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Query: EC:3.6.3.1 (
Mg2+-ATPase
)
1,484
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A protein was isolated from a human erythrocyte lysate with an apparent molecular weight of 23,000--24,000 daltons. This protein was purified by batch
DEAE
cellulose followed by column
DEAE
cellulose chromatography and a gradient of NaCl. On sodium dodecyl sulfate acrylamide electrophoresis, the erythrocyte protein comigrated with muscle troponin inhibitor. An isoelectric precipitation (pH 9.25) was used for the separation of muscle troponin inhibitor from a complex with another troponin component. Both the erythrocyte protein and the muscle troponin inhibitor partially inhibited muscle myosin Ca2+ and K+-EDTA ATPase activity. Furthermore, they inhibited actin-activated
Mg2+-ATPase
of muscle myosin. The inhibitory effects were absent in the presence of muscle troponin calcium-binding component. Muscle troponin inhibitor and the erythrocyte troponin inhibitor-like protein bound to muscle myosin when myosin was precipitated twice at low ionic strength. The presence of a troponin inhibitor-like protein in erythrocytes suggests that it may be a component in the regulation of contractile activity.
...
PMID:Erythrocyte troponin inhibitor-like protein: isolation and characterization. 15 37
Myosin was purified from bovine erythrocytes by chromatography on
DEAE
-cellulose, Sepharose CL-4B, hydroxylapatite, and
DEAE
-5PW. The yield was about 200 micrograms/L of packed cells. From SDS-polyacrylamide gels, the purity was estimated to be greater than 95%. The bovine erythrocyte myosin is composed of heavy chains of 200 kDa and light chains of 20 and 17 kDa, in a molar stoichiometry of 1. Myosin was also purified from human erythrocytes by the same method. The molecular weights of two light chains were 26K and 19.5K which confirmed the earlier reports [Fowler, V. M., Davis, J. Q., & Bennet, V. (1985) J. Cell Biol. 100, 47-55; Wong, A. J., Kiehart, D. P., & Pollard, T.D. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 46-49]. Phosphorylation by gizzard myosin light chain kinase, to a level of 1 mol of phosphate/mol of 20-kDa light chain, increased actin-activated ATPase, and the extent of activation was dependent on the MgCl2 concentration. Both Ca2+-ATPase and
Mg2+-ATPase
activities were dependent on KCl concentration and markedly decreased below 0.3 M KCl.
Mg2+-ATPase
of phosphorylated myosin, while more resistant to decreasing ionic strength, was also decreased below 0.2 M KCl. These results are similar to those obtained with smooth muscle myosin and suggest that the 10S-6S transition occurs. In confirmation of this, gel filtration, viscosity, and electron microscopy (rotary shadowing) show that erythrocyte myosin forms extended and folded conformations in high and low salt, respectively. It is proposed that each conformation is characterized by distinct enzymatic properties.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Correlation of enzymatic properties and conformation of bovine erythrocyte myosin. 254 59
Myosin was reacted with 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulphonate (TNBS) in the presence or absence of Mg-pyrophosphate. The reaction led to trinitrophenylation of lysyl residues which could be divided on the basis of the reaction into three classes: (i) two rapidly reacting lysyl residues (RLR), one residing on each head of myosin, whose rate of reaction depends on the presence of Mg-pyrophosphate; (ii) two lysyl residues which react with intermediate rate (ILR) and reside on the rod segment of myosin; and (iii) the remaining lysyl residues of myosin which react slowly with TNBS. The rate of the trinitrophenylation of RLR was followed spectrophotometrically and enzymatically, measuring an absorbance change at 345 nm, and also changes in K+ (EDTA)-, Mg2+- and Ca2+-activated ATPase activities, respectively. According to analysis of the kinetics of the reaction, Mg-pyrophosphate inhibited the rate of trinitrophenylation in both heads of myosin, not in one head only as was suggested by Miyanishi et al. (J. Biochem Tokyo 85; 1979). Myosin heads (myosin subfragment-1, S-1) were prepared by digesting myosin trinitrophenylated in the absence and presence of Mg-pyrophosphate with chymotrypsin. S-1, with trinitrophenylated RLR, was separated from non-trinitrophenylated S-1 by
DEAE
cellulose column chromatography. The trinitrophenylated S-1 had a high Mg2+- and a low K+(EDTA)-activated ATPase while the non-trinitrophenylated species had the usual high K+(EDTA)- and low
Mg2+-ATPase
activity. This results excluded the possibility suggested by Miyanishi et al., that the myosin head, which is resistant to trinitrophenylation in the presence of Mg-pyrophosphate, did not possess K+(EDTA)-activated ATPase activity. The presence of Mg-pyrophosphate during trinitrophenylation substantially affected the enzymic characteristics of the modified myosin. The myosin trinitrophenylated in the presence of Mg-pyrophosphate had a higher K+(EDTA)- and a lower
Mg2+-ATPase
activity. SH1 (Cys-707) also probably becomes a target of the reaction if myosin is trinitrophenylated in the presence of Mg-pyrophosphate. This is deduced from the following findings: (i) the addition of dithiothreitol after trinitrophenylation partially reversed the loss in the K+(EDTA)-ATPase activity; and (ii) the specific alkylation of the SH1 thiol by 1,5-IAEDANS prior to trinitrophenylation prevented the effect of dithiothreitol on the ATPase activity of myosin. The results indicated that Mg-pyrophosphate induced structural changes in the myosin molecule which influenced the course and possibly the target(s) of trinitrophenylation.
