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1.
Multiple isoforms of tropomyosin (TM) of rat cultured cells show differential effects on actin-severing activity of gelsolin. Flow birefringence measurements have revealed that tropomyosin isoforms with high Mr values (high Mr TMs) partially protect actin filaments from fragmentation by gelsolin, while tropomyosins with low Mr values (low Mr TMs) have no significant protection even when the actin filaments have been fully saturated with low Mr TMs. We have also examined effect of nonmuscle caldesmon on the severing activity of gelsolin because 83-kDa nonmuscle caldesmon stimulates actin binding of rat cell TMs (Yamashiro-Matsumura, S., and Matsumura, F. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 1973-1983). While nonmuscle caldesmon alone or low Mr TMs alone show no significant protection against fragmentation by gelsolin, the low Mr TMs coupled with 83-kDa protein are able to protect actin filaments. Further, high Mr TMs together with 83-kDa protein appear to block the severing activity completely. Electron microscopic analyses of length distribution of actin filaments have confirmed the results. The average length of control actin filaments is measured as 1.46 +/- microns, and gelsolin shortens the average length to 0.084 +/- 0.039 micron. Similar short average lengths are obtained when gelsolin severs actin complexed with low Mr TMs (0.080 +/- 0.045 micron) or with nonmuscle caldesmon (0.11 +/- 0.072 micron) while longer average length (0.22 +/- 0.18 micron) is measured in the presence of high Mr TMs. The simultaneous addition of nonmuscle caldesmon makes the average length considerably longer, i.e. 0.61 +/- 0.37 micron in the presence of low Mr TMs and 1.57 +/- 0.97 micron in the presence of high Mr TMs. Furthermore, the actin binding of gelsolin is strongly inhibited by co-addition of high Mr TMs and nonmuscle caldesmon. These results suggest that TM and gelsolin share the same binding site on actin molecules and that the differences in the actin affinities between TMs are related to their abilities of protection against gelsolin.  相似文献   

2.
Tropomyosin isoforms of the low Mr class were isolated from chicken intestinal epithelium and brain, and their physical and functional properties were characterized. Tropomyosin from each tissue contains four distinct polypeptides, all of about 32,000 daltons. In two-dimensional gels, brain tropomyosin contains two major and two minor polypeptides; the major epithelium isoforms coelectrophorese with the two minor brain isoforms. Conversely, only small amounts of the major brain isoforms are detected in the epithelium. Actin-binding properties of brain tropomyosin isoforms are distinct from those of the intestinal epithelium. At 2.5 mM MgCl2 and physiological ionic strength, the intestinal epithelial tropomyosin binds to filamentous actin with an apparent Ka of 8 X 10(6) M-1 whereas brain tropomyosin has an apparent Ka of 8 X 10(5) M-1. Tropomyosin from either tissue binds actin cooperatively with a Hill coefficient of 2.3 for intestinal epithelial cell and 1.95 for brain tropomyosin. Isoforms from both tissues exhibit reduced head-to-tail polymerizability as compared to muscle tropomyosin. The actin-binding properties of intestinal epithelial cell tropomyosin are therefore similar to those of the muscle tropomyosins even though the isoforms have lower molecular weight, a paracrystal structure, and reduced head-to-tail polymerizability typical of the other nonmuscle tropomyosins. These results indicate that a heterogeneity of functional properties may be expressed among the low Mr tropomyosin isoforms.  相似文献   

3.
Cultured rat cells contain five isoforms of tropomyosin (Matsumura, F., Yamashiro-Matsumura, S., and Lin, J.J.-C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 6636-6644). To explore the roles of the multiple tropomyosin isoforms in the microfilament organization of cultured cells, we have examined effects of tropomyosins on the bundling activity of the 55-kDa protein recently purified from HeLa cells (Yamashiro-Matsumura, S., and Matsumura, F. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 5087-5097). Maximum bundling of F-actin was observed at a molar ratio of 55-kDa protein to actin higher than 1:8. None of the isoforms of cultured rat cell tropomyosin significantly altered the F-actin-bundling activity of 55-kDa protein at this ratio, whereas skeletal muscle tropomyosin inhibited the bundling activity to about 50%. Also, cultured cell tropomyosins did not inhibit binding of 55-kDa protein to actin, whereas skeletal muscle tropomyosin inhibited it by 50%. The effect of 55-kDa protein on the binding of tropomyosin to actin varied with the isoform type of tropomyosin. Most (80%) of the tropomyosins with low Mr values (Mr 32,400 or 32,000) were caused to dissociate from actin by 55-kDa protein, but only 20% of tropomyosins with high Mr values (Mr 40,000 or 36,500) was dissociated from actin in these conditions. Immunofluorescence has shown that, while tropomyosin was localized in stress fibers, 55-kDa protein was found in microspikes as well as stress fibers, both of which are known to contain bundles of microfilaments. Therefore, we suggest that 55-kDa protein together with the multiple tropomyosin isoforms may regulate the formation of two types of actin-filament bundles, bundles containing tropomyosin and those without tropomyosin.  相似文献   

