Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calponin inhibits the actin-activated ATPase of smooth muscle myosin and thus has been proposed as a thin filament-based regulatory component in smooth muscle. To obtain information on the mechanism of inhibition by calponin we have used chemical modification of actin and cross-linking of actin and subfragment 1. Modification of Lys 61 of actin had no effect on the inhibition by calponin of acto-heavy meromyosin ATPase, i.e. different from tropomyosin-troponin. In addition, modification of the acidic N-terminal region of actin did not impair the ability of calponin to bind to F-actin. Finally, calponin was effective in inhibiting ATPase activity of cross-linked acto-subfragment 1. Therefore the mechanism of inhibition by calponin is distinct from troponin-tropomyosin and caldesmon in that it does not involve either the N-terminal acidic region of actin nor the area around Lys 61 and does not fit a simple steric blocking model.
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PMID:The mechanism of inhibition of the actin-activated myosin MgATPase by calponin. 138 58

The number of specific Ca2+ bound to Akazara scallop troponin C was estimated to be 0.7 with an apparent binding constant of 5 x 10(5) M-1 (T. Ojima and K. Nishita, 1986, J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16749-16754). In the present paper, we report on the Ca(2+)-induced conformational changes in the troponin C and the interaction of the troponin C with rabbit troponin subunits. The Ca2+ binding to the troponin C caused a marked change in difference uv absorption spectra and a retardation of elution on Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration. However, its circular dichroism spectrum was hardly changed by the Ca2+ binding. These results suggest that the Ca2+ binding to the troponin C induced changes predominantly in tertiary structure rather than in secondary structure. Akazara scallop troponin C was shown to be able to bind to rabbit troponin I-Cellulofine affinity column, but the affinity was not greatly increased by Ca2+ unlike the case of rabbit troponin C. On hybridizing with rabbit troponin T and I, Akazara scallop troponin C was shown to be incapable of substituting rabbit troponin C; i.e., the hybrid troponin strongly inhibited the Mg-ATPase activity of rabbit actomyosin-tropomyosin irrespective of the presence or absence of Ca2+, thus recovering no Ca2+ sensitivity.
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PMID:Akazara scallop troponin C: Ca(2+)-induced conformational change and interaction with rabbit troponin subunits. 144 75

Thiosphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin and skeletal muscle myosin, both of which express Ca(2+)-independent actin-activated MgATPase activity, were used to examine the functional effects of calponin and caldesmon separately and together. Separately, calponin and caldesmon inhibited the actin-activated MgATPase activities of thiophosphorylated smooth muscle myosin and skeletal muscle myosin, calponin being significantly more potent in both systems. Calponin-mediated inhibition resulted from the interaction of calponin with actin since it could be reversed by increasing the actin concentration. Caldesmon had no significant influence on the calponin-induced inhibition of the smooth muscle actomyosin ATPase, nor did calponin have a significant effect on caldesmon-induced inhibition. In the skeletal muscle system, however, caldesmon was found to override the inhibitory effect of calponin. This difference probably reflects the lower affinity of skeletal muscle actin for calponin compared with that of smooth muscle actin. Calponin inhibition of skeletal muscle actin-activated myosin MgATPase was not significantly affected by troponin/tropomyosin, suggesting that the thin filament can readily accommodate calponin in addition to the troponin complex, or that calponin may be able to displace troponin. Calponin also inhibited acto-phosphorylated smooth muscle heavy meromyosin and acto-skeletal muscle heavy meromyosin MgATPases. The most appropriate protein preparations for analysis of the regulatory effects of calponin in the actomyosin system therefore would be smooth muscle actin, tropomyosin and thiophosphorylated myosin, and for analysis of the kinetic effects of calponin on the actomyosin ATPase cycle they would be smooth muscle actin, tropomyosin and phosphorylated heavy meromyosin, due to the latter's solubility.
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PMID:A comparison of the effects of calponin on smooth and skeletal muscle actomyosin systems in the presence and absence of caldesmon. 147 86

