Tropomyosin-Troponin Regulation of Actin Does Not Involve Subdomain 2 Motions

Jack H. Gerson, Eldar Kim, Andras Muhlrad, Emil Reisler*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dynamic properties of F-actin structure prompted suggestions (Squire, J. M., and Morris, E. P. (1998) FASEB J. 12, 761-771) that actin subdomain 2 movements play a role in thin-filament regulation. Using fluorescently labeled yeast actin mutants Q41C, Q41C/C374S, and D51C/C374S and azidonitrophenyl putrescine (ANP) Gln41-labeled α-actin, we monitored regulation-linked changes in subdomain 2. These actins had fully regulated acto-S1 ATPase activities, and emission spectra of regulated Q41C AEDANS/C374S and D51CAEDANS/C374S filaments did not reveal any calcium-dependent changes. Fluorescence energy transfer in these F-actins mostly occurred from Trp340 and Trp356 to 5-(2((acetyl)amino)ethyl)amino-naphthalene-1-sulfonate (AEDANS)-labeled Cys 41 or Cys51 of adjacent same strand protomers. Our results show that fluorescence energy transfer between these residues is similar in the mostly blocked (-Ca2+) and closed (+Ca2+) states. Ca2+ also had no effect on the excimer band in the pyrene-labeled Q41C-regulated actin, indicating virtually no change in the overlap of pyrenes on Cys41 and Cys374. ANP quenching of rhodamine phalloidin fluorescence showed that neither Ca2+ nor S1 binding to regulated α-actin affects the phalloidin-probe distance. Taken together, our results indicate that transitions between the blocked, closed, and open regulatory states involve no significant subdomain 2 movements, and, since the cross-linked α-actin remains fully regulated, that subdomain 2 motions are not essential for actin regulation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)18442-18449
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume276
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 Jan 2001

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