Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.4.1 (myosin ATPase)
1,140 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cyclic peptide phalloidin, one of the toxic components of Amanita phalloides prevented the drop of viscosity of F-actin solutions after the addition of 0.6 M KI and inhibited the ATP splitting of F-actin during sonic vibration. The data concerning ATP splitting are consistent with the assumption (a) that only 1 out of every 3 actin units of the filaments needs to be combined with phalloidin in order to suppress the contribution of these 3 actins to the ATPase activity of the filament and (b) that all actin units of the filaments can combine with phalloidin with a very high affinity. -halloidin did not only stabilize the actin-actin bonds in the F-actin structure but it also increased the rate of polymerization of G-actin to F-actin. The ability of F-actin to activate myosin ATPase was not affected by phalloidin. The tropomyosin-troponin complex did not prevent the stabilizing effect of phalloidin on the F-actin structure.
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PMID:Interaction of actin with phalloidin: polymerization and stabilization of F-actin. 12 84

The slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscles of newly hatched chickens were transposed and cross0innervated by the mixed, predominantly fast superior brachialis nerve, and investigated 2 to 15 months after the operation. Two months after the operation, myosin ATPase activity of the cross-innervated ALD muscles was still as low as in the control ALD, although the ultrastructure and the histochemical ATPase activity already showed a mixed fibre-type pattern with a predominance of fast -type fibres around the site of nerve implantation. The change of myosin properties of thw whole cross-innervated ALD did not occur until the third month after the operation. At that time, the myosin ATPase activity increased about 2.5 times and light chains of myosin of the fast type appeared in the electrophoretic pattern. The myosin ATPase activity attained 62% of the activity found in the control fast posterior latissimus dorsi muscles at three months; subsequently it remained at about this level reaching 68% 18 months after the operation. The results indicate that approximately two thirds of the cross-innervated ALD muscle fibres became changed towards the fast type under neural influence, whereas about one third remained slow, being re-innervated by the slow-type motor fibres of the implanted nerve.
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PMID:The onset and progress of transformation of avian slow into fast muscles under neural influence. 12 64

After mild banding of pulmonary artery in dogs there was a rapid elevation in protein and RNA synthesis, followed by an elevation in myosin content and myosin ATPase activity. There was an increase in myosin ATPase activity when K+ or Ca++ was used as activator effector but not with the cations, Mn++ or NH4+. Concomitant with an increase in myosin ATPase activity there was a decrease in one of the C1 light chain components, previously named C1d.
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PMID:Effects of hemodynamic overload on canine myocardial myosin. 12 55

Force-velocity relations from after-loaded contractions, from isometric and isotonic QR experiments, resting-tension curves and biochemical analyses were conducted on sixteen trabecular muscles (SH) from hearts of rats conditioned by eight weeks of swimming training (increase in heart weight 8%), and compared to a control (CH) of eighteen trabecular muscles. (SH) showed increased tension development (p less than 0.01), whereas the diastolic properties remained almost unchanged. Analysis of the amount of hydroxyproline did not prove any variation. Vmax of (SH) was only slightly increase when there was a singificnat rise in actomyosin and myosin ATPase activity, while PO of the force-velocity relations of (SH) on the x axis (tension) shifted clearly to the right (p less than 0.01). Consequently, the maximum instantaneous power of (SH), expressed by the maximum rectangular plane under the force-velocity curve, increased considerably (p less than 0.01) in comparison with (CH). The experiments show that haemodynamic load induced by training does not alter the passive properties of the myocardium, but does bring about an increase in the contractile capabiltiy.
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PMID:Mechanics of the isolated ventricular myocardium of rats conditioned by physical training. 12 47