In a search for an invertebrate muscle from which the muscle regulatory proteins could be obtained in a great quantity and at high homogeneity, the regulatory proteins, tropomyosin (Tm) and three subunits of troponin (Tn), have been isolated from the lobster tail muscle, purified and partially characterized. The calcium-sensitive ATPase of lobster myofibril was restored when purified lobster Tm and lobster Tn were added to actin. Quantitative SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the lobster muscle contains actin, Tm, Tn with a molar ratio 7:1:1 and that lobster Tn consists of three subunits, one of each I, C and T. Each subunit was identified according to its effect on the acto-S1 ATPase rate. The isomer composition in each fraction of purified Tn subunit and in Tm are different from the rabbit skeletal muscle proteins; Tm consists of a single species of polypeptide of M(r) 38,000; the TnT fraction appears to be homogeneous with M(r) 43,000; the TnI fraction contains five isomers, all showing similar isoelectric pH, differing in M(r) in the range from 28,000 to 31,000; two TnC fractions contain three isomers in total with a range of M(r) from 18,500 to 19,000. Further study of the lobster Tm elucidated that digestion by carboxypeptidase A gave rise to a homogeneous preparation of truncated and non-polymerizable Tm which is devoid of 11 residues at the C-terminus of the molecule. The C-terminal amino acid sequence of 11 residues is homologous to the thoracic isomer generated from Drosophila melanogaster Tm-I gene. The present study indicated that, despite heterogeneities owing to the occurrence of isomers, the lobster regulatory proteins serve as an invertebrate source of the proteins for structural and biophysical studies, alternative to vertebrate counterparts.
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PMID:Isolation, purification and partial characterization of tropomyosin and troponin subunits from the lobster tail muscle. 149 Oct 69

Recently, one of the authors (K.I.) and other investigators reported that myosin light chain (MLC) of smooth muscle (gizzard, arterial and tracheal) was diphosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and that diphosphorylated myosin showed a marked increase in the actin-activated myosin ATPase activity in vitro and ex vivo. In this study, we prepared myosin, actin, tropomyosin (human platelet), MLCK (chicken gizzard) and calmodulin (bovine brain) and demonstrated diphosphorylation of MLC of platelet by MLCK in vitro. Our results are as follows. (1) Platelet MLC was diphosphorylated by a relatively high concentration (greater than 20 micrograms/ml) of MLCK in vitro. As a result of diphosphorylation, the actin-activated myosin ATPase activity was increased 3 to 4-fold as compared to the monophosphorylation. (2) Both di- and monophosphorylation reactions showed similar Ca2+, KCl, MgCl2-dependence. Maximal reaction was seen at [Ca2+] greater than 10(-6) M, 60 mM KCl and 2 mM MgCl2. This condition was physiological in activated platelets. (3) Di- and monophosphorylated myosin showed similar Ca2+, KCl-dependence of ATPase activity but distinct MgCl2-dependence. Diphosphorylated myosin showed maximal ATPase activity at 2 mM MgCl2 and monophosphorylated myosin showed a maximum at 10 mM MgCl2. (4) The addition of tropomyosin stimulated actin-activated ATPase activity in both di- and monophosphorylated myosin to the same degree. (5) ML-9, a relatively specific inhibitor of MLCK, inhibited the aggregation of human platelets induced by thrombin ex vivo in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, this drug also partially inhibited both di- and monophosphorylation reactions and actin-activated ATPase activity. On the other hand, H-7, a synthetic inhibitor of protein kinase C, had little effect on the aggregation of human platelets induced by thrombin ex vivo. From these results, we conclude that diphosphorylation of platelet myosin by MLCK may play an important role in activated platelets in vivo.
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PMID:Diphosphorylation of platelet myosin by myosin light chain kinase. 153 1

