Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

It was shown that the highly purified monoaldehyde derivative of ADP obtained by partial reduction of the dialdehyde derivative of ADP causes strong irreversible inhibition of the Ca-ATPase activity of myosin subfragment I, the inhibiting effect being of the affinity modification type. The addition to the reaction medium of Mg2+ (but not Ca2+) during the subfragment I interaction with the inhibitor fully prevents the inhibiting effect at all substrates used (Ca-, Mg- or K, EDTA-ATPases). Contrariwise, the subfragment I modified in the absence of Mg2+ exhibits the same degree of inhibition for all the three types of the ATPase activity. An unexpected result that was previously unobserved for other affinity modifiers of myosin ATPase is the maintenance of activity in 50% of active centers, when "two-head" forms of the enzyme (the myosin proper and heavy meromyosin, HMM) are modified. Noteworthy that the affinity modification reaction is characterized by the same values of inhibition constants as in the case of myosin subfragment I (Ki = 3.3-3.5 X 10(-4) M; ki = 0.03-0.04 min-1). This finding provides additional evidence in favour of functional asymmetry of myosin heads in the myosin molecule which seems to be due to the screening of the active center of one head by the other one.
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PMID:[Characteristics of affinity modification of myosin ATPase under the action of monoaldehyde derivatives of ADP]. 183 50

We have compared actin-activated myosin ATPase activity, myosin binding to actin, and the velocity of myosin-induced actin sliding in order to understand the mechanism of myosin motility. In our in vitro assay, F-actin slides at a constant velocity, regardless of length. The F-actin could slide over myosin heads at KCl concentrations below a critical value (60 mM with myosin and HMM, 100 mM with S-1), and the sliding velocities were quite similar below the critical KCl concentration. However, at KCl concentrations close to the critical value, the sliding F-actin is attached to only one or a few particular points on the surface, each of which perhaps consists of a single head of myosin. The KATPase values for actin-activated ATPase were approximately 300 microM for S-1 and approximately 200 microM with HMM below the critical KCl concentration, and approximately 5,000 microM above the critical KCl concentration. This increase in KATPase is due to a drastic reduction in the binding affinity of myosin heads to F-actin, as determined by a proteolytic digestion method and direct observation by fluorescence microscopy. We also show that the Vmax of actin-activated myosin ATPase activity decreases steadily with increasing KCl concentration, even though the velocity of F-actin sliding remains unchanged. This result provides evidence that the ATPase activity is not necessarily linked to motility. We discuss possible models that do not require a tight coupling between myosin ATPase and motility.
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PMID:In vitro motility of skeletal muscle myosin and its proteolytic fragments. 214 21

The 38-kDa chymotryptic fragment of caldesmon, which possesses the actin/calmodulin binding domain, was purified and utilized to study the mechanism for the inhibition of acto-myosin ATPase by caldesmon. The intact caldesmon inhibited the acto-HMM ATPase although it caused an increase in the binding of HMM to actin, presumably due to the interaction between the S-2 region of HMM and the caldesmon located on the actin filament. The 38-kDa fragment, which lacks the S-2 binding domain, inhibited both the acto-HMM ATPase and the HMM binding to actin. The ATPase and the HMM binding to actin decreased in parallel on increasing the 38-kDa fragment bound to actin. In the presence of tropomyosin, the ATPase activity fell more rapidly than did the HMM binding to actin. Binding of intact caldesmon or 38-kDa fragment to actin inhibited the cooperative turning-on of tropomyosin-actin by NEM.S-1, which forms rigor complexes in the presence of ATP. The absence of cooperative turning-on of the acto-HMM ATPase by rigor complexes in the presence of 38-kDa fragment was associated with an inhibition of the binding of HMM to tropomyosin-actin. Addition of NEM.S-1 to tropomyosin-actin-caldesmon caused a gradual decrease in the caldesmon-induced binding of HMM to actin. The calmodulin restored the caldesmon-induced binding of HMM to tropomyosin-actin, but it had only a slight effect on the acto-HMM ATPase. These data suggest that the cooperative turning-on of the smooth muscle tropomyosin-actin by rigor bonds is modulated by the interaction of caldesmon, tropomyosin, and calmodulin on the thin filament.
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PMID:Caldesmon inhibits the cooperative turning-on of the smooth muscle heavy meromyosin by tropomyosin-actin. 253 47

