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1.
Probing myosin head structure with monoclonal antibodies   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Monoclonal antibodies that react with defined regions of the heavy and light chains of chicken skeletal muscle myosin have been used to provide a correlation between the primary and the tertiary structures of the head. Electron microscopy of rotary shadowed antibody-myosin complexes shows that the sites for three epitopes in the 25,000 Mr tryptic fragment (25k) of subfragment-1, including one within 4000 Mr of the amino terminus of the myosin heavy chain, are clustered 145(+/- 20) A from the head-rod junction. An epitope in the 50,000 Mr fragment maps even further out on the head. These antibodies bind to the head in several orientations, suggesting that each of the heads can rotate can rotate 180 degrees about the head-rod junction. The epitopes are accessible on subfragment-1 bound to actin when they were probed with Fab fragments; therefore, none of these heavy chain sites is is on the contact surface between the head and actin. Two of the anti-25k antibodies affect the K+-EDTA-and Ca2+-ATPase activities of myosin in a manner that mimics the effect on activity of the modification of the reactive thiol, SH-1. These two antibodies also inhibit the actin-activated ATPase non-competitively with respect to actin. None of the other eight antibodies tested had any marked effect on activity. A monoclonal antibody that reacts with an epitope in the amino-terminal third of myosin light chain 2 maps close to the head-rod junction. A polyclonal antibody specific for the amino terminus of light chain 3 binds further up in the "neck region" of the head, indicating that these portions of the two classes of light chains are located at different sites.  相似文献   

2.
The heavy chain of myosin subfragment-1 prepared by chymotrypsin treatment had a molecular weight of about 96 K. It was split into 26 K, 50K, and 21 K fragments on trypsin treatment. The effect of actin binding on the susceptibilities of the junctions between 26 K and 50 K and between 50 K and 21 K, and on that of alkali light chain 1 to trypsin was studied. The addition of actin increased the viscosity of the solution, and the apparent activity of trypsin decreased. We estimated this decrease as 35% by measuring the degradation of gamma-globin heavy chain, which is known not to interact with actin and subfragment-1 but is known to be susceptible to trypsin, in actin-subfragment-1 solution. Taking this value into consideration, we concluded that the 26 K-50 K junction became 5 times more and the 50 K-21 K junction became 3 times less susceptible to tryptic attack upon the binding of actin. We also observed that alkali light chain 1 became resistant to trypsin upon the binding of actin to subfragment-1. The relation between this conformational change in subfragment-1 and the cyclic interaction of subfragment-1 with actin and ATP is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The functional activities of myosin head are located in a 95 kilodalton (kDa) heavy chain which can be divided into three fragments of 23 kDa, 50 kDa, and 20 kDa. ATP hydrolysis sites were suggested to be located in the 23 kDa and 50 kDa fragments, and actin binding sites were in the 50 kDa and 20 kDa fragments. In this study, we obtained electron microscopic images of the myosin molecule bound with antibodies directed to the 23 kDa and 50 kDa fragments. We determined that the antigenic sites for 23 kDa fragment are located at 140-180 A from the head-rod junction of myosin, and those for 50 kDa fragment at 160 A from the junction and at the tip of the head itself. The relationship between the spatial locations and the primary structures is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Kovács M  Tóth J  Nyitray L  Sellers JR 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4219-4226
The enzymatic and motor function of smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin II is activated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains located in the head portion of myosin. Dimerization of the heads, which is brought about by the coiled-coil tail region, is essential for regulation since single-headed fragments are active regardless of the state of phosphorylation. Utilizing the fluorescence signal on binding of myosin to pyrene-labeled actin filaments, we investigated the interplay of actin and nucleotide binding to thiophosphorylated and unphosphorylated recombinant nonmuscle IIA heavy meromyosin constructs. We show that both heads of either thiophosphorylated or unphosphorylated heavy meromyosin bind very strongly to actin (K(d) < 10 nM) in the presence or absence of ADP. The heads have high and indistinguishable affinities for ADP (K(d) around 1 microM) when bound to actin. These findings are in line with the previously observed unusually loose coupling between nucleotide and actin binding to nonmuscle myosin IIA subfragment-1 (Kovács et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 38132.). Furthermore, they imply that the structure of the two heads in the ternary actomyosin-ADP complex is symmetrical and that the asymmetrical structure observed in the presence of ATP and the absence of actin in previous investigations (Wendt et al. (2001) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 98, 4361) is likely to represent an ATPase intermediate that precedes the actomyosin-ADP state.  相似文献   

