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1.
C Frieden  K Patane 《Biochemistry》1985,24(15):4192-4196
The role of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) in the Mg2+-induced conformational change of rabbit skeletal muscle G-actin has been investigated by comparing actin containing bound ADP with actin containing bound ATP. As previously described [Frieden, C. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 2882-2886], N-acetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine-labeled G-actin containing ATP undergoes a time-dependent Mg2+-induced fluorescence change that reflects a conformational change in the actin. Addition of Mg2+ to labeled G-actin containing ADP gives no fluorescence change, suggesting that the conformational change does not occur. The fluorescence change can be restored on the addition of ATP. Examination of the time courses of these experiments suggests that ATP must replace ADP prior to the Mg2+-induced change. The Mg2+-induced polymerization of actin containing ADP is extraordinarily slow compared to that of actin containing ATP. The lack of the Mg2+-induced conformational change, which is an essential step in the Mg2+-induced polymerization, is probably the cause for the very slow polymerization of actin containing ADP. On the other hand, at 20 degrees C, at pH 8, and in 2 mM Mg2+, the elongation rate from the slow growing end of an actin filament, measured by using the protein brevin to block growth at the fast growing end, is only 4 times slower for actin containing ADP than for actin containing ATP.  相似文献   

2.
Substoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D inhibited the rate of polymerization of actin in 0.5 mM MgCl2, increased its critical concentration and lowered its steady state viscosity. Stoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D in 0.5 mM MgCl2 and even substoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D in 30 mM KCl, however, accelerated the rate of actin polymerization, although still lowering the final steady state viscosity. Cytochalasin B, at all concentrations in 0.5 mM MgCl2 or in 30 mM KCl, accelerated the rate of polymerization and lowered the final steady state viscosity. In 0.5 mM MgCl2, cytochalasin D uncoupled the actin ATPase activity from actin polymerization, increasing the ATPase rate by at least 20 times while inhibiting polymerization. Cytochalasin B had a very much lower stimulating effect. Neither cytochalasin D nor B affected the actin ATPase activity in 30 mM KCl. The properties of cytochalasin E were intermediate between those of cytochalasin D and B. Cytochalasin D also stimulated the ATPase activity of monomeric actin in the absence of MgCl2 and KCl and, to a much greater extent, stimulated the ATPase activity of monomeric actin below its critical concentration in 0.5 mM MgCl2. Both above and below its critical concentration and in the presence and absence of cytochalasin D, the initial rate of actin ATPase activity, when little or no polymerization had occurred, was directly proportional to the actin concentration and, therefore, apparently was independent of actin-actin interactions. To rationalize all these data, a working model has been proposed in which the first step of actin polymerization is the conversion of monomeric actin-bound ATP, A . ATP, to monomeric actin-bound ADP and Pi, A* . ADP . Pi, which, like the preferred growing end of an actin filament, can bind cytochalasins.  相似文献   

3.
Formation of actin dimers as studied by small angle neutron scattering   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Small angle neutron scattering has been used to study the dimensions of G-actin and the formation of low molecular weight actin oligomers under conditions where rapid polymerization does not take place. In the presence of 200 microM Ca2+, actin in solution consists of a single component with a radius of gyration (Rg) of 19.9 +/- 0.4 A, consistent with the known molecular dimensions of the G-actin molecule. In the presence of 50 microM Mg2+, however, formation of an actin species with a larger Rg occurs over a 4-h period. Multicomponent fits were tried and the data were best fit assuming two components, the monomer and a species with an Rg of 29 +/- 1 A. This latter value is consistent with the dimensions expected for certain actin dimers. The apparent dissociation constant for dimer formation is approximately 150 microM with forward and reverse rate constants of 6.0 X 10(-7) microM-1 s-1 and 8.8 X 10(-5) s-1, respectively. Kinetic fluorescence experiments show that the dimer formed in the presence of low levels of Mg2+ is a nonproductive complex which does not participate in the polymerization process. However, the addition of cytochalasin D to actin in the presence of 50 microM Mg2+ rapidly induces the formation of dimers, presumably related to cytochalasin's ability to nucleate actin polymerization.  相似文献   

