Abstracts
AU Zoghbi, ME, Woodhead, JL, Craig, R, Padron, R
TI Helical order in tarantula thick filaments requires the "closed"
conformation of the myosin head
SO JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
DE striated muscle; myosin filaments; helical order; ATP analogs; temperature
ID X-RAY-DIFFRACTION; VERTEBRATE STRIATED-MUSCLE; INSECT FLIGHT-MUSCLE; MOTOR
DOMAIN; SKELETAL-MUSCLE; CROSS-BRIDGES; FISH MUSCLE; ADENOSINE-TRIPHOSPHATE;
ELECTRON-MICROSCOPY; STRUCTURAL-CHANGES
AB Myosin heads are helically ordered on the thick filament surface in relaxed
muscle. In mammalian and avian filaments this helical arrangement is dependent
on temperature and it has been suggested that helical order is related to ATP
hydrolysis by the heads. To test this hypothesis, we have used electron microscopy
and image analysis to study the ability and temperature dependence of analogs
of ATP and ADP.Pi to induce helical order in tarantula thick filaments. ATP
or
analogs were added to rigor myofibrils or purified thick filaments at 22 degreesC
and 4 degreesC and the samples negatively stained. The ADP.Pi analogs ADP.AlF4
and ADP.Vi, and the ATP analogs ADP.BeFx, AMPPNP and ATPgammaNH(2), all induced
helical order in tarantula thick filaments, independent of temperature. In the
absence of nucleotide, or in the presence of ADP or the ATP analog, ATPgammaS,
there was no helical ordering. According to crystallographic and tryptophan
fluorescence studies, all of these analogs, except ATPgammaS and ADP, induce
the "closed" conformation of the myosin head (in which the gamma phosphate
pocket is closed). We suggest that helical order requires the closed conformation
of the myosin head but is not dependent on the hydrolysis of ATP. (C) 2004 Elsevier
Ltd. All rights reserved.
TC 0
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
PD SEP 24
PY 2004
VL 342
IS 4
BP 1223
EP 1236
PG 14
UT ISI:000224005500013
AU Luther, PK, Padron, R, Ritter, S, Craig, R, Squire, JM
TI Heterogeneity of Z-band structure within a single muscle sarcomere: Implications
for sarcomere assembly
SO JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
DE Z-line; Z-disc; fibre types; actin filament length; vertebrate muscle structure
ID ALPHA-ACTININ BINDING; VERTEBRATE Z-DISCS; 3-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE; SKELETAL-MUSCLE;
STRIATED-MUSCLE; Z-LINE; FILAMENT LENGTH; FINE-STRUCTURE; Z-DISKS; TITIN
AB The vertebrate striated muscle Z-band connects actin filaments of opposite
polarity from adjacent sarcomeres and allows tension to be transmitted along
a myofibril during contraction. Z-bands in different muscles have a modular
structure formed by layers of alpha-actinin molecules cross-linking actin filaments.
Successive layers occur at 19 nm intervals and have 90 rotations between them.
3D reconstruction from electron micrographs show a two-layer "simple"
Z-band in fish body fast muscle, a three-layer Z-band in fish fin fast muscle,
and a six-layer Z-band in mammalian slow muscle. Related to the number of these
layers, longitudinal sections of the Z-band show a number of zigzag connections
between the oppositely oriented actin filaments. The number of layers also determines
the axial width of the Z-band, which is a useful indicator of fibre type; fast
fibres have narrow (similar to 30-50 nm) Z-bands; slow and cardiac fibres have
wide (similar to100-140 nm) Z-bands. Here, we report the first observation of
two different Z-band widths within a single sarcomere. By comparison with previous
studies, the narrower Z-band comprises three layers. Since the increase in width
of the wider Z-band is about 19 nm, we conclude that it comprises four layers.
This finding is consistent with a Z-band assembly model involving molecular
control mechanisms that can add additional layers of 19 nm periodicity. These
multiple Z-band structures suggest that different isoforms of nebulin and titin
with a variable number of Z-repeats could be present within a single sarcomere.