4.
Microfilaments were isolated from cultured mammalian cells, utilizing procedures similar to those for isolation of "native" thin filaments from muscle. Isolated microfilaments from rat embryo, baby hamster kidney (BHK- 21), and Swiss mouse 3T3 cells appeared structurally similar to muscle thin filaments, exhibiting long, 6 nm Diam profiles with a beaded, helical substructure. An arrowhead pattern was observed after reaction of isolated microfilaments with rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment 1. Under appropriate conditions, isolated microfilaments will aggregate into a form that resembles microfilament bundles seen in situ cultured cells. Isolated microfilaments represent a complex of proteins including actin. Some of these components have been tentatively identified, based on coelectrophoresis with purified proteins, as myosin, tropomyosin, and a high molecular weight actin-binding protein. The tropomyosin components of isolated microfilaments were unexpected; polypeptides comigrated on SDS-polyacrylamide gels with both muscle and nonmuscle types of tropomyosin. In order to identify more specifically these subunits, we isolated and partially characterized tropomyosin from three cell types. BHK-21 cell tropomyosin was similar to other nonmuscle tropomyosins, as judged by several criteria. However, tropomyosin isolated from rate embryo and 3T3 cells contained subunits that comigrated with both skeletal muscle and nonmuscle types of myosin, whereas the BHK cell protein consistently contained a minor muscle-like subunit. The array of tropomyosin subunits present in a cell culture was reflected in the polypeptide chain pattern seen on SDS-polyacrylamide gels of microfilaments isolated from that culture. These studies provide a starting point for correlating changes in the ultrastructural organization of microfilaments with alterations in their protein composition.  相似文献   

5.
Nonmuscle tropomyosin from ascites tumor cell microvilli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tropomyosin has been isolated from microvilli preparations from 13762 rat mammary adenocarcinoma ascites tumor cells by Triton extraction and pelleting of the microvillar microfilament core, extraction of the microfilament core with 1 M KCl, heat treatment, and hydroxyapatite chromatography. Three major isoforms, designated 31K-a (acidic), 31K-b (basic), and 29K, were identified as tropomyosins by two-dimensional isoelectric focusing-dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis, a urea shift on dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis, chemical cross-linking, amino acid analysis, and molecular weight determinations. The native (60,000) and subunit (31,000 and 29,000) molecular weights, the amino acid composition, and the stoichiometry for binding to F-actin (actin/tropomyosin, 6:1) were typical of nonmuscle tropomyosins. The amount of tropomyosin present in the microvilli preparations is sufficient to saturate about half of the microvillar F-actin. By two-dimensional isoelectric focusing-dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis, the 31K isoforms appeared similar to isoforms of normal rat kidney cells but the 29K isoform was apparently smaller than any normal rat kidney isoforms. All three isoforms bound to F-actin, but the 29K form bound most strongly. Its behavior was similar to that of muscle tropomyosin, exhibiting saturable binding as a function of both ionic strength and Mg2+ concentration. In contrast, the 31K isoforms bound more weakly and required higher concentrations of Mg2+ for binding than that required for saturation with 29K (4 mM). These results clearly indicate that nonmuscle tropomyosin isoforms from a single source and location (subplasmalemmal) in the cell can exhibit different properties.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2173-2183
We have used a monoclonal antibody (CL2) directed against striated muscle isoforms of tropomyosin to selectively isolate a class of microfilaments (skeletal tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments) from differentiating muscle cells. This class of microfilaments differed from the one (tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments) isolated from the same cells by a monoclonal antibody (LCK16) recognizing all isoforms of muscle and nonmuscle tropomyosin. In myoblasts, the skeletal tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments had a higher content of alpha-actin and phosphorylated isoforms of tropomyosin as compared with the tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments. Moreover, besides muscle isoforms of actin and tropomyosin, significant amounts of nonmuscle isoforms of actin and tropomyosin were found in the skeletal tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments of myoblasts and myotubes. These results suggest that different isoforms of actin and tropomyosin can assemble into the same set of microfilaments, presumably pre-existing microfilaments, to form the skeletal tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments, which will eventually become the thin filaments of myofibrils. Therefore, the skeletal tropomyosin-enriched microfilaments detected here may represent an intermediate class of microfilaments formed during thin filament maturation. Electron microscopic studies of the isolated microfilaments from myoblasts and myotubes showed periodic localization of tropomyosin molecules along the microfilaments. The tropomyosin periodicity in the microfilaments of myoblasts and myotubes was 35 and 37 nm, respectively, whereas the nonmuscle tropomyosin along chicken embryo fibroblast microfilaments had a 34-nm repeat.  相似文献   

