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1.
Recent analyses of the assembly of thin filaments containing altered forms of troponin (or no troponin) suggested that the strongly cooperative nature of troponin-tropomyosin binding to actin might be primarily caused by indirect interactions involving the actin lattice, rather than by direct contacts between neighboring troponin-tropomyosin molecules. To test this hypothesis, thin filament assembly was examined using either cardiac tropomyosin digested with carboxypeptidase A (cbpTm) or a tropomyosin with defective function at both amino and carboxyl termini (unacetylated cbpTm). Compared to intact troponin-tropomyosin, both troponin-cbpTm and troponin-unacetylated cbpTm had much weaker binding to actin; however, cooperative interactions were only slightly reduced. These data support the implication that the primary source of the cooperativity involves troponin-tropomyosin-promoted conformational changes within the actin polymer. Surprisingly, the effects of tropomyosin amino- and carboxyl-terminal structural defects on troponin-tropomyosin binding to actin were not additive. In the presence of troponin, tropomyosin molecules with either defect had the same diminution in actin affinity as molecules with both defects. Finally, the Ca2+ sensitivity of troponin-tropomyosin binding to actin was increased by alteration of either end of tropomyosin.  相似文献   

2.
The thermodynamics and kinetics of actin interaction with Arabidopsis thaliana actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF)1, human ADF, and S6D mutant ADF1 protein mimicking phosphorylated (inactive) ADF are examined comparatively. ADFs interact with ADP.G-actin in rapid equilibrium (k+ = 155 microM-1.s-1 and k- = 16 s-1 at 4 degreesC under physiological ionic conditions). The kinetics of interaction of plant and human ADFs with F-actin are slower and exhibit kinetic cooperativity, consistent with a scheme in which the initial binding of ADF to two adjacent subunits of the filament nucleates a structural change that propagates along the filament, allowing faster binding of ADF in a "zipper" mode. ADF binds in a non-cooperative faster process to gelsolin-capped filaments or to subtilisin-cleaved F-actin, which are structurally different from standard filaments (Orlova, A., Prochniewicz, E., and Egelman, E. H. (1995) J. Mol. Biol. 245, 598-607). In contrast, the binding of phalloidin to F-actin cooperatively inhibits its interaction with ADF. The ADF-facilitated nucleation of ADP.actin self-assembly indicates that ADF stabilizes lateral interactions in the filament. Plant and human ADFs cause only partial depolymerization of F-actin at pH 8, consistent with identical functions in enhancing F-actin dynamics. Phosphorylation does not affect ADF activity per se, but decreases its affinity for actin by 20-fold.  相似文献   

3.
Cardiac thin filaments contain many troponin C (TnC) molecules, each with one regulatory Ca2+ binding site. A statistical mechanical model for the effects of these sites is presented and investigated. The ternary troponin complex was reconstituted with either TnC or the TnC mutant CBMII, in which the regulatory site in cardiac TnC (site II) is inactivated. Regardless of whether Ca2+ was present, CBMII-troponin was inhibitory in a thin filament-myosin subfragment 1 MgATPase assay. The competitive binding of [3H]troponin and [14C]CBMII-troponin to actin.tropomyosin was measured. In the presence of Mg2+ and low free Ca2+ they had equal affinities for the thin filament. When Ca274+ was added, however, troponin's affinity for the thin filament was 2.2-fold larger for the mutant than for the wild type troponin. This quantitatively describes the effect of regulatory site Ca2+ on troponin's affinity for actin.tropomyosin; the decrease in troponin-thin filament binding energy is small. Application of the theoretical model to the competitive binding data indicated that troponin molecules bind to interdependent rather than independent sites on the thin filament. Ca2+ binding to the regulatory site of TnC has a long-range rather than a merely local effect. However, these indirect TnC-TnC interactions are weak, indicating that the cooperativity of muscle activation by Ca2+ requires other sources of cooperativity.  相似文献   

