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1.
The heavy chains and the 19-kDa and 20-kDa light chains of bovine brain myosin can by phosphorylated. To localise the site of heavy-chain phosphorylation, the myosin was initially subjected to digestion with chymotrypsin and papain under a variety of conditions and the fragments thus produced were identified. Irrespective of the ionic strength, i.e. whether the myosin was monomeric or filamentous, chymotryptic digestion produced two major fragments of 68 kDa and 140 kDa; the 140-kDa fragment was further digested by papain to yield a 120-kDa and a 23-kDa fragment. These fragments were characterised by (a) a gel overlay technique using 125I-labelled light chains, which showed that the 140-kDa and 23-kDa polypeptides contain the light-chain-binding sites; (b) using myosin photoaffinity labelled at the active site with [3H]UTP, which showed that the 68-kDa fragment contained the catalytic site, and (c) electron microscopy, using rotary shadowing and negative-staining techniques, which demonstrated that after chymotryptic digestion the myosin head remains attached to the tail whereas on papain digestion isolated heads and tails were observed. Thus the 120-kDa polypeptide derived from the 140-kDa fragment is the tail of the myosin, and the 68-kDa fragment containing the catalytic site and the 23-kDa fragment, with the light-chain-binding sites, form the head (S1) portion of the myosin. When [32P]-phosphorylated brain myosin was digested with chymotrypsin and papain it was shown that the heavy-chain phosphorylation site is located in a 5-kDa peptide at the C-terminal end of the heavy chain, i.e. the end of the myosin tail. Using hydrodynamic and electron microscopic techniques, no significant effect of either light-chain or heavy-chain phosphorylation on the stability of brain myosin filaments was observed, even in the presence of MgATP. Brain myosin filaments appear to be more stable than those of other non-muscle myosins. Light-chain phosphorylation did, however, have an effect on the conformation of brain myosin, for example in the presence of MgATP non-phosphorylated myosin molecules were induced to fold into a very compact folded state.  相似文献   

2.
The binding sites of five monoclonal antibodies against myosin of Dictyostelium discoideum have been mapped. These antibodies bind to the tail region of the myosin molecule. By rotary shadowing, images of myosin-antibody complexes were obtained in which the mean distance of the midpoint of an antibody molecule from the myosin heads was localized with a precision better than 2 nm (90% confidence limit). Other quantitative data extracted from electron micrographs provided information on the stoichiometry of antibody-myosin interaction. Certain antibodies interacted with myosin molecules only at a ratio of 1:1. Other antibodies formed complexes of two molecules bound to homologous sites on a double-stranded myosin tail. Affinities were estimated and the abilities of different antibodies to cross-connect two myosin molecules were evaluated.  相似文献   

3.
We have previously purified and characterized a Dictyostelium myosin II heavy chain kinase which phosphorylates threonine residues (C?té, G. P., and Bukiejko, U. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1065-1072). The phosphorylated threonines are located within a 34-kDa fragment which can be selectively cleaved from the carboxyl terminal end of the Dictyostelium myosin II tail. Tryptic and chymotryptic digests of the 34-kDa fragment phosphorylated with the kinase have now been performed and the resulting phosphopeptides isolated and sequenced. Two phosphorylated threonine residues have been identified, corresponding to residues 1833 and 2029 in the complete amino acid sequence of the Dictyostelium myosin II heavy chain. These amino acids are 87 and 283 residues, respectively, distant from the carboxyl terminus of the Dictyostelium myosin II heavy chain and are present in sections of the tail which seem to be alpha-helical coiled coils. In contrast, the three Acanthamoeba myosin II heavy chain phosphorylation sites are located within 10 residues of each other in a small globular domain at the carboxyl terminal tip of the tail (C?té, G. P., Robinson, E. A., Appella, E., and Korn, E. D. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12781-12787). This suggests that the mechanism by which heavy chain phosphorylation inhibits the actin-activated ATPase activity and filament-forming properties of the two myosins may be quite different.  相似文献   

