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Query: EC:3.6.4.1 (
myosin ATPase
)
1,140
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The heart is a major target organ for thyroid hormone action, and marked changes occur in cardiac function in patients with hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. Triiodothyronine (T3)-induced changes in cardiac function can result from direct or indirect T3 effects. Direct T3 effects result from T3 action in the heart itself and are mediated by nuclear or extranuclear mechanisms. Extranuclear T3 effects, which occur independently of nuclear T3 receptor binding and increases in protein synthesis, influence primarily the transport of amino acids, sugars, and calcium across the cell membrane. Nuclear T3 effects are mediated by the binding of T3 to specific nuclear receptor proteins, which results in increased transcription of T3-responsive cardiac genes. The T3 receptor is a member of the ligand-activated transcription factor family and is encoded by cellular erythroblastosis A (c-erb A) genes. T3 increases the heart transcription of the myosin heavy chain (MHC) alpha gene and decreases the transcription of the MHC beta gene, leading to an increase of myosin V1 and a decrease in myosin V3 isoenzymes.
Myosin
V1, which is composed of two MHC alpha, has a higher
myosin ATPase
activity than myosin V3, which contains two MHC beta. The globular head of myosin V1, with its higher ATPase activity, leads to a more rapid movement of the globular head of myosin along the thin filament, resulting in an increased velocity of contraction. T3 also leads to an increase in the speed of diastolic relaxation, which is caused by the more efficient pumping of the calcium ATPase of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). This T3 effect results from T3-induced increases in the level of the mRNA coding for the SR calcium ATPase protein, leading to an increased number of calcium ATPase pump units in the SR. Overall, T3 leads to an increase in ATP consumption in the heart. In addition, less chemical energy of ATP is used for contractile purposes and more of it goes toward heat production, which causes a decreased efficiency of the contractile process in the hyperthyroid heart. The pathophysiologic basis for myxedema is the opposite of that discussed for the hyperthyroid heart. In addition to decreased direct effects of thyroid hormone in cardiac myocytes, indirect effects occur through decreases in peripheral oxygen consumption and changes in hemodynamic parameters. Myofibrillar swelling with loss of striation and interstitial fibrosis occurs on histologic examination of hypothyroid hearts. In addition, accumulation of mucopolysaccharide substances (Glycosaminoglycans) can be demonstrated. On electron microscopic examination, mitochondria show disruption and lipid inclusion. Cardiac papillary muscle obtained from animals with hypothyroidism shows a depression of the force velocity curve and reduced rate of tension development, indicating significant contractile abnormalities. In patients with hypothyroidism, a true enhanced incidence of hypertension (increased peripheral vascular resistance) has been found. In addition, hypercholesterolemia and impairment of fatty acid mobilization are associated with myxedema and present additional risk factors for the development of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:[Cardiovascular effects of thyroid hormones]. 906 69
The aim of this study was to determine the effects of maturation on crossbridge properties and myosin isoform composition in hamster diaphragm muscle. Diaphragm strips were obtained at postnatal Days 1 and 8 and in adults (10 to 12 wk). Peak isometric tension and maximum unloaded shortening velocity (Vmax) increased with age (p < 0.001). The single crossbridge force (pi), the total number of crossbridges normalized per cross-sectional area (m x 10(9)/mm2), the turnover rate of
myosin ATPase
(kcat), and peak mechanical efficiency (Effmax) were calculated from Huxley's equations. The value of m increased significantly from birth to adulthood (p < 0.001), with no changes in pi or Effmax; kcat increased significantly only after the first week postpartum. There was a strong linear relationship between peak isometric tension and m (p < 0.001). Conversely, changes in Vmax were not related to kcat.
Myosin
electrophoresis showed that neonatal bands and slow myosin isoforms (S) were present at birth. The number of fast adult myosin isoforms increased progressively from birth to adulthood, whereas S increased during the first week postpartum. In conclusion, development changes in diaphragm muscle force and myosin isoform composition were associated with changes in crossbridge number and kinetics, with no changes in the average force per crossbridge or in mechanical efficiency.
...
PMID:Developmental changes in crossbridge properties and myosin isoforms in hamster diaphragm. 931 20
Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that actively invades mammalian cells using a unique form of gliding motility that critically depends on actin filaments in the parasite. To determine if parasite motility is driven by a myosin motor, we examined the distribution of myosin and tested the effects of specific inhibitors on gliding and host cell invasion. A single 90 kDa isoform of myosin was detected in parasite lysates using an antisera that recognizes a highly conserved myosin peptide.
Myosin
was localized in T. gondii beneath the plasma membrane in a circumferential pattern that overlapped with the distribution of actin. The
myosin ATPase
inhibitor, butanedione monoxime (BDM), reversibly inhibited gliding motility across serum-coated slides. The myosin light-chain kinase inhibitor, KT5926, also blocked parasite motility and greatly reduced host cell attachment; however, these effects were primarily caused by its ability to block the secretion of microneme proteins, which are involved in cell attachment. In contrast, while BDM partially reduced cell attachment, it prevented invasion even under conditions in which microneme secretion was not affected, indicating a potential role for myosin in cell entry. Collectively, these results indicate that myosin(s) probably participate(s) in powering gliding motility, a process that is essential for cell invasion by T. gondii.
