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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)

The effect of myosin LC2 modifications (phosphorylation or selective proteolytic removal of a seven-residue N-terminal peptide) and partial or complete removal of the whole LC2 was studied under various conditions. (1) Actin binding in the absence of ATP is not influenced by the nature of the myosin species (phosphorylated, dephosphorylated or devoid of LC2). (2) A 50% inhibition of K+/EDTA-ATPase was obtained with actin concentrations hardly different when phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosins were compared (of the order of 5 microM), whereas both myosin devoid of LC2 and myosin in which the LC2 N-terminal peptide has been removed required significantly higher concentrations of actin (13.0 +/- 2 and 12.0 +/- 2.0 microM, respectively). (3) Dissociation of the actomyosin complex at high ionic strength with nucleotides is not influenced by phosphorylation. (4) Actin activation of Mg2+-ATPase is enhanced when LC2 is phosphorylated; no activation enhancement is observed with myosin devoid of LC2. (5) Translational diffusion coefficient measurements of myosin in high-ionic-strength solutions indicate a tendency for LC2-deprived myosin to form autoassociation oligomers. It thus appears that a structural modification (partial cleavage or removal of LC2) induces important structural changes in myosin, pointing to a role for LC2 in the intrinsic conformation of the molecule and its interaction potentialities. Effects of LC2 removal at high ionic strength are best explained by interactions bearing no relationship to physiological functions. A physiologically significant effect of LC2 phosphorylation requires a minimum degree of organization (actomyosin complex) to be expressed in which LC2 could play the role of a return-spring in the cross-bridge mechanism.
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PMID:Influence of the regulatory light chain of fast skeletal muscle myosin on its interaction with actin in the presence and absence of ATP. 293 62

Audiogenic seizure (AGS)-susceptible DBA/2 (D2) mice have a significant reduction in brain Ca2+-ATPase activity compared to AGS-resistant C57BL/6 (B6) mice. This reduction is inherited together with AGS susceptibility in B6 X D2 recombinant inbred strains. The Ca2+-ATPase reduction occurs in microsomes and synaptosomes, but not in mitochondria. This enzyme activity is measured at a high Ca2+ concentration (2 mM) with no added Mg2+ or EGTA. We further studied this Ca2+-ATPase activity and a Mg2+-dependent (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity in synaptic plasma membranes (SPM) from the B6 and D2 strains. Using EGTA or CDTA to adjust free Ca2+ concentrations, we measured Ca2+-ATPase activities at Ca2+ concentrations from 0.8 microM to 436 microM. The Ca2+-ATPase activity is consistently lower in the D2 than in the B6 SPM over all Ca2+ concentrations. The basal Mg2+-ATPase activity measured at 2 mM MgCl2, is also lower in SPM of D2 than B6 mice. Calcium stimulates the basal Mg2+-ATPase activity to the same extent in the SPM of the B6 and the D2 mice. Maximum stimulation in both strains occurs at 150 microM added CaCl2 (buffered with 100 microM EGTA). Higher Ca2+ concentrations inhibit this ATPase activity similarly in both strains. The EGTA-EDTA washing of SPM significantly reduces by 50% of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activities of both strains, whereas calmodulin treatment restored these activities. Neither of these treatments, however, has any noticeable effects on the Ca2+-ATPase activities of the strains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Calcium ATPase activities in synaptic plasma membranes of seizure-prone mice. 293 83

A simple technique for the isolation and purification of mammalian brain actomyosin, based on extraction of whole brains in low ionic-strength buffer, is described. The final preparation of brain actomyosin is obtained in good yield, has relatively high K+-EDTA and Ca2+-ATPase activities, and is substantially free of other ATPases and tubulin. The preparation is useful for initial enzymatic studies and/or as an enrichment step toward purification of the individual protein components. The Mg2+-ATPase and K+-EDTA ATPase activities are strongly inhibited by the sulfhydryl blocking reagent, pHMB. Interaction between the actin and myosin components can be demonstrated. Brain actomyosin had a distinct electrophoretic profile and enzymatic activity when compared with smooth muscle actomyosin from the aorta.
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PMID:Isolation and purification of actomyosin ATPase from mammalian brain. 293 1

To examine the possibility of cooperative interactions between the two myosin heads in muscle contraction, Ca2+-activated force development, K+-EDTA-and Mg2+-ATPase activities, muscle fiber stiffness, and the velocity of unloaded shortening were measured on partially p-phenylenedimaleimide (p-PDM)-treated glycerinated muscle fibers, which contained a mixture of myosin molecules with zero, one, and two of their heads inactivated, and the relationships among these values (expressed relative to the control values) were studied. It was found that the magnitude of the Ca2+-activated isometric force development was proportional to the square of both K+-EDTA- and Mg2+-ATPase activities and also to the square of muscle fiber stiffness. If the two myosin heads in the glycerinated fibers are assumed to react independently with p-PDM, the above results strongly suggest that each myosin molecule in the thick filaments can generate force only when its two heads do not react with p-PDM, muscle fiber stiffness is determined by the total number of native heads, and there is no cooperative interaction between the two myosin heads in catalyzing ATP hydrolysis.
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PMID:Evidence for cooperative interactions of myosin heads with thin filament in the force generation of vertebrate skeletal muscle fibers. 294 85

