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Abstract
By interacting with the troponin-tropomyosin complex on myofibrillar thin filaments, Ca2+ and myosin govern the regulatory switching processes influencing contractile activity of mammalian cardiac and skeletal muscles. A possible explanation of the roles played by Ca2+ and myosin emerged in the early 1970s when a compelling "steric model" began to gain traction as a likely mechanism accounting for muscle regulation. In its most simple form, the model holds that, under the control of Ca2+ binding to troponin and myosin binding to actin, tropomyosin strands running along thin filaments either block myosin-binding sites on actin when muscles are relaxed or move away from them when muscles are activated. Evidence for the steric model was initially based on interpretation of subtle changes observed in X-ray fiber diffraction patterns of intact skeletal muscle preparations. Over the past 25 years, electron microscopy coupled with three-dimensional reconstruction directly resolved thin filament organization under many experimental conditions and at increasingly higher resolution. At low-Ca2+, tropomyosin was shown to occupy a "blocked-state" position on the filament, and switched-on in a two-step process, involving first a movement of tropomyosin away from the majority of the myosin-binding site as Ca2+ binds to troponin and then a further movement to fully expose the site when small numbers of myosin heads bind to actin. In this contribution, basic information on Ca2+-regulation of muscle contraction is provided. A description is then given relating the voyage of discovery taken to arrive at the present understanding of the steric regulatory model.
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2
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Abstract
The ability of cells to sense and respond to physiological forces relies on the actin cytoskeleton, a dynamic structure that can directly convert forces into biochemical signals. Because of the association of muscle actin-binding proteins (ABPs) may affect F-actin and hence cytoskeleton mechanics, we investigated the effects of several ABPs on the mechanical properties of the actin filaments. The structural interactions between ABPs and helical actin filaments can vary between interstrand interactions that bridge azimuthally adjacent actin monomers between filament strands (i.e. by molecular stapling as proposed for caldesmon) or, intrastrand interactions that reinforce axially adjacent actin monomers along strands (i.e. as in the interaction of tropomyosin with actin). Here, we analyzed thermally driven fluctuations in actin's shape to measure the flexural rigidity of actin filaments with different ABPs bound. We show that the binding of phalloidin increases the persistence length of actin by 1.9-fold. Similarly, the intrastrand reinforcement by smooth and skeletal muscle tropomyosins increases the persistence length 1.5- and 2- fold respectively. We also show that the interstrand crosslinking by the C-terminal actin-binding fragment of caldesmon, H32K, increases persistence length by 1.6-fold. While still remaining bound to actin, phosphorylation of H32K by ERK abolishes the molecular staple (Foster et al. 2004. J Biol Chem 279;53387-53394) and reduces filament rigidity to that of actin with no ABPs bound. Lastly, we show that the effect of binding both smooth muscle tropomyosin and H32K is not additive. The combination of structural and mechanical studies on ABP-actin interactions will help provide information about the biophysical mechanism of force transduction in cells.
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Caldesmon and the regulation of cytoskeletal functions. ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY 2008; 644:250-72. [PMID: 19209827 DOI: 10.1007/978-0-387-85766-4_19] [Citation(s) in RCA: 38] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/14/2022]
Abstract
Caldesmon (CaD) is an extraordinary actin-binding protein, because in addition to actin, it also bindsmyosin, calmodulin and tropomyosin. As a component of the smoothmuscle and nonmuscle contractile apparatus CaD inhibits the actomyosin ATPase activity and its inhibitory action is modulated by both Ca2+ and phosphorylation. The multiplicity of binding partners and diverse biochemical properties suggest CaD is a potent and versatile regulatory protein both in contractility and cell motility. However, after decades ofinvestigation in numerous laboratories, hard evidence is still lacking to unequivocally identify its in vivo functions, although indirect evidence is mounting to support an important role in connection with the actin cytoskeleton. This chapter reviews the highlights of the past findings and summarizes the current views on this protein, with emphasis of its interaction with tropomyosin.