7.
Most eukaryotic cells express multiple isoforms of the actin-binding protein tropomyosin that help construct a variety of cytoskeletal networks. Only one nonmuscle tropomyosin (Tm1A) has previously been described in Drosophila, but developmental defects caused by insertion of P-elements near tropomyosin genes imply the existence of additional, nonmuscle isoforms. Using biochemical and molecular genetic approaches, we identified three tropomyosins expressed in Drosophila S2 cells: Tm1A, Tm1J, and Tm2A. The Tm1A isoform localizes to the cell cortex, lamellar actin networks, and the cleavage furrow of dividing cells—always together with myosin-II. Isoforms Tm1J and Tm2A colocalize around the Golgi apparatus with the formin-family protein Diaphanous, and loss of either isoform perturbs cell cycle progression. During mitosis, Tm1J localizes to the mitotic spindle, where it promotes chromosome segregation. Using chimeras, we identified the determinants of tropomyosin localization near the C-terminus. This work 1) identifies and characterizes previously unknown nonmuscle tropomyosins in Drosophila, 2) reveals a function for tropomyosin in the mitotic spindle, and 3) uncovers sequence elements that specify isoform-specific localizations and functions of tropomyosin.  相似文献   

8.
Previous results from our laboratory have shown that 1) cultured rat cells contain two classes of tropomyosin (TM), one (high Mr TMs) with higher Mr values and greater affinity for actin than the other (low Mr TMs); 2) presaturation of F-actin with high Mr TMs, but not with low Mr TMs, inhibits both actin-severing and actin binding activities of gelsolin; and 3) nonmuscle caldesmon not only enhances the inhibitory effects of high Mr TMs but also makes low Mr TMs capable of inhibiting the severing activity of gelsolin (Ishikawa, R., Yamashiro, S., and Matsumura, F. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7490-7497). These results suggest that gelsolin has much lower affinity for F-actin-TM-caldesmon complexes than for pure F-actin. We have therefore examined whether addition of TM and/or caldesmon to gelsolin-severed actin filaments can make gelsolin dissociate from barbed ends of actin filaments, resulting in annealing of short actin filaments into long ones. Flow birefringence and electron microscopic studies have suggested that high Mr TMs slowly and partially anneal gelsolin-severed actin fragments in 3 h, whereas low Mr TMs have no effects. Nonmuscle caldesmon greatly potentiates the effects of high Mr TMs and accelerates the process to 20 min, whereas nonmuscle caldesmon alone shows no effects. Furthermore, nonmuscle caldesmon makes low Mr TMs capable of reversing gelsolin-severing action. Actin binding assay has shown that gelsolin (or a gelsolin-actin complex) is dissociated from these annealed actin filaments. Smooth muscle TM and smooth muscle caldesmon also appear to anneal gelsolin-severed actin fragments as do high Mr TMs and nonmuscle caldesmon. Calmodulin decreases the potentiation effects of caldesmon as calmodulin inhibits actin binding of caldesmon. These results suggest that tropomyosin and caldesmon may regulate both capping and severing activities of gelsolin.  相似文献   

