Spectral fluctuation of a single fluorophore conjugated to a protein molecule. (25/1004)

We have measured the fluorescence spectra of a single fluorophore attached to a single protein molecule in aqueous solution using a total internal reflection fluorescence microscope. The most reactive cysteine residue of myosin subfragment-1 (S1) was labeled with tetramethylrhodamine. The spectral shift induced by a change in solvent from aqueous buffer to methanol in both single-molecule and bulk measurements were similar, indicating that, even at the single molecule level, the fluorescence spectrum is sensitive to microenvironmental changes of fluorophores. The time dependence of the fluorescence spectra of fluorophores attached to S1 molecules solely showed a fluctuation with time over a time scale of seconds. Because the fluorescence spectra of the same fluorophores directly conjugated to a glass surface remained constant, the spectral fluctuation observed for the fluorophores attached to S1 is most likely due to slow spontaneous conformational changes in the S1 molecule. Thus, single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy appears to be a powerful tool to study the dynamic behavior of single biomolecules.  (+info)

Proteolytic cleavage of actin within the DNase-I-binding loop changes the conformation of F-actin and its sensitivity to myosin binding. (26/1004)

Effects of subtilisin cleavage of actin between residues 47 and 48 on the conformation of F-actin and on its changes occurring upon binding of myosin subfragment-1 (S1) were investigated by measuring polarized fluorescence from rhodamine-phalloidin- or 1, 5-IAEDANS-labeled actin filaments reconstructed from intact or subtilisin-cleaved actin in myosin-free muscle fibers (ghost fibers). In separate experiments, polarized fluorescence from 1, 5-IAEDANS-labeled S1 bound to non-labeled actin filaments in ghost fibers was measured. The measurements revealed differences between the filaments of cleaved and intact actin in the orientation of rhodamine probe on the rhodamine-phalloidin-labeled filaments, orientation and mobility of the C-terminus of actin, filament flexibility, and orientation and mobility of the myosin heads bound to F-actin. The changes in the filament flexibility and orientation of the actin-bound fluorophores produced by S1 binding to actin in the absence of ATP were substantially diminished by subtilisin cleavage of actin. The results suggest that loop 38-52 plays an important role, not only in maintaining the F-actin structure, but also in the conformational transitions in actin accompanying the strong binding of the myosin heads that may be essential for the generation of force and movement during actin-myosin interaction.  (+info)

Kinetics of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin with one thiophosphorylated head. (27/1004)

Actin-activated MgATPase of smooth muscle heavy meromyosin is activated by thiophosphorylation of two regulatory light chains, one on each head domain. To understand cooperativity between heads, we examined the kinetics of heavy meromyosin (HMM) with one thiophosphorylated head. Proteolytic gizzard heavy meromyosin regulatory light chains were partially exchanged with recombinant thiophosphorylated His-tagged light chains, and HMM with one thiophosphorylated head was isolated by nickel-affinity chromatography. In vitro motility was observed. By steady-state kinetic analysis, one-head thiophosphorylated heavy meromyosin had a similar K(m) value for actin but a V(max) value of approximately 50% of the fully thiophosphorylated molecule. However, single turnover analysis, which is not sensitive to small amounts of active heads, showed that one-head thiophosphorylated heavy meromyosin was 46-120 times more active than unphosphorylated HMM but only 7-19% as active as the fully thiophosphorylated molecule. Discrepancy between the single turnover and steady-state values could be explained by a small fraction of rigor heads. These rigor heads would have a large effect on the steady-state kinetics of one-head thiophosphorylated HMM. In summary, thiophosphorylation of one head leads to a molecule with unique intermediate kinetics suggesting that thiophosphorylation of one head cooperatively alters the kinetics of the partner head and vice versa.  (+info)

Comparative single-molecule and ensemble myosin enzymology: sulfoindocyanine ATP and ADP derivatives. (28/1004)

Single-molecule and macroscopic reactions of fluorescent nucleotides with myosin have been compared. The single-molecule studies serve as paradigms for enzyme-catalyzed reactions and ligand-receptor interactions analyzed as individual stochastic processes. Fluorescent nucleotides, called Cy3-EDA-ATP and Cy5-EDA-ATP, were derived by coupling the dyes Cy3.29.OH and Cy5.29.OH (compounds XI and XIV, respectively, in, Bioconjug. Chem. 4:105-111)) with 2'(3')-O-[N-(2-aminoethyl)carbamoyl]ATP (EDA-ATP). The ATP(ADP) analogs were separated into their respective 2'- and 3'-O-isomers, the interconversion rate of which was 30[OH(-)] s(-1) (0.016 h(-1) at pH 7.1) at 22 degrees C. Macroscopic studies showed that 2'(3')-O-substituted nucleotides had properties similar to those of ATP and ADP in their interactions with myosin, actomyosin, and muscle fibers, although the ATP analogs did not relax muscle as well as ATP did. Significant differences in the fluorescence intensity of Cy3-nucleotide 2'- and 3'-O-isomers in free solution and when they interacted with myosin were evident. Single-molecule studies using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy showed that reciprocal mean lifetimes of the nucleotide analogs interacting with myosin filaments were one- to severalfold greater than predicted from macroscopic data. Kinetic and equilibrium data of nucleotide-(acto)myosin interactions derived from single-molecule microscopy now have a biochemical and physiological framework. This is important for single-molecule mechanical studies of motor proteins.  (+info)