4.
Soluble myosin heavy chain kinases (MHC kinases) were partially purified from growth phase and aggregation-competent cells of Dictyostelium discoideum. In the aggregation-competent cells, two MHC kinases were distinguishable. One of these enzymes, called MHC kinase II, was inactivated by Ca2+ and calmodulin in a highly temperature-dependent reaction. A MHC kinase found in growth phase cells did not have these regulatory properties. Substrate specificities were analysed for MHC kinase II and for the MHC kinase from growth phase cells. Both enzymes phosphorylated threonine residues of the myosin heavy chains of D. discoideum and Physarum polycephalum. Phosphopeptide mapping of D. discoideum myosin and determination of the stoichiometry of its phosphorylation suggested the presence of two phosphorylation sites per heavy chain. Both sites were contained within a 38-kd chymotryptic fragment. The inactivation of MHC kinase II by Ca2+ plus calmodulin suggests this enzyme has a role in the regulation of myosin functions during the chemotactic response of a cell. The phosphorylated myosin had about one third the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of the non-phosphorylated myosin. Previous findings indicated that stimulation of D. discoideum cells with the chemo-attractant cAMP increases the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration. Under these conditions MHC kinase II might be inhibited and the dephosphorylated, more active form of myosin would accumulate.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of light chain phosphorylation and the presence of skeletal muscle myosin on the stability of non-phosphorylated non-muscle myosin filaments was investigated. Purified skeletal, brush border and thymus myosins were assembled in vitro into hybrid filaments consisting of varying proportions of (1) non-muscle and skeletal myosins, or (2) phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated non-muscle myosins. The stability of these hetero- and homopolymers in the presence of MgATP was determined using sedimentation, gel electrophoresis and immunochemical techniques. In addition, the effect of a monoclonal antibody, binding to the tip of brush border myosin tail, on the assembly of the homo- and heteropolymers, was tested. Filamentous non-phosphorylated non-muscle myosin was disassembled by MgATP to the same extent whether in homo- or heteropolymers, indicating that skeletal myosin has no stabilising effect on the hybrid filaments. The presence of small amounts of phosphorylated non-muscle myosin was, however, found to prevent the complete disassembly by MgATP of non-phosphorylated non-muscle myosin filaments, indicating that light chain phosphorylation stabilizes co-operatively non-muscle myosin filaments. The monoclonal antibody prevented the assembly of brush border myosin into both homo- and heteropolymers, and its effect on the filaments was compared with that of MgATP.  相似文献   

6.
The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin II from the soil amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii is regulated by phosphorylation of 3 serine residues on the myosin II heavy chain. Partial chymotryptic digestion of 32P-labeled myosin II cleaves from the tail end of the myosin II heavy chain a small peptide which contains all three phosphorylation sites. During purification the phosphorylated peptide is resolved into several different species as a result of heterogeneity both in phosphate content and in size (probably due to chymotryptic cleavage at the carboxyl terminus). However, all forms of the peptide have an identical amino terminus. The sequence of the first 58 residues of the peptide is: N-S-A-L-E-S-D-K-Q-I10-L-E-D-E-I-G-D-L-H- E20-K-N-K-Q-L-Q-A-K-I-A30-Q-L-Q-D-E-I-D-G-T- P40-S-S-R-G-G-S-T-R-G-A50-S-A-R-G-A-S-V-R. The phosphorylated serines are at positions 46, 51, and 56. The first 36 residues of the sequence display a repeating 3-4-3-4 pattern of hydrophobic residues suggesting that this section of the peptide forms an alpha-helical coiled-coil structure. A -Gly-Thr-Pro sequence at residues 38-40 disrupts the alpha-helix and, at the same point, the repeating pattern of non-polar residues is lost. It is likely that the residues extending from Gly-38 to the end of the myosin II tail, which include the 3 phosphorylatable serines, form a randomly coiled or small globular structure. This is the first report of the sequence around the regulatory phosphorylation sites on any myosin heavy chain.  相似文献   

