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)

The binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) to actin in the presence of ATP and the acto-S-1 ATPase activities of acto-S-1 complexes were determined at 5 degrees C under conditions of partial saturation of actin, up to 90%, by antibodies against the first seven N-terminal residues on actin. The antibodies [Fab(1-7)] inhibited strongly the acto-S-1 ATPase and the binding of S-1 to actin in the presence of ATP at low concentrations of S-1, up to 25 microM. Further increases in S-1 concentration resulted in a partial and cooperative recovery of both the binding of S-1 to actin and the acto-S-1 ATPase while causing only limited displacement of Fab(1-7) from actin. The extent to which the binding and the ATPase activity were recovered depended on the saturation of actin by Fab(1-7). The combined amounts of S-1 and Fab binding to actin suggested that the activation of the myosin ATPase activity was due to actin free of Fab. Examination of the acto-S-1 ATPase activities as a function of S-1 bound to actin at different levels of actin saturation by Fab(1-7) revealed that the antibodies inhibited the activation of the bound myosin. Thus, the binding of antibodies to the N-terminal segment of actin can act to inhibit both the binding of S-1 to actin in the presence of ATP and a catalytic step in ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin. The implications of these results to the regulation of actomyosin interaction are discussed.
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PMID:Actomyosin interactions in the presence of ATP and the N-terminal segment of actin. 153 Dec 99

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 importance of perfusion of the coronary vasculature in the regulation of ATPase activity of myosin in rat myocardial cells has been studied. Quantitative histochemistry was used to determine the activity of the enzyme among cells in tissues that had been either perfused through the coronary system or superfused over the surface of the tissue. Enzymatic activity was measured in cryostatic sections from three different preparations: 1) hearts frozen immediately after removal from the animal; 2) isolated hearts frozen after they had been perfused through the coronary circulation; and 3) isolated papillary muscles or trabeculae that had been superfused after dissection and then frozen. ATPase activity was measured in the isolated tissues at different times after dissection. Both calcium- and actin-activated myosin ATPase activities were uniform among cells in both the ventricles of the hearts frozen immediately after dissection and those that had been perfused through the coronary system. In the superfused tissues, although calcium-activated myosin ATPase activity was uniform, actin-activated ATPase activity was not uniform for about 90 minutes after the dissection, the period required for stabilization of the contraction. The pattern of nonuniformity was complex. In all bundles the lowest enzymatic activity was found in the most superficial cells. In very thin bundles, the cells in the center had the highest activity. In the medium and thicker bundles, there were three concentric zones of actin-activated ATPase activity, the superficial zone with the lowest activity, an intermediate zone with high activity, and a central zone with lower activity. Within each zone, the activity was often greatest in myocardial cells immediately next to blood vessels even though the blood vessels had not been perfused. The transverse distribution of ATPase activity of myosin could be explained by a mechanism in which cells in blood vessels (presumably endothelium) release a substance that upregulates myosin ATPase activity, with the rate of release being related to the local oxygen tension. A downregulating substance may also be produced. The period of stabilization of the contraction coincides with the time during which the pattern of actomyosin ATPase activity is nonuniform. These data suggest that the contractile proteins are regulated by a substance produced by blood vessels in proportion to the local PO2, and possibly in relation to shear force on the vascular endothelium.
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PMID:Contractile proteins in myocardial cells are regulated by factor(s) released by blood vessels. 153 52