9.
We have previously shown that chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) cells and human bladder carcinoma (EJ) cells contain multiple isoforms of tropomyosin, identified as a, b, 1, 2, and 3 in CEF cells and 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 in human EJ cells by one-dimensional SDS-PAGE (Lin, J. J.-C., D. M. Helfman, S. H. Hughes, and C.-S. Chou. 1985. J. Cell Biol. 100: 692-703; and Lin, J. J.-C., S. Yamashiro-Matsumura, and F. Matsumura. 1984. Cancer Cells 1:57-65). Both isoform 3 (TM-3) of CEF and isoforms 4,5 (TM-4,-5) of human EJ cells are the minor isoforms found respectively in normal chicken and human cells. They have a lower apparent molecular mass and show a weaker affinity to actin filaments when compared to the higher molecular mass isoforms. Using individual tropomyosin isoforms immobilized on nitrocellulose papers and sequential absorption of polyclonal antiserum on these papers, we have prepared antibodies specific to CEF TM-3 and to CEF TM-1,-2. In addition, two of our antitropomyosin mAbs, CG beta 6 and CG3, have now been demonstrated by Western blots, immunoprecipitation, and two-dimensional gel analysis to have specificities to human EJ TM-3 and TM-5, respectively. By using these isoform-specific reagents, we are able to compare the intracellular localizations of the lower and higher molecular mass isoforms in both CEF and human EJ cells. We have found that both lower and higher molecular mass isoforms of tropomyosin are localized along stress fibers of cells, as one would expect. However, the lower molecular mass isoforms are also distributed in regions near ruffling membranes. Further evidence for this different localization of different tropomyosin isoforms comes from double-label immunofluorescence microscopy on the same CEF cells with affinity-purified antibody against TM-3, and monoclonal CG beta 6 antibody against TM-a, -b, -1, and -2 of CEF tropomyosin. The presence of the lower molecular mass isoform of tropomyosin in ruffling membranes may indicate a novel way for the nonmuscle cell to control the stability and organization of microfilaments, and to regulate the cell motility.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of 125I- and 14C-caldesmon to actin and actin-tropomyosin was studied using a cosedimentation technique and was analyzed by the method of McGhee and von Hippel [1974) J. Mol. Biol. 86, 469-489) for the binding of large ligands to a homogeneous lattice. The binding was adequately described by a single class of binding sites with a stoichiometry between 1:7 and 1:10. The binding exhibited a small degree of positive cooperativity (omega = 5-6) which was the same in the presence and absence of tropomyosin. The association constant for the binding of caldesmon to an isolated binding site was enhanced, from about 6 X 10(5) to about 1.4 X 10(6) M-1, by the presence of smooth muscle tropomyosin. Caldesmon inhibited the actin-activated ATPase activity of skeletal myosin subfragment 1 in both the absence and presence of tropomyosin. Maximum inhibition of ATPase activity occurred when one caldesmon molecule bound to seven actin monomers. A greater degree of inhibition was observed in the presence of tropomyosin than in the absence. This greater inhibition cannot be explained totally by the increased strength of binding of caldesmon to actin in the presence of tropomyosin. Finally, Ca2+-calmodulin completely reversed the binding of caldesmon to actin.  相似文献   

11.
Several non-muscle tropomyosins have been reported to lack the ability to polymerize in a head-to-tail manner [Dabrowska, R. et al. (1983) J. Muscle Res. Cell Motil. 1, 83-92; C?té, G.P. (1983) Mol. Cell. Biochem. 57, 127-146]. Unlike rabbit skeletal muscle tropomyosin, these proteins could therefore not protect the F-actin microfilaments neither from disassembly or from cross-linking by the other actin-associating factors. However, we have provided evidence that, in vitro, pig platelet tropomyosin, although shorter in molecular length, exhibits the same properties as the muscle protein: it self-associates and forms a 1:6 complex with platelet filamentous actin under physiological conditions [Prulière et al. (1984) J. Muscle Res. Cell Motil. 6, 126]. In this paper, we examine the effects of several other actin-binding proteins on the microfilaments saturated with this non-muscle tropomyosin. Since contractile proteins often vary with the cell type and may require different conditions for their interactions, we have developed a procedure which allows the parallel purification of actin-binding protein (ABP), vinculin, alpha-actinin, gelsolin as well as actin and tropomyosin from the same batch of cells. Thus, using an homogeneous system, we show by viscometry, sedimentation and densitometry, and by electron microscopy, that pig platelet tropomyosin can protect the structure of the microfilaments from the action of the modulating factors to the same extent as rabbit skeletal muscle alpha-tropomyosin. Our data suggest that interaction of ABP, vinculin or alpha-actinin can occur only with the ends of the filaments when F-actin is saturated with tropomyosin, while cross-linking takes place by interactions with sites localized along the entire length of F-actin in the absence of tropomyosin. Moreover, the presence of tropomyosin on F-actin leads to the total inhibition of gelsolin severing activity, although it did not prevent the binding of gelsolin to the F-actin--tropomyosin complex. This suggests that pig platelet as well as skeletal muscle tropomyosins have the ability to increase the strength of the interaction between actin monomers within the filament. This also suggests that the binding sites of gelsolin along the filaments are not localized in the groove of the F-actin helix.  相似文献   

