Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Biochemistry ; 48(23): 5263-75, 2009 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19408946

ABSTRACT

Actin and myosin form the molecular motor in muscle. Myosin is the enzyme performing ATP hydrolysis under the allosteric control of actin such that actin binding initiates product release and force generation in the myosin power stroke. Non-equilibrium Monte Carlo molecular dynamics simulation of the power stroke suggested that a structured surface loop on myosin, the C-loop, is the actin contact sensor initiating actin activation of the myosin ATPase. Previous experimental work demonstrated C-loop binds actin and established the forward and reverse allosteric link between the C-loop and the myosin active site. Here, smooth muscle heavy meromyosin C-loop chimeras were constructed with skeletal (sCl) and cardiac (cCl) myosin C-loops substituted for the native sequence. In both cases, actin-activated ATPase inhibition is indicated mainly by the lower V(max). In vitro motility was also inhibited in the chimeras. Motility data were collected as a function of myosin surface density, with unregulated actin, and with skeletal and cardiac isoforms of tropomyosin-bound actin for the wild type, cCl, and sCl. Slow and fast subpopulations of myosin velocities in the wild-type species were discovered and represent geometrically unfavorable and favorable actomyosin interactions, respectively. Unfavorable interactions are detected at all surface densities tested. Favorable interactions are more probable at higher myosin surface densities. Cardiac tropomyosin-bound actin promotes the favorable actomyosin interactions by lowering the inhibiting geometrical constraint barriers with a structural effect on actin. Neither higher surface density nor cardiac tropomyosin-bound actin can accelerate motility velocity in cCl or sCl, suggesting the element initiating maximal myosin activation by actin resides in the C-loop.


Subject(s)
Actins/chemistry , Actomyosin/chemistry , Myosins/chemistry , Actins/metabolism , Actomyosin/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Allosteric Site , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Chickens , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Monte Carlo Method , Myosin-Light-Chain Kinase/chemistry , Myosin-Light-Chain Kinase/metabolism , Myosins/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Transfection
2.
Biophys J ; 93(10): 3555-66, 2007 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17704147

ABSTRACT

The motor protein myosin binds actin and ATP, producing work by causing relative translation of the proteins while transducing ATP free energy. Smooth muscle myosin has one of four heavy chains encoded by the MYH11 gene that differ at the C-terminus and in the active site for ATPase due to alternate splicing. A seven-amino-acid active site insert in phasic muscle myosin is absent from the tonic isoform. Fluorescence increase in the nucleotide sensitive tryptophan (NST) accompanies nucleotide binding and hydrolysis in several myosin isoforms implying it results from a common origin within the motor. A wild-type tonic myosin (smA) construct of the enzymatic head domain (subfragment 1 or S1) has seven tryptophan residues and nucleotide-induced fluorescence enhancement like other myosins. Three smA mutants probe the molecular basis for the fluorescence enhancement. W506+ contains one tryptophan at position 506 homologous to the NST in other myosins. W506F has the native tryptophans except phenylalanine replaces W506, and W506+(Y499F) is W506+ with phenylalanine replacing Y499. W506+ lacks nucleotide-induced fluorescence enhancement probably eliminating W506 as the NST. W506F has impaired ATPase activity but retains nucleotide-induced fluorescence enhancement. Y499F replacement in W506+ partially rescues nucleotide sensitivity demonstrating the role of Y499 as an NST facilitator. The exceptional response of W506 to active site conformation opens the possibility that phasic and tonic isoforms differ in how influences from active site ATPase propagate through the protein network.


Subject(s)
Muscle, Smooth/metabolism , Myosins/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Baculoviridae/metabolism , Binding Sites , DNA Primers/chemistry , Expressed Sequence Tags , Humans , Models, Biological , Models, Chemical , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Myosins/chemistry , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Protein Conformation , Protein Isoforms , Proteins/chemistry , Signal Transduction
3.
Biophys J ; 93(6): 2226-39, 2007 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17513376

ABSTRACT

Myosin is the molecular motor in muscle-binding actin and executing a power stroke by rotating its lever arm through an angle of approximately 70 degrees to translate actin against resistive force. A green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged human cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (HCRLC) was constructed to study in situ lever arm orientation one molecule at a time by polarized fluorescence emitted from the GFP probe. The recombinant protein physically and functionally replaced the native RLC on myosin lever arms in the thick filaments of permeabilized skeletal muscle fibers. Detecting single molecules in fibers where myosin concentration reaches 300 microM is accomplished using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. With total internal reflection fluorescence, evanescent field excitation, supercritical angle fluorescence detection, and CCD detector pixel size limits detection volume to just a few attoliters. Data analysis manages both the perturbing effect of the TIR interface on probe emission and the effect of high numerical aperture collection of light. The natural myosin concentration gradient in a muscle fiber allows observation of fluorescence polarization from C-term GFP-tagged HCRLC exchanged myosin from regions in the thick filament containing low and high myosin concentrations. In rigor, cross-bridges at low concentration at the end of the thick filament maintain GFP dipole moments at two distinct polar angles relative to the fiber symmetry axis. The lower angle, where the dipole is nearly parallel to fiber axis, is more highly populated than the alternative, larger angle. Cross-bridges at higher concentration in the center of the thick filament are oriented in a homogeneous band at approximately 45 degrees to the fiber axis. The data suggests molecular crowding impacts myosin conformation, implying mutual interactions between cross-bridges alter how the muscle generates force. The GFP-tagged RLC is a novel probe to assess single-lever-arm orientation characteristics in situ.


Subject(s)
Myosin Light Chains/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Biophysical Phenomena , Biophysics , Fluorescence Polarization , Fluorescent Dyes , Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Molecular Motor Proteins/chemistry , Molecular Probes , Muscle Contraction , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/chemistry , Muscle Relaxation , Myocardium/chemistry , Myosin Light Chains/genetics , Rabbits , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics
4.
Biophys J ; 90(12): 4662-71, 2006 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16565065

ABSTRACT

Fluorescence detection of single molecules provides a means to investigate protein dynamics minus ambiguities introduced by ensemble averages of unsynchronized protein movement or of protein movement mimicking a local symmetry. For proteins in a biological assembly, taking advantage of the single molecule approach could require single protein isolation from within a high protein concentration milieu. Myosin cross-bridges in a muscle fiber are proteins attaining concentrations of approximately 120 muM, implying single myosin detection volume for this biological assembly is approximately 1 attoL (10(-18) L) provided that just 2% of the cross-bridges are fluorescently labeled. With total internal reflection microscopy (TIRM) an exponentially decaying electromagnetic field established on the surface of a glass-substrate/aqueous-sample interface defines a subdiffraction limit penetration depth into the sample that, when combined with confocal microscopy, permits image formation from approximately 3 attoL volumes. Demonstrated here is a variation of TIRM incorporating a nanometer scale metal film into the substrate/glass interface. Comparison of TIRM images from rhodamine-labeled cross-bridges in muscle fibers contacting simultaneously the bare glass and metal-coated interface show the metal film noticeably reduces both background fluorescence and the depth into the sample from which fluorescence is detected. High contrast metal film-enhanced TIRM images allow secondary label visualization in the muscle fibers, facilitating elucidation of Z-disk structure. Reduction of both background fluorescence and detection depth will enhance TIRM's usefulness for single molecule isolation within biological assemblies.


Subject(s)
Aluminum/chemistry , Image Enhancement/methods , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/ultrastructure , Myosins/ultrastructure , Sarcomeres/ultrastructure , Spectrometry, Fluorescence/methods , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Fluorescent Dyes , Membranes, Artificial , Rabbits , Staining and Labeling/methods
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...