of Ca2+ bound in association with low affinity nucleotide binding. At concentrations sufficient for maximal phosphorylation by ATP (less than or equal to 10 microM), APD, ADP + Pi, beta,gamma-methylene-ATP, CTP, and GTP were unable to substitute for ATP. Active site ligands such as acetyl phosphate, phosphate, and p-nitrophenyl phosphate were also ineffective at increasing the Ca2+ affinity. However, vanadate, a transition state analog of the phosphoenzyme, gave a binding capacity of 1.0 mol/active site and the apparent Kd for free Ca2+ was less than or equal to 18 microM. Mg2+ displaced bound Ca2+ in the absence and presence of ATP but Ca2+ was bound about 10-20 times more tightly than Mg2+. The free Mg2+ affinity, like Ca2+, increased in the presence of ATP. Monovalent cations had no effect on Ca2+ binding in the absence of ATP but dit reduce Ca2+ binding in the presence of ATP (K+ = Rb+ = NH4 + greater than Na+ greater than Li+ greater than Cs+ greater than TMA+, where TMA is tetramethylammonium chloride) by reducing phosphorylation. These results indicate that the Ca2+ and Mg2+ bound more tightly to the phosphoenzyme conformation. Eosin fluorescence changes showed that both Ca2+ and Mg2+ stabilized E1 conformations (i.e. cytosolic conformations of the monovalent cation site(s)) (Ca.E1 and Mg.E1). Addition of the substrate acetyl phosphate to either Ca.E1 or Mg.E1 produced identical eosin fluorescence showing that Ca2+ and Mg2+ gave similar E2 (extracytosolic) conformations at the eosin (nucleotide) site. In the presence of acetyl phosphate and K+, the conformations with Ca2+ or Mg2+ were also similar. Comparison of the kinetics of the phosphoenzyme and Ca2+ binding showed that Ca2+ bound prior to phosphorylation and dissociated after dephosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
In the present work, we show that actin is present in considerable quantities in the oocyte nucleus of the newt Pleurodeles waltlii. The nuclear sap, extracted in saline buffer containing Ca++, is fluid. DNAase I inhibition assays have shown that 90% of actin is under a globular state in such conditions. Chelation of Ca++ by EGTA leads to the formation of a nuclear gel composed of individual microfilaments. This nuclear gel contains approximately 50% of total nuclear actin in a filamentous form. Phalloidin, a drug known to stabilize F-actin, induces the formation of a network of actin cables in the nuclei. This network contains nearly 100% of total nuclear actin in the filamentous form. The observation of the cables in the electron microscope shows that they are made of tightly associated microfilaments to which RNP- like particles are bound. The actin antibodies stain the cables and the particles by the indirect immunoperoxidase technique; myosin antibodies mainly stain the particles. The formation of the phalloidin-induced network seems to require the presence of Ca++, Mg++, and ATP. We propose a scheme for the regulation of the supramolecular forms of actin in oocyte nuclei in which a delicate equilibrium seems to exist between globular actin, microfilaments, and actin cables. This equilibrium would be controlled by the concentration of Ca++, ATP, and various actin-associated proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The chromium moiety of gamma,beta-bidentate CrATP slowly accepts a ligand from the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase to form an exchange inert coordination complex (k + 1 = 0.083 min-1; k - 2 = 0.003 min-1, 37 degrees C, 100 microM CaCl2). The stability of the Cr3+ coordinate bonds allowed the complex to be isolated by filtration techniques at neutral pH without acid precipitation. We found 4-5 nmol of [gamma-32P]CrATP to bind to 1 mg of sarcoplasmic reticulum protein with the subsequent occlusion of 7-8 nmol of 45Ca2+. At 37 degrees C, the CrATP.ATPase complex could be formed in the absence of Ca2+, although the reaction was 2-3 times slower than in the presence of Ca2+. Inhibition by Pi, by orthovanadate, and by fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate verified that the bound CrATP was at the catalytic site. The site of CrATP attachment was found to be on the A tryptic fragment, possibly on the A2 subfragment. It was determined that Ca2+ binding to high affinity sites on the enzyme controls the rate by which the Cr3+ moiety accepts the ligand from the enzyme. The rate of change in the EPR spectrum of iodoacetamide spin-labeled ATPase was shown to follow the rate of ligand acceptance, rather than the binding of Ca2+ and substrate per se. This particular change has been attributed to the formation of an activated complex that is immediately precursory to phosphorylation and indicates here that this complex cannot be properly formed until the metal has been chelated by the enzyme. It is concluded that control over metal chelation (Cr3+ here, Mg2+ in the normal mechanism) is one means by which Ca2+ activates the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics of cytochalasin D binding to monomeric actin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
It has been shown previously, using G-actin labeled with N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylene-diamine, that Mg2+ induces a conformational change in monomeric G-actin as a consequence of binding to a tight divalent cation binding site (Frieden, C. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 2882-2886). Using the same fluorescent probe, we show that, subsequent to the Mg2+-induced conformational change, cytochalasin D induces a fluorescence decrease. The data are consistent with a mechanism which proposes that, after Mg2+ binding, cytochalasin D binds and induces a second conformational change which results in overall tight binding of the cytochalasin. The initial binding of cytochalasin D to monomeric actin labeled with the fluorescent probe was found to be 200 microM, and the forward and reverse rate constants for the subsequent conformational change were 350 s-1 and 8 s-1, respectively, with an overall dissociation constant to the Mg2+-induced form of 4.6 microM. The conformational change does not occur in monomeric actin in the presence of Ca2+ rather than Mg2+, but Ca2+ competes with Mg2+ for the tight binding site on the G-actin molecule. Direct binding studies show that actin which has not been labeled with the fluorophore binds cytochalasin D more tightly. The conformational change induced by Mg2+ and cytochalasin D precedes the formation of an actin dimer.  相似文献   