4.
The effects resulting from the removal of the N-terminus of heavy meromyosin (HMM) A1 light chain by papain digestion are investigated. The fluorometry of TRITC-phalloidin labelled actin in ghost fibers is used as a tool for sensing conformational changes of rigor complex of phosphorylated and dephosphorylated HMM with actin filament. The experiments were performed both under conditions assuring saturation of RLC with magnesium cation (4 mM EGTA) or calcium cation (0.1 mM CaCl2), and in constant presence of 1 mM magnesium chloride. HMM native and with A1 shortened from the N-terminus is used. As it was observed previously rigor complex of actin filament and native HMM shows sensitivity to the kind of cation saturating RLC and to the phosphorylation status of RLC. In particular, the sin2 theta parameter of actin bound rhodamine-phalloidin fluorescence polarization representing roughly the flexibility of actin filament HMM complex changes significantly with the changes of RLC phosphorylation and cation saturation. Removal of the N-terminus of A1 reduces this sensitivity to cation and phosphorylation both in the case of dephosphorylated and phosphorylated HMM. Our results suggest that the N-terminus of A1 plays significant role in the rigor interaction of myosin heads with actin and is involved in modulatory function of RLC in this interaction.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of Ca2+ on conformational changes in rhodamine-phalloidin-labeled F-actin induced by binding of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin (HMM) with either phosphorylated or dephosphorylated regulatory light chains (LC20) was studied by polarized fluorimetry. LC20 phosphorylation caused alterations in the F-actin structure typical of the force-producing (strong-binding) state, while dephosphorylation of the chains led to alterations typical of the formation of non-force-producing (weak-binding) state of the actomyosin complex. The presence of Ca2+ enhanced the effect of LC20 phosphorylation and weakened the effect of LC20 dephosphorylation. These data suggest that Ca2+ modulates actin-myosin interaction in smooth muscle by promoting formation of the strong-binding state.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: In the failing human heart myofibrillar calcium sensitivity of tension development is greater and maximal myofibrillar ATPase activity is less than in the normal heart. Phosphorylation of the cardiac troponin I (cTnI)-specific NH2-terminus decreases myofilament sensitivity to calcium, while phosphorylation of other cTnI sites decreases maximal myofibrillar ATPase activity. METHODS AND RESULTS: We examined cTnI phosphorylation in left ventricular myocardium collected from failing hearts at the time of transplant (n=20) and normal hearts from trauma victims (n=24). The relative amounts of actin, tropomyosin, and TnI did not differ between failing and normal myocardium. Using Western blot analysis with a monoclonal antibody (MAb) that recognizes the striated muscle TnI isoforms, we confirmed that the adult human heart expresses only cTnI. A cTnI-specific MAb recognized two bands of cTnI, designated cTnI1 and cTnI2, while a MAb whose epitope is located in the cTnI-specific NH2-terminus recognized only cTnI1. Alkaline phosphatase decreased the relative amount of cTnl1, while protein kinase A and protein kinase C increased cTnI1. The percentage of cTnI made up of cTnI1, the phosphorylated form of TnI, is greater in the normal than the failing human heart (P<.00). CONCLUSIONS: This phosphorylation difference could underlie the reported greater myofibrillar calcium sensitivity of failing myocardium. The functional consequence of this difference may be an adaptive or maladaptive response to the lower and longer calcium concentration transient of the failing heart, eg, enhancing force development or producing ventricular diastolic dysfunction.  相似文献   