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Effect of Caldesmon on the Position and Myosin-induced Movement of Smooth Muscle Tropomyosin Bound to Actin. J Biol Chem 2005; 280:4135-43. [PMID: 15504719 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m410375200] [Citation(s) in RCA: 17] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/06/2022] Open
Abstract
It is known that the actin-binding protein caldesmon inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity and might in this way take part in the thin filament regulation of smooth muscle contraction. Although the molecular mechanism of this inhibition is unknown, it is clear that the presence of actin-bound tropomyosin is necessary for full inhibition. Recent evidence also suggests that the myosin-induced movement of tropomyosin plays a key role in regulation. In this work, fluorescence studies provide evidence to show that caldesmon interacts with and alters the position of tropomyosin in a reconstituted actin thin filament and thereby limits the ability of myosin heads to move tropomyosin. Caldesmon interacts with the Cys-190 region in the COOH-terminal half of tropomyosin, resulting in the movement of this part of tropomyosin to a new position on actin. Additionally, this constrains the myosin-induced movement of this region of tropomyosin. On the other hand, caldesmon does not appear to interact with the Cys-36 region in the NH2-terminal half of tropomyosin and neither alters the position of nor significantly constrains the myosin-induced movement of this part of tropomyosin. The ability of caldesmon to limit the myosin-induced movement of tropomyosin provides a possible molecular basis for the inhibitory function of caldesmon. The different movements of the two halves of tropomyosin indicate that actin-bound tropomyosin moves as a flexible molecule and not as a rigid rod. Interestingly, caldesmon, which inhibits tropomyosin's potentiation of actomyosin ATPase activity, moves tropomyosin in one direction, whereas myosin heads, which enhance potentiation, move tropomyosin in the opposite direction.
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5
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Abstract
Smooth muscle caldesmon binds actin and inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity. Phosphorylation of caldesmon by extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) reverses this inhibitory effect and weakens actin binding. To better understand this function, we have examined the phosphorylation-dependent contact sites of caldesmon on actin by low dose electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction of actin filaments decorated with a C-terminal fragment, hH32K, of human caldesmon containing the principal actin-binding domains. Helical reconstruction of negatively stained filaments demonstrated that hH32K is located on the inner portion of actin subdomain 1, traversing its upper surface toward the C-terminal segment of actin, and forms a bridge to the neighboring actin monomer of the adjacent long pitch helical strand by connecting to its subdomain 3. Such lateral binding was supported by cross-linking experiments using a mutant isoform, which was capable of cross-linking actin subunits. Upon ERK phosphorylation, however, the mutant no longer cross-linked actin to polymers. Three-dimensional reconstruction of ERK-phosphorylated hH32K indeed indicated loss of the interstrand connectivity. These results, together with fluorescence quenching data, are consistent with a phosphorylation-dependent conformational change that moves the C-terminal end segment of caldesmon near the phosphorylation site but not the upstream region around Cys(595), away from F-actin, thus neutralizing its inhibitory effect on actomyosin interactions. The binding pattern of hH32K suggests a mechanism by which unphosphorylated, but not ERK-phosphorylated, caldesmon could stabilize actin filaments and resist F-actin severing or depolymerization in both smooth muscle and nonmuscle cells.
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Influence of ionic strength, actin state, and caldesmon construct size on the number of actin monomers in a caldesmon binding site. Biochemistry 2003; 42:6136-48. [PMID: 12755616 DOI: 10.1021/bi0274017] [Citation(s) in RCA: 13] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
There is no consensus on the mechanism of inhibition of actin-myosin ATPase activity by caldesmon. Various models are based on different assumptions for the number of actin monomers that constitute a caldesmon binding site. Differences in binding behavior may be due to variations in the assay, the range of caldesmon concentrations, the type of caldesmon, and the method of data analysis used. We have evaluated these factors by measuring binding in the presence and absence of tropomyosin with both intact caldesmon and a recombinant 35 kDa actin binding fragment and with actin initially in the polymerized state or monomeric state. In all cases caldesmon binding could be simulated with a model having one class of binding sites. However, the number of actin monomers constituting a site was variable. Binding to F-actin at 165 mM ionic strength was best described with 7 actin monomers per site. When caldesmon bound to actin during the polymerization of G-actin, the size of the binding site was 3. Binding of the expressed truncated fragment, Cad35, could be described with 3 monomers per site. A simple interpretation of the data is that caldesmon binds tightly to 2-3 actin monomers. Additional parts of caldesmon bind less tightly to actin, causing caldesmon to cover approximately 7 actin monomers. The appendix contains an analysis of several binding curves with multiple binding site models. There is no compelling evidence for two classes of binding sites.
