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)

Caldesmon, an actin/calmodulin binding protein, inhibits acto-heavy meromyosin (HMM) ATPase, while it increases the binding of HMM to actin, presumably mediated through an interaction between the myosin subfragment 2 region of HMM and caldesmon, which is bound to actin. In order to study the mechanism for the inhibition of acto-HM ATPase, we utilized the chymotryptic fragment of caldesmon (38-kDa fragment), which possesses the actin/calmodulin binding region but lacks the myosin binding portion. The 38-kDa fragment inhibits the actin-activated HMM ATPase to the same extent as does the intact caldesmon molecule. In the absence of tropomyosin, the 38-kDa fragment decreased the KATPase and Kbinding without any effect on the Vmax. However, when the actin filament contained bound tropomyosin, the caldesmon fragment caused a 2-3-fold decrease in the Vmax, in addition to lowering the KATPase and the Kbinding. The 38-kDa fragment-induced inhibition is partially reversed by calmodulin at a 10:1 molar ratio to caldesmon fragment; the reversal was more remarkable in 100 mM ionic strength at 37 degrees C than in 20 or 50 mM at 25 degrees C. Results from these experiments demonstrate that the 38-kDa domain of caldesmon fragment of myosin head to actin; however, when the actin filament contains bound tropomyosin, caldesmon fragment affects not only the binding of HMM to/actin but also the catalytic step in the ATPase cycle. The interaction between the 38-kDa domain of caldesmon and tropomyosin-actin is likely to play a role in the regulation of actomyosin ATPase and contraction in smooth muscle.
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PMID:Mechanism for the inhibition of acto-heavy meromyosin ATPase by the actin/calmodulin binding domain of caldesmon. 182 22

A chemical modification of G-actin with (m-maleimidobenzoyl)-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (MBS) impairs actin polymerization [Bettache, N., Bertrand, R., & Kassab, R. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 6028-6032]. MBS-actin recovers the ability to polymerize when a 2-fold molar excess of phalloidin is added in 30 mM KCl/2 mM MgCl2/20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6). The resulting polymer (MBS-P-actin) is highly potentiated so that it activates the Mg(2+)-ATPase of S1 more strongly than native F-actin. The affinity of MBS-P-actin for S1 in the presence of ATP (KATPase) is about four times higher than that of native F-actin, although the maximum velocity at infinite actin concentration (Vmax) is almost the same. This high activation is not due to a cross-linking between MBS-P-actin and the S1 heavy chain, since no substantial amount of cross-linking was observed in SDS gel electrophoresis. Direct binding studies and ATPase measurements showed that the modification of actin with MBS impairs the binding of tropomyosin. Tropomyosin binding can be improved considerably by the addition of troponin. However, the regulation mechanism of the acto-S1 ATPase activity by troponin-tropomyosin is damaged. The addition of troponin-tropomyosin reduces the S1 ATPase activation by MBS-P-actin to the same level as that of native F-actin in 30 mM KCl/2.5 mM ATP/2 mM MgCl2, but there is no difference in the ATPase activation in the presence and absence of Ca2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Interaction of maleimidobenzoyl actin with myosin subfragment 1 and tropomyosin-troponin. 182 94

Calponin, an actin-binding protein, inhibited the acto-heavy meromyosin (HMM) MgATPase and lowered the binding of HMM to actin. The amount of calponin bound to actin or tropomyosin-actin was the same when the ATPase was inhibited 80-90%. While the KATPase was diminished only less than 2-fold in the presence of calponin, the Vmax was decreased 6-fold and 2-fold with actin and tropomyosin-actin, respectively. A comparison of the kinetic constants for the ATP hydrolysis obtained in the presence of actin-calponin and tropomyosin-actin-calponin revealed that the tropomyosin augmented the Vmax 5-fold from the inhibited level, but there was no effect on the KATPase.
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PMID:The mechanism for the inhibition of actin-activated ATPase of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin by calponin. 182 52