5.
Detergent-resistant membranes contain signaling and integral membrane proteins that organize cholesterol-rich domains called lipid rafts. A subset of these detergent-resistant membranes (DRM-H) exhibits a higher buoyant density ( approximately 1.16 g/ml) because of association with membrane skeleton proteins, including actin, myosin II, myosin 1G, fodrin, and an actin- and membrane-binding protein called supervillin (Nebl, T., Pestonjamasp, K. N., Leszyk, J. D., Crowley, J. L., Oh, S. W., and Luna, E. J. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 43399-43409). To characterize interactions among DRM-H cytoskeletal proteins, we investigated the binding partners of the novel supervillin N terminus, specifically amino acids 1-830. We find that the supervillin N terminus binds directly to myosin II, as well as to F-actin. Three F-actin-binding sites were mapped to sequences within amino acids approximately 280-342, approximately 344-422, and approximately 700-830. Sequences with combinations of these sites promote F-actin cross-linking and/or bundling. Supervillin amino acids 1-174 specifically interact with the S2 domain in chicken gizzard myosin and nonmuscle myosin IIA (MYH-9) but exhibit little binding to skeletal muscle myosin II. Direct or indirect binding to filamin also was observed. Overexpression of supervillin amino acids 1-174 in COS7 cells disrupted the localization of myosin IIB without obviously affecting actin filaments. Taken together, these results suggest that supervillin may mediate actin and myosin II filament organization at cholesterol-rich membrane domains.  相似文献   

6.
In contrast to skeletal muscle isoforms of myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C), the cardiac isoform has 11 rather than 10 fibronectin or Ig modules (modules are identified as C0 to C10, NH2 to COOH terminus), 3 phosphorylation sites between modules C1 and C2, and 28 additional amino acids rich in proline in C5. Phosphorylation between C1 and C2 increases maximum Ca-activated force (Fmax), alters thick filament structure, and increases the probability of myosin heads on the thick filament binding to actin on the thin filament. Unphosphorylated C1C2 fragment binds to myosin, but phosphorylation inhibits the binding. MyBP-C also binds to actin. Using two types of immunoprecipitation and cosedimentation, we show that fragments of MyBP-C containing C0 bind to actin. In low concentrations C0-containing fragments bind to skinned fibers when the NH2 terminus of endogenous MyBP-C is bound to myosin, but not when MyBP-C is bound to actin. C1C2 fragments bind to skinned fibers when endogenous MyBP-C is bound to actin but not to myosin. Disruption of interactions of endogenous C0 with a high concentration of added C0C2 fragments produces the same effect on contractility as extraction of MyBP-C, namely decrease in Fmax and increase in Ca sensitivity. These results suggest that cardiac contractility can be regulated by shifting the binding of the NH2 terminus of MyBP-C between actin and myosin. This mechanism may have an effect on diastolic filling of the heart.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The protein caldesmon inhibits actin-activated ATP hydrolysis of myosin and inhibits the binding of myosin.ATP to actin. A fragment isolated from a chymotryptic digest of caldesmon contains features of the intact molecule that make it useful as a selective inhibitor of the binding of myosin.ATP complexes to actin without having the complexity of binding to myosin. The COOH-terminal 20 kDa region of caldesmon binds to actin with one-sixth the affinity of caldesmon with a stoichiometry of binding of one fragment per two actin monomers. This contrasts with the 1:6-9 stoichiometry of intact caldesmon. The binding of the 20 kDa fragments to actin is totally reversed by Ca(2+)-calmodulin and, like intact caldesmon, the 20 kDa fragments are competitive with the binding of myosin subfragments to actin. This competition with myosin binding is largely responsible for the inhibition of ATP hydrolysis, although both the fragments and intact caldesmon also reverse the potentiation of ATPase activity caused by tropomyosin. These polypeptides are useful both in defining the function of caldesmon and in studying the role of weakly bound cross-bridges in muscle.  相似文献   