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Abstract
The Arp2/3 complex greatly accelerates actin polymerization, which is thought to play a major role in cell motility by inducing membrane protrusions including ruffling movements. Membrane ruffles contain a variety of actin-binding proteins, which would modulate Arp2/3-dependent actin polymerization. However, their exact roles in actin polymerization remain to be established. Because caldesmon is present in membrane ruffles, as well as in stress fibers, it may alter Arp2/3-mediated actin polymerization. We have found that caldesmon greatly retards Arp2/3-induced actin polymerization. Kinetic analyses have revealed that caldesmon inhibits the nucleation process, whereas it does not largely reduce elongation. Caldesmon is found to inhibit binding of Arp2/3 to F-actin, which apparently reduces the ability of F-actin as a secondary activator of Arp2/3-mediated nucleation. We also have found that the inhibition of the binding between actin and caldesmon either by Ca(2+)/calmodulin or by phosphorylation with cdc2 kinase reverses the inhibitory effect of caldesmon on Arp2/3-induced actin polymerization. Our results suggest that caldesmon may be a key protein that modulates membrane ruffling and that this may involve changes in caldesmon phosphorylation and/or intracellular calcium concentrations during signal transduction.
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Mass determination of native smooth muscle myosin filaments by scanning transmission electron microscopy. J Mol Biol 2002; 318:999-1007. [PMID: 12054797 DOI: 10.1016/s0022-2836(02)00191-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 25] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/17/2022]
Abstract
The thick filaments of vertebrate smooth muscle have a fundamentally different arrangement of myosin molecules from the bipolar, helical organization present in striated muscle filaments. This side-polar, non-helical structure is probably critical to the ability of smooth muscles to shorten by large amounts; however, details of myosin organization beyond this general description are unknown. The non-helical arrangement of myosin precludes the use of helical reconstruction methods for structural determination, and a tomographic approach is required. As a first step towards this goal we have determined the number of myosin molecules present at each 14.5 nm repeat in native smooth muscle myosin filaments by scanning transmission electron microscopy. The mass-per-length of myosin filaments was 159 kDa/nm, corresponding to 4.38(+/-0.11) (mean+/-s.e.m.) myosin molecules at each 14.5 nm level. The mass of thin filaments in the preparation (intrinsic control) was 21 kDa/nm, consistent with current models of smooth muscle thin filament structure, and the mass of tobacco mosaic virus (mass standard) was within 5% of the known value. We conclude that native smooth muscle myosin filaments contain four myosin molecules at each 14.5 nm level, two on each side of the side-polar structure.
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Caldesmon exhibits a clustered distribution along individual chicken gizzard native thin filaments. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 2002; 22:77-90. [PMID: 11563552 DOI: 10.1023/a:1010392322503] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/04/2023]
Abstract
Our earlier immuno-gold electron microscopic study indicated that the distribution of caldesmon (CaD) on actin filaments is not uniform and is restricted to the vicinity of the myosin filaments (Mabuchi K, Li Y, Tao T, Wang CLA (1996) J Muscle Res Cell Motil 17: 243). This suggested that CaD could effectively inhibit muscle contraction, if those actin filaments in the vicinity of myosin filaments were saturated with CaD. In the present study we further examined the distribution of CaD along isolated, crude and purified native thin filaments (NTF). Individual CaD molecules on purified NTF were visualized with the aid of a chemical crosslinker, 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), which efficiently crosslinks CaD to actin (Graceffa P, Adam LP, Lehman W (1993) Biochem J294: 63), and of a monoclonal anti-CaD antibody. The results indicated that individual NTF had alternating CaD-rich and CaD-deficient regions. Moreover, we found that the N-termini of all CaD molecules in a given cluster appeared on the same side of an actin filament. Electron microscopic images of crude NTF immunoprecipitated by a polyclonal antibody clearly indicated that the spacing between the CaD clusters is wide enough for myosin heads to interact with actin subunits. Similar clustering of CaD was also observed in plastic embedded tissue sections. These observations raise the possibility that CaD is not acting as a simple on/off switch, but more likely as a modulator, of smooth muscle contraction.