The ATPase activity of acto-myosin subfragment 1 (S1) at low ratios of S1 to actin in the presence of tropomyosin is dependent on the tropomyosin source and ionic conditions. Whereas skeletal muscle tropomyosin causes a 60% inhibitory effect at all ionic strengths, the effect of smooth muscle tropomyosin was found to be dependent on the ionic strength. At low ionic strength (20 mM) smooth muscle tropomyosin inhibits the ATPase activity by 60%, while at high ionic strength (120 mM) it potentiates the ATPase activity three- to five-fold. Therefore, the difference in the effect of smooth muscle and skeletal muscle tropomyosin on the acto-S1 ATPase activity was due to a greater fraction of the tropomyosin-actin complex being turned on in the absence of S1 with smooth muscle tropomyosin than with skeletal muscle tropomyosin. Using well-oriented gels of actin and of reconstituted specimens from vertebrate smooth muscle thin filament proteins suitable for X-ray diffraction, we localized the position of tropomyosin on actin under different levels of acto-S1 ATPase activity. By analysing the equatorial X-ray pattern of the oriented specimens in combination with solution scattering experiments, we conclude that tropomyosin is located at a binding radius of about 3.5 nm on the f-actin helix under all conditions studied. Furthermore, we find no evidence that the azimuthal position of tropomyosin is different for smooth muscle tropomyosin at various ionic strengths, or vertebrate tropomyosin, since the second actin layer-line intensity (at 17.9 nm axial and 4.3 nm radial spacing), which was shown in skeletal muscle to be a sensitive measure of this parameter, remains strong and unchanged. Differences in the ATPase activity are not necessarily correlated with different positions of tropomyosin on f-actin. The same conclusion is drawn from our observations that, although the regulatory protein caldesmon inhibits the ATPase activity in native and reconstituted vertebrate smooth muscle thin filaments at a molar ratio of actin/tropomyosin/caldesmon of 28:7:1, the second actin layer-line remains strong. Only adding caldesmon in excess reduces the intensity of the second actin layer-line, from which the binding radius of caldesmon can be estimated to be about 4 nm. The lack of predominant meridional reflections in oriented specimens, with caldesmon present, suggests that caldesmon does not project away from the thin filament as troponin molecules in vertebrate striated muscle in agreement with electron micrographs of smooth muscle thin filaments. In freshly prepared native smooth muscle thin filaments we observed a Ca(2+)-sensitive reversible bundling effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:X-ray diffraction studies on oriented gels of vertebrate smooth muscle thin filaments. 153 10

It is well established that caldesmon binds to actin (Kb = 10(7) - 10(-8) M-1) and to tropomyosin (Kb = 10(6) M-1) and that it is a potent inhibitor of actomyosin ATPase. Caldesmon can also bind tightly to myosin. We investigated the binding of smooth muscle and nonmuscle caldesmon isoforms (CDh and CDl respectively) to myosin using proteins from sheep aorta. Both caldesmon isoforms bind to myosin with indistinguishable affinity. The affinity is about 10(6) M-1 in low salt buffer, but is weakened by increasing [KCl] reaching 10(5) M-1 in 100 mM KCl. The stoichiometry of binding is about three caldesmon per myosin molecule. Stoichiometry and affinity are not dependent on whether myosin is phosphorylated nor on the presence of Mg2+ and ATP, provided the ionic strength is maintained constant. The caldesmon binding site of smooth muscle myosin is located in the S-2 region, consequently both HMM and myosin rod bind to caldesmon. Over a range of conditions myosin and myosin rod binding to caldesmon were indistinguishable. Skeletal muscle myosin has no caldesmon binding site. Smooth muscle myosin rods form side-polar filaments in low salt buffer in which the backbone packing of LMM into the filament shaft is clearly visible in negatively-stained electron microscopic images. Sometimes the S-2 portions can be seen 'frayed' from the filament shaft. When caldesmon is bound the filament shaft appears to be about 20% thicker and the frayed effect is dramatically increased; long filamentous 'whiskers' are often seen curving out from the filament shaft. Similar structures are observed with smooth muscle and with non-muscle caldesmon. Myosin also binds to caldesmon when it is incorporated into the thin filament; however, this interaction is qualitatively different. Measurements of smooth muscle HMM binding to native thin filaments in the presence of 3 mM MgATP shows there is a high affinity binding (Kb = 10(6) M-1) which is independent of [Ca2+] and of the level of myosin phosphorylation. The stoichiometry is one HMM molecule per actin monomer which is equivalent to up to 14 HMM bound at high affinity per caldesmon. Negatively stained electron microscopic images of the HMM.ADP.Pi-thin filament complex have failed to show any attachment of HMM to the thin filaments. When rod filaments are added to actin plus caldesmon or to native thin filaments the rod filaments are strongly associated with the actin filament bundles. The majority of rod filaments are lined up parallel and in close proximity to actin filaments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Caldesmon binds to smooth muscle myosin and myosin rod and crosslinks thick filaments to actin filaments. 153 66