(C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
TC 1
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
PD SEP 5
PY 2003
VL 332
IS 1
BP 161
EP 169
PG 9
UT ISI:000185034400014
AU Hidalgo, C, Craig, R, Ikebe, M, Padron, R
TI Mechanism of phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain of myosin from
tarantula striated muscle
SO JOURNAL OF MUSCLE RESEARCH AND CELL MOTILITY
ID SMOOTH-MUSCLE; THICK FILAMENTS; SKELETAL-MUSCLE; PROTEIN-KINASE; CONTRACTION;
FIBERS; CELLS; DEPHOSPHORYLATION; ARRANGEMENT; PHOSPHATASE
AB Contraction is modulated in many striated muscles by Ca2+-calmodulin dependent
phosphorylation of the myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) by myosin light chain
kinase. We have investigated the biochemical mechanism of RLC phosphorylation
in tarantula muscle to better understand the basis of myosin-linked regulation.
In an earlier study
it was concluded that the RLC occurred as two species, both of which could be
phosphorylated, potentiating contraction. Here we present evidence that only
a single species exists, and that this can be phosphorylated at one or two sites.
In relaxed muscle we find evidence for a substantial level of basal phosphorylation
at the first site. This is augmented on activation, followed by partial phosphorylation
of the second site. We find in addition that Ca2+ has a dual effect on light
chain phosphorylation, depending on its concentration. At low concentration
(relaxing conditions) only basal phosphorylation is observed, while at higher
concentrations (activating conditions) RLC phosphorylation is stimulated. At
still higher Ca2+ concentrations we find partial inhibition of RLC phosphorylation,
suggesting an additional mechanism by which the muscle cell can fine tune contractile
activity by controlling the level of free Ca2+.
TC 2
PU KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL
PI DORDRECHT
PA SPUIBOULEVARD 50, PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
PD JAN
PY 2001
VL 22
IS 1
BP 51
EP 59
PG 9
UT ISI:000169514000003
AU Offer, G, Knight, PJ, Burgess, SA, Alamo, L, Padron, R
TI A new model for the surface arrangement of myosin molecules in tarantula
thick filaments
SO JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
DE myosin; thick filament; cross-bridges; three-dimensional reconstruction;
muscle
ID CHANGES ACCOMPANYING PHOSPHORYLATION; OPTICAL DIFFRACTION ANALYSIS; SMOOTH-MUSCLE
MYOSIN; X-RAY-SCATTERING; SCALLOP MYOSIN; 3-DIMENSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION; STRUCTURAL-CHANGES;
REGULATORY DOMAIN; SCORPION MUSCLE; SKELETAL-MUSCLE
AB Three-dimensional reconstructions of the negatively stained thick filaments
of tarantula muscle with a resolution of 50 Angstrom have previously suggested
that the helical tracks of myosin heads are zigzagged, short diagonal ridges
being connected by nearly axial links. However, surface views of lower contour
levels reveal an additional J-shaped feature approximately the size and shape
of a myosin head. We have modelled the surface array of myosin heads on the
filaments
using as a building block a model of a two-headed regulated myosin molecule
in which the regulatory light chains of the two heads together form a compact
head-tail junction. Four parameters defining the radius, orientation and rotation
of each myosin molecule were varied. In addition, the heads were allowed independently
to bend in a plane perpendicular to the coiled-coil tail at three sites, and
to tilt with respect to the tail and to twist at one of these sites. After low-pass
filtering, models were aligned with the reconstruction, scored by cross-correlation
and refined by simulated annealing. Comparison of the geometry of the reconstruction
and the distance between domains in the myosin molecule narrowed the choice
of models to two main classes. A good match to the reconstruction was obtained
with a model in which each ridge is formed from the motor domain of a head pointing
to the bare zone together with the head-tail junction of a neighbouring molecule.
The heads pointing to the Z-disc intermittently occupy the J-position. Each
motor domain interacts with the essential and regulatory light chains of the
neighbouring heads. A near-radial spoke in the reconstruction connecting the
backbone to one end of the
ridge can be identified as the start of the coiled-coil tail. (C) 2000 Academic
Press.