7.
A tail fragment of Dictyostelium discoideum myosin has been cloned and expressed as a fusion protein with the N-terminal region of MS-2 polymerase. The cloned fragment was phosphorylated with myosin heavy chain kinase II from aggregation-competent D. discoideum cells that specifically phosphorylate threonine residues on the myosin tail. Phosphopeptide maps showed the same site specificity of phosphorylation with the fusion protein as a substrate as with native myosin. An improved assay for the kinase was developed in which the fusion protein is precipitated with a monoclonal antibody that inhibits polymerization of the myosin tails without preventing their phosphorylation. Sites of phosphorylation were tentatively localized to a sequence in the C-terminal region of the heavy chain where four threonine residues are found.  相似文献   

8.
Electron microscopy of myosin-II molecules and filaments reacted with monoclonal antibodies demonstrates directly where the antibodies bind and shows that certain antibodies can inhibit the polymerization of myosin-II into filaments. The binding sites of seven of 23 different monoclonal antibodies were localized by platinum shadowing of myosin monomer-antibody complexes. The antibodies bind to a variety of sites on the myosin-II molecule, including the heads, the proximal end of the tail near the junction of the heads and tail, and the tip of the tail. The binding sites of eight of the 23 antibodies were also localized on myosin filaments by negative staining. Antibodies that bind to either the myosin heads or to the proximal end of the tail decorate the ends of the bipolar filaments. Some of the antibodies that bind to the tip of the myosin-II tail decorate the bare zone of the myosin-II thin filament with 14-nm periodicity. By combining the data from these electron microscope studies and the peptide mapping and competitive binding studies we have established the binding sites of 16 of 23 monoclonal antibodies. Two of the 23 antibodies block the formation of myosin-II filaments and given sufficient time, disassemble preformed myosin-II filaments. Both antibodies bind near one another at the tip of the myosin-II tail and are those that decorate the bare zone of preformed bipolar filaments with 14-nm periodicity. None of the other antibodies affect myosin filament formation, including one that binds to another site near the tip of the myosin-II tail. This demonstrates that antibodies can inhibit polymerization of myosin-II, but only when they bind to key sites on the tail of the molecule.  相似文献   

9.
Ten monoclonal antibodies (My1-10) against Dictyostelium discoideum myosin were prepared and characterized. Nine bound to the 210-kD heavy chain and one (My8) bound to the 18-kD light chain. They defined six topographically distinct antigenic sites of the heavy chain. Five binding sites (the My1, My5, My10 site, and the My2, My3, My4, and My9 sites) are located on the rod portion of the myosin molecule. The position of the sixth site (the My6 and My7 site) is less certain, but it appears to be near the junction of the globular heads and the rod. Three of the antibodies (My2, My3, and My6) bound to myosin filaments in solution and could be sedimented in stoichiometric amounts with the filamentous myosin. In contrast, My4, which recognized a site on the rod, inhibited the polymerization of monomeric myosin into filaments. A single antibody (My6) affected the actin-activated ATPase of myosin. The nature of the effect depended on the valency of the antibody and the myosin. Bivalent IgG and F(ab')2 fragments of My6 inhibited the actin-activated ATPase of filamentous myosin by 50% whereas univalent Fab' fragments increased the activity by 50%. The actin-activated ATPase activity of the soluble chymotryptic fragment of myosin was increased 80-90% by both F(ab')2 and Fab' of My6.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphorylation at three sites at the tip of the tail of myosin II from Acanthamoeba castellanii inactivates the actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of filamentous myosin and the in vitro motility activity of both monomeric and filamentous myosin. To seek a structural explanation for these effects, we examined the susceptibilities of dephosphorylated and phosphorylated myosins II to endoproteinases. Endoproteinase Arg-C cleaved myosin II preferentially at two sites in the globular head, Lys-621 and Arg-638, producing an NH2-terminal fragment of about 67,000 Da and a COOH-terminal fragment of about 112,000 Da. Dephosphorylated monomers and filaments were cleaved about 3 times more rapidly than their phosphorylated counterparts principally because of a much greater rate of cleavage at Arg-638; the ratio of cleavage at Arg-638:Lys-621 was about 3 for dephosphorylated myosins and about 0.5 for phosphorylated myosins. These data demonstrate that phosphorylation at the tip of the tail of Acanthamoeba myosin II causes a conformational change in the globular head that contains the catalytic sites; therefore, this conformational change may be related to the different catalytic and motile activities of the dephosphorylated and phosphorylated enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
A Safran  D Neumann    S Fuchs 《The EMBO journal》1986,5(12):3175-3178
Three peptides corresponding to residues 354-367, 364-374, 373-387 of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) delta subunit were synthesized. These peptides represent the proposed phosphorylation sites of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, the tyrosine-specific protein kinase and the calcium/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase respectively. Using these peptides as substrates for phosphorylation by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase it was shown that only peptides 354-367 was phosphorylated whereas the other two were not. These results verify the location of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylation site within the AChR delta subunit. Antibodies elicited against these peptides reacted with the delta subunit. The antipeptide antibodies and two monoclonal antibodies (7F2, 5.46) specific for the delta subunit were tested for their binding to non-phosphorylated receptor and to receptor phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Antibodies to peptide 354-367 were found to react preferentially with non-phosphorylated receptor whereas the two other anti-peptide antibodies bound equally to phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated receptors. Monoclonal antibody 7F2 reacted preferentially with the phosphorylated form of the receptor whereas monoclonal antibody 5.46 did not distinguish between the two forms.  相似文献   

