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1.
The formation of hybrid myosin and subfragment 1 species by incubation of these proteins with free alkali light chains at physiological ionic and temperature conditions is described. Exchange of bound alkali light chain on myosin by free alkali light chains under these conditions is readily demonstrated from the subunit composition of the isolated myosin. Therefore, the light chain exchange previously described for the one-headed subfragment 1 [Sivaramakrishnan, M., & Burke, M (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2607--2610] also occurs in the two-headed myosin molecule. It is found than the isozyme to hybrid transformation is dependent on both the temperature and the ionic strength of the incubation mixture but is relatively independent of pH in the range 6.5--8.0. A comparison of the SF1(A1) leads to SF1(A2)h system with the SF1(A2) leads to SF1(A1)h system indicates that more hybrid is formed in the latter case. With the assumption that hybrid formation reflects the degree of reversible dissociation exhibited by the isozyme, under the particular experimental condition employed, the data signify that the subunit interactions in the two isozymes are not identical and that the heavy chain--A1 interactions are significantly more stable that the heavy chain--A2 ones. An examination of the ATPase properties of the thermal hybrids in the presence and absence of actin indicates close similarities to their corresponding "native" isozymic counterparts.  相似文献   

2.
The procedure of thermal ion-exchange chromatography has been used to examine the effect of prior tryptic cleavage on the stability of myosin subfragment 1 (SF1). Although it is found that digestion does destabilize the subunit interactions at physiological temperatures, the heavy-chain subunit can be isolated either as an equimolar complex comprised of 50K, 27K, and 21K fragments or as one comprised of 50K, 27K, and 18K peptides. Thus, the interactions within the heavy chain are considerably more stable than those between the two subunits. Both forms of the free severed heavy chain exhibit ATPase properties similar to those of the parent tryptic SF1. The Vmax for the actin-activated MgATPase of the free severed heavy chain is the same as that for both undigested and tryptic SF1 (A2). Since its Km for actin is similar to that of tryptic SF1(A2), it may be concluded that changes in the affinity of SF1 for actin induced by trypsin [Botts, J., Muhlrad, A., Takashi, R., & Morales, M. F. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 6903-6905] are not dependent on the presence of the associated alkali light chain. Furthermore, the communication between the SH1 site and the ATPase site is also shown to be independent of the associated alkali light chain, and it persists despite the cleavages present in the free heavy chain. Studies on the ability of these severed heavy chains to reassociate with free A1 and A2 chains indicate that the binding site is retained in the 21K-severed heavy chain but is lost in the 18K form.  相似文献   

3.
1. Fast skeletal myosin subfragment 1 (S1) was separated into two isozymes, S1(A1) and S1(A2), based on the associated alkali light chain, and their thermostabilities were compared. 2. Inactivation rate constants of Ca2(+)-ATPase (at 30 and 35 degrees C) were higher and heat-induced turbidity increase at 340 nm (at 40 degrees C) was faster with S1(A1) than with S1(A2), indicating a higher stability of S1(A2). 3. When S1 isozymes were incubated in the presence of excess alkali light chain, turbidity increase was markedly reduced, depending on the amount of light chain added. 4. Results obtained strongly suggest that alkali light chains are involved in the maintenance of myosin head structure.  相似文献   

4.
Modification of the free alkali light chains of myosin by iodoacetylation results in a much lower extent of exchange into myosin subfragment 1 by the thermal hybridization procedure (Burke, M., and Sivaramakrishnan, M. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 5908-5913). As reported by others (Wagner, P. D., and Stone, D. B. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 8876-8882), free alkali light chains modified by iodoacetate at their single sulfhydryl residue exhibit minimal exchange into intact myosin. However, when unmodified alkali light chain is used to probe for exchange, close to the theoretical limit of exchange is observed for subfragment 1, and significant levels of exchange are found for myosin. It appears that modification of the free alkali light chain alters the structure of the protein, and this causes either a marked reduction in its affinity for the heavy chain or in its ability to enter the light chain binding site. This conclusion is supported by tryptic digestions done on the unmodified and modified free light chains where it is found that the latter is degraded at a much faster rate, indicating a more open structure for the modified protein. The observation that alkali light chain exchanges into myosin when unmodified alkali light chains are used indicates that the presence of the associated 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) light chains does not preclude the reversible dissociation of this subunit from myosin under ionic and temperature conditions approaching the physiological state.  相似文献   

