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Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head

Muscle contraction results from attachment-detachment cycles between myosin heads extending from myosin filaments and actin filaments. It is generally believed that a myosin head first attaches to actin, undergoes conformational changes to produce force and motion in muscle, and then detaches from a...

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Autores principales: Sugi, Haruo, Chaen, Shigeru, Kobayashi, Takakazu, Abe, Takahiro, Kimura, Kazushige, Saeki, Yasutake, Ohnuki, Yoshiki, Miyakawa, Takuya, Tanokura, Masaru, Sugiura, Seiryo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4053314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24918754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093272
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author Sugi, Haruo
Chaen, Shigeru
Kobayashi, Takakazu
Abe, Takahiro
Kimura, Kazushige
Saeki, Yasutake
Ohnuki, Yoshiki
Miyakawa, Takuya
Tanokura, Masaru
Sugiura, Seiryo
author_facet Sugi, Haruo
Chaen, Shigeru
Kobayashi, Takakazu
Abe, Takahiro
Kimura, Kazushige
Saeki, Yasutake
Ohnuki, Yoshiki
Miyakawa, Takuya
Tanokura, Masaru
Sugiura, Seiryo
author_sort Sugi, Haruo
collection PubMed
description Muscle contraction results from attachment-detachment cycles between myosin heads extending from myosin filaments and actin filaments. It is generally believed that a myosin head first attaches to actin, undergoes conformational changes to produce force and motion in muscle, and then detaches from actin. Despite extensive studies, the molecular mechanism of myosin head conformational changes still remains to be a matter for debate and speculation. The myosin head consists of catalytic (CAD), converter (CVD) and lever arm (LD) domains. To give information about the role of these domains in the myosin head performance, we have examined the effect of three site-directed antibodies to the myosin head on in vitro ATP-dependent actin-myosin sliding and Ca(2+)-activated contraction of muscle fibers. Antibody 1, attaching to junctional peptide between 50K and 20K heavy chain segments in the CAD, exhibited appreciable effects neither on in vitro actin-myosin sliding nor muscle fiber contraction. Since antibody 1 covers actin-binding sites of the CAD, one interpretation of this result is that rigor actin-myosin linkage is absent or at most a transient intermediate in physiological actin-myosin cycling. Antibody 2, attaching to reactive lysine residue in the CVD, showed a marked inhibitory effect on in vitro actin-myosin sliding without changing actin-activated myosin head (S1) ATPase activity, while it showed no appreciable effect on muscle contraction. Antibody 3, attaching to two peptides of regulatory light chains in the LD, had no significant effect on in vitro actin-myosin sliding, while it reduced force development in muscle fibers without changing MgATPase activity. The above definite differences in the effect of antibodies 2 and 3 between in vitro actin-myosin sliding and muscle contraction can be explained by difference in experimental conditions; in the former, myosin heads are randomly oriented on a glass surface, while in the latter myosin heads are regularly arranged within filament-lattice structures.
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spelling pubmed-40533142014-06-18 Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head Sugi, Haruo Chaen, Shigeru Kobayashi, Takakazu Abe, Takahiro Kimura, Kazushige Saeki, Yasutake Ohnuki, Yoshiki Miyakawa, Takuya Tanokura, Masaru Sugiura, Seiryo PLoS One Research Article Muscle contraction results from attachment-detachment cycles between myosin heads extending from myosin filaments and actin filaments. It is generally believed that a myosin head first attaches to actin, undergoes conformational changes to produce force and motion in muscle, and then detaches from actin. Despite extensive studies, the molecular mechanism of myosin head conformational changes still remains to be a matter for debate and speculation. The myosin head consists of catalytic (CAD), converter (CVD) and lever arm (LD) domains. To give information about the role of these domains in the myosin head performance, we have examined the effect of three site-directed antibodies to the myosin head on in vitro ATP-dependent actin-myosin sliding and Ca(2+)-activated contraction of muscle fibers. Antibody 1, attaching to junctional peptide between 50K and 20K heavy chain segments in the CAD, exhibited appreciable effects neither on in vitro actin-myosin sliding nor muscle fiber contraction. Since antibody 1 covers actin-binding sites of the CAD, one interpretation of this result is that rigor actin-myosin linkage is absent or at most a transient intermediate in physiological actin-myosin cycling. Antibody 2, attaching to reactive lysine residue in the CVD, showed a marked inhibitory effect on in vitro actin-myosin sliding without changing actin-activated myosin head (S1) ATPase activity, while it showed no appreciable effect on muscle contraction. Antibody 3, attaching to two peptides of regulatory light chains in the LD, had no significant effect on in vitro actin-myosin sliding, while it reduced force development in muscle fibers without changing MgATPase activity. The above definite differences in the effect of antibodies 2 and 3 between in vitro actin-myosin sliding and muscle contraction can be explained by difference in experimental conditions; in the former, myosin heads are randomly oriented on a glass surface, while in the latter myosin heads are regularly arranged within filament-lattice structures. Public Library of Science 2014-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4053314/ /pubmed/24918754 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093272 Text en © 2014 Sugi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sugi, Haruo
Chaen, Shigeru
Kobayashi, Takakazu
Abe, Takahiro
Kimura, Kazushige
Saeki, Yasutake
Ohnuki, Yoshiki
Miyakawa, Takuya
Tanokura, Masaru
Sugiura, Seiryo
Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head
title Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head
title_full Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head
title_fullStr Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head
title_full_unstemmed Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head
title_short Definite Differences between In Vitro Actin-Myosin Sliding and Muscle Contraction as Revealed Using Antibodies to Myosin Head
title_sort definite differences between in vitro actin-myosin sliding and muscle contraction as revealed using antibodies to myosin head
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4053314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24918754
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093272
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