Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 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

Analysis of the three-dimensional crystal structure of the Dictyostelium myosin motor domain revealed that the myosin head is required to bend at residues Ile-455 and Gly-457 to produce the conformation changes observed in the ternary complexes that resemble the pre- and post-hydrolysis states (Fisher, A. J., Smith, C. A., Thoden, J. B., Smith, R., Sutoh, K., Holden, H. M., and Rayment, I. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 8960-8972). Asp-454, Ile-455, and Gly-457 of smooth muscle myosin were substituted by Ala, Met, and Ala, respectively, and the mechano-enzymatic activities were determined to study the role of these residues in myosin motor function. Whereas the basal steady-state Mg2+-ATPase activity of D454A was higher than that of the wild type, the rate of the hydrolytic step is reduced approximately 2,000-fold and becomes rate-limiting. M-ATP rather than M-ADP-P is the predominant steady-state intermediate, and the initial Pi burst and the ATP-induced enhancement of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence are absent in D454A. D454A binds actin in the absence of ATP but is not dissociated from actin by ATP. Moreover, actin inhibits rather than activates the ATPase activity; consequently, D454A does not support actin translocating activity. I455M has normal actin-activated ATPase activity, Pi burst, and ATP-induced enhancement of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, suggesting that the enzymatic properties are normal. However, the actin translocating activity was completely inhibited. This suggests that the side chain at Ile-455 is critical for myosin motor activity but not for relatively normal enzymatic function, which indicates an apparent uncoupling between enzymatic activity and motile function. Although G457A has normal ATP-dependent actin dissociation, ATP hydrolytic step is reduced by approximately 10(5)-fold in the presence or absence of actin; consequently, G457A does not have actin translocating activity. These results indicate the importance of these conserved residues at the hinge region for normal myosin motor function.
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PMID:Functional significance of the conserved residues in the flexible hinge region of the myosin motor domain. 1034

Previous electric birefringence experiments have shown that the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosin II correlates with the ability of minifilaments to cycle between flexible and stiff conformations. The cooperative transition between conformations was shown to depend on Mg2+ concentration, on ATP binding, and on the state of phosphorylation of three serines in the C-terminal end of the heavy chains. Since the junction between the heavy meromyosin (HMM) and light meromyosin (LMM) regions is expected to disrupt the alpha-helical coiled-coil structure of the rod, this region was anticipated to be the flexible site. We have now cloned and expressed the wild-type rod (residues 849-1509 of the full-length heavy chain) and rods mutated within the junction in order to test this. The sedimentation and electric birefringence properties of minifilaments formed by rods and by native myosin II are strikingly similar. In particular, the Mg2+-dependent flexible-to-stiff transitions of native myosin II and wild-type rod minifilaments are virtually superimposable. Mutations within the junction between the HMM and LMM regions of the rod modulate the ability of Mg2+ to stabilize the stiff conformation. Less Mg2+ is required to induce minifilament stiffening if proline-1244 is replaced with alanine. Deleting the entire junction region (25 amino acids) results in a even greater decrease in the Mg2+ concentration necessary for the transition. The HMM-LMM junction does indeed seem to act as a Mg2+-dependent flexible hinge.
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PMID:Flexibility of Acanthamoeba myosin rod minifilaments. 1035 36

ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters are integral membrane proteins that translocate a wide variety of substrates across cellular membranes and are conserved from bacteria to humans. Here we compare four x-ray structures of the bacterial ABC lipid flippase, MsbA, trapped in different conformations, two nucleotide-bound structures and two in the absence of nucleotide. Comparison of the nucleotide-free conformations of MsbA reveals a flexible hinge formed by extracellular loops 2 and 3. This hinge allows the nucleotide-binding domains to disassociate while the ATP-binding half sites remain facing each other. The binding of the nucleotide causes a packing rearrangement of the transmembrane helices and changes the accessibility of the transporter from cytoplasmic (inward) facing to extracellular (outward) facing. The inward and outward openings are mediated by two different sets of transmembrane helix interactions. Altogether, the conformational changes between these structures suggest that large ranges of motion may be required for substrate transport.
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PMID:Flexibility in the ABC transporter MsbA: Alternating access with a twist. 1802 85

By undergoing conformational changes, active membrane transporters alternate between an inward-facing (IF) and an outward-facing (OF) state to transport their substrates across cellular membrane. The conformational landscape of membrane transporters, however, could be influenced by their environment, and the dependence of the alternating access mechanism on the lipid composition has not been understood at the molecular level. We have performed an extensive set of microsecond-level all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on bacterial ATP binding cassette (ABC) exporter Sav1866 in six different phosphocholine (PC) and phosphoethanolamine (PE) lipid membrane environments. This study mainly focuses on the energetically downhill OF-to-IF conformational transition of Sav1866 upon the ATP hydrolysis. We observe that the transporter undergoes large-scale conformational changes in the PE environment, particularly in the POPE lipids, resulting in an IF-occluded conformation, a transition that does not occur when the transporter is embedded in any of the PC lipid bilayers. We propose that the PE lipids facilitate the closing of the protein on the periplasmic side due to their highly polar headgroups that mediate the interaction of the two transmembrane (TM) bundles by a network of lipid-lipid and lipid-protein hydrogen bonds. POPE lipids in particular facilitate the closure of periplasmic gate by promoting a hinge formation in TM helices and an interbundle salt bridge formation. This study explains how the alternating access mechanism and the flippase activity in ABC exporters could be lipid-dependent.
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PMID:Lipid-Dependent Alternating Access Mechanism of a Bacterial Multidrug ABC Exporter. 3069 24