5.
M Ikebe  D J Hartshorne 《Biochemistry》1985,24(9):2380-2387
The proteolysis of gizzard myosin by Staphylococcus aureus protease produces both heavy meromyosin and subfragment 1 in which the 20 000-dalton light chains are intact, and conditions are suggested for the preparation of each. Cleavage of the myosin heavy chain to produce subfragment 1 is dependent on the myosin conformation. Proteolysis of myosin in the 10S conformation yields predominantly heavy meromyosin, and myosin in the 6S conformation yields mostly subfragment 1 and some heavy meromyosin. Two sites are influenced by myosin conformation, and these are located at approximately 68 000 and 94 000 daltons from the N-terminus of the myosin heavy chain. The latter site is thought to be located at the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 junction, and cleavage at this site results in the production of subfragment 1. The time courses of phosphorylation of both heavy meromyosin and subfragment 1 can be fit by a single exponential. The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of heavy meromyosin is markedly activated by phosphorylation of the 20 000-dalton light chains. From the actin dependence of Mg2+-ATPase activity the following values are obtained: for phosphorylated heavy meromyosin, Vmax approximately 5.6 s-1 and Ka (the apparent dissociation constant for actin) approximately 2 mg/mL; for dephosphorylated heavy meromyosin, Vmax approximately 0.2 s-1 and Ka approximately 7 mg/mL. The actin-activated ATPase activity of subfragment 1 is not influenced by phosphorylation, and Vmax and Ka for both the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms are 0.4 s-1 and 5 mg/mL, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The stability of the interaction of A1 in myosin and subfragment 1 isolated from fast-twitch mammalian and avian muscles with respect to temperature and ionic strength has been examined. This was done by determining the extent of exchange of the endogenous free A1 light chain into these proteins from the two species. Whereas the extent of exchange at 37 degrees C into mammalian S1, occurring after 60 min, is about 80% of the theoretically expected amount at physiological ionic conditions, the level of exchange observed with the avian S1 is significantly lower. However, close to the theoretical limit is observed for the avian S1 when exchange is done at 43 degrees C which is close to average avian body temperature. A similar dependence with temperature is observed in the case of exchanges into avian myosin. In the case of mammalian myosin, 50% of the theoretical exchange is observed at 37 degrees C under physiological ionic strength, whereas the level of exchange observed under these conditions with the avian protein is much lower in agreement with recent observations (Waller, G. S., and Lowey, S. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 14368-14373; Pastra-Landis, S. C., and Lowey, S. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 14811-14816). If, however, the exchanges are done at 43 degrees C in physiological ionic strength, significant extents of exchange can be observed in avian myosin. These results suggest that at physiological ionic and temperature conditions relevant for the source of myosin and S1 being investigated, the alkali light chains are in dynamic equilibrium between free and heavy chain associated states. Therefore, the failure to observe alkali light chain exchange in avian myosin at 37 degrees C appears to be related to the higher temperature stability of its interaction with the heavy chain.  相似文献   

7.
1. Presence of N-terminal peptide ("difference peptide") in alkali light chain 1 (A1) of fish fast skeletal myosin was examined by comparing two kinds of light chain-based myosin subfragment 1 (S1) isozymes from the yellowtail Seriola quinqueradiata. 2. On tryptic digestion, A1 was cleaved to a smaller fragment (mol. wt decrement by 2000) along with the cleavage of S1 heavy chain, while A2 was resistant to trypsin. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed that A1 released a basic peptide by tryptic digestion. 3. Both S1 isozymes showed clear kinetic differences in actin-activated Mg-ATPase activity, suggesting a higher affinity of A1 for actin. Affinity of A2 for heavy chain was also estimated to be about 2-fold higher than that of A1, as judged by the model experiments in which rabbit S1 isozymes were hybridized with heterologous alkali light chains.  相似文献   