12.
Tropomyosin purified from rabbit lung macrophages is very similar in structure to other nonmuscle cell tropomyosins. Reduced and denatured, the protein has two polypeptides which migrate during electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate on polyacrylamide gels with slightly different mobilities corresponding to apparent Mr's of about 30 000. Following cross-linking by air oxidation in the presence of CuCl2, electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions reveals a single polypeptide of Mr 60 000. Macrophage tropomyosin has an isoelectric point of 4.6 and an amino acid composition similar to other tropomyosins. It contains one cysteine residue per chain. In the electron microscope, macrophage tropomyosin molecules rotary shadowed with platinum and carbon are slender, straight rods, 33 nm in length. Macrophage tropomyosin paracrystals grown in high magnesium concentrations have an axial periodicity of 34 nm. On the basis of yields from purification and from two-dimensional electrophoretic analyses of macrophage extracts, tropomyosin comprises less than 0.2% of the total macrophage protein, a molar ratio of approximately 1 tropomyosin molecule to 75 actin monomers in the cell. Macrophage tropomyosin binds to actin filaments. Macrophage, skeletal muscle, and other nonmuscle cell tropomyosins inhibit the fragmentation of actin filaments by the Ca2+-gelsolin complex. The finding implies that tropomyosin may have a role in stabilizing actin filaments in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) cells were microinjected with several different monoclonal antibodies that recognize certain nonmuscle isoforms of tropomyosin. Immediately after injection, cells were recorded with a time-lapse video imaging system; later analysis of the tapes revealed that particles in cells injected with one of these antibodies (CG1, specific for CEF tropomyosin isoforms 1 and 3) showed a dramatic decrease in instantaneous speed while moving, distance moved per saltation, and proportion of time spent in motion. Injection of Fab fragments of CG1 resulted in similar changes in the pattern of granule movement. This inhibition of granule movement by CG1 antibody was reversible; at 2.5 h after injection, granules in injected cells had already reached three-fourths of normal speed. The speed of granule movement in cells injected either with antibody specific for tropomyosin isoforms not present in CEF cells, or with CG1 antibody preabsorbed with tropomyosin, was not significantly different from the speed of granules in uninjected cells. When cells were injected with CG1 or Fab fragments of CG1, fixed, and counter-stained with rabbit antibodies to reveal the microtubule, microfilament, and intermediate filament systems, no obvious differences from the patterns normally seen in uninjected cells were observed. Examination of the ultrastructure of injected cells by EM confirmed the presence of apparently intact and normal microtubule, actin, and intermediate filament networks. These experiments suggest that tropomyosin may play an important role in the movement of vesicles and organelles in the cell cytoplasm. Also, we have shown previously that the CG1 determinant can undergo a motility-dependent change in reactivity, that may be important for the regulatory function of nonmuscle tropomyosin (Hegmann, T. E., J. L.-C. Lin, and J. J.-C. Lin. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 106:385-393). Therefore, in addition to postulated microtubule-based motors, microfilaments may play a critical role in regulating granule movement in nonmuscle cells.  相似文献   

14.
We have isolated tropomyosin cDNAs from human skeletal muscle and nonmuscle cDNA libraries and constructed gene-specific DNA probes for each of the four functional tropomyosin genes. These DNA probes were used to define the regulation of the corresponding mRNAs during the process of myogenesis. Tropomyosin regulation was compared with that of beta- and gamma-actin. No two striated muscle-specific tropomyosin mRNAs are coordinately accumulated during myogenesis nor in adult striated muscles. Similarly, no two nonmuscle tropomyosins are coordinately repressed during myogenesis. However, mRNAs encoding the 248 amino acid nonmuscle tropomyosins and beta- and gamma-actin are more persistent in adult skeletal muscle than those encoding the 284 amino acid nonmuscle tropomyosins. In particular, the nonmuscle tropomyosin Tm4 is expressed at similar levels in adult rat nonmuscle and striated muscle tissues. We conclude that each tropomyosin mRNA has its own unique determinants of accumulation and that the 248 amino acid nonmuscle tropomyosins may have a role in the architecture of the adult myofiber. The variable regulation of nonmuscle isoforms during myogenesis suggests that the different isoforms compete for inclusion into cellular structures and that compensating autoregulation of mRNA levels bring gene expression into alignment with the competitiveness of each individual gene product. Such an isoform competition-autoregulatory compensation mechanism would readily explain the unique regulation of each gene.  相似文献   