9.
Studies in Dictyostelium discoideum have established that the cycle of myosin II bipolar filament assembly and disassembly controls the temporal and spatial localization of myosin II during critical cellular processes, such as cytokinesis and cell locomotion. Myosin heavy chain kinase A (MHCK A) is a key enzyme regulating myosin II filament disassembly through myosin heavy chain phosphorylation in Dictyostelium. Under various cellular conditions, MHCK A is recruited to actin-rich cortical sites and is preferentially enriched at sites of pseudopod formation, and thus MHCK A is proposed to play a role in regulating localized disassembly of myosin II filaments in the cell. MHCK A possesses an aminoterminal coiled-coil domain that participates in the oligomerization, cellular localization, and actin binding activities of the kinase. In the current study, we show that the interaction between the coiled-coil domain of MHCK A and filamentous actin leads to an approximately 40-fold increase in the initial rate of kinase catalytic activity. Actin-mediated activation of MHCK A involves increased rates of kinase autophosphorylation and requires the presence of the coiled-coil domain. Structure-function analyses revealed that the coiled-coil domain alone binds to actin filaments (apparent K(D) = 0.9 microm) and thus mediates the direct interaction with F-actin required for MHCK A activation. Collectively, these results indicate that MHCK A recruitment to actin-rich sites could lead to localized activation of the kinase via direct interaction with actin filaments, and thus this mode of kinase regulation may represent an important mechanism by which the cell achieves localized disassembly of myosin II filaments required for specific changes in cell shape.  相似文献   

10.
Myosin II, like many molecular motors, is a two-headed dimer held together by a coiled-coil rod. The stability of the (S2) rod has implications for head-head interactions, force generation, and possibly regulation. Whether S2 uncoils has been controversial. To test the stability of S2, we constructed a series of "zippered" dimeric smooth muscle myosin II compounds, containing a high-melting temperature 32-amino acid GCN4 leucine zipper in the S2 rod beginning 0, 1, 2, or 15 heptads from the head-rod junction. We then assessed the ability of these and wild-type myosin to bind strongly via two heads to an actin filament by measuring the fluorescence quenching of pyrene-labeled actin induced by myosin binding. Such two-headed binding is expected to exert a large strain that tends to uncoil S2, and hence provide a robust test of S2 stability. We find that wild-type and zippered heavy meromyosin (HMM) are able to bind by both heads to actin under both nucleotide-free and saturating ADP conditions. In addition, we compared the actin affinity and rates for the 0- and 15-zippered HMMs in the phosphorylated "on" state and found them to be very similar. These results strongly suggest that S2 uncoiling is not necessary for two-headed binding of myosin to actin, presumably due to a compliant point in the myosin head(s). We conclude that S2 likely remains intact during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

