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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Myosin
motors drive muscle contraction, cytokinesis and cell locomotion, and members of the myosin superfamily have been implicated in an increasingly diverse range of cell functions.
Myosin
can displace a bound actin filament several nanometers in a single interaction. Crystallographic studies suggest that this 'working
stroke
' involves bending of the myosin head between its light chain and catalytic domains. Here we used X-ray fiber diffraction to test the crystallographic model and measure the interdomain bending during force generation in an intact single muscle fiber. The observed bending has two components: an elastic distortion and an active rotation that generates force. The average bend of the force-generating myosin heads in a muscle fiber is intermediate between those in crystal structures with different bound nucleotides, and the C-terminus of the head is displaced by 7 nm along the actin filament axis compared with the in vitro conformation seen in the absence of nucleotide.
...
PMID:Conformation of the myosin motor during force generation in skeletal muscle. 1088 Nov 96
Myosin
subfragment 1 (S1) is the ATP catalyzing motor protein in muscle. It consists of three domains that catalyze ATP and bind actin (catalytic), conduct energy transduction (converter), and transport the load (lever arm). These domains interface in two places identified as interface I, containing the reactive thiol (SH1) and ATP-sensitive tryptophan (Trp510), and interface II, containing the reactive lysine residue (RLR). Two crystal structures of S1 were extrapolated to working "in solution" or oriented "in tissue" forms, using structure-sensitive optical spectroscopic signals from extrinsic probes located in the interfaces. Observed signals included circular dichroism (CD) and absorption originating from S1 in solution in the presence and absence of actin and fluorescence polarization from cross-bridges in muscle fibers. Theoretical signals were calculated from S1 crystal structure models perturbed with lever arm movement from swiveling at three conserved glycines, 699, 703, and 710 (chicken skeletal myosin numbering). Structures giving the best agreement between the computed and observed signals were selected as the representative forms. Both interfaces undergo dramatic conformational change during ATPase and force development. Changes at interface I suggest the molecular basis for the collisional quenching sensitivity of Trp510 to nucleotide binding. The probe conformation at SH1 suggests how it alters S1 ATPases. At interface II, the spatial relationship of the lever arm and the extrinsic probe at RLR suggests how the probe alters S1 ATPases and that it should inhibit lever arm movement during the power
stroke
. The latter possibility, if true, establishes a part of the corridor through which the lever arm swings during the power
stroke
. Global structural changes in actomyosin are discussed in the accompanying paper [Burghardt et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 4821-4833].
...
PMID:Conformation of myosin interdomain interactions during contraction: deductions from proteins in solution. 1129 51
Myosin
II is the motor protein that produces force and shortening in muscle by ATP-driven cyclic interactions of its globular portion, the head, with the actin filament. During each interaction the myosin head undergoes a conformational change, the working
stroke
, which, depending on the mechanical conditions, can generate a force of several piconewtons or an axial displacement of the actin filament toward the centre of the sarcomere of several nanometres. However, the sizes of the elementary force and length steps and their dependence on the mechanical conditions are still under question. Due to the small fraction of the ATPase cycle time myosin II spends attached to actin, single molecule mechanics failed to produce definitive measurements of the individual events. In intact frog muscle fibres, however, myosin II's working
stroke
can be synchronised in the few milliseconds following a step reduction in either force or length superimposed on the isometric contraction. Here we show that with 150 micros force steps it is possible to separate the elastic response from the subsequent early rapid component of filament sliding due to the working
stroke
in the attached myosin heads. In this way we determine how the size and the speed of the working
stroke
depend on the clamped force. The relation between mechanical energy and force provides a molecular basis for muscle efficiency and an estimate of the isometric force exerted by a myosin head.
...