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Sarcomeric binding pattern of exogenously added intact caldesmon and its C-terminal 20-kDa fragment in skinned fibers of skeletal muscle. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 1999; 20:291-303. [PMID: 10471992 DOI: 10.1023/a:1005490405222] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022]
Abstract
Intact caldesmon and particularly the actin-binding C-terminal fragment (20-kDa) of caldesmon have been shown in skeletal muscle fibers to selectively displace low affinity, weakly bound cross-bridges from actin without significantly altering the actin attachment of force producing, strong binding cross-bridges (Brenner et al., 1991; Kraft et al., 1995a). However, the sarcomeric distribution and the specific binding of externally added caldesmon to the myofilaments of skeletal muscle fibers was not known. It was e.g., unclear whether caldesmon binds along actin in a manner similar to tropomyosin or whether it also binds to myosin. In this study, we determined the binding pattern of exogenously added intact caldesmon and its C-terminal 20-kDa fragment, respectively, in MgATP-relaxed rabbit skeletal muscle fibers using electron (EM) and confocal fluorescence microscopy (CFM). EM showed that similar to what has been demonstrated earlier for smooth muscle thin filaments (Lehman et al., 1989), intact caldesmon binds periodically every 38 nm along the thin filaments. CFM revealed that rhodamine-labeled intact caldesmon and the 20-kDa caldesmon fragment bind along nearly the entire length of the thin filaments. A portion of the I-band near the Z-line appears unlabeled, both when equilibrated at normal and long sarcomere lengths. The width of the unlabeled region seems to depend on ionic strength. The 20-kDa C-terminal caldesmon fragment binds in essentially the same pattern as intact caldesmon. This indicates that the high fluorescence intensity in the overlap region seen with intact caldesmon does not depend on caldesmon binding to myosin. X-ray diffraction was used to monitor the effects of filament lattice. Intact caldesmon at > 0.3 mg/ml induced disorder in the myofilament lattice. No such disordering was observed, however, when fibers were equilibrated with up to 0.8 mg/ml of the 20-kDa caldesmon fragment.
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Applicability of the sliding filament/crossbridge paradigm to smooth muscle. Rev Physiol Biochem Pharmacol 1999; 134:7-61. [PMID: 10087907 DOI: 10.1007/3-540-64753-8_2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/11/2023]
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13
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Abstract
Caldesmon, a narrow, elongated actin-binding protein, is found in both nonmuscle and smooth muscle cells. It inhibits actomyosin ATPase and filament severing in vitro, and is thus a putative regulatory protein. To elucidate its function, we have used electron microscopy and three-dimensional image reconstruction to reveal the location of caldesmon on isolated smooth muscle thin filaments. Caldesmon density was clearly delineated in reconstructions and found to occur peripherally, on the extreme outer edge of actin subdomains-1 and 2, without making obvious contacts with tropomyosin strands on the inner domains of actin. When the reconstructions were fitted to the atomic model of F-actin, caldesmon appeared to cover potentially weak sites of myosin interaction with actin, while, together with tropomyosin, it flanked strong sites of myosin interaction, without covering them. These interactions are unlike those of troponin-tropomyosin and therefore inhibition of actomyosin ATPase by caldesmon-tropomyosin and by troponin-tropomyosin cannot occur in the same way. The location of caldesmon would allow it to compete with a number of cellular actin-binding proteins, including those known to sever or sequester actin.
