scholarly journals Phosphorylation by casein kinase II affects the interaction of caldesmon with smooth muscle myosin and tropomyosin

1993 ◽  
Vol 290 (2) ◽  
pp. 437-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
N V Bogatcheva ◽  
A V Vorotnikov ◽  
K G Birukov ◽  
V P Shirinsky ◽  
N B Gusev

Smooth muscle caldesmon was phosphorylated by casein kinase II, and the effects of phosphorylation on the interaction of caldesmon and its chymotryptic peptides with myosin and tropomyosin were investigated. The N-terminal chymotryptic peptide of caldesmon of molecular mass 27 kDa interacted with myosin. Phosphorylation of Ser-73 catalysed by casein kinase II resulted in a 2-fold decrease in the affinity of the native caldesmon (or its 27 kDa N-terminal peptide) for smooth muscle myosin. At low ionic strength, caldesmon and its N-terminal peptides of molecular masses 25 and 27 kDa were retarded on a column of immobilized tropomyosin. Phosphorylation of Ser-73 led to a 2-4-fold decrease in the affinity of caldesmon (or its N-terminal peptides) for tropomyosin. Thus phosphorylation of Ser-73 catalysed by casein kinase II affects the interaction of caldesmon with both smooth muscle myosin and tropomyosin.

In actomyosin extracts from smooth muscle obtained at low ionic strength, an assembly of protein into long ribbon-shaped elements is observed to take place. These ribbons which range up to about 100 nm in width and up to many micrometres in length exhibit a strong repeat period of about 5.6 nm. Optical diffraction analysis shows that they possess a long repeat of 39.1 nm ± 0.4 nm. Tropomyosin purified from vertebrate smooth muscle can be induced to form the same ribbon-shaped elements. On removal of salt from solution the ribbons dissociate into fine filaments of average diameter about 8 nm which show subfilaments of about 2 to 3 nm diameter. In crude preparations the ribbons occur in solution together with myosin. If such preparations are left to stand for several days, ribbons may be found that show a visible 14 nm period which appears to arise from the presence of a regular arrangement of projections. Smooth muscle myosin alone assembles into cylindrical filaments which exhibit a regular arrangement of projections along their entire length, indicating an absence of polarity. These results indicate, as have those recently obtained from section material, that the myosin-containing component of vertebrate smooth muscle contains a protein that forms the core of the filament, which is responsible for its ribbon-like shape and which probably determines the polarity of the attached myosin molecules. It is proposed that this protein is tropomyosin.


1978 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 827-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
RE Ostlund ◽  
JT Leung ◽  
DM Kipnis

Myosin has been purified from the principal pancreatic islet of catfish, hog salivary gland, and hog pituitary. Use of the protease inhibitor Trasylol (FBA Pharmaceuticals, New York) was essential in the isolation of pituitary myosin. Secretory tissue myosins were very similar to smooth muscle myosin, having a heavy chain of 200,000 daltons and light chains of 14,000 and 19,000 daltons. Salivary gland myosin cross-reacted with antibodies directed toward both smooth muscle myosin and fibroblast myosin, but not with antiskeletal muscel myosin serum. The specific myosin ATPase activity measured in 0.6 M KCl was present. Tissues associated with secretion of hormone granules contained substantial amounts of this ATPase, rat pancreatic islets having 4.5 times that of rat liver. Activation of low ionic strength myosin ATPase by actin could not be demonstrated despite adequate binding of the myosin to muscle actin and elution by MgATP. The myosins were located primarily in the cytoplasm as determined by cell fractionation and were quite soluble in buffers of low ionic strength.


FEBS Letters ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 431 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim S. Lau ◽  
Robert W. Grange ◽  
Wen-Jinn Chang ◽  
Kristine E. Kamm ◽  
Ingrid Sarelius ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 105 (6) ◽  
pp. 3007-3019 ◽  
Author(s):  
K M Trybus ◽  
S Lowey

Small bipolar filaments, or "minifilaments," are formed when smooth muscle myosin is dialyzed against low ionic strength pyrophosphate or citrate/Tris buffers. Unlike synthetic filaments formed at approximately physiological ionic conditions, minifilaments are homogeneous as indicated by their hypersharp boundary during sedimentation velocity. Electron microscopy and hydrodynamic techniques were used to show that 20-22S smooth muscle myosin minifilaments are 380 nm long and composed of 12-14 molecules. By varying solvents, a continuum of different size polymers in the range of 15-30S could be obtained. Skeletal muscle myosin, in contrast, preferentially forms a stable 32S minifilament (Reisler, E., P. Cheung, and N. Borochov. 1986. Biophys. J. 49:335-342), suggesting underlying differences in the assembly properties of the two myosins. Addition of salt to the smooth muscle myosin minifilaments caused unidirectional growth into a longer "side-polar" type of filament, whereas bipolar filaments were consistently formed by skeletal muscle myosin. As with synthetic filaments, addition of 1 mM MgATP caused dephosphorylated minifilaments to dissociate to a mixture of folded monomers and dimers. Phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain prevented disassembly by nucleotide, even though it had no detectable effect on the structure of the minifilament. These results suggest that differences in filament stability as a result of phosphorylation are due largely to conformational changes occurring in the myosin head, and are not due to differences in filament packing.


2002 ◽  
Vol 156 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyoungtae Kim ◽  
Thomas C.S. Keller

Smooth muscle cells use an actin–myosin II-based contractile apparatus to produce force for a variety of physiological functions, including blood pressure regulation and gut peristalsis. The organization of the smooth muscle contractile apparatus resembles that of striated skeletal and cardiac muscle, but remains much more poorly understood. We have found that avian vascular and visceral smooth muscles contain a novel, megadalton protein, smitin, that is similar to striated muscle titin in molecular morphology, localization in a contractile apparatus, and ability to interact with myosin filaments. Smitin, like titin, is a long fibrous molecule with a globular domain on one end. Specific reactivities of an anti-smitin polyclonal antibody and an anti-titin monoclonal antibody suggest that smitin and titin are distinct proteins rather than differentially spliced isoforms encoded by the same gene. Smitin immunofluorescently colocalizes with myosin in chicken gizzard smooth muscle, and interacts with two configurations of smooth muscle myosin filaments in vitro. In physiological ionic strength conditions, smitin and smooth muscle myosin coassemble into irregular aggregates containing large sidepolar myosin filaments. In low ionic strength conditions, smitin and smooth muscle myosin form highly ordered structures containing linear and polygonal end-to-end and side-by-side arrays of small bipolar myosin filaments. We have used immunogold localization and sucrose density gradient cosedimentation analyses to confirm association of smitin with both the sidepolar and bipolar smooth muscle myosin filaments. These findings suggest that the titin-like protein smitin may play a central role in organizing myosin filaments in the contractile apparatus and perhaps in other structures in smooth muscle cells.


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