TC 7
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
PD APR 28
PY 2000
VL 298
IS 2
BP 239
EP 260
PG 22
UT ISI:000086831200006
AU Padron, R, Alamo, L, Murgich, J, Craig, R
TI Towards an atomic model of the thick filaments of muscle
SO JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
DE muscle; thick filaments; myosin; structure; electron microscopy
ID DICTYOSTELIUM-DISCOIDEUM MYOSIN; X-RAY STRUCTURE; TARANTULA MUSCLE; SCALLOP
MYOSIN; 3-DIMENSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION; CONFORMATIONAL-CHANGES; ANGSTROM RESOLUTION;
STRIATED-MUSCLE; ACTIN FILAMENT; GENERAL MODEL
AB The thick filaments of muscle and non-muscle cells are polymers of myosin
molecules whose energy-transducing heads lie on the filament surface, where
they interact with actin to generate force. A key structural question is how
the myosin heads are arranged in the relaxed state, and how this arrangement
changes on activation of contraction. We have fitted the atomic structure of
the myosin head to the three-dimensional structure of myosin filaments of tarantula
muscle determined by electron microscopy to produce a near-atomic model of the
head arrangement. A good fit is obtained only when the two heads from a myosin
molecule run along the helical tracks antiparallel to each other. Oppositely
oriented heads from axially adjacent molecules in a helix interact with each
other, with their nucleotide-binding pockets opposed. This arrangement, supported
also by crosslinking evidence, suggests a simple mechanism for the stabilization
of myosin head helices in relaxed muscle via the formation of intermolecular
"dimers" of heads from axially adjacent myosin molecules. (C) 1998
Academic
Press Limited.
TC 9
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
PD JAN 9
PY 1998
VL 275
IS 1
BP 35
EP 41
PG 7
UT ISI:000071392800005
AU Mateu, L, Moran, O, Padron, R, Borgo, M, Vonasek, E, Marquez, G, Luzzati,
V
TI The action of local anesthetics on myelin structure and nerve conduction
in toad sciatic nerve
SO BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
ID ORDER-DISORDER PHENOMENA; OPTIC NERVES; MEMBRANE; SHEATHS; RESOLUTION; MECHANISMS;
MODEL
AB X-ray scattering and electrophysiological experiments were performed on toad
sciatic nerves in the presence of local anesthetics. In vitro experiments were
performed on dissected nerves superfused with Ringer's solutions containing
procaine, lidocaine, tetracaine, or dibucaine. In vivo experiments were performed
on nerves dissected from animals
anesthesized by targeted injections of tetracaine-containing solutions. In all
cases the anesthetics were found to have the same effects on the x-ray scattering
spectra: the intensity ratio of the even-order to the odd-order reflections
increases and the lattice parameter increases. These changes are reversible
upon removal of the anesthetic. The magnitude of the structural changes varies
with the duration of the superfusion and with the nature and concentration of
the anesthetic molecule. A striking quantitative correlation was observed between
the structural effects and the potency of the anesthetic, Electron density profiles,
which hardly showed any structural alteration of the unit membrane, clearly
indicated that the anesthetics have the effect of moving the pairs of membranes
apart by increasing the thickness of the cytoplasmic space. Electrophysiological
measurements performed on the very samples used in the x-ray scattering experiments
showed that the
amplitude of the compound action potential is affected earlier than the structure
of myelin (as revealed by the x-ray scattering experiments), whereas conduction
velocity closely follows the structural alterations.
TC 3
PU BIOPHYSICAL SOCIETY
PI BETHESDA
PA 9650 ROCKVILLE PIKE, BETHESDA, MD 20814-3998
PD JUN
PY 1997
VL 72
IS 6
BP 2581
EP 2587
PG 7
UT ISI:A1997XA63600018
AU SanBlas, G, Padron, R, Alamo, L, SanBlas, F
TI Use of morphology index histograms to quantify populations of the fungal
pathogen Paracoccidioides brasiliensis
SO MICROBIOLOGY-UK
DE Paracoccidioides brasiliensis; morphology index; dimorphism; morphogenesis
ID CELL; MUTANTS; GROWTH
AB To quantify the dimorphic process in wild and mutant strains of Paracoccidioides
brasiliensis, we defined a morphology index (Mi) in terms of the maximum cell
length (I), maximum cell diameter (d), and septal diameter (s), according to
the equation Mi = 2 . 13 + 13 . log(10)(ls/d(2)), whose intercept and slope
were such that Mi was around 1 for yeast (spherical) cells or 4 for hyphal (elongated)
cells. This discriminatory power was used to quantify morphological population
mixtures through Mi histograms. During the temperature-induced dimorphic transition
(either way). mean Mi (<(Mi)over bar>) varied
linearly with time, suggesting a continuity in the process. Also, in wild strains
and mutants thereof we found an inverse relationship between <(Mi)over bar>
and content of both cell wall chitin and 1.3-alpha-glucan.