7.
The function of three of tropomyosin's sequential quasiequivalent regions was studied by deletion from skeletal muscle alpha-tropomyosin of internal residues 49-167. This deletion mutant tropomyosin spans four instead of the normal seven actins, and most of the tropomyosin region believed to interact with troponin is retained and uninterrupted in the mutant. The mutant tropomyosin was compared with a full-length control molecule that was modified to functionally resemble muscle tropomyosin (Monteiro, P. B., Lataro, R. C., Ferro, J. A., and Reinach, F. C. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 10461-10466). The tropomyosin deletion suppressed the actin-myosin subfragment 1 MgATPase rate and the in vitro sliding of thin filaments over a heavy meromyosin-coated surface. This inhibition was not reversed by troponin plus Ca2+. Comparable tropomyosin affinities for actin, regardless of the deletion, suggest that the deleted region has little interaction with actin in the absence of other proteins. Similarly, the deletion did not weaken binding of the troponin-tropomyosin complex to actin. Furthermore, Ca2+ had a 2-fold effect on troponin-tropomyosin's affinity for actin, regardless of the deletion. Notably, the deletion greatly weakened tropomyosin binding to myosin subfragment 1-decorated actin, with the full-length tropomyosin having a 100-fold greater affinity. The inhibitory properties resulting from the deletion are attributed to defective stabilization of the myosin-induced active state of the thin filament.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of LC-2 phosphorylation and ionic strength on actin-myosin interaction in relaxed skeletal muscle fibers have been studied using polarization fluorimetry. F-actin was chemically modified by the fluorescent dye, rhodamine-phalloidin, and the mode of myosin-actin interaction was estimated by a polarized fluorescence technique based on changes in the dye orientation (phi E) and thin filament flexibility (sin 2 theta). Phosphorylation of LC-2 at relaxation in low ionic strength induced typical for the force production ("strong" binding) state changes in the polarized fluorescence of F-actin (decreasing of phi E and increasing of sin 2 theta). In contrast, phosphorylation in high ionic strength induced changes similar to those typical for the nonforce production ("weak" binding) state (phi E did not change, while sin 2 theta decreased). It is suggested that phosphorylation of LC-2 at approximately physiological ionic strength may provide fiber relaxation by switching some of the cross-bridges to the nonforce production state at the initial stage of relaxation.  相似文献   

9.
Polymerizability of tropomyosin was unaffected by the removal of the three terminal residues 282, 283, and 284 using carboxypeptidase A. However, when residue 281 was removed, polymerizability was abolished. These results are consistent with a 9-residue molecular head-to-tail overlap in polymerized tropomyosin, in which residue 281 plays a space-filling role at the center of the overlap core. In acetylation studies, loss of polymerizability closely paralleled the extent of acetylation of lysine-7, and this residue was more susceptible to acetylation than any other. The effect of acetylation on polymerizability was probably caused not only by cleavage of salt-bridge between lysine 7 epsilon-NH2 and residue 284 alpha-COOH but also by distortion of the overlap core by the N-acetyl group. Specific modification of methionine in tropomyosin indicated that, in addition to residue 281, methionine-8 is also involved in formation of the overlap core. Modified nonpolymerizable tropomyosins could still bind to F-actin, indicating that the head-to-tail polymerization of tropomyosin is not a prerequisite for actin binding, although the regularity of tropomyosin molecules along the actin helix is presumably disrupted.  相似文献   

10.
The atomic model of the F-actin-myosin subfragment 1 complex (acto-S-1) from skeletal muscle suggests that the transition of the complex from a weakly to a strongly binding state, generating mechanical force during the contractile cycle, may involve the attachment of the upper 50-kDa subdomain of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) to the interface between subdomains 1 and 3 of actin. For the human cardiac myosin, this putative interaction would take place at the ordered loop including Arg403 of the beta-heavy chain sequence, a residue whose mutation into Gln is known to elicit a severe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy caused by a decrease of the rate of the actomyosin ATPase activity. Moreover, in several nonmuscle myosins the replacement of a Glu residue within the homolog loop by Ser or Thr also results in the reduction of the actomyosin ATPase rate that is alleviated by phosphorylation. As an approach to the characterization of the unknown interaction properties of F-actin with this particular S-1 loop region, we have synthesized four 17-residue peptides corresponding to the sequence Gly398-Gly414 of the human beta-cardiac myosin. Three peptides included Arg403 (GG17) or Gln403 (GG17Q) or Ser409 (GG17S) and the fourth peptide (GG17sc) was a scrambled version of the normal GG17 sequence. Using fluorescence polarization, cosedimentation analyses and photocross-linking, we show that the three former peptides, but not the scrambled sequence, directly associate in solution to F-actin, at a nearly physiological ionic strength, with almost identical affinities (Kd approximately 40 microM). The binding strength of the F-actin-GG17 peptide complex was increased fivefold (Kd = 8 microM) in the presence of subsaturating concentrations of added skeletal S-1 relative to actin, without apparent competition between the peptide and S-1. Each of the three actin-binding peptides inhibited the steady-state actin-activated MgATPase of skeletal S-1 by specifically decreasing about twofold the Vmax of the reaction without changing the actin affinity for the S-1-ATP intermediate. Cosedimentation assays indicated the binding of about 0.65 mol peptide/mol actin under conditions inducing 70% inhibition. Collectively, the data point to a specific and stoichiometric interaction of the peptides with F-actin that uncouples its binding to S-1 from ATP hydrolysis, probably by interfering with the proper attachment of the S-1 loop segment to the interdomain connection of actin.  相似文献   

