Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0271276 (Hudson)
1,066 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Despite extensive knowledge of many muscle A-band proteins (myosin molecules, titin, C-protein (MyBP-C)), details of the organization of these molecules to form myosin filaments remain unclear. Recently the myosin head (crossbridge) configuration in a relaxed vertebrate muscle was determined from low-angle X-ray diffraction (Hudson et al. (1997), J Mol Biol 273: 440-455). This showed that, even without C-protein, the myosin head array displays a characteristic polar pattern with every third 143 A-spaced crossbridge level particularly prominent. However, X-ray diffraction cannot determine the polarity of the crossbridge array relative to the neighbouring actin filaments; information crucial to a proper understanding of the contractile event. Here, electron micrographs of negatively-stained goldfish A-segments and of fast-frozen, freeze-fractured plaice A-bands have been used to determine the resting myosin head polarity relative to the M-band. In agreement with the X-ray data, the prominent 429 A-spaced striations are seen outside the C-zone, where no non-myosin proteins apart from titin are thought to be located. The head orientation is with the concave side of the curved myosin heads (containing the entrance to the ATP-binding site) facing towards the M-band and the convex surface (containing the actin-binding region at one end) facing away from the M-band.
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PMID:A-band architecture in vertebrate skeletal muscle: polarity of the myosin head array. 1122 95