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1.
J Electron Microsc (Tokyo) ; 60(5): 337-43, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21880612

ABSTRACT

A new optical condition using an objective lens (OL) of a long focal length (objective mini lens: OM) was tested to enhance image contrast in phase plate transmission electron microscopy (P-TEM). A phase plate was set on the selected area aperture plane where diffraction patterns were formed under the optical condition using the OM. A phase shift by the phase plate was added to the electron waves to visualize phase objects. The application of the OM to the P-TEM should provide higher phase contrast than that obtained by the OL for the phase objects. One of the reasons for the contrast enhancement is that high-angle scattering electron waves which would give the background intensity were not used for image formation due to the large spherical aberration. Another reason is that the cut-on frequency above which the phase shift was added by the phase plate could be smaller using the OL with a long focal length. Experimental results and model calculations showed the contrast enhancement of the biological specimens using the OM.


Subject(s)
Microscopy, Electron, Transmission/instrumentation , Microscopy, Phase-Contrast/instrumentation , Adenosine Triphosphate/pharmacology , Animals , Gold Colloid , In Vitro Techniques , Lenses , Models, Theoretical , Myosins/drug effects , Myosins/ultrastructure , Optical Phenomena
2.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 405(4): 651-6, 2011 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21281603

ABSTRACT

Muscle contraction results from an attachment-detachment cycle between the myosin heads extending from myosin filaments and the sites on actin filaments. The myosin head first attaches to actin together with the products of ATP hydrolysis, performs a power stroke associated with release of hydrolysis products, and detaches from actin upon binding with new ATP. The detached myosin head then hydrolyses ATP, and performs a recovery stroke to restore its initial position. The strokes have been suggested to result from rotation of the lever arm domain around the converter domain, while the catalytic domain remains rigid. To ascertain the validity of the lever arm hypothesis in muscle, we recorded ATP-induced movement at different regions within individual myosin heads in hydrated myosin filaments, using the gas environmental chamber attached to the electron microscope. The myosin head were position-marked with gold particles using three different site-directed antibodies. The amplitude of ATP-induced movement at the actin binding site in the catalytic domain was similar to that at the boundary between the catalytic and converter domains, but was definitely larger than that at the regulatory light chain in the lever arm domain. These results are consistent with the myosin head lever arm mechanism in muscle contraction if some assumptions are made.


Subject(s)
Muscle Contraction , Myosin Subfragments/chemistry , Myosin Subfragments/physiology , Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Animals , Microscopy, Electron , Protein Conformation , Rabbits
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