4.
Isolation and characterization of covalently cross-linked actin dimer   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Covalently cross-linked actin dimer was isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin reacted with phenylenebismaleimide (Knight, P., and Offer, G. (1978) Biochem. J. 175, 1023-1032). The UV spectrum of the purified cross-linked actin dimer, in a nonpolymerizing buffer, was very similar to that of native F-actin and not to the spectrum of G-actin. Cross-linked actin dimer polymerized to filaments that were indistinguishable in the electron microscope from F-actin made from native G-actin and that were similar to native F-actin in their ability to activate the Mg2+-ATPase of myosin subfragment-1. The critical concentrations of polymerization of cross-linked actin dimer in 0.5 mM and 2.0 mM MgCl2, 2 to 4 microM, and 1 to 2 microM, respectively, were similar to the values for native G-actin. Cross-linked actin dimer contained 2 mol of bound nucleotide/mol of dimer. One bound nucleotide exchanged with ATP in solution with a t 1/2 of 55 min and with ADP with a t 1/2 of 5 h. The second bound nucleotide exchanged much more slowly. The more rapidly exchangeable site contained 10 to 15% bound ADP.Pi and 85 to 90% bound ATP while the second site contained much less, if any, bound ADP.Pi. Cross-linked actin dimer had an ATPase activity in 0.5 mM MgCl2 that was 7 times greater than the ATPase activity of native G-actin and that was also stimulated by cytochalasin D. These data are discussed in relation to the possible role of ATP in actin polymerization and function with the speculation that the cross-linked actin dimer may serve simultaneously as a useful model for each of the two different ends of native F-actin.  相似文献   

5.
Clostridium perfringens iota toxin belongs to a novel family of actin-ADP-ribosylating toxins. The effects of ADP-ribosylation of skeletal muscle actin by Clostridium perfringens iota toxin on cytochalasin D-stimulated actin ATPase activity was studied. Cytochalasin D stimulated actin-catalysed ATP hydrolysis maximally by about 30-fold. ADP-ribosylation of actin completely inhibited cytochalasin D-stimulated ATP hydrolysis. Inhibition of ATPase activity occurred at actin concentrations below the critical concentration (0.1 microM), at low concentrations of Mg2+ (50 microM) and even in the actin-DNAase I complex, indicating that ADP-ribosylation of actin blocks the ATPase activity of monomeric actin and that the inhibitory effect is not due to inhibition of the polymerization of actin.  相似文献   