PMID:The size and the speed of the working stroke of muscle myosin and its dependence on the force. 1243 42
Myosin
is a molecular motor and a member of a protein family comprising at least 18 classes. There is an about 1,000-fold difference in the in vitro sliding velocity between the fastest myosin and the slowest one. Previous studies revealed that the hydrophobic triplet in the motor domain (Val534, Phe535, and Pro536 in Dictyostelium myosin) is important for the strong binding of myosin to actin. We studied the role of the triplet in the sliding motion of myosin by means of site directed mutagenesis because the sliding velocity is determined by the time that myosin interacts with actin strongly. We produced mutant Dictyostelium myosins and subfragment-1s that have the triplet sequences of various classes of myosin with different sliding velocities. The V(max) and K(actin) values of the actin-activated ATPase for all these mutant subfragment-1s were lower than those of the wild-type Dictyostelium myosin. The mutant myosins exhibited much lower sliding velocities than the wild type. The time that the mutant subfragment-1s are in the strongly bound state did not correlate well with the sliding velocity. Our results suggested that (i) the hydrophobic triplet alone does not determine the sliding velocity of myosin, (ii) the size of the amino acid side chain in the triplet is crucial for the ATPase activity and the motility of myosin, and (iii) the hydrophobic triplet is important not only for strong binding to actin but also for the structural change of the myosin motor domain during the power
stroke
.
...
PMID:Roles of the hydrophobic triplet in the motor domain of myosin in the interaction between myosin and actin. 1294 84
The molecular mechanism of myosin function was addressed by measuring transient kinetic parameters of naturally occurring and chimeric Drosophila muscle myosin isoforms. We assessed the native embryonic isoform, the native indirect flight muscle isoform, and two chimeric isoforms containing converter domains exchanged between the indirect flight muscle and embryonic isoforms.
Myosin
was purified from the indirect flight muscles of transgenic flies, and S1 was produced by alpha-chymotryptic digestion. Previous studies in vertebrate and scallop myosins have shown a correlation between actin filament velocity in motility assays and cross-bridge detachment rate, specifically the rate of ADP release. In contrast, our study showed no correlation between the detachment rate and actin filament velocity in Drosophila myosin isoforms and further that the converter domain does not significantly influence the biochemical kinetics governing the detachment of myosin from actin. We suggest that evolutionary pressure on a single muscle myosin gene may maintain a fast detachment rate in all isoforms. As a result, the attachment rate and completion of the power
stroke
or the equilibrium between actin.myosin.ADP states may define actin filament velocity for these myosin isoforms.
...
PMID:Kinetic analysis of Drosophila muscle myosin isoforms suggests a novel mode of mechanochemical coupling. 1450 31
Myosin
VIIA is an unconventional myosin that has been implicated in Usher syndrome type 1B, atypical Usher syndrome, non-syndromic autosomal recessive hearing impairment (DFNB2) and autosomal dominant hearing impairment (DFNA11). Here, we present a family with non-syndromic autosomal dominant hearing impairment that clinically resembles the previously published DFNA11 family. The affected family members show a flat audiogram at young ages and only modest progression, most clearly at the high frequencies. In addition, they suffer from minor vestibular symptoms. Linkage analysis yielded a maximum two-point lodscore of 3.43 for marker D11S937 located within 1 cM of the myosin VIIA gene. The myosin VIIA gene was sequenced and 11 nucleotide variations were found. Ten nucleotide changes represent benign intronic variants, silent exon mutations or non-pathologic amino acid substitutions. One variant, a c.1373A-->T transversion that is heterozygously present in all affected family members and absent in 300 healthy individuals, is predicted to result in an Asn458Ile amino acid substitution. Asn458 is located in a region of the myosin VIIA motor domain that is highly conserved in different classes of myosins and in myosins of different species. To evaluate whether the Asn458Ile mutation was indeed responsible for the hearing impairment, a molecular model of myosin VIIA was built based on the known structure of the myosin II heavy chain from Dictyostelium discoideum. In this model, conformational changes in the protein caused by the amino acid substitution Asn458Ile are predicted to disrupt ATP/ADP binding and impair the myosin power-
stroke
, which would have a severe effect on the function of the myosin VIIA protein.
...
PMID:Identification and molecular modelling of a mutation in the motor head domain of myosin VIIA in a family with autosomal dominant hearing impairment (DFNA11). 1522 49
Current evidence favors the theory that, when the globular motor domain of myosin attaches to actin, the light chain binding domain or "lever arm" rotates, and thereby generates movement of actin filaments.