11.
Localisation of light chain and actin binding sites on myosin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A gel overlay technique has been used to identify a region of the myosin S-1 heavy chain that binds myosin light chains (regulatory and essential) and actin. The 125I-labelled myosin light chains and actin bound to intact vertebrate skeletal or smooth muscle myosin, S-1 prepared from these myosins and the C-terminal tryptic fragments from them (i.e. the 20-kDa or 24-kDa fragments of skeletal muscle myosin chymotryptic or Mg2+/papain S-1 respectively). MgATP abolished actin binding to myosin and to S-1 but had no effect on binding to the C-terminal tryptic fragments of S-1. The light chains and actin appeared to bind to specific and distinct regions on the S-1 heavy chain, as there was no marked competition in gel overlay experiments in the presence of 50-100 molar excess of unlabelled competing protein. The skeletal muscle C-terminal 24-kDa fragment was isolated from a tryptic digest of Mg2+/papain S-1 by CM-cellulose chromatography, in the presence of 8 M urea. This fragment was characterised by retention of the specific label (1,5-I-AEDANS) on the SH1 thiol residue, by its amino acid composition, and by N-terminal and C-terminal sequence analyses. Electron microscopical examination of this S-1 C-terminal fragment revealed that: it had a strong tendency to form aggregates with itself, appearing as small 'segment-like' structures that formed larger aggregates, and it bound actin, apparently bundling and severing actin filaments. Further digestion of this 24-kDa fragment with Staphylococcus aureus V-8 protease produced a 10-12-kDa peptide, which retained the ability to bind light chains and actin in gel overlay experiments. This 10-12-kDa peptide was derived from the region between the SH1 thiol residue and the C-terminus of S-1. It was further shown that the C-terminal portion, but not the N-terminal portion, of the DTNB regulatory light chain bound this heavy chain region. Although at present nothing can be said about the three-dimensional arrangement of the binding sites for the two kinds of light chain (regulatory and essential) and actin in S-1, it appears that these sites are all located within a length of the S-1 heavy chain of about 100 amino acid residues.  相似文献   

12.
The proteins corresponding in molecular weight and solubility in salt solutions to skeletal muscle actin and myosin were revealed in liver and thymus chromatin fragments. When the ionic strength reached 0.3, about 60% of the myosin-like protein identified by electrophoretic mobility of high chains and the K+-EDTA-ATPase activity was cosedimented with nucleohistones. In the presence of ATP or PPi and Mg2+ the solubility of myosin in such salt solutions increased up to 90%, which was paralleled with significant stimulation of RNA release from the nucleohistones. The conformity in the degree of extraction and sedimentation of RNA and intranuclear myosin was also observed in other solutions used during myosin purification. The supposition that the nuclear system of contractile proteins causes labile, ATP-dependent binding of RNA to chromatin is discussed. No essential differences in the actin or myosin contents in the fractions of soluble and non-soluble chromatin were detected.  相似文献   

13.
Myosin II has two heads that are joined together by an alpha-helical coiled-coil rod, which can separate in the region adjacent to the head-rod junction (Trybus, K. M. 1994. J. Biol. Chem. 269:20819-20822). To test whether this flexibility at the head-rod junction is important for the mechanical performance of myosin, we used the optical trap to measure the unitary displacements of heavy meromyosin constructs in which a stable coiled-coil sequence derived from the leucine zipper was introduced into the myosin rod. The zipper was positioned either immediately after the heads (0-hep zip) or following 15 heptads of native sequence (15-hep zip). The unitary displacement (d) decreased from d = 9.7 +/- 0.6 nm for wild-type heavy meromyosin (WT HMM) to d = 0.1 +/- 0.3 nm for the 0-hep zip construct (mean +/- SE). Native values were restored in the 15-hep zip construct (d = 7.5 +/- 0.7 nm). We conclude that flexibility at the myosin head-rod junction, which is provided by an unstable coiled-coil region, is essential for optimal mechanical performance.  相似文献   

14.
Myosin heavy-chain kinase A (MHCK A) catalyses the disassembly of myosin II filaments in Dictyostelium cells via myosin II heavy-chain phosphorylation. MHCK A possesses a 'coiled-coil'-enriched domain that mediates the oligomerization, cellular localization and actin-binding activities of the kinase. F-actin (filamentous actin) binding by the coiled-coil domain leads to a 40-fold increase in MHCK A activity. In the present study we examined the actin-binding characteristics of the coiled-coil domain as a means of identifying mechanisms by which MHCK A-mediated disassembly of myosin II filaments can be regulated in the cell. Co-sedimentation assays revealed that the coiled-coil domain of MHCK A binds co-operatively to F-actin with an apparent K(D) of approx. 0.5 muM and a stoichiometry of approx. 5:1 [actin/C(1-498)]. Further analyses indicate that the coiled-coil domain binds along the length of the actin filament and possesses at least two actin-binding regions. Quite surprisingly, we found that the coiled-coil domain cross-links actin filaments into bundles, indicating that MHCK A can affect the cytoskeleton in two important ways: (1) by driving myosin II-filament disassembly via myosin II heavy-chain phosphorylation, and (2) by cross-linking/bundling actin filaments. This discovery, along with other supporting data, suggests a model in which MHCK A-mediated bundling of actin filaments plays a central role in the recruitment and activation of the kinase at specific sites in the cell. Ultimately this provides a means for achieving the robust and highly localized disruption of myosin II filaments that facilitates polarized changes in cell shape during processes such as chemotaxis, cytokinesis and multicellular development.  相似文献   