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Three-dimensional image reconstruction of reconstituted smooth muscle thin filaments: effects of caldesmon. Biophys J 1997; 72:2398-404. [PMID: 9168017 PMCID: PMC1184439 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(97)78885-4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 54] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/04/2023] Open
Abstract
Caldesmon inhibits actomyosin ATPase and filament sliding in vitro, and therefore may play a role in modulating smooth and non-muscle motile activities. A bacterially expressed caldesmon fragment, 606C, which consists of the C-terminal 150 amino acids of the intact molecule, possesses the same inhibitory properties as full-length caldesmon and was used in our structural studies to examine caldesmon function. Three-dimensional image reconstruction was carried out from electron micrographs of negatively stained, reconstituted thin filaments consisting of actin and smooth muscle tropomyosin both with and without added 606C. Helically arranged actin monomers and tropomyosin strands were observed in both cases. In the absence of 606C, tropomyosin adopted a position on the inner edge of the outer domain of actin monomers, with an apparent connection to sub-domain 1 of actin. In 606C-containing filaments that inhibited acto-HMM ATPase activity, tropomyosin was found in a different position, in association with the inner domain of actin, away from the majority of strong myosin binding sites. The effect of caldesmon on tropomyosin position therefore differs from that of troponin on skeletal muscle filaments, implying that caldesmon and troponin act by different structural mechanisms.
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15
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Abstract
Smooth muscle caldesmon is a single polypeptide chain with its NH2- and COOH-terminal domains separated by a long alpha-helix. Caldesmon was labeled at either Cys-153 in the NH2 domain or Cys-580 in the COOH domain with a variety of fluorescence probes. Fluorescence intensity, peak position, and polarization of probes on Cys-580 were very sensitive to the binding to actin (with or without tropomyosin), whereas for probes on Cys-153, there was a lack of response, in reconstituted or native actin thin filaments. From fluorescence resonance energy transfer from donor labels on either caldesmon cysteine to acceptor labels on Cys-374 of actin, the distance between the donor and acceptor was estimated to be 27 A for the donor at Cys-580 and 65-80 A for the donor at Cys-153. These findings were the same for caldesmon prepared with or without heat treatment and with striated or smooth muscle actin. These results, together with previous knowledge that COOH-terminal fragments of caldesmon bind to actin whereas NH2-terminal fragments do not, indicate that, while the COOH domain of caldesmon is bound to actin, the NH2 domain is largely dissociated. Fluorescence quenching studies showed that actin binding to caldesmon greatly decreased the accessibility of probes at caldesmon Cys-580 to the quencher, whereas for probes at Cys-153, actin afforded much less, but significant, protection from quenching. Consequently, it appears that, although the NH2 domain is mostly dissociated, it spends some time in the vicinity of actin, through either a weak interaction with actin or collisions with actin and/or because of restricted flexibility which constrains the NH2 domain to be close to the actin filament. Since the NH2 domain of caldesmon binds to the neck region of myosin, a dissociated NH2 domain may account for caldesmon's ability to link myosin and actin filaments.
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16
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Abstract
Smooth muscle caldesmon (CaD) exhibits apparent heat stability. A widely used purification procedure of CaD involves extensive heat treatment (Bretscher, A. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12873-12880). CaD thus purified co-sediments with actin, inhibits actomyosin ATPase activity, and interacts with Ca2+/calmodulin, similarly to the unheated protein. On the other hand, heat-treated CaD binds to actin filaments in a tether-like fashion, whereas lengthwise binding dominates in vivo (Mabuchi, K., Lin, J. J.-C., and Wang, C.-L. A. (1993) J. Muscle Res. Cell Motil. 14, 54-64), suggesting that differences do exist between heat-purified CaD and the native protein. We have isolated, without heat treatment, full-length recombinant chicken gizzard CaD overexpressed in insect cells (High-FiveTM) using a baculovirus expression system. We found that such unheated CaD interacts with calmodulin 10 times stronger than does the heated CaD; its inhibitory action on actomyosin ATPase is reversed by a much lesser amount of calmodulin. Moreover, electron microscopic examination indicated that actin binding at the N-terminal region is more frequent in the unheated CaD, resulting in more lengthwise binding. These findings point to the fact that CaD is not entirely heat-stable; the C-terminal CaM-binding regions and the N-terminal actin-binding region are possibly affected by heat treatment.