...
PMID:Participation of myosin in gliding motility and host cell invasion by Toxoplasma gondii. 938 98
1. In this study we investigated whether long-term trimetazidine (anti-ischaemic drug) therapy alters the ventricular myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform composition in a model of cardiomyopathy. 2. MHC isoforms were analysed in the native state by electrophoresis in a pyrophosphate buffer.
Myosin
isoform patterns were studied in cardiac muscle from cardiomyopathic hamsters (CMH) of the BIO 14:6 strain during the time course of the disease and compared with those of healthy golden hamsters (F1B). The correlation between myosin profile and Ca2+-activated ATPase activity was determined from 220 days. 3. At the stage of insufficiency (350 days), CMH presented the most abnormal phenotype with 53% V1-24% V3 compared to 79% V1-7% V3 (P<0.001), in F1B. Trimetazidine was administered to cardiomyopathic hamsters from the early stage of active disease (30 days) to the congestive stages (220-350 days). Within 65 days, trimetazidine treatment, in CMH and F1B, reduced V1 to a low level (53% and 62%, respectively), which remained constant throughout the treatment. This level was similar to that in 220 and 350 days-old untreated-CMH. In sharp contrast, a standard calcium blocker, verapamil, administered to CMH in the same conditions resulted in a higher V1 (about 70%) and higher global
myosin ATPase
activity from 220 days. 4. Previous results in terms of hypertrophy and survival, compared to these results, suggest that verapamil and trimetazidine treatments reveal a dissociation between ventricular hypertrophy and isomyosin distribution. In addition, the shift in favour of V3 may not necessarily be an aggravating factor of the disease but an adaptative compensatory event.
...
PMID:Effect of trimetazidine and verapamil on the cardiomyopathic hamster myosin phenotype. 951 78
Myosin
forms stable ternary complexes with ADP and the phosphate analogues, fluoroaluminate (Al F4-), fluoroberyllate (BeFn) or orthovanadate (Vi); these ternary complexes mimic transient intermediates in the
myosin ATPase
cycle. Moreover, we previously demonstrated that these complexes may mimic different
myosin ATPase
reaction intermediates corresponding to separate steps in the cross-bridge cycle [Maruta, S., Henry, G. D., Sykes, B. D. & Ikebe, M. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 7093-7100]. Park et al. suggested that the changing conformation of ATP during hydrolysis stresses the active site of myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) through protein-nucleotide contacts at the gamma-phosphate and nucleotide base, and the stress-induced strain in the cross-bridge may be the mechanism by which energy in ATP is transferred to the myosin structure [Park, S., Ajtai, K. & Burghardt, T. P. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 3368-3372]. In the present study, the photoactive ADP analogue, 3'-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)-2-azido-ADP (Mant-2-N3-ADP), and the 19F-labeled ADP analogue, 2-[(trifluoromethylnitrophenyl)aminoethyl]diphosphate, were employed to examine conformational differences in protein-nucleotide contact in the ATP-binding site that may correlate with energy transduction. Mant-2-N3-ADP was trapped within the active site of skeletal and smooth muscle myosin in the presence of AlF4-, BeFn or Vi. For both skeletal and smooth muscle myosins, trapped Mant-2-N3-ADP was covalently linked to the 25-kDa N-terminal fragment of S-1 of both myosin/Mant-2-N3-ADP/AlF4- and BeFn complexes, presumably at Trp130. However, the efficiency of the incorporation was much higher for skeletal than for smooth muscle myosin suggesting that the conformations of the adenine-binding pockets of the two myosins are somewhat different. Although the amount of Mant-2-N3-ADP trapped in the presence of AlF4- and BeFn was the same for both myosins, the efficiency of photolabeling skeletal muscle myosin was approximately two times higher for BeFn complex than for AlF4- complex. The 19F-NMR spectra of the bound 2-[(trifluoromethylnitrophenyl)aminoethyl]diphosphate in the ternary complexes formed in the presence of AlF4-, BeFn or Vi showed small but distinguishable differences. Taken together, these results indicate that there is some variation in the protein-nucleotide contacts at the nucleotide base among the ternary complexes studied, and these differences mimic separate steps occurring transiently during the contractile cycle.
...
PMID:Analysis of stress in the active site of myosin accompanied by conformational changes in transient state intermediate complexes using photoaffinity labeling and 19F-NMR spectroscopy. 954 69
The chemotactic migration toward platelet-derived growth factor-BB of SM3, a cell line established from rabbit aorta smooth muscle, was examined by the Boyden chamber method.