11.
The stoichiometric actin--DNase-I complex was used to study the actin--nucleotide and actin--divalent-cation interactions and its ATPase activity in the presence of MgCl2 and cytochalasin D. Treatment of actin--DNase-I complex with 1 mM EDTA results in almost complete restoration of its otherwise inhibited DNase I activity, although the complex does not dissociate, as verified by size-exclusion chromatography. This effect is due to a loss of actin-bound nucleotide but is prevented by the presence of 0.1-0.5 mM ATP, ADP and certain ATP analogues. In this case no increase in DNase I activity occurs, even in the presence of EDTA. At high salt concentrations and in the presence of Mg2+ ('physiological conditions') the association rate constants for ATP, ADP and epsilon ATP (1,N6-ethenoadenosine 5'-triphosphate) and the dissociation rate constant for epsilon ATP were determined. Both the on and off rates were found to be reduced by a factor of about 10 when compared to uncomplexed actin. Thus the binding constant of epsilon ATP to actin is almost unaltered after complexing to DNase I (2.16 x 10(8) M-1). Titrating the increase in DNase I activity of the actin--DNase I complex against nucleotide concentration in the presence of EDTA, the association constant of ATP to the cation-free form of actin--DNase I complex was found to be 5 x 10(3) M-1, which is many orders of magnitude lower than in the presence of divalent metal ions. The binding constant of Ca2+ to the high-affinity metal-binding site of actin was found not to be altered when complexed to DNase I, although the rate of Ca2+ release decreases by a factor of 8 after actin binding to DNase I. The rate of denaturation of nucleotide-free and metal-ion-free actin--DNase I complex was found to be reduced by a factor of about 15. The ATPase activity of the complex is stimulated by addition of Mg2+ and even more effectively by cytochalasin D, proving that this drug is able to interact with monomeric actin.  相似文献   

12.
Actin is one of the proteins that rely on chaperonins for proper folding. This paper shows that the thermal unfolding of G-actin, as studied by CD and ultraviolet difference spectrometry, coincides with a loss in DNase I-inhibiting activity of the protein. Thus, the DNase I inhibition assay should be useful for systematic studies of actin unfolding and refolding. Using this assay, we have investigated how the thermal stability of actin is affected by either Ca2 + or Mg2 + at the high affinity divalent cation binding site, by the concentration of excess nucleotide, and by the nucleotide in different states of phosphorylation (ATP, ADP.Pi, ADP. Vi, ADP.AlF4, ADP.BeFx, and ADP). Actin isoforms from different species were also compared, and the effect of profilin on the thermal stability of actin was studied. We conclude that the thermal unfolding of G-actin is a three-state process, in which an equilibrium exists between native actin with bound nucleotide and an intermediate free of nucleotide. Actins in the Mg-form were less stable than the Ca-forms, and the stability of the different isoforms decreased in the following order: rabbit skeletal muscle alpha-actin = bovine cytoplasmic gamma-actin > yeast actin > cytoplasmic beta-actin. The activation energies for the thermal unfolding reactions were in the range 200-290 kJ.mol- 1, depending on the bound ligands. Generally, the stability of the actin depended on the degree with which the nucleotide contributed to the connectivity between the two domains of the protein.  相似文献   