The interaction between troponin I and troponin C plays a critical role in the regulation of muscle contraction. In this study the interaction between troponin C (TnC) and the N-terminal region of TnI was investigated by the synthesis of three TnI peptides (residues 1-40/Rp, 10-40, and 20-40). The regulatory peptide (Rp) on binding to TnC prevents the ability of TnC to release the inhibition of the acto-S1-tropomyosin ATPase activity caused by TnI or the TnI inhibitory peptide (Ip), residues 104-115. A stable complex between TnC and Rp in the presence of Ca2+ was demonstrated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of 6 M urea. Rp was able to displace TnI from a preformed TnI.TnC complex. In the absence of Ca2+, Rp was unable to maintain a complex with TnC in benign conditions of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis which demonstrates the Ca(2+)-dependent nature of this interaction. Size-exclusion chromatography demonstrated that the TnC.Rp complex consisted of a 1:1 complex. The results of these studies have shown that the N-terminal region of TnI (1-40) plays a critical role in modulating the Ca(2+)-sensitive release of TnI inhibition by TnC.
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PMID:Biologically important interactions between synthetic peptides of the N-terminal region of troponin I and troponin C. 163 7

Tropomyosin of fast-twitch, slow-twitch and cardiac muscles of carp and icefish has been isolated by hydroxyapatite chromatography. The subunit distribution has been investigated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by peptide mapping. The purified skeletal muscle tropomyosins all belong to the alpha family and differ from higher vertebrate tropomyosin by the lack of beta subunits. Specific alpha isotypes are however encountered in fast-twitch fibres (alpha w subunit) and slow-twitch or intermediate (pink) fibres (alpha and alpha w subunits). The amino acid compositions and the paracrystals formed by the carp alpha w alpha w and alpha alpha w tropomyosins do not differ markedly from that of rabbit alpha alpha chains. They differ however by their capability to inhibit the ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle acto-HMM system. A beta-like subunit is found in carp cardiac tropomyosin, in the proportion of 25% of the native protein, but not in icefish heart.
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PMID:Tropomyosin from the striated muscles of carp (Cyprinus carpio) and of icefish (Channichthys rhinoceratus). 170 98

Using the intensity of the outer part of the second actin layer line as an indicator of thin filament conformation in vertebrate muscle we were able to identify the four different states of rest, and the three states induced by the presence of Ca2+ ions, rigor bridge attachment and actively cycling bridges, respectively. These findings are in qualitative agreement with a number of biochemical studies by Eisenberg and Greene and others, indicating that activation of the thin filament depends both on Ca2+ ions and crossbridge binding. Yet quantitatively, the biochemical data and our structural data are contradictory. Whereas the biochemical studies suggest a strong coupling between structural changes of the thin filament and the ATPase activity, the structural studies indicate that this is not necessarily the case. Troponin molecules also change their conformation upon activation depending on both Ca2+ ions and crossbridge binding as demonstrated by the early part of the time course of the thin filament meridional reflections in contracting frog muscle. Low ionic strength which has been shown by Brenner and collaborators to increase weakly binding crossbridges in relaxed rabbit psoas muscle does not influence the intensity of the second actin layer line in this muscle. Yet in contracting frog muscle the increase of the second actin layer line increases very rapidly in one step, suggesting that weak binding bridges which are attached to actin prior to force production may indeed influence the thin filament conformation. It therefore appears that weakly bound bridges in the low ionic strength state do not have the same effect on the thin filament conformation as weakly bound bridges in an actively contracting muscle. Arthropod muscles like the thin filament regulated lobster muscles differ from vertebrate muscle in not showing an increase of the second layer line during contraction, which may have to do with differences in crossbridge attachment. The myosin-regulated molluscan muscle ABRM shows a large increase on the second actin layer line upon phasic contraction and a much smaller increase in catch or rigor, indicating that actively cycling bridges influence the thin filament conformation differently than catch or rigor bridges. Several pieces of evidence which we have briefly outlined in this paper suggest that the thin filament conformational changes we have observed do not arise solely from tropomyosin movements and that conformational changes of actin domains should be considered.
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PMID:X-ray diffraction studies on muscle regulation. 175 69


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