6.
The ATPase activity and fluoresence of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase (Rubisco) activase were determined over a range of MgCl2, KCl, and activase concentrations. Both salts promoted ADP release from ATP and intrinsic fluorescence enhancement by adenosine 5[prime]-[[gamma]-thio] triphosphate, but Mg2+ was about 10 times more effective than K+. ATPase and fluorescence enhancement both increased from zero to saturation within the same Mg2+ and K+ concentration ranges. At saturating concentrations (5 mM Mg2+ and 22 mM K+), the specific activity of ATPase (turnover time, about 1 s) and specific intrinsic fluorescence enhancement were maximal and unaffected by activase concentration above 1 [mu]M activase; below 1 [mu]M activase, both decreased sharply. These responses are remarkably similar to the behavior of actin. Intrinsic fluorescence enhancement of Rubisco activase reflects the extent of polymerization, showing that the smaller oligomer or monomer present in low-salt and activase concentrations is inactive in ATP hydrolysis. However, quenching of 1-anilinonapthaline-8-sulfonate fluorescence revealed that ADP and adenosine 5[prime]-[[gamma]-thio] triphosphate bind equally well to activase at low- and high-salt concentrations. This is consistent with an actin-like mechanism requiring a dynamic equilibrium between monomer and oligomers for ATP hydrolysis. The specific activation rate of substrate-bound decarbamylated Rubisco decreased at activase concentrations below 1 [mu]M. This suggests that a large oligomeric form of activase, rather than a monomer, interacts with Rubisco when performing the release of bound ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate from the inactive enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The rate of actin polymerization gradually decreased without changing the final level of polymerization, when incubated in the presence of 0.2 mM ATP at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C. This change was much faster in Mg2+-actin than Ca2+-actin, and Mg2+-actin became denatured and unpolymerizable on prolonged incubation. The drop in the polymerization rate was due both to weakened nucleation and a slowed elongation rate in the incubated actin. The change in the polymerization rate was partially reversible by storing the sample at 0 degrees C. When the rate of polymerization dropped markedly on prolonged incubation, a gel filtration profile showed that Ca2+-actin existed as monomer not as oligomer. On the other hand, Mg2+-actin formed dimers, and other oligomers, as revealed by crosslinking analysis. There were changes in fluorescence intensities due to tyrosine and/or tryptophan residues of the actin molecule, and in difference absorption spectra, suggesting that conformational changes intermediate between native and denatured states occurred during incubation.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
T Keiser  A Schiller  A Wegner 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4899-4906
The nonlinear increase of the elongation rate of actin filaments above the critical monomer concentration was investigated by nucleated polymerization of actin. Significant deviations from linearity were observed when actin was polymerized in the presence of magnesium ions. When magnesium ions were replaced by potassium or calcium ions, no deviations from linearity could be detected. The nonlinearity was analyzed by two simple assembly mechanisms. In the first model, if the ATP hydrolysis by polymeric actin is approximately as fast as the incorporation of monomers into filaments, terminal subunits of lengthening filaments are expected to carry to some extent ADP. As ADP-containing subunits dissociate from the ends of actin filaments faster than ATP-containing subunits, the rate of elongation of actin filaments would be nonlinearly correlated with the monomer concentration. In the second model (conformational change model), actin monomers and filament subunits were assumed to occur in two conformations. The association and dissociation rates of actin molecules in the two conformations were thought to be different. The equilibrium distribution between the two conformations was assumed to be different for monomers and filament subunits. The ATP hydrolysis was thought to lag behind polymerization and conformational change. As under the experimental conditions the rate of ATP hydrolysis by polymeric actin was independent of the concentration of filament ends, the observed nonlinear increase of the rate of elongation with the monomer concentration above the critical monomer concentration was unlikely to be caused by ATP hydrolysis at the terminal subunits. The conformational change model turned out to be the simplest assembly mechanism by which all available experimental data could be explained.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The correlation between the time courses of actin polymerization under continuous sonication and the associated ATP hydrolysis has been studied. ATP hydrolysis was not mechanistically coupled to polymerization, i.e. not necessary for polymerization, but occurred on F-actin in a subsequent monomolecular reaction. Under sonication, polymerization was complete in 10 s while hydrolysis of ATP on the polymer required 200 s. A value of 0.023 s-1 was found for the first order rate constant of ATP hydrolysis on the polymer at 25 degrees C, pH 7.8, in the presence of 0.2 mM ATP, 0.1 mM CaCl2, and 1 mM MgCl2, independent of the F-actin concentration. The conversion of ATP X F-actin to ADP X F-actin was accompanied by an increase in fluorescence of a pyrenyl probe covalently attached to actin, consistent with a 2-fold greater fluorescence for ADP X F-actin than for ATP X F-actin, with a rate constant of 0.022 s-1. In contrast, the fluorescence of F-actin labeled with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzeno-2-oxa-1,3-diazole did not change significantly when ATP or ADP was bound. The direct consequence of the uncoupling between polymerization and ATP hydrolysis is the formation of an ATP cap at the ends of the filaments, which maintains the stability of the polymer, while most of the filament contains bound ADP. The heterogeneity of the filament with respect to ATP and ADP results in a nonlinear relationship between the rate of elongation and the concentration of G-actin with a discontinuity at the critical concentration, where the rate of growth is zero. In this respect, F-actin in ATP behaves similarly to microtubules in GTP.  相似文献   