11.
Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is an extracellular signaling molecule that can enter the central nervous system following injury or diseases that disrupt the blood-brain-barrier. Using a combination of time-lapse microscopy, immunocytochemistry, and biochemical techniques, we demonstrate that LPA stimulates profound changes in astrocyte morphology that are due to effects on the actomyosin cytoskeleton. Flat astrocytes in primary culture display prominent actin stress fibers. Treatment with the myosin light chain kinase inhibitor, ML-9, causes stress fiber dissolution and dramatic morphology changes including rounding of the cell body and the formation of processes. LPA can stabilize actin stress fibers and inhibit the morphology changes in ML-9-treated cells. Furthermore, this activity is dependent upon activation of the GTP-binding protein Rho as evidenced by the ability of C3 exoenzyme, a specific inhibitor of Rho, to block the effect. Phosphorylation of the regulatory light (RLC) chain initiates conformational changes in myosin II that result in the formation of myosin filaments and the recruitment of actin into contractile stress fibers. LPA-induced stabilization of stress fibers is accompanied by increases in phosphorylation of the RLC of myosin. Furthermore, astrocytes grown on flexible silicone undergo rapid contraction in response to LPA treatment. The forces generated by these cells manifest themselves as increased wrinkling in the silicone. The observed contraction and accompanying increases in regulatory light chain phosphorylation suggest that LPA-induced signaling cascades in astrocytes regulate actin/myosin interactions.  相似文献   

12.
In both cardiac and skeletal muscle, the force-generating molecular motors (crossbridges) are turned on by increasing the intracellular free calcium level that regulates the troponin-tropomyosin system. However, calcium activation is a two-way process in the sense that activated crossbridges also affect the troponin-tropomyosin system. Here we review the mechanism of calcium action on myofilament proteins, particularly tropomyosin, that affects both the extent and the rate of force development and hence the contractility of the myocardium. At low myoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations tropomyosin is located at the edge of the thin filament, thereby interfering with the formation of strong actin-myosin linkages (blocked state). An increase in Ca2+ activity causes an azimuthal shift of tropomyosin around the filament (by about 30 degrees), thereby increasing the probability of low-force crossbridge interaction, a process which by cooperative effects induces further tropomyosin movement (by an additional 10 degrees) which results in the open state of the filament characterized by forceful crossbridge interaction. (This mechanism may be analogous to that in ligand-gated ion channels, where ligand binding increases the open probability of the pore.) The extent of activation then depends on the free Ca2+ concentration and on the calcium sensitivity of the thin filament that may be affected by protein phosphorylation, crossbridge attachment, the troponin isoform composition of the filament, and novel calcium-sensitizing drugs that act on the contractile or regulatory proteins and thus increase the force of the heart.  相似文献   

13.
Several studies have shown that substitution of cardiac troponin C into fast skeletal muscle causes a marked reduction in cooperativity of Ca(2+)-activation of both myofibrillar ATPase and tension development. To clarify the underlying mechanisms, in the present study, Ca2+ binding to cardiac troponin C inserted into fast skeletal myofibrils was measured. Two classes of binding sites with different affinities (classes 1 and 2) were clearly identified, which were equivalent stoichiometrically to the two high-affinity sites (sites III and IV) and a single low-affinity site (site II) of troponin C, respectively. Ca2+ binding to class-2 sites and Ca(2+)-activation of myofibrillar ATPase occurred in roughly the same Ca2+ concentration range, indicating that site II is responsible for Ca2+ -regulation. Myosin crossbridge interactions with actin, both in the presence and absence of ATP, enhanced the Ca2+ binding affinity of only class-2 sites. These effects of myosin crossbridges, however, were much smaller than the effects on the Ca2+ binding to the low-affinity sites of fast skeletal troponin C, which are responsible for regulating fast skeletal myofibrillar ATPase. These findings provide strong evidence that the reduction in the cooperative response to Ca2+ upon substituting cardiac troponin C into fast skeletal myofibrils is due to a decrease in the positive feedback interaction between myosin crossbridge attachment and Ca2+ binding to the regulatory site of troponin C.  相似文献   