12.
Eight monoclonal antibodies that bind to specific sites on the tail of Dictyostelium discoideum myosin were tested for their effects on polymerization and ATPase activity. Two antibodies that bind close to the myosin heads inhibited actin activation of the ATPase either partially or completely, without having an effect on polymerization. Two other antibodies bind to sites within the distal portion of the tail that has been shown, by cleavage mapping, to be important for polymerization. One of these antibodies binds close to the sites of heavy chain phosphorylation which is known to regulate both myosin polymerization and actin-activated ATPase activity. Both antibodies showed strong inhibition of polymerization accompanied by complete inhibition of the actin-activated ATPase activity. A unique effect was obtained with an antibody that binds to the end of the myosin tail. This antibody prevented the formation of bipolar filaments. It caused myosin to assemble into unipolar filaments with heads at one end and the antibody molecules at the other. Only at concentrations higher than required for its effect on polymerization did this antibody show substantial inhibition of the actin-activated ATPase. These results indicate that, using a monoclonal antibody as a blocking agent, parallel assembly of myosin can be dissected out from antiparallel association, and that essentially normal actin-activated ATPase activity could be obtained after significant reductions in filament size.  相似文献   

13.
Vinculin is a conserved actin binding protein localized in focal adhesions and cell-cell junctions. Here, we report that vinculin is tyrosine phosphorylated in platelets spread on fibrinogen and that the phosphorylation is Src kinases dependent. The phosphorylation of vinculin on tyrosine was reconstituted in vanadate treated COS-7 cells coexpressing c-Src. The tyrosine phosphorylation sites in vinculin were mapped to residues 100 and 1065. A phosphorylation-specific antibody directed against tyrosine residue 1065 reacted with phosphorylated platelet vinculin but failed to react with vinculin from unstimulated platelet lysates. Tyrosine residue 1065 located in the vinculin tail domain was phosphorylated by c-Src in vitro. When phosphorylated, the vinculin tail exhibited significantly less binding to the vinculin head domain than the unphosphorylated tail. In contrast, the phosphorylation did not affect the binding of vinculin to actin in vitro. A double vinculin mutant protein Y100F/Y1065F localized to focal adhesion plaques. Wild-type vinculin and single tyrosine phosphorylation mutant proteins Y100F and Y1065F were significantly more effective at rescuing the spreading defect of vinculin null cells than the double mutant Y100F/Y1065F. The phosphorylation of vinculin by Src kinases may be one mechanism by which these kinases regulate actin filament assembly and cell spreading.  相似文献   

14.
High-Mr caldesmon, which is involved in smooth muscle contraction, was phosphorylated by protein kinase C. By chymotryptic digestion, actin- and calmodulin-binding assays and immunoprecipitation with the antibody to the C-terminal 35-kDa fragment, we have identified that all phosphate groups are incorporated exclusively into this fragment, which is the functional domain for binding actin and calmodulin. Phosphorylation of high-Mr caldesmon and its C-terminal 35-kDa fragment reduced their binding abilities to both F-actin and calmodulin. Further, their inhibitory effects on the actin-activated ATPase activity of gizzard myosin were also reversed in proportion to the degree of phosphorylation. These results suggest that phosphorylation of high-Mr caldesmon by protein kinase C, which is restricted within the C-terminal 35-kDa domain, results in the modulation of its activity in the smooth muscle actin--myosin interaction.  相似文献   