15.
Interaction of phalloidin with chemically modified actin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Modification of Tyr-69 with tetranitromethane impairs the polymerizability of actin in accordance with the previous report [Lehrer, S. S. and Elzinga, M. (1972) Fed. Proc. 31, 502]. Phalloidin induces this chemically modified actin to form the same characteristic helical thread-like structure as normal F-actin. The filaments bind myosin heads and activate the myosin ATPase activity as effectively as normal F-actin. When a dansyl group is introduced at the same point [Chantler, P. D. and Gratzer, W. B. (1975) Eur. J. Biochem. 60, 67-72], phalloidin still induces the polymerization. The filaments bind myosin heads and activate the myosin ATPase activity. These results indicate that Tyr-69 is not directly involved in either an actin-actin binding site or the myosin binding site on actin. Moreover, the results suggest that phalloidin binds to actin monomer in the presence of salt and its binding induces a conformational change in actin which is essential for polymerization, or that actin monomer fluctuates between in unpolymerizable and polymerizable form while phalloidin binds to actin only in the polymerizable form and its binding locks the conformation which causes the irreversible polymerization of actin. Modification of Tyr-53 with 5-diazonium-(1H)tetrazole blocks actin polymerization [Bender, N., Fasold, H., Kenmoku, A., Middelhoff, G. and Volk, K. E. (1976) Eur. J. Biochem. 64, 215-218]. Phalloidin is unable to induce the polymerization of this modified actin nor does it bind to it. Phalloidin does not induce the polymerization of the trypsin-digested actin core. These results indicate that the site at which phalloidin binds is involved in polymerization and the probable conformational change involved in polymerization may be modulated through this site.  相似文献   

16.
Coulton AT  Stelzer JE 《Biochemistry》2012,51(15):3292-3301
Cardiac myosin binding protein C (c-MyBPC) is a thick filament protein that is expressed in cardiac sarcomeres and is known to interact with myosin and actin. While both structural and regulatory roles have been proposed for c-MyBPC, its true function is unclear; however, phosphorylation has been shown to be important. In this study, we investigate the effect of c-MyBPC and its phosphorylation on two key steps of the cross-bridge cycle using fast reaction kinetics. We show that unphosphorylated c-MyBPC complexed with myosin in 1:1 and 3:1 myosin:c-MyBPC stoichiometries regulates the binding of myosin to actin (K(D)) cooperatively (Hill coefficient, h) (K(D) = 16.44 ± 0.33 μM, and h = 9.24 ± 1.34; K(D) = 11.48 ± 0.75 μM, and h = 3.54 ± 0.67) and significantly decelerates the ATP-induced dissociation of myosin from actin (K(1)k(+2) values of 0.12 ± 0.01 and 0.22 ± 0.01 M(-1) s(-1), respectively, compared with a value of 0.42 ± 0.01 M(-1) s(-1) for myosin alone). Phosphorylation of c-MyBPC abolished the regulation of the association phase (K(1)k(+2) values of 0.32 ± 0.02 and 0.33 ± 0.01 M(-1) s(-1) at 1:1 and 3:1 myosin:c-MyBPC ratios, respectively) and also accelerated the dissociation of myosin from actin (K(1)k(+2) values of 0.23 ± 0.01 and 0.29 ± 0.01 M(-1) s(-1) at a 1:1 and 3:1 myosin:c-MyBPC ratios, respectively) relative to the dissociation of myosin from actin in the presence of unphosphorylated c-MyBPC. These results indicate a direct effect of c-MyBPC on cross-bridge kinetics that is independent of the thin filament that together with its phosphorylation provides a mechanism for fine-tuning cross-bridge behavior to match the contractile requirements of the heart.  相似文献   