15.
Differential interactions of tropomyosin (TM) isoforms with actin can be important for determination of the thin filament functions. A mechanism of tropomyosin binding to actin was studied by comparing interactions of five αTM isoforms with actin modified with m-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (MBS) and with fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate (FITC). MBS attachment sites were revealed with mass spectrometry methods. We found that the predominant actin fraction was cross-linked by MBS within subdomain 3. A smaller fraction of the modified actin was cross-linked within subdomain 2 and between subdomains 2 and 1. Moreover, investigated actins carried single labels in subdomains 1, 2, and 3. Such extensive modification caused a large decrease in actin affinity for skeletal and smooth muscle tropomyosins, nonmuscle TM2, and chimeric TM1b9a. In contrast, binding of nonmuscle isoform TM5a was less affected. Isoform’s affinity for actin modified in subdomain 2 by binding of FITC to Lys61 was intermediate between the affinity for native actin and MBS-modified actin except for TM5a, which bound to FITC–actin with similar affinity as to actin modified with MBS. The analysis of binding curves according to the McGhee–von Hippel model revealed that binding to an isolated site, as well as cooperativity of binding to a contiguous site, was affected by both actin modifications in a TM isoform-specific manner.  相似文献   

16.
We have previously shown that rat cultured cells contain five isoforms of tropomyosin (Matsumura, F., Yamashiro-Matsumura, S., and Lin, J. J.-C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 6636-6644) and that these tropomyosins are differentially expressed upon cell transformation (Matsumura, F., Lin, J. J.-C., Yamashiro-Matsumura, S., Thomas, G. P., and Topp, W. C. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 13954-13964). To examine functions of tropomyosin in microfilament organization, we have purified and partially separated the multiple isoforms of tropomyosin by chromatography on hydroxylapatite. Analyses of cross-linked dimers produced by air oxidation have revealed that all isoforms except the tropomyosin isoform with apparent Mr of 35,000 form homodimers. Although these tropomyosins share many properties characteristic of tropomyosin, structural analyses at a peptide level and immunological analyses have shown that the five isoforms can be classified into two groups, i.e. tropomyosins with higher apparent Mr (Mr = 40,000, 36,500, and 35,000) and tropomyosins with lower apparent Mr (Mr = 32,400 and 32,000). The low Mr tropomyosins show less ability for head-to-tail polymerization and lower affinity to actin than the high Mr tropomyosins. We suggest that these differences in properties may be related to the changes in microfilament organization observed in transformed cells.  相似文献   

17.
The interactions of actin filaments with actin-binding protein (filamin) and caldesmon under the influence of tropomyosin were studied in detail using falling-ball viscometry, binding assay and electron microscopy. Caldesmon decreased the binding constant of filamin with F-actin. In contrast, the maximum binding ability of filamin to F-actin was decreased by tropomyosin. The filamin-induced gelation of actin filaments was inhibited by caldesmon. Tropomyosin also inhibited this gelation. The effect of caldesmon became stronger under the influence of tropomyosin. Furthermore, both caldesmon and tropomyosin additionally decreased the filamin binding to F-actin. From these results, caldesmon and tropomyosin appeared to influence filamin binding to F-actin with different modes of actin. In addition, there was no sign of direct interactions between filamin, caldesmon and tropomyosin as judged from gel filtration. Under the influence of caldesmon and tropomyosin, calmodulin conferred Ca2+ sensitivity on the filamin-induced gelation of actin filaments.  相似文献   