Effects of purealin isolated from a sea sponge, Psammaplysilla purea, on the enzymatic and physiochemical properties of chicken gizzard myosin were studied. At 0.15 M KCl, 40 microM purealin increased the Ca2+- and Mg2+-ATPase activity of dephosphorylated gizzard myosin to 2.5- and 3-fold, respectively, but decreased the K+-EDTA-ATPase activity of the myosin to 0.25-fold. In contrast, purealin had little effect on the ATPase activities of phosphorylated gizzard myosin. The ATP-induced decrease in light scattering of dephosphorylated gizzard myosin at 0.15 M KCl was lessened by 40 microM purealin. Electron microscopic observations indicated that thick filaments of dephosphorylated myosin were disassembled immediately by addition of 1 mM ATP at 0.15 M KCl, although they were preserved by purealin for a long time even after addition of ATP. Upon ultracentrifugation, dephosphorylated myosin sedimented as two components, the 10 S species and myosin filaments, in the solution containing 0.18 M KCl and 1 mM Mg X ATP in the presence of 60 microM purealin. These results suggest that purealin modulates the ATPase activities of dephosphorylated gizzard myosin by enhancing the stability of myosin filaments against the disassembling action of ATP.
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PMID:Purealin, a novel stabilizer of smooth muscle myosin filaments that modulates ATPase activity of dephosphorylated myosin. 294 86

We studied the effects of caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein found in a variety of muscle and non-muscle tissues, on the various ATPase activities of skeletal-muscle myosin. Caldesmon inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase, and this inhibition was enhanced by tropomyosin. In the presence of the troponin complex and tropomyosin, caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-dependent actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase; this inhibition could be partly overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon, phosphorylated to the extent of approximately 4 mol of Pi/mol of caldesmon, inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase to the same extent as did non-phosphorylated caldesmon. Both inhibitions could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon also inhibited the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the absence of actin; this inhibition also could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the presence or absence of actin, at both low (0.1 M-KCl) and high (0.3 M-KCl) ionic strength. Finally, caldesmon inhibited the skeletal-muscle myosin K+/EDTA-ATPase at 0.1 M-KCl, but not at 0.3 M-KCl. Addition of actin resulted in no inhibition of this ATPase by caldesmon at either 0.1 M- or 0.3 M-KCl. These observations suggest that caldesmon may function in the regulation of actin-myosin interactions in striated muscle and thereby modulate the contractile state of the muscle. The demonstration that caldesmon inhibits a variety of myosin ATPase activities in the absence of actin indicates a direct effect of caldesmon on myosin. The inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin (the physiological activity) may not be due therefore simply to the binding of caldesmon to the actin filament causing blockage of myosin-cross-bridge-actin interaction.
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PMID:The effects of caldesmon on the ATPase activities of rabbit skeletal-muscle myosin. 294 98

The effects of purealin isolated from the sea sponge, Psammaplysilla purea, on the enzymatic properties of myosin and natural actomyosin (a complex of myosin, actin, tropomyosin and troponin) from canine cardiac ventricle were studied. Purealin increased the ATPase activity of natural actomyosin and the actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin, and accelerated the superprecipitation of natural actomyosin. The Ca2+- and Mg2+-ATPase activities of myosin were inhibited by purealin, whereas the K+-EDTA-ATPase activity was increased. These results suggest that purealin binds to the myosin portion involved in actin-myosin interaction and increases the actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin.
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PMID:Enhancement of the actin-activated ATPase activity of myosin from canine cardiac ventricle by purealin. 295 72

The actin-dependent ATPase activity of myosin is retained in the separated heads (S1) which contain the NH2-terminal 95-kDa heavy chain fragment and one or two light chains. The S1 heavy chain can be degraded further by limited trypsin treatment into characteristic 25-, 50-, and 20-kDa peptides, in this order from the NH2-terminal end. The 20-kDa peptide contains an actin-binding site and SH1 and SH2, two thiols whose modification dramatically affects ATPase activity. By treating myosin filaments with trypsin at 4 degrees C in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2, we have now obtained preferential cleavage at the 50-20-kDa heavy chain site without any cleavage at the head-rod junction and hinge region in the rod. Incubation of these trypsinized filaments at 37 degrees C in the presence of MgATP released a new S1 fraction which lacked the COOH-terminal 20-kDa heavy chain peptide region. This fraction, termed S1'(75K), has more than 50% of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of S1 and the characteristic Ca2+-ATPase and K+-EDTA ATPase activities of myosin. These results show that SH1 and SH2 are not essential for ATPase activity and that binding of actin to the 20-kDa region is not essential for the enhancement of the Mg2+-ATPase activity.
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PMID:A new, smaller actin-activatable myosin subfragment 1 which lacks the 20-kDa, SH1 and SH2 peptide. 295 48

Coupling between ATP hydrolysis and microtubule movement was demonstrated several years ago in flagellar axonemes and subsequent studies suggest that the relevant microtubule motor, dynein, uses ATP to drive microtubule sliding by a cross-bridge mechanism analogous to that of myosin in muscles. Kinesin, a microtubule-based motility protein which may participate in organelle transport and mitosis, binds microtubules in a nucleotide-sensitive manner, and requires hydrolysable nucleotides to translocate microtubules over a glass surface. Recently, neuronal kinesin was shown to possess microtubule-activated ATPase activity although coupling between ATP hydrolysis and motility was not demonstrated. Here we report that sea urchin egg kinesin, prepared either with or without a 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate(AMPPNP)-induced microtubule binding step, also possesses significant microtubule-activated ATPase activity when Mg-ATP is used as a substrate. This ATPase activity is inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by addition of Mg-free ATP, by chelation of Mg2+ with EDTA, by addition of Na3VO4, or by addition of AMPPNP with or without Mg2+. Addition of these same reagents also inhibits the microtubule-translocating activities of sea urchin egg kinesin in a dose-dependent manner, supporting the hypothesis that kinesin-driven motility is coupled to the microtubule-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity.
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PMID:Correlation between the ATPase and microtubule translocating activities of sea urchin egg kinesin. 295 28

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.
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PMID:Characterization of Mg2+-ATPase from slow-twitch muscle membranes. 295 39


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