8.
Light chain exchange in 4.7 M NH4Cl was used to hybridize the essential light chain of cardiac myosin with the heavy chain of fast muscle myosin subfragment 1, S-1. The actin-activated ATPase properties of this hybrid were compared to those of the two fast S-1 isoenzymes, S-1(A1), fast muscle subfragment 1 which contains only the alkali-1 light chain, and S-1(A2), fast muscle myosin subfragment 1 which contains only the alkali-2 light chain. This hybrid S-1 behaved like S-1(A1)., At low ionic strength in the presence of actin, this hybrid had a maximal rate of ATP hydrolysis about the same as that of S-1(A1) and about one-half that of S-1(A2), while at higher ionic strengths the actin-activated ATPases of these three S-2 species were all similar. Light chain exchange in NH4Cl was also used to hybridize the essential light chains of fast muscle myosin with the heavy chains of cardiac myosin and to hybridize the essential light chains of cardiac myosin with the heavy chains of fast muscle myosin. In 60 and 100 mM KCl, the actin-activated ATPases of these two hybrid myosins were very different from those of the control myosins with the same essential light chains but were very similar to those of the control myosins with the same heavy chains, differing at most by one-third.  相似文献   

9.
N D Vu  P D Wagner 《Biochemistry》1987,26(15):4847-4853
Limited proteolysis was used to identify regions on the heavy chains of calf thymus myosin which may be involved in ATP and actin binding. Assignments of the various proteolytic fragments to different parts of the myosin heavy chain were based on solubility, gel filtration, electron microscopy, and binding of 32P-labeled regulatory light chains. Chymotrypsin rapidly cleaved within the head of thymus myosin to give a 70,000-dalton N-terminal fragment and a 140,000-dalton C-terminal fragment. These two fragments did not dissociate under nondenaturing conditions. Cleavage within the myosin tail to give heavy meromyosin occurred more slowly. Cleavage at the site 70,000 daltons from the N-terminus of the heavy chain caused about a 30-fold decrease in the actin concentration required to achieve half-maximal stimulation of the magnesium-adenosinetriphosphatase (Mg-ATPase) activity of unphosphorylated thymus myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activity of this digested myosin was only slightly affected by light chain phosphorylation. Actin inhibited the cleavage at this site by chymotrypsin. In the presence of ATP, chymotrypsin rapidly cleaved the thymus myosin heavy chain at an additional site about 4000 daltons from the N-terminus. Cleavage at this site caused a 2-fold increase in the ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid-ATPase activity and 3-fold decreases in the Ca2+- and Mg-ATPase activities of thymus myosin. Thus, cleavage at the N-terminus of thymus myosin was affected by ATP, and this cleavage altered ATPase activity. Papain cleaved the thymus myosin heavy chain about 94,000 daltons from the N-terminus to give subfragment 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Conformational stability of the myosin rod   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Chymotryptic cleavage patterns of myosin rods from pig stomach, chicken gizzard, and rabbit skeletal muscle indicate that short (approximately 45 nm) heavy meromyosin subfragment 2 (SF2) is a consistent product of all three rods, whereas long (approximately 60 nm) SF2 is derived only from skeletal muscle myosin. Differential scanning calorimetry was used to follow the thermally induced melting transition of the rods and certain of their subfragments. In 0.12 M KCl, sodium phosphate buffer, pH 6.2-7.6, the light meromyosin (LMM) and SF2 domains of each rod had essentially identical conformational stabilities. Temperature midpoints for the melting transitions were 54-56 degrees C for the two smooth muscle myosin rods and 50-53 degrees C for the skeletal muscle myosin rod. In 0.6 M K Cl buffer, melting transitions for the smooth muscle myosin rods were essentially unchanged, but skeletal muscle myosin rods showed multiphase melting, with major transitions at 43 degrees C and 52 degrees C. The first of these was tentatively attributed to LMM, and the second to SF2. In 0.12 M K Cl buffer, the LMM transition was stabilised so that it superimposed on that of SF2. No melting was observed in any of the rods at physiological temperature. These results indicate that, excluding a possible but only narrow hinge region, the entire myosin rod has essentially uniform conformational stability at physiological pH and ionic strength, and thus that the contractile and elastic properties of the cross-bridge exist in the heavy meromyosin subfragment 1 (SF1) domains of the molecule.  相似文献   