Muscle spindles and extrafusal fibers in the tenuissimus muscle of mature golden Syrian hamsters were studied morphologically and quantitatively using several light microscopic techniques. Muscle spindles were identified in serial-transverse frozen-sections of whole muscles stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Five tenuissimus muscles were examined from origin to insertion, and the locations of individual receptors were plotted in camera-lucida reconstructions. Spindles were found in proximity to the main neurovascular bundle in the central core of each muscle. A range of 16-20 receptors was noted per muscle. The mean muscle spindle index (the total number of spindles per gram of muscle weight) was 503 and the average spindle length was 7.5 mm. Oxidative enzyme and myosin adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) staining profiles were also evaluated in the intrafusal and extrafusal fibers in each muscle. Even numbers of type I and type IIA extrafusal fibers were distributed homogeneously throughout all muscle cross-sections. Histochemical staining patterns varied along the lengths of the three intrafusal fiber types. Nuclear chain fibers possessed staining properties similar to the type IIA extrafusal fibers and exhibited no regional variations. Bag1 fibers displayed staining variability, particularly when treated for myosin ATPase under acid preincubation conditions. Some spindles were isolated under darkfield illumination and then either treated with 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD)-phallacidin to detect filamentous actin by fluorescence microscopy, or prepared for conventional scanning electron microscopy (SEM). By fluorescence microscopy, a registered actin banding-pattern was observed in the sarcomeres of the intrafusal fibers, and variations in the intensity of banding were noted amongst different fibers. SEM revealed punctate sensory nerve endings that adhered intimately to the surfaces of underlying intrafusal fibers in the equatorial and juxtaequatorial regions. By transmission electron microscopy (TEM) these endings appeared crescent-shaped and were enveloped by external laminae. Each profile contained numerous mitochondria and cytoskeletal organelles. The high spindle density observed in this muscle suggests that the hamster tenuissimus may function in hindlimb proprioception.
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PMID:Morphometry and histoenzymology of the hamster tenuissimus and its muscle spindles. 153 82

L(+)Lactic acid enhances myosin ATPase in vitro. Different organic acids were tested for activation of myosin ATPase activity. L(+)Lactic is more effective in stimulating ATPase than D(-)Lactic. D(+) and L(-)Malic acids were also effective at the concentration of 2.5 x 10(-2)-5.0 x 10(-2) mmoles/l. At 3.0 x 10(-2) mmoles/l concentration the following acids are activators: acetic, oxalic, malonic, oxaloacetic, pyruvic, glyoxylic, glycolic; succinic is an inhibitor and acetoacetic is without effect. The activation is not in relation with the pKa of these acids. The inhibitory effects of organic acids are evident at the concentration of 5.0 x 10(-2) mmoles/l. This inhibitory effect is linearly increasing with their pKa. The results are discussed in connection with the possible role of these metabolites in controlling not only ATPase activity towards splitting of ATP, but also in controlling the removal of its hydrolytic products.
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PMID:Effects of monocarboxylic and dicarboxylic acids on myosin ATPase activity tested by luminometric procedure. 153 14

Inhibition of the myosin subfragment 1 (S-1) ATPase activity by beryllium fluoride was studied directly in the presence of MgATP and following preincubation of samples with MgADP. In both cases, the rates of inhibition were very slow, with kapp = 0.5 and 58 M-1 s-1, respectively, in analogy to the rates of inhibition of myosin ATPase by vanadate [Goodno, C. C. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 2620-2624]. The very different rates of inhibition in the presence of MgATP and on preincubation with MgADP suggested that beryllium fluoride binds to the M.ADP state of myosin. The slow inhibition rates and the nonlinear dependence of the observed rates on beryllium fluoride concentration were consistent with a two-step inhibition process involving a rapid binding equilibrium to yield a collisional complex, M.ADP.BeF3-, and its slow isomerization into M++.ADP.BeF3-. A third, much slower, step was required to account for the conversion of the stable M++.ADP.BeF3- to a virtually irreversibly inhibited complex. Kinetic description of the inhibition pathway was derived from the observed rates of inhibition of myosin ATPase, information on the binding of beryllium fluoride to M.ADP, and measurements of epsilon ADP chase from M++.epsilon ADP.BeF3-. The isomerization rate and equilibrium constants were 1.4 x 10(-2) s-1 and 50, respectively, and the overall binding constant of beryllium fluoride to M.ADP was 5 x 10(5) M-1. The inhibitory complex showed a 16% enhancement to tryptophan fluorescence of S-1 and a reduced quenching of epsilon ADP by acrylamide. It is concluded that M++.ADP.BeF3- is analogous to the M++.ADP.Vi and M**.ADP.Pi states of myosin.
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PMID:Inhibition of myosin ATPase by beryllium fluoride. 153 58

