| Literature DB >> 17913331 |
Thomas P Burghardt1, Jimmy Yan Hu, Katalin Ajtai.
Abstract
Myosin is a motor protein associating with actin and ATP. It translates along actin filaments against a force by transduction of free energy liberated with ATP hydrolysis. Various myosin crystal structures define time points during ATPase showing the protein undergoes large conformation change during transduction over a cycle with approximately 10 ms periodicity. The protein conformation trajectory between two intermediates in the cycle is surmised by non-equilibrium Monte Carlo simulation utilizing free-energy minimization. The trajectory shows myosin transduction of free energy to mechanical work giving evidence for: (i) a causal relationship between product release and work production in the native isoform that is correctly disrupted in a chemically modified protein, (ii) the molecular basis of ATP-sensitive tryptophan fluorescence enhancement and acrylamide quenching, (iii) an actin-binding site peptide containing the free-energy barrier to ATPase product release defining the rate limiting step and, (iv) a scenario for actin-activation of myosin ATPase.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17913331 PMCID: PMC2505346 DOI: 10.1016/j.bpc.2007.08.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys Chem ISSN: 0301-4622 Impact factor: 2.352