Myosin
light-chain (MLC) kinase inhibitors ML-9 and wortmannin, and the Rho kinase inhibitor Y-27632 effectively reduced the migration. However, neither membrane ruffling nor the phosphorylation of MLC was inhibited concomitantly. The reduction is discussed with reference to a novel property of MLC kinase, which stimulates
myosin ATPase
activity without phosphorylating MLC [Ye et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96, 6666-6671].
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of ML-9, wortmannin, and Y-27632 on the chemotaxis of vascular smooth muscle cells in response to platelet-derived growth factor-BB. 1105 81
When an unfertilized sea urchin egg was exposed to calyculin-A (CL-A), an inhibitor of protein phosphatases, for a short period and then lysed, the cortex contracted to exclude cytoplasm and became a cup-shaped mass. We call the contracted cortex "actin cup" since actin filaments were major structural components. Electron microscopic observation revealed that the cup consisted of inner electron-dense layer, middle microfilamentous layer, and outermost granular region. Microfilaments were heavily accumulated in the inner electron-dense layer. The middle layer also contained numerous microfilaments, which were determined to be actin filaments by myosin S1 decoration, and they were aligned so that their barbed ends directed toward the outermost region.
Myosin
II, Arp2, Arp3, and spectrin were concentrated in the actin cup. Immuno-electron microscopy revealed that myosin II was localized to the electron-dense layer. We further found that the cortical tension of the egg increased just after application of CL-A and reached maximum within 10 min. Cytochalasin B or butanedione monoxime blocked the contraction, which suggested that both actin filaments and
myosin ATPase
activity were required for the contraction. Myosin regulatory light chain (MRLC) in the actin cup was shown to be phosphorylated at the activation sites Ser-19 and Thr-18, by immunoblotting with anti-phosphoepitope antibodies. The phosphorylation of MRLC was also confirmed by a (32)P in vivo labeling experiment. The CL-A-induced cortical contraction may be a good model system for studying the mechanism of cytokinesis.
...
PMID:Calyculin-A, an inhibitor for protein phosphatases, induces cortical contraction in unfertilized sea urchin eggs. 1127 74
A new method for measurement of
myosin ATPase
activity has been developed utilizing reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), which detects as low as 0.05 nmol of ADP hydrolyzed from ATP. After termination of the ATPase reaction by addition of perchloric acid, the hydrolysate ADP and substrate ATP were separated by reversed-phase HPLC. The absorbance of ADP was monitored at 259 nm, and the amount of ADP was quantified from its peak area on the chromatogram by use of the NIH Image computer software. Our method showed linearity over a wide range from 0.05 to 10 nmol of ADP per 20 microl with a coefficient of determination (r(2)) of 0.99.
Myosin
ATPase activities determined by the HPLC method were almost identical to those determined by the malachite green method, a widely used spectrophotometric method with range of detection from 1 to 8 nmol of phosphate. Because our method requires only a small volume of reaction solution, it will be a powerful tool for measuring ATPase activity of motor proteins, which are difficult to obtain in large amount.
...
PMID:A highly sensitive method for measurement of myosin ATPase activity by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. 1257 75
Proteins coimmunoprecipitating with protein kinase C (PKC) epsilon in fibroblasts were identified through matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI TOF m/s). This method identified myosin IIA in PKC epsilon immunoprecipitates, as well as known PKC epsilon binding proteins, actin, beta'Cop and cytokeratin.
Myosin
is not a substrate for PKC epsilon. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that PKC epsilon is colocalised with actin and myosin in actomyosin stress fibers in fibroblasts. Inhibitors of PKC and
myosin ATPase
activity, as well as microfilament-disrupting drugs, all inhibited spreading of fibroblasts after passage, suggesting a role for a PKC epsilon-actin-myosin complex in cell spreading.
...
PMID:PKC epsilon is associated with myosin IIA and actin in fibroblasts. 1189 93
This article summarizes current knowledge on the genetics and possible molecular mechanisms of Human pathologies resulted from mutations within the genes encoding several myosin isoforms. Mutations within the genes encoding some myosin isoforms have been found to be responsible for blindness (myosins III and VIIA), deafness (myosins I, IIA, IIIA, VI, VIIA and XV) and familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (beta cardiac myosin heavy chain and both the regulatory and essential light chains).
Myosin
III localizes predominantly to photoreceptor cells and is proved to be engaged in the vision process in Drosophila. In the inner ear, myosin I is postulated to play a role as an adaptive motor in the tip links of stereocilia of hair cells, myosin IIA seems to be responsible for stabilizing the contacts between adjacent inner ear hair cells, myosin VI plays a role as an intracellular motor transporting membrane structures within the hair cells while myosin VIIA most probably participates in forming links between neighbouring stereocilia and myosin XV probably stabilizes the stereocilia structure. About 30% of patients with familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy have mutations within the genes encoding the beta cardiac myosin heavy chain and both light chains that are grouped within the regions of myosin head crucial for its functions. The alterations lead to the destabilization of sarcomeres and to a decrease of the
myosin ATPase
activity and its ability to move actin filaments.
...
PMID:Myosins and pathology: genetics and biology. 1254 86
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