The binding of the NH2-terminal region of troponin T (TnT) to the COOH-terminal region of tropomyosin (Tm) and the head-to-tail overlap between Tm molecules is thought to provide a pivotal link between troponin (Tn) and Tm (White, S.P., Cohen, C., and Phillips, G.N., Jr. (1987) Nature 325, 826-828). To further explore the structure-function relationship of the NH2-terminal region of TnT, we studied the binding of a 26,000-dalton TnT fragment (26K-TnT, Ohtsuki, I., Shiraishi, F., Suenaga, N., Miyata, T., and Tanokura, M.J. (1984) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 95, 1337-1342) which corresponds to residues 46-259 of TnT2f, the major isoform of TnT in rabbit fast twitch muscle, to immobilized alpha-Tm. Both 26K-TnT and TnT2f were retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column in the presence of 150 mM NaCl. However, upon increasing the NaCl concentration 26K-TnT was eluted from the column at a higher ionic strength than was TnT. When applied alone, the binary complex of TnI and TnC (TnC.TnI) was not retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column. When applied subsequently to prebound TnT2f or 26K-TnT, TnI.TnC was retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column and eluted together with TnT2f or 26K-TnT as ternary troponin complexes. Whether Ca2+ was present or not, Tn containing 26K-TnT was eluted at a higher ionic strength than was Tn containing TnT2f, indicating that removal of the first 45 residues of TnT2f strengthens the binding of Tn to Tm. In the presence of Tm, reconstituted Tn containing 26K-TnT conferred Ca2+ sensitivity on actomyosin-S1 MgATPase, and the steepness of the pCa-ATPase relation was unchanged with respect to the actoS1 ATPase regulated by TnT2f. It is concluded that the first 45 residues of TnT2f are not essential for anchoring the troponin complex to the thin filament and do not play a crucial role in the cooperative response of regulated actoS1 ATPase to Ca2+.
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PMID:Deletion of the first 45 NH2-terminal residues of rabbit skeletal troponin T strengthens binding of troponin to immobilized tropomyosin. 182 57

Unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin filaments do not disassemble in MgATP, provided that the solution is supplemented either by 25% serum albumin or by 6% polyethylene glycol 6000. These filaments are able to support actomyosin retraction but their ATPase activity is not activated by tropomyosin-decorated F-actin.
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PMID:Evidence that unphosphorylated smooth muscle myosin supports smooth muscle contraction. 183 57

Regulation in striated muscles primarily involves the effect of changes in the free calcium concentration on the interaction of subfragment-1 (S-1) with the actin-tropomyosin-troponin complex (henceforth referred to as [acto]R). At low concentrations of free Ca++ the rate of ATP hydrolysis by (acto)R S-1 can be as much as 20-fold lower than that in the presence of high free Ca++, even though the binding of S-1 to (actin)R in the presence of ATP is virtually independent of the calcium concentration. This implies that the mechanism of regulation involves a kinetic transition between actin-bound states, rather than the result of changes in actin binding. In the current work, we have investigated the fluorescence transient that occurs with the binding and hydrolysis of ATP both at low and high free [Ca++]. The magnitude of this transition at low free [Ca++] is higher than at high free [Ca++]. At low free [Ca++], the rate of the fluorescence transient either stays constant or decreases slightly with increasing free actin concentrations, but at high free [Ca++] the rate increases slightly with increasing free actin concentration. The observed changes in rate are not great enough to be of regulatory importance. The results of the fluorescence transient experiments together with the binding studies performed at steady state also show that neither the binding of M.ATP or M.ADP.Pi to (actin)R is appreciably Ca++ sensitive. These data imply that an additional step (or steps) in the ATPase cycle, i.e., other than the burst transition, must be regulated by calcium.
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PMID:Activation of skeletal S-1 ATPase activity by actin-tropomyosin-troponin. Effect of Ca++ on the fluorescence transient. 183 76

Treatment of a solution of actin and smooth muscle caldesmon with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) results in the formation of a disulfide cross-link between the C-terminal penultimate residue Cys-374 of actin and Cys-580 in caldesmon's C-terminal actin-binding region. Therefore, these 2 residues are close in the actin-caldesmon complex. Since myosin also binds to actin in the vicinity of Cys-374 and since caldesmon inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity by the reduction of myosin binding to actin, then the inhibition might be by caldesmon sterically hindering or blocking myosin's interaction with actin. [Ca2+]Calmodulin, which reverses the inhibition of the ATPase activity, decreases the yield of the cross-linked species, suggesting a weakening of the caldesmon-actin interaction in the cross-linked region. It is possible to maximally cross-link one caldesmon molecule/every three actin monomers, in the absence or presence of tropomyosin, clearly ruling out an elongated, end-to-end alignment of caldesmon on the actin filament in vitro, and raising the possibility that the N-terminal part of caldesmon projects out from the filament. Reaction of 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)-modified actin with caldesmon leads to the same disulfide cross-linked product between actin and caldesmon Cys-580, enabling the specific labeling of the other caldesmon cysteine, residue 153, in the N-terminal part of caldesmon with a spectroscopic probe.
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PMID:Disulfide cross-linking of caldesmon to actin. 183 43