13.
The rate of ATP hydrolysis in solutions of F-actin at steady state in 50 mM KC1, 0.1 mM CaC12 was inhibited by AMP and ADP. The inhibition was competitive with ATP (Km of about 600 microM) with Ki values of 9 microM for AMP and 44 microM for ADP. ATP hydrolysis was inhibited greater than 95% by 1 mM AMP. AMP had no effect on the time course of actin polymerization, ATP hydrolysis during polymerization, or the critical actin concentration. Simultaneous measurements of G-actin/F-actin subunit exchange and nucleotide exchange showed that nucleotide exchange occurred much more rapidly than subunit exchange; during the experiment over 50% of the F-actin-bound nucleotide was replaced when less than 1% of the F-actin subunits had exchanged. When AMP was present it was incorporated into the polymer, preventing incorporation of ADP from ATP in solution. F-actin with bound Mg2+ was much less sensitive to AMP than F-actin with bound Ca2+. These data provide evidence for an ATP hydrolysis cycle associated with direct exchange of F-actin-bound ADP for ATP free in solution independent of monomer-polymer end interactions. This exchange and hydrolysis of nucleotide may be enhanced when Ca2+ is bound to the F-actin protomers.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of cytochalasin D to monomeric actin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The binding of cytochalasin D to monomeric actin has been measured directly. In the presence of 200 microM Ca2+, actin binds cytochalasin D in a 1:1 molar ratio with a KD of 18 microM. After incubation with 250 microM Mg2+ for 10 minutes, actin binds cytochalasin D with a KD of 2.6 microM but with one mole of cytochalasin D per 2 moles of actin. This suggests that cytochalasin D induces dimerization of Mg2+-induced actin monomers.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochalasin inhibits the rate of elongation of actin filament fragments   总被引:41,自引:22,他引:19  
Submicromolar concentrations of cytochalasin inhibit the rate of assembly of highly purified dictyostelium discoideum actin, using a cytochalasin concentration range in which the final extent of assembly is minimally affected. Cytochalasin D is a more effective inhibitor than cytochalasin B, which is in keeping with the effects that have been reported on cell motility and with binding to a class of high-affinity binding sites from human erythrocyte membranes (Lin and Lin. 1978. J. Biol. CHem. 253:1415; Lin and Lin. 1979. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76:2345); 5x10(-7) M cytochalasin B lowers it to 70 percent of the control value, whereas 10(-7) M cytochalasin B lowers the rate to 25 percent. Fragments of F-actin were used to increase the rate of assembly fivefold by providing more filament ends on to which monomers could add. Under these conditions, cytochalasin has an even more dramatic effect on the assembly rate; the concentrations of cytochalasin B and cytochalasin D required for half-maximal inhibition are 2x10(-7) M and 10(-8) M, respectively. The assembly rate is most sensitive to cytochalasin when actin assembly is carried out in the absence of ATP (with 3 mM ADP present to stabilize the actin). In this case, the concentrations of cytochalasin B and cytochalasin D required for half-maximal inhibition are 4x10(-8) M and 1x10(-9) M, respectively. A scatchard plot has been obtained using [(3)H]cytochalasin B binding to F-actin in the absence of ATP. The K(d) from this plot (approximately 4x10(-8) M) agrees well with the concentration of cytochalasin B required for half-maximal inhibition of the rate of assembly under these conditions. The number of cytochalasin binding sites is roughly one per F-actin filament, suggesting that cytochalasin has a specific action on actin filament ends.  相似文献   

