| Characterization of the myosin adenosine triphosphate (M.ATP) crossbridge in rabbit and frog skeletal muscle fibers Biophysical Journal, Volume 54, Issue 1, 1 July 1988, Pages 135-148 M. Schoenberg Abstract In the presence of ATP and absence of Ca2+, muscle crossbridges have either MgATP or MgADP.Pi bound at the active site (S. B. Marston and R. T. Tregear, Nature [Lond.], 235:22:1972). The behavior of these myosin adenosine triphosphate (M.ATP) crossbridges, both in relaxed skinned rabbit psoas and frog semitendinosus fibers, was analyzed. At very low ionic strength, T = 5 degrees C, mu = 20 mM, these crossbridges spend a large fraction of the time attached to actin. In rabbit, the attachment rate constants at low salt are 10(4) - 10(5) s-1, and the detachment rate constants are approximately 10(4) s-1. When ionic strength is increased up to physiological values by addition of 140 mM potassium propionate, the major effect is a weakening of the crossbridge binding constant approximately 30–40-fold. This effect occurs because of a large decrease, approximately 100-fold, in the crossbridge attachment rate constants. The detachment rate constants decrease only 2–3-fold. The effect of ionic strength on crossbridge binding in the fiber is very similar to the effect of ionic strength on the binding of myosin subfragment-1 to unregulated actin in solution. Thus, the effect of increasing ionic strength in fibers appears to be a direct effect on crossbridge binding rather than an effect on troponin-tropomyosin. The finding that crossbridges with ATP bound at the active site can and do attach to actin over a wide range of ionic strengths strongly suggests that troponin-tropomyosin keeps a muscle relaxed by blocking a step subsequent to crossbridge attachment. Thus, rather than troponin-tropomyosin serving to keep a muscle relaxed by inhibiting attachment, it seems quite possible that the main way in which troponin-tropomyosin regulates muscle activity is by preventing the weakly-binding relaxed crossbridges from going on through the crossbridge cycle into more strongly-binding states. Abstract | PDF (1735 kb) |
| Formation of ATP-insensitive weakly-binding crossbridges in single rabbit psoas fibers by treatment with phenylmaleimide or para-phenylenedimaleimide Biophysical Journal, Volume 61, Issue 2, 1 February 1992, Pages 358-367 V.A. Barnett, A. Ehrlich and M. Schoenberg Abstract Chaen et al. (1986. J. Biol. Chem. 261:13632–13636) showed that treatment of relaxed single muscle fibers with para-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM) results in inhibition of a fiber's ability to generate active force and a diminished ATPase activity. They postulated that the inhibition of force production was due to pPDM's ability to prevent crossbridges from participating in the normal ATP hydrolysis cycle. We find that the crossbridges produced by pPDM treatment of relaxed muscle cannot bind strongly to the actin filaments in rigor, but do bind weakly to the actin filaments in the presence and also absence of ATP. After pPDM treatment, fiber stiffness, as measured using ramp stretches of varying duration, is ATP-insensitive and identical to that of untreated relaxed fibers (both at high [165 mM] and low [40 mM] ionic strength). These results suggest that the pPDM-treated crossbridges, in both the presence and absence of ATP, are locked in a state that resembles the weakly-binding myosin ATP state of normal crossbridges. Their resemblance to the ATP-crossbridges of relaxed untreated fibers is quite strong; both bind to actin about equally tightly and have similar attachment and detachment rate constants. We also found that crossbridges are locked in a weakly-binding state after treatment with N-phenylmaleimide (NPM). In muscle fibers, this method of producing weakly-binding crossbridges appears preferable to pPDM treatment because, unlike treatment with pPDM, it does not increase the fiber's resting tension and stiffness and it does not disrupt the titin band seen on SDS-PAGE. Abstract | PDF (1203 kb) |
| Structures of actomyosin crossbridges in relaxed and rigor muscle fibers Biophysical Journal, Volume 55, Issue 3, 1 March 1989, Pages 441-453 L.C. Yu and B. Brenner Abstract It was shown previously that a significant fraction of the myosin crossbridges is attached to actin in the skinned rabbit psoas fibers under relaxed conditions at low ionic strength and low temperature (Brenner, B., M. Schoenberg, J. M. Chalovich, L. E. Greene, and E. Eisenberg. 1982. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 79:7288–7291; Brenner, B., L. C. Lu, and R. J. Podolsky. 1984. Biophys. J. 46:299–306). In the present work, the structure of the attached crossbridges in the relaxed state between ionic strengths of 20 and 100 mM, as compared with that in the rigor state, is further examined by equatorial x-ray diffraction. Mass distributions projected along the fiber axis are reconstructed based on the first five equatorial reflections such that the spatial resolution is 128 A. The fraction of crossbridges attached under relaxed conditions are estimated to be in the range of 30% (at 100 mM ionic strength) and 60% (at 20 mM). The reconstructed density maps suggest that in the relaxed state, upon attachment the part of the crossbridge that centers around the thin filament is small, and the attachment does not significantly alter the center of mass of the myosin head distribution around the thick filament backbone. In contrast, accretion of mass in the rigor state occurs in a wider region surrounding the thin filament. In this case, mass in the surface region of the thick filament backbone is shifted slightly outward, probably by approximately 10 A. A schematic model for interpreting the present data is presented. Abstract | PDF (1951 kb) |
Copyright © 1987 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 51, Issue 2, 227-243, 1 February 1987
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(87)83328-3
Research Article
J. Skolnick
Local helix-coil transitions in the coiled coil portion of myosin have long been implicated as a possible origin of tension generation in muscle. From a statistical mechanical theory of conformational transitions in coiled coils, the free energy required to form a randomly coiled bubble in the hinge region of myosin of the type conjectured by Harrington (Harrington, W. F., 1979, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 76:5066–5070) is estimated to be approximately 25 kcal/mol. Unfortunately this is far more than the free energy available from ATP hydrolysis if the crossbridges operate independently. Thus, in solution such bubbles are predicted to be absent, and the theory requires that the rod portion of myosin be a hingeless, continuously deforming rod. While such bubble formation in vivo cannot be entirely ruled out, it appears to be unlikely. We further conjecture that in solution the swivel located between myosin subfragments 1 and 2 (S-2 and S-1) is due to a locally random conformation of the chains caused by the presence of a proline residue at the point that physically separates the coiled coil from the globular portion of myosin. On attachment of S-1 to actin in the strong binding state, the configurational entropy of the random coil in the swivel region is greatly reduced relative to the case where the ends are free. This produces a spontaneous coil-to-helix transition in the swivel region that causes rotation of S-1 and the translation of actin. Thus, the model predicts that the actin filaments are pushed rather than pulled past the thick filaments by the crossbridges. The specific mechanism of force generation is examined in detail, and a simple statistical mechanical realization of the model is proposed. We find that the model gives a substantial number of qualitative and at times quantitative predictions in accord with experiment, and is particularly appealing in that it provides a simple means of free energy transduction--the well known fact that topological constraints shift the equilibrium between helical and random coil states.