13.
C A Rebello  R D Ludescher 《Biochemistry》1999,38(40):13288-13295
We have investigated how Ca2+ or Mg2+ bound at the high-affinity cation binding site in F-actin modulates the dynamic response of these filaments to ATP hydrolysis by attached myosin head fragments (S1). Rotational motions of the filaments were monitored using steady-state phosphorescence emission anisotropy of the triplet probe erythrosin-5-iodoacetamide covalently attached to cysteine 374 of actin. The anisotropy of filaments containing only Ca2+ increased from 0.080 to 0.137 upon binding S1 in a rigor complex and decreased to 0.065 in the presence of ATP, indicating that S1 induced additional rotational motions in the filament during ATP hydrolysis. The comparable anisotropy values for Mg(2+)-containing filaments were 0.067, 0.137, and 0.065, indicating that S1 hydrolysis did not induce measurable rotational motions in these filaments. Phalloidin, a fungal toxin which stabilizes F-actin and increases its rigidity, increased the anisotropy of F-actin containing either Ca2+ or Mg2+ but not the anisotropy of the 1:1 S1-actin complexes of these filaments. Mg(2+)-containing filaments with phalloidin bound also displayed increased rotational motions during S1 ATP hydrolysis. A strong positive correlation between the phosphorescence anisotropy of F-actin under specific conditions and the extent of the rotational motions induced by S1 during ATP hydrolysis suggested that the long axis torsional rigidity of F-actin plays a crucial role in modulating the dynamic response of the filaments to ATP hydrolysis by S1. Cooperative responses of F-actin to dynamic perturbations induced by S1 during ATP hydrolysis may thus be physically mediated by the torsional rigidity of the filament.  相似文献   

14.
Occlusion of Ca2+ induced by beta, gamma-bidentate CrATP in membrane bound and in soluble monomeric sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase was studied by previously developed filtration and HPLC techniques (Vilsen and Andersen (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 855, 429-431). Activation of Ca2+ occlusion occurred at micromolar free Ca2+ and depended on the concentration of Ca2+, H+ and Mg2+ in a similar way as activation of Ca2+ transport and equilibrium Ca2+ binding to high-affinity Ca2+ transport sites. The slopes of the Ca2+ titration curves indicated that Ca2+ binding is a cooperative process both in membraneous and in soluble monomeric enzyme. At alkaline pH and absence of Mg2+, occlusion of Ca2+ was inhibited by 1 mM Ca2+ in membrane-bound, but not in soluble monomeric Ca2+-ATPase. Parallel studies of phosphorylation from [gamma-32P]CrATP indicated a stoichiometry of 2 mol Ca2+ occluded per mol Ca2+-dependent EP formed, at saturating as well as at desaturating Ca2+ concentrations. Tryptic digestion of the CrATP induced Ca2+ occluded complex indicated that it belongs to the E1 conformational class (E1P). In the absence of Ca2+ and Mg2+, but presence of CrATP the conformational state was E2. When Mg2+ was added together with CrATP at alkaline pH the conformation was shifted in direction of E1.  相似文献   

15.
The beta, gamma-bidentate chromium(III) complex of ATP (CrATP) was used as a substrate analog to stabilize a form of the Ca(2+)-ATPase of the sarcoplasmic reticulum containing both of the bound calcium ions in an occluded state without enzyme phosphorylation. The kinetics of dissociation of Ca2+ from the occlusion sites in the CrATP-enzyme complex were consistent with the existence of two nonequivalent and interdependent Ca2+ occlusion sites, both in the membranous Ca(2+)-ATPase and in a detergent-solubilized monomeric Ca(2+)-ATPase preparation. The rate constant for release of the first calcium ion was k1 = 0.99 h-1, whereas the second calcium ion was released with a rate constant of k2 = 0.25 h-1 when the first site was empty and with a rate constant of k3 = 0.13 h-1 when the first site was occupied by Ca2+. Ca2+ binding at the first site occurred with a rate constant of k-1 = 0.96 microM-1 h-1 (apparent Kd = 1.0 microM). The Ca(2+)-occluded state was further stabilized by ADP, binding in exchange with ATP with an apparent Kd of 8.6 microM. Two kinetic classes of CrATP-binding sites were observed, each with a stoichiometry of 3-4 nmol/mg of protein; but only the fast phase of CrATP binding was associated with Ca2+ occlusion. Derivatization of the Ca(2+)-ATPase with N-cyclohexyl-N'-(4-dimethylamino-1-naphthyl)carbodimide resulted in inactivation of phosphorylation of the enzyme from MgATP, whereas the ability to occlude Ca2+ in the presence of CrATP was retained, albeit with a reduced apparent affinity for Ca2+.  相似文献   