A spectrophotometric method for the measurement of inorganic phosphate (P(i)) has been developed by using 2-amino-6-mercapto-7-methylpurine ribonucleoside and purine-nucleoside phosphorylase (purine-nucleoside:orthophosphate ribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.1). This substrate gives an absorbance increase at 360 nm on phosphorolysis at pH 6.5-8.5, and at pH 7.6 the change in extinction coefficient is 11,000 M-1.cm-1. The Michaelis-Menten constants of the two substrates with the enzyme are 70 microM for the nucleoside and 26 microM for P(i); the kcat is 40 s-1 (25 degrees C). The assay was shown to quantitate P(i) in solution at concentrations at least down to 2 microM. It can be used to measure the kinetics of P(i) release from phosphatases, such as GTPases and ATPases, by coupling the two enzymic reactions. The utility of this assay was shown by three test systems: glycerol kinase plus D-glyceraldehyde acting as an ATPase and actin-activated myosin ATPase, and myosin subfragment 1, hydrolyzing a single turnover of ATP, releasing P(i) with a rate constant the same as the steady-state ATPase activity.
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PMID:A continuous spectrophotometric assay for inorganic phosphate and for measuring phosphate release kinetics in biological systems. 153 9

Hypertrophy of the urinary bladder was produced in rabbit by partial ligation of the urethra. Electrophoresis of the bladder smooth muscle myosin on highly porous (3.5-7% gradient) SDS-polyacrylamide gel revealed two heavy chain isoforms, SM-1 and SM-2 with approximate molecular weights of 204,000 and 200,000, respectively. The ratio of the SM-2 to SM-1 heavy chain is 3:1 for myosin isolated from normal bladder smooth muscle, and this ratio changes to about 1:1 in hypertrophied bladder. Despite a change in the ratio of SM-2 to SM-1, the myosin ATPase and the actin-activated ATPase activities are not altered in response to hypertrophy.
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PMID:Smooth muscle myosin isoform distribution and myosin ATPase in hypertrophied urinary bladder. 153 95

The incidence of sarcocysts was examined in postural, propulsive and respiratory muscles from 74 horses ranging in age from mid-gestation to 14 years post-natal. Cryostat sections were stained for myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) at pH 9.5 and the type of muscle fibre containing sarcocysts was identified. Sarcocysts were found in muscles from three animals, all aged 1 year or more. Counts showed that they displayed no preference for any particular muscle. However, fibres with a high activity for myosin ATPase were preferentially colonized. Transverse sectional profiles of sarcocysts showed a wide variation in size, shape and wall thickness. Both the proportion of horses infected and the intensity of infection per animal were considerably lower than those reported in other studies.
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PMID:Incidence of sarcocysts in skeletal muscles of horses. 153 69

The articularis humeri (AH) muscle of the horse is a small muscle composed of histochemically identified type I and IIA extrafusal fibers and a large number of muscle spindles. A total of 150 complete spindles with both spindle poles available were examined in serial transverse sections. On the basis of myosin ATPase-staining reactions after alkaline and acid preincubations, four types of intrafusal fibers, namely, bag1, bag2, "mixed" bag, and chain fibers, were identified. A high proportion of the spindle population (62.6%) consisted of multiple-bag spindles containing three or more (up to six) bag fibers. Also one-bag-fiber spindles were observed. The one-bag-fiber spindles containing a bag2 fiber could be traced into tandem linkages. "Mixed" bag intrafusal fibers, differing in their ATPase staining profile at the two poles, were found in spindles containing also at least one bag1 and one bag2 fiber. An unusually long extracapsular tract (up to 5,500 microns) of the bag intrafusal fibers was observed.
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PMID:High incidence of multiple-bag fiber muscle spindles in the articularis humeri muscle of the horse. 154 62


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