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Cross-linking and Fluorescence Study of the COOH- and NH2-terminal Domains of Intact Caldesmon Bound to Actin. J Biol Chem 1995. [DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9258(17)45845-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
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Location of smooth-muscle myosin and tropomyosin binding sites in the C-terminal 288 residues of human caldesmon. Biochem J 1995; 312 ( Pt 2):617-25. [PMID: 8526878 PMCID: PMC1136306 DOI: 10.1042/bj3120617] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/31/2023]
Abstract
We have produced nine recombinant fragments, H1 to H9, from a human cDNA that codes for the C-terminal 288 residues of caldesmon. The fragment H1, encompassing the 288 residues, is equivalent to domains 3 and 4 of caldesmon (amino acids 506-793 in human, 476-737 in the chicken gizzard sequence). It has been shown [Huber, Redwood, Avent, Tanner and Marston (1993) J. Muscle Res. Cell Motil. 14, 385-391] to bind to actin, Ca(2+)-calmodulin, tropomyosin and myosin. The fragments, H2 to H9, differ in length between 60 and 176 residues and cover the whole of domains 3 and 4 with many of the fragments overlapping. We have characterized the myosin and tropomyosin binding of these fragments. The binding of both tropomyosin and myosin is highly dependent on salt concentration, indicating the ionic nature of these interactions. The location of the myosin binding is an extended region encompassing the junction of domains 3/4 and domain 4a (residues 622-714, human; 566-657, chicken gizzard). Tropomyosin binds in a smaller region within domain 4a of caldesmon (residues 663-714, human; 606-657 chicken gizzard). We confirmed predictions based on sequence similarities of a tropomyosin binding site in domain 3 of caldesmon; however, this site bound to skeletal-muscle tropomyosin and had little affinity for the smooth-muscle tropomyosin isoform. None of the protein fragments H2-H9 retained the affinity of the parent fragment H1 for either myosin or tropomyosin. This indicates the need for several interaction sites scattered over an extended region to attain higher affinity. The regions interacting with caldesmon in both tropomyosin and myosin are coiled-coil structures. This is probably the reason for their shared interaction sites on caldesmon and their similar natures of binding.
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Mode of caldesmon binding to smooth muscle thin filament: possible projection of the amino-terminal of caldesmon from native thin filament. Biophys J 1995; 68:2419-28. [PMID: 7647246 PMCID: PMC1282152 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(95)80424-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 18] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023] Open
Abstract
The structure of smooth muscle thin filament was examined by various electron microscopy techniques, with special attention to the mode of caldesmon binding. Chemical cross-linking was positively used to avoid the dissociation of accessory proteins upon dilution. Caldesmon in reconstituted thin filament was observed as fine filamentous projections from thin filament. Native thin filament isolated from smooth muscle showed similarly numerous fine whisker-like projections by all the techniques employed here. Antibody against the amino-terminus of caldesmon labeled the end of such projections indicating the possibility that the amino-terminal myosin binding moiety might stick out from the shaft of the thin filament. Such whiskers are often projected out as a cluster to the same side of native thin filament. Further, we could visualize the assembly of dephosphorylated heavy meromyosin (HMM) with native or reconstituted thin filament forming "nonproductive" complex in the presence of ATP. The association of HMM to the shaft of thin filament was through subfragment-2 moiety, in accordance with biochemical studies. Some HMM particles bound closer to the thin filament shaft, possibly suggesting the presence of the second myosin-binding site on caldesmon. Occasionally two kinds of HMM association as such coexisted at a single site on this filament in tandem. Thus, we constructed a structural model of thin filament. The proposed molecular arrangement is not only compatible with all the biochemical results but also provides additional support for our recent findings (E. Katayoma, G. C. Scott-Woo, and M. Ikebe (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 3919-3925) regarding the capability of caldesmon to induce dephosphorylated myosin filament, which explains the existence of thick filaments in relaxed smooth muscle cells.