TC 2
PU SOC GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY
PI READING
PA MARLBOROUGH HOUSE, BASINGSTOKE RD, SPENCERS WOODS, READING, BERKS,
ENGLAND RG7 1AE
PD JAN
PY 1997
VL 143
PN Part 1
BP 197
EP 202
PG 6
UT ISI:A1997WE41100024
AU Padron, R, Alamo, L, Guerrero, JR, Granados, M, Uman, P, Craig, R
TI Three-dimensional reconstruction of thick filaments from rapidly frozen,
freeze-substituted tarantula muscle
SO JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
ID CHANGES ACCOMPANYING PHOSPHORYLATION; VERTEBRATE STRIATED-MUSCLE; INSECT
FLIGHT-MUSCLE; X-RAY-DIFFRACTION; ELECTRON-MICROSCOPY; MYOSIN-FILAMENTS; SKELETAL-MUSCLE;
ARRANGEMENT; HEADS; LIMULUS
AB We have applied three-dimensional helical reconstruction techniques to images
of myosin filaments of tarantula leg muscle obtained from rapidly frozen, freeze-substituted
specimens. Computed Fourier transforms of filaments selected from longitudinal
sections show up to six layer lines indexing on the 43.5-nm helical repeat of
myosin crossbridges. The three-dimensional reconstruction, performed after separation
of overlapped Bessel functions, shows four continuous strands of density on
the surface of the filament, modulated by density at 14.5-nm intervals, corresponding
to the myosin heads aligned
approximately along the helical strands. In transverse view, the reconstruction
shows four projections and is similar in profile to myosin filaments seen in
thin transverse sections of rapidly frozen muscle. The reconstruction is similar
to that of negatively stained, isolated tarantula filaments except that in the
latter there is an additional modulation of the helix density, which better
resolves the two heads of each myosin crossbridge. Thus, the general arrangement
of the myosin heads in the freeze-substituted specimens is preserved, although
finer details of structure such as individual myosin heads are lost. (C) 1995
Academic Press, Inc.
TC 6
PU ACADEMIC PRESS INC JNL-COMP SUBSCRIPTIONS
PI SAN DIEGO
PA 525 B ST, STE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495
PD NOV-DEC
PY 1995
VL 115
IS 3
BP 250
EP 257
PG 8
UT ISI:A1995TM54800004
AU PADRON, R, PANTE, N, SOSA, H, KENDRICKJONES, J
TI X-RAY-DIFFRACTION STUDY OF THE STRUCTURAL-CHANGES ACCOMPANYING PHOSPHORYLATION
OF TARANTULA MUSCLE
SO JOURNAL OF MUSCLE RESEARCH AND CELL MOTILITY
ID ACTIN-MYOSIN INTERACTION; LIMULUS THICK FILAMENTS; LIGHT-CHAIN; STRIATED-MUSCLE;
GIZZARD MYOSIN; ACTIVATION; ARRANGEMENT; SCALLOP; PATTERN; KINASE
AB Electron microscopy of negatively stained isolated thick filaments of tarantula
muscle has revealed that phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains is
accompanied by a loss of the helical order of myosin heads. From equatorial
X-ray diffraction patterns of tarantula muscles in the phosphorylated state
we have detected a mass movement in the myosin filaments that supports this
finding.
TC 11
PU CHAPMAN HALL LTD
PI LONDON
PA 2-6 BOUNDARY ROW, LONDON, ENGLAND SE1 8HN
PD JUN
PY 1991
VL 12
IS 3
BP 235
EP 241
PG 7
UT ISI:A1991FN32900003