16.
The distance separating the high-affinity binding sites of actin for a divalent metal ion and nucleotide was evaluated by using high-resolution proton NMR and EPR spectroscopy. Replacement of the Ca2+ or Mg2+ bound to the high-affinity divalent cation site of G-actin by trivalent lanthanide ions such as La3+, EU3+, or Gd3+ results in an increase in the mobility of the bound ATP as observed in the NMR spectra of G-actin monomers. Little difference was observed between the spectra obtained in the presence of the diamagnetic La3+ control and the paramagnetic ions Eu3+ and Gd3+ which respectively shift and broaden the proton resonances of amino acids in the vicinity of the binding site. Analysis of the NMR spectra indicates that the metal and nucleotide binding sites are separated by a distance of at least 16 A. In the past, the metal and ATP have been widely assumed to bind as a complex. Further verification that the two sites on actin are physically separated was obtained by using an ATP analogue with a nitroxide spin-label bound at the 6' position of the purine ring. An estimate of the distance was made between the site containing the ATP analogue and the paramagnetic ion, Mn2+, bound to the cation binding site. These EPR experiments were not affected by the state of polymerization of the actin. The data obtained by using this technique support the conclusion stated above, namely, that the cation and nucleotide sites on either G- or F-actin are well separated.  相似文献   

17.
Umetskaia VN  Pinaev GP 《Biofizika》2001,46(2):197-202
The mechanism of transformation of ATP-G actin to F actin by the action of Mg2+ ions was studied by measuring UV absorption spectra of solutions of monomeric Ca(2+)-ATP-G actin in the presence of MgCl2 and of Mg(2+)-ATP-G actin. The protein solutions contained no excessive free ATP. The changes in the UV absorption spectra of monomeric ATP-G actin that result from the interaction with Mg2+ are explained by the formation of ADP-G actin from monomeric ATP-G actin due to hydrolysis of ATP which is considered as the initial step of the transformation to F actin.  相似文献   

18.
The glycosidic bond torsion angles and the conformations of the ribose of Mg2+ATP, Mg2+ADP and Mg2+AdoPP[NH]P (magnesium adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate) bound to Ca2+ATPase, both native and modified with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), in intact sarcoplasmic reticulum have been determined by the measurement of proton-proton transferred nuclear Overhauser enhancements by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. This method shows clearly the existence of a low-affinity ATP binding site after modification of the high-affinity site with FITC. For all three nucleotides bound to both the high-affinity (catalytic) site and the low-affinity site, we find that the conformation about the glycosidic bond is anti, the conformation of the ribose 3'-endo of the N type and the conformation about the ribose C4'-C5' bond either gauche-trans or trans-gauche. The values for the glycosidic bond torsion angles chi (O4'-C1'-N9-C4) for Mg2+ATP, Mg2+ADP and Mg2+AdoPP[NH]P bound to the low-affinity site of FITC-modified Ca2+ATPase are approximately equal to 270 degrees, approximately equal to 260 degrees and approximately equal to 240 degrees respectively. In the case of the nucleotides bound to the high-affinity (catalytic) site of native Ca2+ATPase, chi lies in the range 240-280 degrees.  相似文献   

19.
Growing evidence suggests that the nucleotide bound to actin filaments serves as a timer to control actin filament turnover during cell motility (Pollard, T. D., Blanchoin, L., and Mullins, R. D. (2000) Annu. Rev. Biophys. Biomol. Struct. 29, 545-576). We re-examined the hydrolysis of ATP by polymerized actin using mechanical quenched-flow methods to improve temporal resolution. The rate constant for ATP hydrolysis by polymerized Mg actin is 0.3 s(-1), 3-fold faster than that measured manually. The ATP hydrolysis rate is similar when Mg ATP actin elongates either the pointed end or the barbed end of filaments. Polymerized Ca actin hydrolyzes ATP at 0.05 s(-1). Mg ATP actin saturated with profilin can elongate barbed ends at >60 s(-1), 2 orders of magnitude faster than ATP hydrolysis (0.3 s(-1)). Given that profilin binds to a surface on actin that is buried in the Holmes model of the actin filament, we expect that profilin will block subunit addition at the barbed end of a filament. Profilin must move from this site at rates much faster than it dissociates from monomers (4 s(-1)). ATP hydrolysis is not required for this movement.  相似文献   

20.
Water proton nuclear relaxation measurements are used to detect and characterize four distinct intermediate states for Gd3+ bound to Ca2+ sites of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase in complexes with ATP analogues. In the absence of nucleotides, Gd3+ binds to two occluded Ca2+ transport sites on Ca2+-ATPase which have a low accessibility to solvent water. In the presence of the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, Co(NH3)4AMPPCP, a new state for bound Gd3+ (still occluded and with fewer waters of hydration) is observed. In the presence of Co(NH3)4ATP or ATP, two additional states for bound Gd3+ are detected in the NMR studies. The first of these probably represents an intermediate state for bound Gd3+ during ATP hydrolysis. The latter is the most occluded Gd3+ site yet observed in these studies and is probably analogous to the highly occluded E1-P state observed with CrATP [(1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 898, 313-322].  相似文献   

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