G-actin has been nitrated with tetranitromethane in conditions that lead to the modification of one tyrosine residue. The reactive residue was found by earlier workers to be Tyr-69. The nitrated actin is conformationally similar to native G-actin, as judged by sedimentation velocity and circular dichroism analysis. A small proportion only is in the form of covalently linked dimers and trimers. The nitrated G-actin will polymerise to form filaments, indistinguishable in the electron microscope from those of native F-actin, but the polymerisation process is slower. Reduction of the nitrophenol group to the corresponding aminophenol leaves the properties of the protein in respect of polymerisation unchanged. When a dansyl group is introduced at the same point, however, the ability of the actin to polymerise is lost. The nitrated actin and its reduced counterpart will also bind heavy meromyosin, and the characteristic arrowhead formation of the bound molecules along the filaments can be seen in the electron microscope. Neither of the modified F-actins, however, significantly activates or inhibits the myosin ATPase activity. The fluorescence of nitrated actin is strongly quenched through the presence of the nitrophenol chromophore. In soluble complexes with heavy meromyosin the fluorescence is indistinguishable from the sum of the separate contributions of the two protein components. There is thus no measurable excitation transfer between any tryptophan residues on the myosin heads, such as that inferred to be present in the ATPase site, and the nitrotyrosine in position 69 of the actin sequence. Implications of this observation are considered in relation to the different interaction sites in myosin and in actin. The activation of heavy meromyosin ATPase by copolymers containing actin and nitroactin in different proportions has been measured, and is not proportional to the fraction of native actin. The results are consistent with the view that the function of actomyosin depends on the interaction of the myosin heads with more than one actin subunit.
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PMID:Effects of specific chemical modification of actin. 12 59

Mild pulmonic stenosis was performed in dogs to evaluate the effect of systolic pressures overloading on the activity and subunits of myosin in the early hypertrophied right ventricle. Three weeks following pulmonary constriction, six hypertrophied dogs were sacrificed and compared to six sham-operated dogs which served as controls. In the right ventricular free wall of hypertrophied right ventricles (HRV), the heart/body weight was 46% greater than that of normal right ventricles (NRV) (p less than 0.01). Myosin ATPase activity (Vmax values) in mumoles phosphate/mg/min, was elevated significantly in the stressed ventricle for both K+ and Ca++ activity in hypertrophied right ventricles. Associated with the increase in myosin activity, there was an increase in proportion of heavy to light chains in myosin from HRV. There were approximately 2 moles of myosin light chains per mole of myosin heavy chains in NRV and approximately 1 mole of myosin light chains per mole of myosin heavy chains in HRV. The proportion of light chain C1 to C2, did not change in myosin from NRV and HRV. Of the C1 light chains, according to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, there was less C1d as compared to C1c in HRV as compared to NRV. Thus K+- and Ca++- activated myosin is elevated in early canine HRV by pressure overload. It is suggested taht the augmented myosin activity is due to a reduction of light chain inhibition of myosin ATPase activity, which appears to result from the slower turnover rate of myosin light chains relative to heavy chains. Furthermore, when myosin light chains are added to hypertrophied right ventricular myosin, the ATPase activity is lowered.
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PMID:Modulation of myosin in right ventricular hypertrophy. 12 38

70 human hearts were studied less than 36 hours after death. The apex, and in some cases other parts of the myocardium were homogenized, DNA, hydroxyproline content, myofibrillar Ca2+ and Mg2+ ATPase were measured. In normal hearts the DNA and collagen content were 372 +/- 9 mg and 36 +/- 7 mg. Ca2+ and Mg2+ ATPase of the myofibrils prepared from these hearts have shown the same specific activity (35 +/- 5 and 34 +/- 6 nmol/min./mg) as those from fresh biopsies taken during open-chest surgery. The heart weight correlates with the DNA content (r= + 0.58 -p less than 0.01) and with the myofibrillar ATPase (r= - 0.33 - p less than 0.02) but not with the DNA concentration nor with the collagen content or concentration. The main result of this study was the presence of a negative correlation between the DNA content of the heart and the Mg2+ or Ca2+ myofibrillar ATPase (r= - 0.31, p less than 0.05 - r= - 0.45, p less than 0.01). This correlation was analysed with reference to the histological and biochemical studies published by several authors in human or experimental heart hypertrophy and it was suggested that in human heart hypertrophy the decrease of the myofibrillar or myosin ATPase is a direct consequence of the high degree of polyploidy of the muscular cells observed in this condition.
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PMID:Myofibrillar ATPase, DNA and hydroxyproline content of human hypertrophied heart. 13 Feb 42