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Abstract
The binding of chicken gizzard caldesmon to actin was studied both in the presence and the absence of caltropin using Airfuge centrifugation experiments, disulfide cross-linking studies, and the fluorescent probe acrylodan (6-acryloyl-2-(dimethylamino)naphthalene). In co-sedimentation studies most of the caldesmon pelleted along with actin. However, when caldesmon in the presence of caltropin was mixed with actin, caldesmon did not pellet along with actin following high speed centrifugation, suggesting that caltropin has significantly weakened its binding to actin. The caltropin effect was noticed even when tropomyosin was included in the reaction mixture. Acrylodan-labeled caldesmon, when excited at 375 nm, had an emission maximum at 515 +/- 2 nm. The addition of actin produced a nearly 70% increase in fluorescent intensity, accompanied by a blue shift in the emission maximum (i.e. lambda em (max) = 505 +/- 2 nm), suggesting that the probe now occupies a more nonpolar environment. Titration of labeled caldesmon with actin indicated a strong affinity (K alpha = approximately 6 x 10(7) M-1). When actin was titrated with labeled caldesmon in the presence of caltropin in a 0.2 mM Ca2+ medium, its affinity for caldesmon was lowered (K alpha = approximately 2 x 10(7) M-1). Caltropin, which is very effective in reversing caldesmon's inhibition of the actin-activated myosin ATPase (Mani, R. S., McCubbin, W. D., and Kay, C. M. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 11896-11901), is shown in the present study to have a pronounced effect on its binding to actin, suggesting a major role for caltropin in regulating caldesmon in smooth muscle.
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22
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Abstract
Caldesmon and tropomyosin can be selectively and quantitatively extracted from vascular and visceral smooth muscle following heat treatment; all other smooth muscle proteins are precipitated by this procedure. Estimates of the caldesmon/tropomyosin molar ratio in heat-extracts determined by SDS-PAGE densitometry are 1 caldesmon:5.1-5.3 tropomyosin for rabbit and sheep aorta, and 1 caldesmon:5.9 tropomyosin for rabbit stomach and chicken gizzard. If the assumption is made that tropomyosin serves as a true reference of thin-filament content in intact muscle, it follows that the relative caldesmon contents in the above tissues are similar to each other. Caldesmon in heat extracts was identified by Western blotting, by its anomalous migration on several different SDS-PAGE systems and by its position on two-dimensional PAGE. Values of caldesmon contents in unfractionated total tissue homogenates were found to be similar to those cited above. Smooth muscles contain different thin-filament classes and only one type appears to possess caldesmon. By comparing values for the molar composition of caldesmon-specific filaments (1 caldesmon:2 tropomyosin:14 actin) with the values above determined for intact tissue, we conclude that the caldesmon filaments account for approx. 35-45% of the total thin-filament pool in arterial smooth muscle and slightly less in visceral muscles.
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Abstract
Caldesmon is known to inhibit actomyosin ATPase and filament sliding in vitro, and may play a role in modulating smooth muscle contraction as well as in diverse cellular processes including cytokinesis and exocytosis. However, the structural basis of caldesmon action has not previously been apparent. We have recorded electron microscope images of negatively stained thin filaments containing caldesmon and tropomyosin which were isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle in EGTA. Three-dimensional helical reconstructions of these filaments show actin monomers whose bilobed shape and connectivity are very similar to those previously seen in reconstructions of frozen-hydrated skeletal muscle thin filaments. In addition, a continuous thin strand of density follows the long-pitch actin helices, in contact with the inner domain of each actin monomer. Gizzard thin filaments treated with Ca2+/calmodulin, which dissociated caldesmon but not tropomyosin, have also been reconstructed. Under these conditions, reconstructions also reveal a bilobed actin monomer, as well as a continuous surface strand that appears to have moved to a position closer to the outer domain of actin. The strands seen in both EGTA- and Ca2+/calmodulin-treated filaments thus presumably represent tropomyosin. It appears that caldesmon can fix tropomyosin in a particular position on actin in the absence of calcium. An influence of caldesmon on tropomyosin position might, in principle, account for caldesmon's ability to modulate actomyosin interaction in both smooth muscles and non-muscle cells.
