Location of the sites of reaction of N-ethylmaleimide in papain and chymotryptic fragments of the gizzard myosin heavy chain
- 7 October 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 25 (20) , 6169-6176
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00368a051
Abstract
The thiol of the gizzard myosin heavy chain, which reacts most rapidly with N-ethylmaleimide (MalNEt), has been located in the subfragment 2 region of myosin rod by fragmentation of [14C]-Ma1NEt-labeled myosin with papain and chymotrypsin. MalNEt reacts more slowly with thiols present in the 70- and 25-kilodalton (kDa) papain fragments of subfragment 1. The reaction of MalNEt with thiols present in these regions is increased on addition of ATP by factors of 2 and 10, respectively, when myosin is modified in 0.45 M NaCl where it is present in the extended, 6S conformation. The rate of increase of Mg2+-activated adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) activity which reflects the loss of ability of myosin to assume the folded, 10S conformation, and the rate of loss of K+-EDTA-activated activity produced by MalNEt are both accelerated 5- to 10-fold on addition of ATP. The rates at which ATPase activities change agree closely to the reaction rates of MalNEt with the 25-kDa region of subfragment 1; therefore, the changes in these activities can be attributed to modification of a thiol of the 25-kDa segment. An increase in actin-activated ATPase activity produced by reaction of myosin with MalNEt in 0.45 M NaCl is accelerated by ATP by a factor of at least 4. Reaction with [14C]MalNEt in the presence of MgATP and 0.2 M NaCl, where myosin is in the 10S form, inhibits the incorporation of radioactive MalNEt into the 25-kDa papain fragment of subfragment 1. It also prevents the increase in actin-activated ATPase activity and preserves the ability of myosin to assume the 10S form.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cross-linking of myosin subfragment 1. Nucleotide-enhanced modification by a variety of bifunctional reagents.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1980
- Chymotryptic heavy meromyosin from gizzard myosin: A proteolytic fragment with the regulatory properties of the intact myosinBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1978