Calponin, a 35 kDa actin-binding protein, was shown to be a normal component of 'native' thin filaments prepared from sheep aorta. Actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon and calponin were present in molar ratios 14:2:1:0.9. Calponin was isolated from thin filaments in yield 0.5 mg/100 mg thin filament protein. Calponin inhibited actomyosin ATPase up to 85%, half maximal at 0.2 calponin/actin. Inhibition did not depend on tropomyosin, Ca2+ or Ca2+ calmodulin. Caldesmon inhibited actomyosin with a 10-fold greater potency than calponin in the presence of tropomyosin and inhibition could be reversed by Ca2+ calmodulin under certain conditions. Calponin had no effect on caldesmon inhibition or the reversal of inhibition.
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PMID:Properties of calponin isolated from sheep aorta thin filaments. 183 99

A binary complex consisting of Mr 19,000 and Mr 40,000 components was co-purified with troponin from a crude troponin fraction of Akazara scallop (Chlamys nipponensis akazara) striated adductor muscle. This complex is incapable of conferring Ca(2+)-sensitivity to rabbit reconstituted actomyosin Mg-ATPase activity, rather strongly inhibiting it, but became capable on further complexing with Akazara scallop troponin-C. To examine the effects of the Mr 19,000 and Mr 40,000 components on the ATPase activity, they were separated from each other by CM-Toyopearl column chromatography. The Mr 19,000 component strongly inhibited the Mg-ATPase activity of actomyosin-tropomyosin and the inhibition was reversed by further addition of the Akazara scallop troponin-C. On the other hand, the Mr 40,000 component slightly increased it. On hybridization with the Akazara scallop troponin subunits, the Mr 19,000 and Mr 40,000 components were shown to be able to substitute for troponin-I and troponin-T, respectively. The amino acid compositions of the Mr 40,000 component and troponin-T were almost identical, and those of the Mr 19,000 component and Mr 17,000 C-terminal fragment of the troponin-I resembled each other fairly well. From these results, it may be concluded that the Mr 19,000-40,000 binary complex is the troponin-I-troponin-T complex.
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PMID:A binary complex of troponin-I and troponin-T from Akazara scallop striated adductor muscle. 183 23

We investigated the mechanism(s) responsible for differences in the effects of acidic pH on Ca2+ activation of the activity of adult and neonatal rat heart myofilaments. Studies on preparations of myofilaments reconstituted with adult troponin-tropomyosin (Tn-Tm) and either adult or neonatal thick filaments indicated that the difference in effect of acidic pH is related to differences in Tn-Tm and not other myofilament proteins. Immunoblotting analysis showed that development of the rat heart myofibrils is associated with isoform switching from slow skeletal TnI to cardiac TnI and from a slow mobility isoform of TnT (TnT1) to a faster Mr isoform (TnT2. Expression of slow skeletal TnI was associated with a relative insensitivity of myofilament Ca2+ activation to deactivation by acidic pH. Moreover, the effect of acidic pH on Ca2+ activation of ATPase activity of soleus myofibrils, which contain cardiac TnC and slow skeletal TnI, was essentially the same as the effect of acidic pH on rat cardiac myofibrils in the early neonatal period. Neonatal myofilaments also contained a relative abundance of a set of polypeptides copurifying with the thin filaments. We have identified these proteins as histones. The relative amount of histones among a variety of preparations from different species was not correlated with the pH sensitivity of myofibrillar Ca2+ activation. Shifts in TnT isoforms among these species were also not correlated with an altered response to acidic pH. Our data provide evidence in support of the hypothesis that the relative insensitivity of neonatal myofilament activity to acidic pH is due to the presence of slow skeletal TnI in the thin-filament regulatory complex.
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PMID:Identification and functional significance of troponin I isoforms in neonatal rat heart myofibrils. 193 54


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