14.
Integrin-mediated interaction with the extracellular matrix plays a critical role in the function of osteoclasts, the bone-resorbing cells. This study examines the role of p130Cas (Crk-associated substrate (Cas)) in actin organization in osteoclasts. Multinucleated osteoclast-like cells (OCLs) were obtained in a co-culture of murine bone marrow cells and primary osteoblasts. After plating on culture dishes, OCLs formed a ringlike structure consisting of F-actin dots at cell periphery (actin ring). The percentage of OCLs with actin rings and its diameter increased with time and cell spreading. Tyrosine phosphorylation of a protein (p130) increased with actin ring formation. Treatment with cytochalasin D disrupted actin rings and reduced tyrosine phosphorylation of p130. Using specific antibodies, p130 was identified as Cas. By immunocytochemistry, Cas was localized to the peripheral regions of OCLs and its distribution overlapped that of F-actin. In OCLs derived from Src(-/-) mice, in which osteoclast activity is severely compromised, tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas was markedly reduced. Moreover, Cas was diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm and actin ring formation is not observed. These findings suggest that Src-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas is involved in the adhesion-induced actin organization associated with osteoclast activation.  相似文献   

15.
The contribution of electrostatic interactions to the effects of chicken gizzard calponin on the kinetics of actin polymerization and the bundling of F-actin were characterized by a combination of fluorescence, light-scattering, co-sedimentation, and electron-microscopic methods. Stoichiometric amounts of calponin accelerate actin polymerization in low-ionic-strength solutions, but this effect is diminished at [KCI] = 150 mM. At low ionic strengths, micromolar concentrations of calponin induce the formation of large bundles of actin filaments, and lower concentrations of calponin quench the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled F-actin. The latter effect is related to binding of calponin to F-actin rather than to bundling of the filaments. The concentration of calponin required to bundle a fixed concentration of actin filaments increases with increasing ionic strength, as the average diameter of the bundles decreases. Millimolar concentrations of ATP, GTP or ITP are equally efficient at dispersing actin bundles to single filaments or smaller aggregates, even though a significant fraction of calponin remains bound to F-actin. Our findings show that the binding of calponin to actin is determined at least in part by electrostatic interactions, and that the polycationic nature of calponin is primarily responsible for the formation of F-actin bundles via its ability to reduce the electrostatic repulsion between the negatively charged actin filaments.  相似文献   

16.
We observed the localization of the contractile proteins myosin, filamentous actin, alpha-actinin, tropomyosin, and vinculin in surface-activated, spreading human platelets using a single fluorescence staining procedure and conventional fluorescence microscopy. Myosin was distributed in a speckled pattern that extended radially from the granulomere. F-actin demonstrated cable-networks. Tropomyosin and alpha-actinin occurred in a punctuate distribution, and vinculin was localized at adhesion sites. Although myosin, F-actin, alpha-actinin, tropomyosin, and vinculin were not studied in resting platelets, our data support the idea that these contractile proteins are reorganized and reassembled in activated platelets during platelet function.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of myosin and actin is by intracellular Ca2+ concentration, which in turn is controlled by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In muscle--including cardiac muscle--of vertebrates, and some invertebrates, the site of Ca2+ control is in the thin, actin-containing filaments. These filaments contain tropomyosin and troponin; the latter is a complex of three subunits. When Ca2+ combines with troponin C, the Ca-binding subunit, a shift occurs in the position of tropomyosin that makes it possible for the myosin heads to bind to actin. This process is inhibited by a conformational change in troponin C, resulting in the release of the troponin complex from one of the binding sites on the thin filament. This process exhibits cooperative aspects which have been analyzed in terms of the Ca-binding process and the effect of Ca2+ on actomyosin ATPase activity.  相似文献   