11.
To begin to understand the nature of myosin subunit assembly, we determined the region of a vertebrate sarcomeric myosin heavy chain required for binding of light chain 1. We coexpressed in Escherichia coli segments of the rat alpha cardiac myosin heavy chain which spanned the carboxyl terminus of subfragment 1 and the amino terminus of subfragment 2 with a full-length rat cardiac myosin light chain 1. A 16 amino acid region of the myosin heavy chain (residues 792-808) was shown to be required for myosin light chain 1 binding in an immunoprecipitation assay.  相似文献   

12.
Acanthamoeba myosin IB is a single-headed enzyme containing one heavy chain of 125,000 daltons, one light chain of 27,000 daltons, and one light chain of 14,000 daltons. The 125,000- and 27,000-dalton polypeptides are consistently found in a molar ratio of 1:1. The content of the 14,000-dalton peptide is usually only 0.1 to 0.2, and always less than 0.5, relative to the other two chains and might be a contaminant or a degradation product of one of the other chains. The specific activities of the Ca2+-ATPase, (K+, EDTA)-ATPase, and (after phosphorylation of its heavy chain by a specific kinase) actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase of Acanthamoeba myosin IB are similar to those of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin. After treatment of the enzyme with 2 M LiCl, the 125,000-dalton heavy chain of Acanthamoeba myosin Ib can be obtained, by chromatography on Sephadex G-200, essentially free of the 14,000-dalton peptide and more than 90% free of the 27,000-dalton peptide. This isolated heavy chain has the same specific ATPase activities as the original enzyme. Therefore, the heavy chain of Acanthamoeba myosin IB contains the ATPase catalytic site, the actin-binding site, and the phosphorylation site and is fully active enzymatically in the absence of light chains.  相似文献   

13.
The divalent metal ion binding sites of skeletal myosin were investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy using the paramagnetic (Mn(II) ion as a probe. Myosin possesses two high affinity sites (K less than 1 muM) for Mn(II), which are located on the 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) (DTNB) light chains. Mn(II) bound to the isolated DTNB light chain gives rise to an EPR spectrum similar to that of Mn(II) bound to myosin and this indicates that the metal binding site comprises ligands from the DTNB light chain alone. Myosin preparations in which the DTNB light chain content is reduced by treatment with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) show a corresponding reduction in the stoichiometry of Mn(II) binding, but the stoichiometry is recovered on reassociation of the DTNB light chain. Chymotryptic digestion of myosin filaments in the presence of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid yields subfragment 1, but digestion in the presence of divalent metal ions produces heavy meromyosin. Myosin with a depleted DTNB light chain content gives rise to subfragment 1 on proteolysis, even in the presence of divalent metal ions. It is proposed that saturation of the DTNB light chain site with divalent ions protects this subunit against proteolysis, which, in turn, inhibits the cleavage of the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 link. Either the DTNB light chain is located near the region of the link and sterically blocks chymotryptic attack, or it is bound to the subfragment 1 moiety and affects the conformation of the link region. When the product heavy meromyosin was examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, an apparent anomaly arose in that there was no trace of the 19 000-dalton band corresponding to the DTNB light chain. This was resolved by following the time course of chymotryptic digestion of the myosin heavy chain, the DTNB light chain, and the divalent metal binding site. The 19 000-dalton DTNB light chain is rapidly degraded to a 17 000-dalton fragment which comigrates with the alkali 2 light chain. The divalent metal site remains intact, despite this degradation, and the 17 000 fragment continues to protect the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 link. In the absence of divalent metal ions, the 17 000-dalton fragment is further degraded and attack of the subfragment 1 link ensues. Mn(II) bound to cardiac myosin gives an EPR spectrum basically similar to that of skeletal myosin, suggesting that their 19 000-dalton light chains are analogous with respect to their divalent metal binding sites, despite their chemical differences. The potential of EPR spectroscopy for characterizing the metal binding sites of myosin from different sources and of intact muscle fibers is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Digestion of insoluble myosin with soluble papain produces heavy meromyosin subfragment 1 (HMM-S-1) having ATPase activity and the ability to combine with actin. These fragments of myosin do not undergo appreciable changes in ATPase activity, chromatographic behavior, or actin combining ability during digestion up to 2 h but, as shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, several splits occur in both the heavy and light polypeptide chains. The largest fragment of heavy chain present in fast, slow, cardiac and embryonic HMM-S-1 has a mass of 89,000 daltons. This fragment undergoes further degradation resulting in fragments having masses of the order of 70,000, 50,000, and 27,000 daltons. The latter fragment and other material resulting from the proteolysis of myosin appear as bands in that region of the gels where the light chains are found in electrophoretograms of the parent myosin. The precise size of the fragments and the rates of their formation depend on the type of myosin; slow and cardiac HMM-S-1 and their fragments show greater stability. Embryonic myosin has properties intermediate between those of fast skeletal and cardiac myosin. Experiments involving the combination of HMM-S-1 with actin and experiments with glutaraldehyde cross linking and chromatography on Sephadex G-200 indicate that the fragments separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis are held together by noncovalent forces in HMM-S-1.  相似文献   