17.
Mouse myosin V is a two-headed unconventional myosin with an extended neck that binds six calmodulins. Double-headed (heavy meromyosin-like) and single-headed (subfragment 1-like) fragments of mouse myosin V were expressed in Sf9 cells, and intact myosin V was purified from mouse brain. The actin-activated MgATPase of the tissue-purified myosin V, and its expressed fragments had a high V(max) and a low K(ATPase). Calcium regulated the MgATPase of intact myosin V but not of the fragments. Both the MgATPase activity and the in vitro motility were remarkably insensitive to ionic strength. Myosin V and its fragments translocated actin at very low myosin surface densities. ADP markedly inhibited the actin-activated MgATPase activity and the in vitro motility. ADP dissociated from myosin V subfragment 1 at a rate of about 11.5 s(-1) under conditions where the V(max) was 3.3 s(-1), indicating that, although not totally rate-limiting, ADP dissociation was close to the rate-limiting step. The high affinity for actin and the slow rate of ADP release helps the myosin head to remain attached to actin for a large fraction of each ATPase cycle and allows actin filaments to be moved by only a few myosin V molecules in vitro.  相似文献   

18.
Myosin V is a molecular motor shown to move processively along actin filaments. We investigated the properties of the weak binding states of monomeric myosin V containing a single IQ domain (MV 1IQ) to determine if the affinities of these states are increased as compared to conventional myosin. Further, using a combination of non-hydrolyzable nucleotide analogues and mutations that block ATP hydrolysis, we sought to probe the states that are populated during ATP-induced dissociation of actomyosin. MV 1IQ binds actin with a K(d) = 4 microM in the presence of ATP gamma S at 50 mM KCl, which is 10-20-fold tighter than that of nonprocessive class II myosins. Mutations within the switch II region trapped MV 1IQ in two distinct M.ATP states with very different actin binding affinities (K(d) = 0.2 and 2 microM). Actin binding may change the conformation of the switch II region, suggesting that elements of the nucleotide binding pocket will be in a different conformation when bound to actin than is seen in any of the myosin crystal structures to date.  相似文献   

19.
The metal ion requirement of myosin-ADP binding was investigated by use of Mn2+. Mn2+ binds to two sets of noninteracting sites on myosin which are characterized by affinity constants of 106 and 103, M−1 at 0.016 M KCl concentration. The maximum number of sites is 2 for the high affinity and 20–25 for the low affinity set. Binding of Mn2+ to the high affinity sites increases the affinity of ADP binding to myosin. F-actin inhibits ADP binding (Kiely, B., and Martonosi, A., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 172: 158–170 [1969]), but even at F-actin concentrations much higher than that required to saturate the actin binding sites of myosin or its proteolytic fragments, significant ADP binding remained. The actin insensitive portion of ADP binding was inhibited by 10−4 M inorganic pyrophosphate or ATP. The results are discussed on the basis of a model in which actin and ADP bind to myosin at distinct but interacting sites.  相似文献   

20.
Myosin binding to actin. Structural analysis using myosin fragments   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The actin-binding property of the myosin head 20 K (K = 10(3) Mr) fragment has been examined by a structural assay. A new fragment is produced by digestion of scallop myosin synthetic filaments with a lysine-specific protease. This fragment consists of the rod together with two "nubs" corresponding to the 20 K fragment, which retain both the regulatory and essential light chains. Myosin filaments, digested for different lengths of time, were mixed with F-actin and visualized by electron microscopy after negative staining. When the head is cleaved, but the head fragments remain associated, the filaments bind actin in an ATP-sensitive manner. Filaments made primarily of the nub-containing fragments, however, bind actin very poorly. In addition, electron microscopic characterization of actin-binding by the isolated tryptic 20 K fragment from chicken myosin indicates that binding of this fragment to actin is probably non-specific. These results suggest that interactions between the 20 K region and the other peptides in the head are essential for actin-binding.  相似文献   

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