Bovin platelet actin prepared by Spudich's method (Spudich, J. A. (1972) Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 27, 585-594) separated into two peaks on a Sephadex G-200 column. The actin of both peaks had a mol. wt. of 42 000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel and activated myosin ATPase, although in a quantitatively different manner. Actin eluted in the first peak (probably an oligomeric form) was not polymerized in 2 mM MgCl2 and 0.05 M KCl, while that of the second peak went through normal G-F transformation. If CaATP was present in the incubation mixture neither actin was attacked by thrombin. However, if EDTA was added, thrombin split G-actins and the pattern of cleavage was the same as that found for muscle actin in our earlier studies, i.e. the final split products were two actinopeptides and two larger fragments of 26 500 and 11 000 daltons. It is suggested that the possible attraction of membrane-associated platelet actin for thrombin may have an importance in thrombin-induced platelet aggregation.
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PMID:Cleavage of thrombosthenin A by thrombin. Evidence for the existence of two types of bovine platelet actin. 13 Sep 29

The effects of D2O on the elementary steps in the contractile and transport ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] reactions were studied, and the following results were obtained: 1. The rate of H-meromyosin ATPase in the steady state decreased in D2O to 60% of that in H2O. Deuterium oxide did not affect the size or rate of the initial burst of Pi liberation, i.e. the amount or rate of formation of the reactive myosin-phosphate-ADP complex, MADPP. Moreover, neither the rate of change in the fluorescence spectrum of H-meromyosin induced by ATP (the rate of formation of the second enzyme-ATP complex, M2ATP) nor the rate constant of decomposition of MADPP into M degrees + ADP + Pi was affected by D2O. However, the equilibrium constant of the step M2ATP in equilibrium MADPP decreased in D2O to about 1/2 the value in H2O. 2. In the case of the Na+-K+-dependent ATPase reactin, neither the rate constant of formation of the second enzyme-ATP complex, E2ATP, nor that of decomposition of a phosphorylated intermediate, EADP approximately P, was affected by D2O. However, the equilibrium constant of the step E2ATP in equilibrium EADP approximately P decreased in D2O to about 1/2.5-1/4 of the value in H2O. These results suggest a similarity between the modes of binding of phosphate in MADPP in the myosin ATPase reaction and in EADP approximatley P in the Na+-K+-dependent ATPase reaction.
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PMID:Effects of deuterium oxide on elementary steps in the ATPase reaction. Evidence for the similarity of key intermediates in contractile and transport ATPase. 13 92

The simplest interacting unit of actomyosin, viz., single myosin heads (subfragment 1) with actin monomers, has been studied at physiological ionic strength, by isolating the actin molecules from each other on a solid support. The interaction is characterized by a binding constant of 10(5) to 10(6) M-1 in the temperature range 4-30degrees C. It is endothermic with a standard enthalpy of 24 +/- 10 kcal mol-1, and a standard entropy of 110 +/- 40 eu. It is thus, like many protein-protein association processes, entropy-driven. Despite the high affinity of the association, which is comparable in its binding constant to that of subfragment 1 with F-actin, there is only very small activation of myosin ATPase. The ionic-strength dependence of the interaction shows unusual features. Binding of the proteins of the relaxing system to the monomeric actin was also examined: troponin binds both in the presence and absence of calcium ions, but neither tropomyosin nor the tropomyosin-troponin complex was found to bind significantly. Monomeric actin has also been examined as a function of ionic strength by spectroscopic methods; it appears that conformational differences between the G and the F state are the consequence of polymerization, and not of the change in ionic strength required to being the conversion about.
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PMID:The interaction of actin monomers with myosin heads and other muscle proteins. 13 85


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