16.
Cytochalasin D strongly inhibits the faster components in the reactions of actin filament depolymerization and elongation in the presence of 10 mM Tris-Cl-, pH 7.8, 0.2 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM CaCl2, and 0.2 mM ATP or ADP. Assuming an exclusive and total capping of the barbed end by the drug, the kinetic parameters derived at saturation by cytochalasin D refer to the pointed end and are 10-15-fold lower than at the barbed end. In ATP, the critical concentration increases with cytochalasin D up to 12-fold its value when both ends are free; as a result of the lowering of the free energy of nucleation by cytochalasin D, short oligomers of F-actin exist just above and below the critical concentration. Cytochalasin D interacts strongly with the barbed ends independently of the ADP-G-actin concentration (K = 0.5 nM-1). In contrast, the affinity of cytochalasin D decreases cooperatively with increasing ATP-G-actin concentration. These data are equally well accounted for by two different models: either cytochalasin D binds very poorly to ATP-capped filament ends whose proportion increases with actin concentration, or cytochalasin D binds equally well to ATP-ends and ADP-ends and also binds to actin dimers in ATP but not in ADP. A linear actin concentration dependence of the rate of growth was found at the pointed end, consistent with the virtual absence of an ATP cap at that end.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The mechanism of salt-induced actin polymerization involves the energetically unfavorable nucleation step, followed by filament elongation by the addition of monomers. The use of a bifunctional cross-linker, N,N′-(1,4-phenylene)dimaleimide, revealed rapid formation of the so-called lower dimers (LD) in which actin monomers are arranged in an antiparallel fashion. The filament elongation phase is characterized by a gradual LD decay and an increase in the yield of “upper dimers” (UD) characteristic of F-actin. Here we have used 90° light scattering, electron microscopy, and N,N′-(1,4-phenylene)dimaleimide cross-linking to reinvestigate relationships between changes in filament morphology, LD decay, and increase in the yield of UD during filament growth in a wide range of conditions influencing the rate of the nucleation reaction. The results show irregularity and instability of filaments at early stages of polymerization under all conditions used, and suggest that an earlier documented coassembling of LD with monomeric actin contributes to the initial disordering of the filaments rather than to the nucleation of polymerization. The effects of the type of G-actin-bound divalent cation (Ca2+/Mg2+), nucleotide (ATP/ADP), and polymerizing salt on the relation between changes in filament morphology and progress in G-actin-to-F-actin transformation show that ligand-dependent alterations in G-actin conformation determine not only the nucleation rate but also the kinetics of ordering of the filament structure in the elongation phase. The time courses of changes in the yield of UD suggest that filament maturation involves cooperative propagation of “proper” interprotomer contacts. Acceleration of this process by the initially bound MgATP supports the view that the filament-destabilizing conformational changes triggered by ATP hydrolysis and Pi liberation during polymerization are constrained by the intermolecular contacts established between MgATP monomers prior to ATP hydrolysis. An important role of contacts involving the DNase-I-binding loop and the C-terminus of actin is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
INF2 (inverted formin 2) is a formin protein with unique biochemical effects on actin. In addition to the common formin ability to accelerate actin nucleation and elongation, INF2 can also sever filaments and accelerate their depolymerization. Although we understand key attributes of INF2-mediated severing, we do not understand the mechanism by which INF2 accelerates depolymerization subsequent to severing. Here, we show that INF2 can create short filaments (<60 nm) that continuously turn over actin subunits through a combination of barbed end elongation, severing, and WH2 motif-mediated depolymerization. This pseudo-steady state condition occurs whether starting from actin filaments or monomers. The rate-limiting step of the cycle is nucleotide exchange of ADP for ATP on actin monomers after release from the INF2/actin complex. Profilin addition has two effects: 1) to accelerate filament turnover 6-fold by accelerating nucleotide exchange and 2) to shift the equilibrium toward polymerization, resulting in longer filaments. In sum, our findings show that the combination of multiple interactions of INF2 with actin can work in concert to increase the ATP turnover rate of actin. Depending on the ratio of INF2:actin, this increased flux can result in rapid filament depolymerization or maintenance of short filaments. We also show that high concentrations of cytochalasin D accelerate ATP turnover by actin but through a different mechanism from that of INF2.  相似文献   

20.
E Kim  M Motoki  K Seguro  A Muhlrad    E Reisler 《Biophysical journal》1995,69(5):2024-2032
Gln-41 on G-actin was specifically labeled with a fluorescent probe, dansyl ethylenediamine (DED), via transglutaminase reaction to explore the conformational changes in subdomain 2 of actin. Replacement of Ca2+ with Mg2+ and ATP with ADP on G-actin produced large changes in the emission properties of DED. These substitutions resulted in blue shifts in the wavelength of maximum emission and increases in DED fluorescence. Excitation of labeled actin at 295 nm revealed energy transfer from tryptophans to DED. Structure considerations and Cu2+ quenching experiments suggested that Trp-79 and/or Trp-86 serves as energy donors to DED. Energy transfer from these residues to DED on Gln-41 increased with the replacement of Ca2+ with Mg2+ and ATP with ADP. Polymerization of Mg-G-actin with MgCl2 resulted in much smaller changes in DED fluorescence than divalent cation substitution. This suggests that the conformation of loop 38-52 on actin is primed for the polymerization reaction by the substitution of Ca2+ with Mg2+ on G-actin.  相似文献   

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