15.
Evidence is presented that, under conditions of 4.7 M NH4Cl and 10 mM Mg-ATP where no subunit dissociation can be detected by transport methods, a dynamic equilibrium exists in subfragment 1 between the associated and dissociated subunits. This is readily discerned by the formation of hybrid subfragment 1 species when a subfragment 1 isozyme is incubated with excess free light chains of the alternate isozyme. A similar process occurs with p-N,N'-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM)-modified subfragment 1 containing [14C]Mg-ADP, but in this case, although extensive amounts of hybrid are formed, no loss of the trapped nucleotide is observed. Subunit scrambling without loss of the trapped nucleotide is apparent from incubating pPDM-SF1(A2)-[14C]Mg-ADP with unmodified SF1(A1) under similar conditions since the mixture subsequently contains SF1(A1), SF1(A2)h, pPDM-SF1(A1)h-[14C]Mg-ADP and pPDM-SF1(A2)-[14C]Mg-ADP. These data show that the nucleotide trapped in the presumptive active site does not escape during the dissociation-reassociation cycle, and suggest that the ATPase site resides solely on the heavy chain.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The photoprobe 3'(2')-O-(4-benzoyl)benzoyladenosine 5'-triphosphate (Bz2ATP) was used to characterize the nucleotide-binding site of myosin subfragment 1 (SF1). Improved synthesis and purification of Bz2ATP are reported. 1H NMR and ultraviolet spectroscopy show that Bz2ATP is a 60:40 mixture of the 3'(2')-ribose isomers and that the epsilon M261 is 41,000 M-1 cm-1. Bz2ATP is hydrolyzed by SF1 comparably to ATP in the presence of actin or K+, NH4+, or Mg2+ ions; and the product, Bz2ADP, has a single binding site on SF1 (K'a = 3.0 X 10(5) M-1). [3H]Bz2ATP was photoincorporated into SF1 with concomitant loss of K+-EDTA-ATPase activity. Analysis of photolabeled SF1 showed that the three major tryptic peptides (23, 50, and 20 kDa) of the heavy chain fragment and the alkali light chains were labeled. The presence of ATP during irradiation protected only the 50-kDa peptide, indicating that the other peptides were nonspecifically labeled. If Bz2ATP was first trapped on SF1 by cross-linking the reactive thiols, SH1 and SH2, with p-phenylenedimaleimide, only the 50-kDa tryptic peptide was labeled. These results confirm and extend previous observations that [3H]Bz2ATP trapped on SF1 by cobalt(III) phenanthroline photolabeled the same 50-kDa peptide (Mahmood, R., and Yount, R.G. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12956-12959). Thus, the 50-kDa peptide is labeled with or without thiol cross-linking, indicating that the relative position of SH1 and SH2 does not affect the labeling pattern.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of temperature, Mg2+, ATP, and actin on the conformation of the neck region of the myosin head were studied by limited proteolysis of heavy meromyosin (HMM) and subfragment 1 (S1) preparations obtained by papain digestion of myosin in the presence of Mg2+ (Mg-S1) or EDTA (EDTA-S1). The preparations were fluorescently labelled at the SH1 thiol group to enable identification of the COOH-terminal fragments of the head portion of the heavy chain where this group is located. The results indicate that the head-rod junctional region of the myosin heavy chain contains at least three different sites readily susceptible to trypsin at 25 degrees C if the light chain LC2 or its LC2' fragment are absent. The susceptibility of one of these sites dramatically decreases when the temperature is lowered to 0 degree C, indicating a temperature-dependent conformational transition in the head-rod junction. With the method used, this transition is detectable only in LC2/LC'2-deficient preparations since all three sites are protected, although to different extents, by LC2 and its LC'2 derivative. It is, however, most probable that the effect of the light chain is confined to steric hindrance of trypsin access and that the temperature-dependent structural transition in the head-rod junction can occur in the presence of intact LC2 as well and may contribute to the temperature sensitivity of force generation in muscle.  相似文献   