Actin and temperature effects on the cross-linking of the SH1-SH2 helix in myosin subfragment 1. (29/1004)

Past biochemical work on myosin subfragment 1 (S1) has shown that the bent alpha-helix containing the reactive thiols SH1 (Cys(707)) and SH2 (Cys(697)) changes upon nucleotide and actin binding. In this study, we investigated the conformational dynamics of the SH1-SH2 helix in two actin-bound states of myosin and examined the effect of temperature on this helix, using five cross-linking reagents that are 5-15 A in length. Actin inhibited the cross-linking of SH1 to SH2 on both S1 and S1.MgADP for all of the reagents. Because the rate of SH2 modification was not altered by actin, the inhibition of cross-linking must result from a strong stabilization of the SH1-SH2 helix in the actin-bound states of S1. The dynamics of the helix is also influenced by temperature. At 25 degrees C, the rate constants for cross-linking in S1 alone are low, with values of approximately 0.010 min(-1) for all of the reagents. At 4 degrees C, the rate constants, except for the shortest reagent, range between 0.030 and 0.070 min(-1). The rate constants for SH2 modification in SH1-modified S1 show the opposite trend; they increase with the increases in temperature. The greater cross-linking at the lower temperature indicates destabilization of the SH1-SH2 helix at 4 degrees C. These results are discussed in terms of conformational dynamics of the SH1-SH2 helix.  (+info)

Interaction of myosin with F-actin: time-dependent changes at the interface are not slow. (30/1004)

The kinetics of formation of the actin-myosin complex have been reinvestigated on the minute and second time scales in sedimentation and chemical cross-linking experiments. With the sedimentation method, we found that the binding of the skeletal muscle myosin motor domain (S1) to actin filament always saturates at one S1 bound to one actin monomer (or two S1 per actin dimer), whether S1 was added slowly (17 min between additions) or rapidly (10 s between additions) to an excess of F-actin. The carbodiimide (1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide, EDC)-induced cross-linking of the actin-S1 complex was performed on the subsecond time scale by a new approach that combines a two-step cross-linking protocol with the rapid flow-quench technique. The results showed that the time courses of S1 cross-linking to either of the two actin monomers are identical: they are not dependent on the actin/S1 ratio in the 0.3-20-s time range. The overall data rule out a mechanism by which myosin rolls from one to the other actin monomer on the second or minute time scales. Rather, they suggest that more subtle changes occur at the actomyosin interface during the ATP cycle.  (+info)

Influence of ADP on cross-bridge-dependent activation of myofibrillar thin filaments. (31/1004)

Contraction of skeletal muscle is regulated by calcium at the level of the thin filament via troponin and tropomyosin. Studies have indicated that strong cross-bridge binding is also involved in activation of the thin filament. To further test this, myofibrils were incubated with a wide range of fluorescent myosin subfragment 1(fS1) at pCa 9 or pCa 4 with or without ADP. Sarcomere fluorescence intensity and the fluorescence intensity ratio (non-overlap region/overlap region) were measured to determine the amount and location of bound fS1 in the myofibril. There was lower sarcomere fluorescence intensity with ADP compared to without ADP for both calcium levels. Similar data were obtained from biochemical measures of bound fS1, validating the fluorescence microscopy measurements. The intensity ratio, which is related to activation of the thin filament, increased with increasing [fS1] with or without ADP. At pCa 9, the fluorescence intensity ratio was constant until 80-160 nM fS1 without ADP conditions, then it went up dramatically and finally attained saturation. The dramatic shift of the ratio demonstrated the cooperative character of strong cross-bridge binding, and this was not observed at high calcium. A similar pattern was observed with ADP in that the ratio was right-shifted with respect to total [fS1]. Saturation was obtained with both the fluorescence intensity and ratio data. Plots of intensity ratio as a function of normalized sarcomere intensity (bound fS1) showed little difference between with and without ADP. This suggests that the amount of strongly bound fS1, not fS1 state (with or without ADP) is related to activation of the thin filament.  (+info)

Temperature change does not affect force between single actin filaments and HMM from rabbit muscles. (32/1004)

The temperature dependence of sliding force, velocity, and unbinding force was studied on actin filaments when they were placed on heavy meromyosin (HMM) attached to a glass surface. A fluorescently labeled actin filament was attached to the gelsolin-coated surface of a 1-microm polystyrene bead. The bead was trapped by optical tweezers, and HMM-actin interaction was performed at 20-35 degrees C to examine whether force is altered by the temperature change. Our experiments demonstrate that sliding force increased moderately with temperature (Q(10) = 1.6 +/- 0.2, +/-SEM, n = 9), whereas the velocity increased significantly (Q(10) = 2.9 +/- 0.4, n = 10). The moderate increase in force is caused by the increased number of available cross-bridges for actin interaction, because the cross-bridge number similarly increased with temperature (Q(10) = 1. 5 +/- 0.2, n = 3) when measured during rigor induction. We further found that unbinding force measured during the rigor condition did not differ with temperature. These results indicate that the amount of force each cross-bridge generates is fixed, and it does not change with temperature. We found that the above generalization was not modified in the presence of 1 mM MgADP or 8 mM phosphate.  (+info)