In the rapid "quench" kinetics of myosin, the "initial phosphate burst" is the excess inorganic phosphate that is produced during the early time-course of ATP hydrolysis by myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) or HMM. In general, the existence of a Pi burst implies a rapid (i.e., generally an order of magnitude faster than the steady-state hydrolysis rate) lysis of the phospho-anhydride bond within the ATP molecule, followed by one or more slower steps that are rate limiting for the process. Thus, the presence of a Pi burst can provide an important clue to the mechanism of the reaction. However, in the case of actomyosin, this clue has long been the subject of controversy and misunderstanding. To measure the (initial) Pi burst, myosin S-1 (or HMM) is rapidly mixed with ATP and then the mixture is acid quenched after a specific time period. The medium produced contains free Pi generated from hydrolysis of the ATP. The quantitative measure of the phosphate generated in this way has always been significantly greater than that expected by steady-state "release" of Pi alone, and it is that very difference between this measured Pi after the quench and that amount of Pi expected to be released by steady-state considerations in that same time period that has been referred to as the "initial Pi burst." Recent investigations of the kinetics of Pi release have used an entirely new method that directly measures the release of Pi from the enzyme-product complex. These studies have made reference to the properties of the "initial Pi burst" in the presence of actin, as well as to a new kinetic entity: the "burst of Pi release," and have been often vague concerning the true nature of the initial Pi burst, as well as the properties of Pi release as predicted by the current models of the actin activation of the myosin ATPase activity. The purpose of the current article is to correct this oversight, to discuss the "burst" in some detail, and to display the kinetics predicted by the current models for the actin activation of myosin. Furthermore, predictions for the kinetics of the new "burst of Pi release" are discussed in terms of its ability to discriminate between the two current competing models for actin activation of the myosin ATPase activity.
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PMID:Modeling of the actomyosin ATPase activity. Origin of the initial phosphate burst and implications of the phosphate release kinetics. 910 93

Myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is a multifunctional regulatory protein of smooth muscle contraction [IUBMB Life 51 (2001) 337, for review]. The well-established mode for its regulation is to phosphorylate the 20 kDa myosin light chain (MLC 20) to activate myosin ATPase activity. MLCK exhibits myosin-binding activity in addition to this kinase activity. The myosin-binding activity also stimulates myosin ATPase activity without phosphorylating MLC 20 [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96 (1999) 6666]. We engineered an MLCK fragment containing the myosin-binding domain but devoid of a catalytic domain to explore how myosin is stimulated by this non-kinase pathway. The recombinant fragment thus obtained stimulated myosin ATPase activity by V(max)=5.53+/-0.63-fold with K(m)=4.22+/-0.58 microM (n=4). Similar stimulation figures were obtained by measuring the ATPase activity of HMM and S1. Binding of the fragment to both HMM and S1 was also verified, indicating that the fragment exerts stimulation through the myosin heads. Since S1 is in an active form regardless of the phosphorylated state of MLC 20, we conclude that the non-kinase stimulation is independent of the phosphorylating mode for activation of myosin.
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PMID:Myosin light chain kinase stimulates smooth muscle myosin ATPase activity by binding to the myosin heads without phosphorylating the myosin light chain. 1273 90

We explored the potential of contractile proteins, actin and myosin, as biosensors of solutions containing mercuric ions. We demonstrate that the reaction of HgCl2 with myosin rapidly inhibits actin-activated myosin ATPase activity. Mercuric ions inhibit the in vitro analog of contraction, namely the ATP-initiated superprecipitation of the reconstituted actomyosin complex. Hg reduces both the rate and extent of this reaction. Direct observation of the propulsive movement of actin filaments (10 nm in diameter and 1 microm long) in a motility assay driven by a proteolytic fragment of myosin (heavy meromyosin or HMM) is also inhibited by mercuric ions. Thus, we have demonstrated the biochemical, biophysical and nanotechnological basis of what may prove to be a useful nano-device.
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PMID:A novel biosensor for mercuric ions based on motor proteins. 1559 Feb 99