Myosin
is uniquely designed for such a role in that a long alpha-helix (approximately 9 nm) extending from the C terminus of the catalytic core is stabilized by two calmodulin-like molecules, the regulatory light chain (RLC) and the essential light chain (ELC). Here, we introduce a single-point mutation into the skeletal myosin RLC, which results in a large (approximately 50%) reduction in actin filament velocity (V(actin)) without any loss in actin-activated MgATPase activity. Single-molecule analysis of myosin by optical trapping showed a comparable 2-fold reduction in unitary displacement or step size (d), without a significant change in the duration of the strongly attached state (tau(on)) after the power
stroke
. Assuming that V(actin) approximately d/tau(on), we can account for the change in velocity primarily by a change in the step size of the lever arm without incurring any change in the kinetic properties of the mutant myosin. These results suggest that a principal role for the many light chain isoforms in the myosin II class may be to modulate the flexural rigidity of the light chain binding domain to maximize tension development and movement during muscle contraction.
...
PMID:A point mutation in the regulatory light chain reduces the step size of skeletal muscle myosin. 1525
Myosin
produces force in a cyclic interaction, which involves alternate tight binding to actin and to ATP. We have investigated the energetics associated with force production by measuring the force generated by skinned muscle fibers as the strength of the actomyosin bond is changed. We varied the strength of the actomyosin bond by addition of a polymer that promotes protein-protein association or by changing temperature or ionic strength. We estimated the free energy available to generate force by measuring isometric tension, as the free energy of the states that precede the working
stroke
are lowered with increasing phosphate. We found that the free energy available to generate force and the force per attached cross-bridge at low [Pi] were both proportional to the free energy available from the formation of the actomyosin bond. We conclude that the formation of the actomyosin bond is involved in providing the free energy driving the production of isometric tension and mechanical work. Because the binding of myosin to actin is an endothermic, entropically driven reaction, work must be performed by a "thermal ratchet" in which a thermal fluctuation in Brownian motion is captured by formation of the actomyosin bond.
...
PMID:The force exerted by a muscle cross-bridge depends directly on the strength of the actomyosin bond. 1545 48
Myosin
motor proteins use the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to move cargo along actin tracks. Myosin VI, unlike almost all other myosins, moves toward the minus end of actin filaments and functions in a variety of intracellular processes such as vesicular membrane traffic, cell migration, and mitosis. These diverse roles of myosin VI are mediated by interaction with a number of different binding partners present in multi-protein complexes. Myosin VI can work in vitro as a processive dimeric motor and as a nonprocessive monomeric motor, each with a large working
stroke
. The possibility that both monomeric and dimeric forms of myosin VI operate in the cell may represent an important regulatory mechanism for controlling the multiple steps in transport pathways where nonprocessive and processive motors are required.
...
PMID:Myosin VI: cellular functions and motor properties. 1547 55
In most current models of muscle contraction there are two translational steps, the working
stroke
, whereby an attached myosin cross-bridge moves relative to the actin filament, and the repriming step, in which the cross-bridge returns to its original orientation. The development of single molecule methods has allowed a more detailed investigation of the relationship of these mechanical steps to the underlying biochemistry. In the normal adenosine triphosphate cycle, myosin.adenosine diphosphate.phosphate (M.ADP.Pi) binds to actin and moves it by ca. 5 nm on average before the formation of the end product, the rigor actomyosin state. All the other product-like intermediate states tested were found to give no net movement indicating that M.ADP.Pi alone binds in a pre-force state.
Myosin
states with bound, unhydrolysed nucleoside triphosphates also give no net movement, indicating that these must also bind in a post-force conformation and that the repriming, post- to pre-transition during the forward cycle must take place while the myosin is dissociated from actin. These observations fit in well with the structural model in which the working
stroke
is aligned to the opening of the switch 2 element of the ATPase site.
...
PMID:Using optical tweezers to relate the chemical and mechanical cross-bridge cycles. 1564 61
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