...
PMID:The effect of pyrophosphate on the reaction of myosin with 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulphonate. 284 63
An inhibitor protein of synaptic plasma membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was purified to apparent homogeneity from rat cerebrum by a molecular weight cut followed by chromatography of cytosol proteins with molecular weights between 10 000 and 3500 on
DEAE
-Sephadex at pH 5.2. The inhibitor could be partially inactivated by proteinases and dithiothreitol, but was heat-stable. Gel filtration gave a molecular weight of about 6000. Like the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase inhibitor protein isolated from erythrocytes, the inhibitor from brain contains a characteristic high proportion of glutamic acid (36%) and glycine (37%) residues. Synaptic plasma membrane
Mg2+-ATPase
and microsomal membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase did not respond to the inhibitor. Synaptic plasma membrane and erythrocyte membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPases, however, were affected. Inhibitory influence on synaptic membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase was reversible, since inhibition could be relieved upon removal of inhibitor from saturable sites on the membrane. The inhibitor is not a calmodulin-binding protein, since the concentration of calmodulin for half-maximal activation of the ATPase was unaffected by its presence. Mode of inhibition of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase by the inhibitor was non-competitive.
...
PMID:An endogenous inhibitor protein of synaptic plasma membrane (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase. 293 75
Actin in cultured bovine retinal capillary pericytes was identified and partially characterized biochemically. The filamentous actin was localized in bovine retinal capillary pericytes using a fluorescent mushroom toxin (nitrobenzoxadiazole-phallacidin) specific for actin. One-dimensional SDS-polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of urea-extracted proteins from bovine retinal capillary pericytes revealed a 46,000 MW protein band corresponding to an actin standard, which comprised 7.3% of the total urea-soluble proteins. Actin-activated skeletal muscle myosin
Mg2+-ATPase
assay, using [gamma-32P]-ATP as substrate, demonstrated functional actin in bovine retinal capillary pericyte extracts after
DEAE
-cellulose anion-exchange chromatography. The actin-containing protein fractions were eluted at ionic strengths between 0.25 and 0.35 M KCl. The presence of functional actin in pericytes indicated the ability to generate contractile force. This contraction-generating ability may allow pericytes to regulate microvessel caliber and to maintain the integrity of the capillary wall. A lack of this function when pericytes are preferentially lost in diabetic retinal microangiopathy could destabilize the microvessel wall and predispose the capillary to further pathologic changes.
...
PMID:Actin in cultured bovine retinal capillary pericytes: morphological and functional correlation. 294 15
Two Triton-insoluble fractions were isolated from Acanthamoeba castellanii. The major non-membrane proteins in both fractions were actin (30-40%), myosin II (4-9%), myosin I (1-5%), and a 55-kD polypeptide (10%). The 55-kD polypeptide did not react with antibodies against tubulins from turkey brain, paramecium, or yeast. All of these proteins were much more concentrated in the Triton-insoluble fractions than in the whole homogenate or soluble supernatant. The 55-kD polypeptide was extracted with 0.3 M NaCl, fractionated by ammonium sulfate, and purified to near homogeneity by
DEAE
-cellulose and hydroxyapatite chromatography. The purified protein had a molecular mass of 110 kD and appeared to be a homodimer by isoelectric focusing. The 110-kD dimer bound to F-actin with a maximal binding stoichiometry of 0.5 mol/mol of actin (1 mol of 55-kD subunit/mol of actin). Although the 110-kD protein enhanced the sedimentation of F-actin, it did not affect the low shear viscosity of F-actin solutions nor was bundling of F-actin observed by electron microscopy. The 110-kD dimer protein inhibited the actin-activated
Mg2+-ATPase
activities of Acanthamoeba myosin I and myosin II in a concentration-dependent manner. By indirect immunofluorescence, the 110-kD protein was found to be localized in the peripheral cytoplasm near the plasma membrane which is also enriched in F-actin filaments and myosin I.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of a 110-kD dimer actin-binding protein. 294 52
alpha-Actinin exists in several polymorphic forms which appear to be characteristic of the muscle type from which it is isolated. In order to determine the possible physiological role of this structural protein in cardiac muscle, we describe and compare here the physico-chemical properties of cardiac alpha-actinin from two different mammalian species, rat (fast contracting muscle) and dog (slow contracting muscle). Purification of cardiac alpha-actinin was achieved by chromatography on
DEAE
-cellulose and hydroxyapatite columns. The alpha-actinins isolated were different in their electrophoretic mobility (SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis), molecular size and alpha-helical content. However, their shape as revealed by electron microscopy and their activating effect on
Mg2+-ATPase
activity of actomyosin appear to be similar. These studies suggest that the rat and dog cardiac alpha-actinin are structurally different but functionally similar proteins.
