Literature DB >> 1532210

X-ray diffraction studies on oriented gels of vertebrate smooth muscle thin filaments.

D Popp1, K C Holmes.   

Abstract

The ATPase activity of acto-myosin subfragment 1 (S1) at low ratios of S1 to actin in the presence of tropomyosin is dependent on the tropomyosin source and ionic conditions. Whereas skeletal muscle tropomyosin causes a 60% inhibitory effect at all ionic strengths, the effect of smooth muscle tropomyosin was found to be dependent on the ionic strength. At low ionic strength (20 mM) smooth muscle tropomyosin inhibits the ATPase activity by 60%, while at high ionic strength (120 mM) it potentiates the ATPase activity three- to five-fold. Therefore, the difference in the effect of smooth muscle and skeletal muscle tropomyosin on the acto-S1 ATPase activity was due to a greater fraction of the tropomyosin-actin complex being turned on in the absence of S1 with smooth muscle tropomyosin than with skeletal muscle tropomyosin. Using well-oriented gels of actin and of reconstituted specimens from vertebrate smooth muscle thin filament proteins suitable for X-ray diffraction, we localized the position of tropomyosin on actin under different levels of acto-S1 ATPase activity. By analysing the equatorial X-ray pattern of the oriented specimens in combination with solution scattering experiments, we conclude that tropomyosin is located at a binding radius of about 3.5 nm on the f-actin helix under all conditions studied. Furthermore, we find no evidence that the azimuthal position of tropomyosin is different for smooth muscle tropomyosin at various ionic strengths, or vertebrate tropomyosin, since the second actin layer-line intensity (at 17.9 nm axial and 4.3 nm radial spacing), which was shown in skeletal muscle to be a sensitive measure of this parameter, remains strong and unchanged. Differences in the ATPase activity are not necessarily correlated with different positions of tropomyosin on f-actin. The same conclusion is drawn from our observations that, although the regulatory protein caldesmon inhibits the ATPase activity in native and reconstituted vertebrate smooth muscle thin filaments at a molar ratio of actin/tropomyosin/caldesmon of 28:7:1, the second actin layer-line remains strong. Only adding caldesmon in excess reduces the intensity of the second actin layer-line, from which the binding radius of caldesmon can be estimated to be about 4 nm. The lack of predominant meridional reflections in oriented specimens, with caldesmon present, suggests that caldesmon does not project away from the thin filament as troponin molecules in vertebrate striated muscle in agreement with electron micrographs of smooth muscle thin filaments. In freshly prepared native smooth muscle thin filaments we observed a Ca(2+)-sensitive reversible bundling effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1532210     DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(92)90576-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  3 in total

1.  Structure of the mid-region of tropomyosin: bending and binding sites for actin.

Authors:  Jerry H Brown; Zhaocai Zhou; Ludmilla Reshetnikova; Howard Robinson; Rama D Yammani; Larry S Tobacman; Carolyn Cohen
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-12-19       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  X-ray diffraction study on mammalian visceral smooth muscles in resting and activated states.

Authors:  M Watanabe; S Takemori; N Yagi
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  1993-10       Impact factor: 2.698

3.  Three-dimensional reconstruction of caldesmon-containing smooth muscle thin filaments.

Authors:  P Vibert; R Craig; W Lehman
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  1993-10       Impact factor: 10.539

  3 in total

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