Identification of functional regions on the tail of Acanthamoeba myosin-II using recombinant fusion proteins. II. Assembly properties of tails with NH2- and COOH-terminal deletions.
Open Access
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 111 (6) , 2417-2426
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.111.6.2417
Abstract
We used purified fusion proteins containing parts of the Acanthamoeba myosin-II tail to localize those regions of the tail responsible for each of the three steps in the successive dimerization mechanism (Sinard, J. H., W. F. Stafford, and T. D. Pollard. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 107:1537-1547) for Acanthamoeba myosin-II minifiliment assembly. Fusion proteins containing the terminal approximately 90% of the myosin-II tail assemble normally, but deletions within the last 100 amino acids of the tail sequence alter or prevent assembly. The first step in minifilament assembly, formation of antiparallel dimers, requires the COOH-terminal approximately 30 amino acids that are thought to form a nonhelical domain at the end of the coiled-coil. The second step, formation of antiparallel tetramers, requires the last approximately 40 residues in the coiled-coil. The final step, the association of two antiparallel tetramers to form the completed octameric minifilament, requires residues approximately 40-70 from the end of the coiled-coil. A region of the tail near the junction with the heads is important for tight packing of the tails in the minifilaments. Divalent cations induce the lateral aggregation of minifilaments formed from native myosin-II or fusion proteins containing a nonmyosin "head," but under the same conditions fusion proteins composed essentially only of myosin tail sequences with very little nonmyosin sequences form paracrystals. The region of the tail necessary for this paracrystal formation lies NH2-terminal to amino acid residue 1,468 in the native myosin-II sequence.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification of functional regions on the tail of Acanthamoeba myosin-II using recombinant fusion proteins. I. High resolution epitope mapping and characterization of monoclonal antibody binding sites.The Journal of cell biology, 1990
- Acanthamoeba myosin-II minifilaments assemble on a millisecond time scale with rate constants greater than those expected for a diffusion limited reaction.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1990
- Expression of Dictyostelium myosin tail segments in Escherichia coli: domains required for assembly and phosphorylation.The Journal of cell biology, 1990
- The mechanism of assembly of Acanthamoeba myosin-II minifilaments: minifilaments assemble by three successive dimerization steps.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- The effect of heavy chain phosphorylation and solution conditions on the assembly of Acanthamoeba myosin-II.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- Location of the head-tail junction of myosin.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- New plasmid vectors for high level synthesis of eukaryotic fusion proteins in Escherichia coliGene, 1989
- Assembly Processes in Vertebrate Skeletal Thick Filament FormationAnnual Review of Biophysics, 1988
- Expression in Escherichia coli of a functional Dictyostelium myosin tail fragment.The Journal of cell biology, 1987
- Electric birefringence study of the solution structure of chymotrypsin-cleaved Acanthamoeba myosin II.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1987