15.
Regulation in vitro of brush border myosin by light chain phosphorylation   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Myosin was purified from chicken brush border cells to greater than 95% homogeneity and in a predominantly non-phosphorylated state. The effects of light chain phosphorylation by a Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase on the conformational, enzymatic and filament assembly properties of this myosin were investigated. The actin-activated MgATPase activity of the non-phosphorylated myosin was low, and upon light chain phosphorylation an eight- to ninefold increase in this activity was observed, which was further potentiated by tropomyosin. Light chain phosphorylation was shown to control the assembly and disassembly of brush border myosin filaments. For example, turbidity measurements and electron microscopy demonstrated that MgATP disassembled non-phosphorylated myosin filaments; the disassembled myosin could reassemble when the light chains were phosphorylated, and could be disassembled again by dephosphorylating the light chains with phosphatase. In the electron microscope, the disassembled non-phosphorylated myosin molecules appeared in a folded conformation, and they were extended when phosphorylated. Proteolytic digestion was used to probe further the conformation of these folded and extended molecules, and their subunit organizations were characterized by a gel overlay technique. Quantitative analysis further demonstrated that light chain phosphorylation alters dramatically the monomer/polymer equilibrium of brush border myosin, shifting it towards filament formation. Comparison of analogous data for myosin from gizzard and thymus shows that each myosin has distinct solubility properties.  相似文献   

16.
The sulfonylurea receptor 2B (SUR2B) forms the regulatory subunit of ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels in vascular smooth muscle. Phosphorylation of the SUR2B nucleotide binding domains (NBD1 and NBD2) by protein kinase A results in increased channel open probability. Here, we investigate the effects of phosphorylation on the structure and nucleotide binding properties of NBD1. Phosphorylation sites in SUR2B NBD1 are located in an N-terminal tail that is disordered. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data indicate that phosphorylation of the N-terminal tail affects multiple residues in NBD1, including residues in the NBD2-binding site, and results in altered conformation and dynamics of NBD1. NMR spectra of NBD1 lacking the N-terminal tail, NBD1-ΔN, suggest that phosphorylation disrupts interactions of the N-terminal tail with the core of NBD1, a model supported by dynamic light scattering. Increased nucleotide binding of phosphorylated NBD1 and NBD1-ΔN, compared with non-phosphorylated NBD1, suggests that by disrupting the interaction of the NBD core with the N-terminal tail, phosphorylation also exposes the MgATP-binding site on NBD1. These data provide insights into the molecular basis by which phosphorylation of SUR2B NBD1 activates KATP channels.  相似文献   

17.
Su Z  Kiehart DP 《Biochemistry》2001,40(12):3606-3614
Conventional myosins (myosin-IIs) generate forces for cell shape change and cell motility. Myosin heavy chain phosphorylation regulates myosin function in simple eukaryotes and may also be important in metazoans. To investigate this regulation in a complex eukaryote, we purified the Drosophila myosin-II tail expressed in Escherichia coli and showed that it was phosphorylated in vitro by protein kinase C(PKC) at serines 1936 and 1944, which are located in the nonhelical globular tail piece. These sites are close to a conserved serine that is phosphorylated in vertebrate, nonmuscle myosin-IIs. If the two serines are mutagenized to alanine or aspartic acid, phosphorylation no longer occurs. Using a 341 amino acid tail fragment, we show that there is no difference in the salt-dependent assembly of wild-type phosphorylated and mutagenized polypeptides. Thus, the nonmuscle myosin heavy chain in Drosophila, which is encoded by the zipper gene, appears to be similar to rabbit nonmuscle myosin-IIA. In vivo, we generated transgenic flies that expressed the various myosin heavy chain variants in a zipper null or near-null genetic background. Like their wild-type counterparts, such variants are able to completely rescue the lethal phenotype due to severe zipper mutations. These results suggest that while the myosin-II heavy chain can be phosphorylated by PKC, regulation by this enzyme is not required for viability in Drosophila. Conservation during 530-1000 million years of evolution suggests that regulation by heavy chain phosphorylation may contribute to nonmuscle myosin-II function in some real, but minor, way.  相似文献   