18.
The smooth muscle tropomyosin isoforms beta and gamma were isolated in pure form and labeled with N-(1-pyrenyl)iodoacetamide (PIA) on the cysteine residues at either the N- or the C-terminal region (Cys-36 and Cys-190 of beta- and gamma-isoforms, respectively). The effect of caldesmon (CaD) on local conformational changes in different regions of the tropomyosin molecule was determined on the basis of changes in the excimer fluorescence (excited dimer of pyrene) formed in homodimers of tropomyosin isoforms. In the absence of actin, excimer fluorescence from the pyrene at Cys-190 of gamma-tropomyosin homodimer decreased in a simple manner on the addition of CaD, whereas the excimer from the Cys-36 of beta-tropomyosin homodimer exhibited a biphasic change, suggesting that additional weak binding sites exist near Cys-36. In the presence of actin, CaD-induced changes in the excimer fluorescence of pyrene-tropomyosin were observed only with Cys-36, and this change was associated with an inhibition of actin-activated myosin ATPase. A competition study with unlabeled tropomyosin isoforms indicated that the different excimer changes exhibited by beta- and gamma-tropomyosin in the presence of CaD were due to conformational changes in different regions of the tropomyosin molecule and not to differences in their affinities for CaD. Experiments with recombinant CaD mutants derived using the baculovirus expression system showed that the inhibition of tropomyosin potentiation of actomyosin ATPase by CaD requires the regions between residues 728-756 and 718-727 on the CaD molecule, although the latter region was sufficient for direct interaction with tropomyosin.  相似文献   

19.
The modulatory effect of myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation in mammalian skeletal muscle, first documented as posttetanic potentiation of twitch tension, was subsequently shown to enhance the expression and development of tension at submaximal levels of activating calcium. Structural analyses demonstrated that thick filaments with phosphorylated myosin regulatory light chains appeared disordered: they lost the near-helical, periodic arrangement of myosin head characteristic of the relaxed state. We suggested that disordered heads may be more mobile than ordered heads and are likely to spend more time close to their binding sites on thin filaments. In this study we determined that the physiological effects of phosphorylation could be mimicked by decreasing the lattice spacing between the thick and the thin filaments, either by osmotic compression with dextran or by increasing the sarcomere length of permeabilized rabbit psoas fibers. Phosphorylation of regulatory light chains by incubation of permeabilized fibers with myosin light chain kinase and calmodulin, followed by low levels of activating calcium, potentiated tension development at resting or lower sarcomere lengths in the absence of dextran but had no additional effect on tension potentiation or development in fibers with decreased lattice spacing due to either osmotic compression or increased sarcomere length.  相似文献   

20.
The high stiffness of relaxed cardiac myofibrils is explainable mainly by the expression of a short-length titin (connectin), the giant elastic protein of the vertebrate myofibrillar cytoskeleton. However, additional molecular features could account for this high stiffness, such as interaction between titin and actin, which has previously been reported in vitro. To probe this finding for a possible physiological significance, isolated myofibrils from rat heart were subjected to selective removal of actin filaments by a calcium-independent gelsolin fragment, and the "passive" stiffness of the specimens was recorded. Upon actin extraction, stiffness decreased by nearly 60%, and to a similar degree after high-salt extraction of thick filaments. Thus actin-titin association indeed contributes to the stiffness of resting cardiac muscle. To identify possible sites of association, we employed a combination of different techniques. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that actin extraction increased the extensibility of the previously stiff Z-disc-flanking titin region. Actin-titin interaction within this region was confirmed in in vitro cosedimentation assays, in which multimodule recombinant titin fragments were tested for their ability to interact with F-actin. By contrast, such assays showed no actin-titin-binding propensity for sarcomeric regions outside the Z-disc comb. Accordingly, the results of mechanical measurements demonstrated that competition with native titin by recombinant titin fragments from Z-disc-remote, I-band or A-band regions did not affect passive myofibril stiffness. These results indicate that it is actin-titin association near the Z-disc, but not along the remainder of the sarcomere, that helps to anchor the titin molecule at its N-terminus and maintain a high stiffness of the relaxed cardiac myofibril.  相似文献   

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