19.
Saturation transfer electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to investigate the rotational motion of the head domains of native and desensitized scallop myosin and its proteolytic subfragments. Scallop myosin was spin-labelled with 4-(2-iodoacetamido)-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinooxyl, which reacted with a heavy chain residue in the subfragment 1 domain. As previously shown for rabbit skeletal muscle myosin (Thomas et al., 1975), the two head domains of native scallop myosin appear to have independent motion (rotational correlation time, pi, = 0.8 X 10(-7) s for subfragment 1; 1.4 X 10(-7) s for myosin). However, removal of a regulatory light chain, to effect desensitization of the actin-activated ATPase, was associated with an increase in pi for myosin to a value of 2.4 X 10(-6) s. The Ca2+ sensitivity and initial correlation time were restored on recombination of the regulatory light chain in the presence of Mg2+. Sedimentation velocity profiles in an analytical ultracentrifuge indicated that the desensitized myosin preparations were largely monomeric and therefore the change in pi appears to reflect an intramolecular event. Addition of EDTA to spin-labelled scallop heavy meromyosin caused an immediate 2.5 to 4-fold increase in pi and a partial desensitization of the ATPase activity. Comparable experiments with subfragment 1 yielded a barely detectable increase in pi (1.5-fold) in the first ten minutes. The restricted rotational motion observed in desensitized myosin and heavy meromyosin could arise by a conformational change in the subfragment 1-subfragment 2 hinge region or by an association of one head with its partner. The latter mechanism, involving the exposed light chain binding site, would also explain the preferential release of one regulatory light chain from scallop myosin, and might account for some other co-operative effects observed in this molecule (Bagshaw, 1980).  相似文献   

20.
The effects of temperature on Mg-ITPase activity of heavy meromyosin and myosin subfragment 1 were measured in 0.1 M KC1. The initial burst of Pi liberation was one mol per mol of heavy meromyosin or two mol of myosin subfragment 1, i.e. one mol per two mol of myosin active sites, at 20 degrees C. However, it was almost zero mol below 8degrees C. Effects of KC1 concentration and pH on ITPase activity of heavy meromyosin at 20 degrees C were different from those below 8 degrees C, suggesting that the rate-limiting step in the Mg-ITP hydrolysis of myosin depends on temperature. The effect of temperature on the actin activation of heavy meromyosin Mg-ITPase was analyzed by measuring the temperature dependence of double-reciprocal plots of ITPase activity against actin concentration. The extent of actin activation was larger at low temperture. The results presented in this paper might be explained by assuming the existence of two kinds of active sites on a myosin molecule.  相似文献   

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