18.
Chymotrypsin cleaves Dictyostelium myosin in half, splitting the heavy chain (210,000 daltons) into two fragments of 105,000 daltons each. One of the two major fragments is soluble at low ionic strength and has a native molecular weight of 130,000. As judged by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, this soluble fragment consists of the two intact myosin light chains of 18,000 and 16,000 daltons and a 105,000-dalton polypeptide derived from the myosin heavy chain. The soluble fragment retains actin-activated ATPase activity and the ability to bind to actin in an ATP-dissociable fashion. The maximal velocity of the actin- activated ATPase activity of the soluble fragment is 80% of that of uncleaved myosin, although its apparent Km for actin is 12-fold greater than that of myosin. In addition to the major soluble 105,000-dalton fragment discussed above, chymotryptic cleavage of the Dictyostelium myosin also generates fragments that are insoluble at low ionic strength. The major insoluble fragment is 105,000 daltons on an SDS polyacrylamide gel and forms thick filaments that are devoid of myosin heads. A less prevalent insoluble fragment has a molecular weight of 83,000 and is probably a subfragment of the insoluble 105,000-dalton fragment. The heavy chain of myosin is phosphorylated in vivo and the phosphorylation site has been localized to the insoluble fragments, which derive from the tail portion of the myosin molecule.  相似文献   

19.
To elucidate whether phosphorylation of myosin II regulatory light chain (MRLC) is essential for myosin II recruitment to the furrow during cytokinesis, HeLa cells transfected with three types of GFP-tagged recombinant MRLCs, wild-type MRLC, non-phosphorylated form of MRLC, and phosphorylated form of MRLC, were examined. Living cell-imaging showed that both phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated form of MRLCs were recruited to the equator at the same time after anaphase onset, suggesting that phosphorylation of MRLC is not responsible for recruitment of myosin II to the equator. Moreover, the treatment with an inhibitor of myosin II activity, blebbistatin, induced no effect on recruitment of those three recombinant MRLCs. During cytokinesis, phosphorylated but not non-phosphorylated form of MRLC was retained in the equator. These results suggest that phosphorylation of MRLC is essential for retainment of myosin II in the furrow but not for initial recruitment of myosin II to the furrow in dividing HeLa cells.  相似文献   

20.
Brush border myosin I from chicken intestine is phosphorylated in vitro by chicken intestinal epithelial cell protein kinase C. Phosphorylation on serine and threonine to a maximum of 0.93 mol of P/mol of myosin I occurs within an approximately 20 kDa region at the end of the COOH-terminal tail of the 119-kDa heavy chain. The effects of Ca2+ on myosin I phosphorylation by protein kinase C are complex, with up to 4-fold stimulation occurring at 0.5-3 microM Ca2+, and up to 80% inhibition occurring at 3-320 microM Ca2+. Phosphorylation required that brush border myosin I be in its phosphatidylserine vesicle-bound state. Previously unknown Ca2+ stimulation of brush border myosin I binding to phosphatidylserine vesicles was found to coincide with Ca2+ stimulation of phosphorylation. A myosin I proteolytic fragment lacking approximately 20 kDa of its tail retained Ca(2+)-stimulated binding, but showed reduced Ca(2+)-independent binding. Ca(2+)-dependent phosphatidylserine binding is apparently due to the concomitant phosphatidylserine-promoted, Ca(2+)-induced dissociation of up to three of the four calmodulin light chains from myosin I. Four highly basic putative calmodulin-binding sites in the Ca(2+)-dependent phosphatidylserine binding region of the heavy chain were identified based on the similarity in their sequence to the calmodulin- and phosphatidylserine-binding site of neuromodulin. Calmodulin dissociation is now shown to occur in the low micromolar Ca2+ concentration range and may regulate the association of brush border myosin I with membranes and its phosphorylation by protein kinase C.  相似文献   

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