18.
Modulation of actin mechanics by caldesmon and tropomyosin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The ability of cells to sense and respond to physiological forces relies on the actin cytoskeleton, a dynamic structure that can directly convert forces into biochemical signals. Because of the association of muscle actin-binding proteins (ABPs) may affect F-actin and hence cytoskeleton mechanics, we investigated the effects of several ABPs on the mechanical properties of the actin filaments. The structural interactions between ABPs and helical actin filaments can vary between interstrand interactions that bridge azimuthally adjacent actin monomers between filament strands (i.e. by molecular stapling as proposed for caldesmon) or, intrastrand interactions that reinforce axially adjacent actin monomers along strands (i.e. as in the interaction of tropomyosin with actin). Here, we analyzed thermally driven fluctuations in actin's shape to measure the flexural rigidity of actin filaments with different ABPs bound. We show that the binding of phalloidin increases the persistence length of actin by 1.9-fold. Similarly, the intrastrand reinforcement by smooth and skeletal muscle tropomyosins increases the persistence length 1.5- and 2- fold respectively. We also show that the interstrand crosslinking by the C-terminal actin-binding fragment of caldesmon, H32K, increases persistence length by 1.6-fold. While still remaining bound to actin, phosphorylation of H32K by ERK abolishes the molecular staple (Foster et al. 2004. J Biol Chem 279;53387-53394) and reduces filament rigidity to that of actin with no ABPs bound. Lastly, we show that the effect of binding both smooth muscle tropomyosin and H32K is not additive. The combination of structural and mechanical studies on ABP-actin interactions will help provide information about the biophysical mechanism of force transduction in cells.  相似文献   

19.
K Y Horiuchi  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1988,27(22):8388-8393
Cysteine residues of caldesmon were labeled with the fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide. The number of sulfhydryl (SH) groups in caldesmon was around 3.5 on the basis of reactivity to 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate); 80% of the SH groups were labeled with pyrene. The fluorescence spectrum from pyrene-caldesmon showed the presence of excited monomer and dimer (excimer). As the ionic strength increased, excimer fluorescence decreased, disappearing at salt concentrations higher than around 50 mM. The labeling of caldesmon with pyrene did not affect its ability to inhibit actin activation of heavy meromyosin Mg-ATPase and the release of this inhibition in the presence of Ca2+-calmodulin. Tropomyosin induced a change in the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon, indicating a conformational change associated with the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin. The affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was dependent on ionic strength. The binding constant was 5 x 10(6) M-1 in low salt, and the affinity was 20-fold less at ionic strengths close to physiological conditions. In the presence of actin, the affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was increased 5-fold. The addition of tropomyosin also changed the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon bound to actin filaments. The change in the conformation of tropomyosin, caused by the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin, was studied with pyrene-labeled tropomyosin. Fluorescence change was evident when unlabeled caldesmon was added to pyrene-tropomyosin bound to actin. These data suggest that the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin on the actin filament is associated with conformational changes on these thin filament associated proteins. These conformational changes may modulate the ability of thin filament to interact with myosin heads.  相似文献   

20.
Granulosa cell differentiation in vitro in response to gonadotropins is characterized by major changes in cell shape, cell aggregation, and the organization of microfilaments. These changes are associated with enhanced steroidogenesis in maturing granulosa-lutein cells. Since nonmuscle tropomyosin isoforms were implicated in stabilizing actin filaments, we studied the organization and expression of tropomyosin in differentiating primary cultures of rat granulosa cells and during ovarian folliculogenesis and luteinization. In unstimulated primary granulosa cell cultures tropomyosin was found mainly along stress fibers. In differentiating cells tropomyosin staining was diffuse with sometimes a subcortical organization. The changes in tropomyosin organization were accompanied by a pronounced decrease in the synthesis, translation in vitro, and mRNA levels of all the rat nonmuscle tropomyosin isoforms, with a greater reduction in the higher molecular weight isoforms than in the smaller isoforms. Similar results were obtained whether cells were stimulated to differentiate with gonadotropins, with cAMP, by culturing cells on an extracellular matrix, or by treatment with cytochalasin B. The effect of cytochalasin B was reversible; upon removal of the drug tropomyosin synthesis increased to near control levels, while that of proteins associated with luteinization decreased drastically. RNA isolated from ovaries with follicles at the preantral, preovulatory stage and from corpora lutea contained decreased tropomyosin mRNA levels during ovarian luteinization when the level of RNA for a key steroidogenic enzyme, cytochrome P-450 cholesterol side chain cleavage (P-450 scc), increased. The results suggest a physiological relevance for the low level of tropomyosin expression in the mechanisms which bring about the morphological and biochemical development and maturation of granulosa cells.  相似文献   

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