Literature DB >> 2953902

Pig platelet tropomyosin: interactions with the other thin-filament proteins.

G Pruliere, S D Fuller, A G Weeds, A d'Albis, E der Terrossian.   

Abstract

Pig platelet tropomyosin exhibits many of the functional activities of skeletal tropomyosin. At low ionic strength it forms end-to-end aggregates similar to those formed by skeletal tropomyosins. It forms a 1:1 complex with muscle troponin or with a troponin I-pig brain calmodulin complex, as well as a 1:6 association with platelet filamentous actin. Electron microscopy of paracrystals shows that the troponin binding site is slightly C-terminal of the unique cysteine, corresponding to position 190 of the rabbit skeletal alpha-tropomyosin sequence. The effect of a complex comprising platelet actin and tropomyosin on the ATPase activity of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 was similar to that displayed by its skeletal muscle counterpart. Platelet tropomyosin decreased the activity by roughly half in a calcium-independent manner. Addition of troponin to the actin-tropomyosin in the absence of calcium results in further inhibition and allows the full activity of the complex to be restored by Ca2+. These results differ from those obtained by Côté & Smillie for horse platelet tropomyosin and this may reflect the different isomeric nature of pig platelet tropomyosin. These results suggest that the functional properties of non-muscle tropomyosins may differ when comparisons are made between proteins isolated from the same type of cell but in different species. Differences in self-association and actin-binding properties may be finely graded between different isoforms.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 2953902     DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(86)90031-8

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


  2 in total

1.  Tropomodulin: a cytoskeletal protein that binds to the end of erythrocyte tropomyosin and inhibits tropomyosin binding to actin.

Authors:  V M Fowler
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  1990-08       Impact factor: 10.539

2.  Evolutionarily conserved sites in yeast tropomyosin function in cell polarity, transport and contractile ring formation.

Authors:  Susanne Cranz-Mileva; Brittany MacTaggart; Jacquelyn Russell; Sarah E Hitchcock-DeGregori
Journal:  Biol Open       Date:  2015-07-17       Impact factor: 2.422

  2 in total

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