...
PMID:Physico-chemical properties of rat and dog cardiac alpha-actinin. 294 32
SR vesicles from rabbit slow-twitch muscle reveal high activity (0.7-0.9 mumol/mg X min) of "basic" or
Mg2+-ATPase
. This enzyme differs in its biochemical properties from the well characterized Ca2+ pump ATPase. It is active in millimolar concentration of magnesium or calcium. The activity is inhibited by various detergents except for digitonin. This enzyme seems to be an integral membrane protein since it remains in the membrane after removal of peripheral proteins with EDTA. It can be partially solubilized from the membrane using digitonin without a decrease in specific activity. Ion exchange chromatography on
DEAE
-Sephacel of the post digitonin supernatant allows us to obtain a 5-fold increase in
Mg2+-ATPase
specific activity concomitantly with the enrichment in two proteins of Mr = 30,000 and 150,000.
...
PMID:Characterization of Mg2+-ATPase from slow-twitch muscle membranes. 295 39
We have partially purified myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) from Dictyostelium discoideum. MLCK was purified 4,700-fold with a yield of approximately 1 mg from 350 g of cells. The enzyme is very acidic as suggested by its tight binding to
DEAE
. Dictyostelium MLCK has an apparent native molecular mass on HPLC G3000SW of approximately 30,000 D. Mg2+ is required for enzyme activity. Ca2+ inhibits activity and this inhibition is not relieved by calmodulin. cAMP or cGMP have no effect on enzyme activity. Dictyostelium MLCK is very specific for the 18,000-D light chain of Dictyostelium myosin and does not phosphorylate the light chain of several other myosins tested. Myosin purified from log-phase amebas of Dictyostelium has approximately 0.3 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain as assayed by glycerol-urea gel electrophoresis. Dictyostelium MLCK can phosphorylate this myosin to a stoichiometry approaching 1 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain. MLCP, which was partially purified, selectively removes phosphate from the 18,000-D light chain but not from the heavy chain of Dictyostelium myosin. Phosphatase-treated Dictyostelium myosin has less than or equal to 0.01 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain. Phosphatase-treated myosin could be rephosphorylated to greater than or equal to 0.96 mol Pi/mol 18,000-D light chain by incubation with MLCK and ATP. We found myosin thick filament assembly to be independent of the extent of 18,000-D light-chain phosphorylation when measured as a function of ionic strength. However, actin-activated
Mg2+-ATPase
activity of Dictyostelium myosin was found to be directly related to the extent of phosphorylation of the 18,000-D light chain. MLCK-treated myosin moved in an in vitro motility assay (Sheetz, M. P., and J. A. Spudich, 1983, Nature (Lond.), 305:31-35) at approximately 1.4 micron/s whereas phosphatase-treated myosin moved only slowly or not at all. The effects of phosphatase treatment on the movement were fully reversed by subsequent treatment with MLCK.
...
PMID:Myosin light chain kinase and myosin light chain phosphatase from Dictyostelium: effects of reversible phosphorylation on myosin structure and function. 303 87
Mg2+-ATPase
activity was identified in the cytosol of human erythrocytes. A partial purification of this activity was achieved by an initial
DEAE
-Sephadex column chromatography, followed by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 and then a second
DEAE
-Sephadex chromatography procedure. The enzyme appeared in the void volume of the Sephadex G-100 column and was retained on an Amicon XM100A ultrafiltration membrane. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 113 000 from SD gels. The above purification protocol yielded an enzyme with an optimal pH between 7.6 and 8.2. The enzyme activity increased linearly between 30 and 44 degrees C. It was stable for several months at -20 degrees C. Magnesium was essential for activity, but the rate attainable with Mn2+ was at least as great as that due to Mg2+. No other divalent cation was able to substitute for Mg2+ or Mn2+. Neither low nor high Ca2+ concentrations significantly affected the enzymatic activity. Substrate specificity studies showed that ATP was the preferred substrate followed by CTP (46% of the rate produced by ATP). Hydrolysis of GTP, UTP, ITP and ADP was less than 10% of the rate seen with ATP. No phosphatase, pyrophosphatase, phosphodiesterase, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase or adenylate cyclase activity could be detected in this enzyme preparation. Calmodulin, which stimulates the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase of the human erythrocyte membrane, failed to enhance the
Mg2+-ATPase
activity. Of considerable interest, the activity of this
Mg2+-ATPase
was enhanced approximately 5-fold by low concentrations of mercuric ion, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and DTNB, but was much less sensitive to iodoacetamide.
...
PMID:Partial purification and characterization of a novel Mg2+-dependent ATPase present in the cytosol from human erythrocytes. 615 Jul 30
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