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Electron microscopic images suggest both ends of caldesmon interact with actin filaments. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 1993; 14:54-64. [PMID: 8478429 DOI: 10.1007/bf00132180] [Citation(s) in RCA: 28] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/31/2023]
Abstract
An improved rotary shadowing technique enabled us to visualize chicken gizzard caldesmon (CaD) and its complexes with one or two covalently linked calmodulin (CaM) molecules by electron microscopy. Using a monoclonal antibody against an epitope in the N-terminal region of CaD (anti-N), we can now identify the end of the molecule that is involved in binding to another protein molecule. Thus in the 1:1 complex of CaD and CaM, the CaM molecule was almost always associated with the C-terminus of CaD, indicating preferential CaM-binding to the C-terminal region. We have also studied binding of CaD to filamentous actin (F-actin), using an EM technique that avoids spraying or freeze drying and thereby preserves the structure of F-actin. Only one end of CaD appeared to bind to F-actin, leaving the rest of the molecule projecting away from the filament. While the majority of anti-N bound at the free end of CaD, some antibody molecules were found on F-actin. These findings suggest that either end of CaD can bind to F-actin. Experiments using a monoclonal antibody against the C-terminus of CaD (anti-C) supported this idea. When the native thin filaments that contain endogenous CaD were incubated with anti-N, almost all the bound antibodies were found on the filaments, indicating that the N-terminal regions of CaD interact with actin, and that the binding affinity of the N-terminal region of CaD for actin is higher in vivo than that in vitro, either because the properties of CaD have been altered during purification, or because of the presence of some other component(s) associated with the native filaments.
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Protein phosphorylation during the contraction-relaxation-contraction cycle of arterial smooth muscle. Arch Biochem Biophys 1992; 294:571-8. [PMID: 1567213 DOI: 10.1016/0003-9861(92)90727-e] [Citation(s) in RCA: 23] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/27/2022]
Abstract
Porcine carotid arterial muscles were labeled with 32P and then subjected to a resting-contraction-relaxation-contraction cycle. Four different agents were used for contraction: KCl, histamine, norepinephrine, and phorbol dibutyrate. To relax the contracted muscles, they were washed with physiological salt solution. Changes in the [32P]phosphate content of four different proteins--myosin light chain, a 28-kDa cytosolic protein, desmin, and caldesmon--were followed. In a short contraction-relaxation-contraction cycle lasting minutes, induced by K+, histamine, or norepinephrine, only the light chain underwent a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation-rephosphorylation without concomitant cyclic phosphorylation of the 28-kDa protein, desmin, or caldesmon. In a contraction-relaxation-contraction cycle of long duration, 60-min contractions with K+, histamine, or norepinephrine, cyclic phosphorylation of both the light chain and desmin was observed. With 60-min phorbol dibutyrate stimulation, in the long contraction-relaxation-contraction cycle, the phosphorylations of the light chain, desmin, and caldesmon were cycling. It is concluded that under physiological conditions, light-chain phosphorylation initiates both short and sustained arterial contraction. Desmin phosphorylation is likely to be involved in force maintenance during sustained contraction.
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Abstract
The ATPase activity of acto-myosin subfragment 1 (S1) at low ratios of S1 to actin in the presence of tropomyosin is dependent on the tropomyosin source and ionic conditions. Whereas skeletal muscle tropomyosin causes a 60% inhibitory effect at all ionic strengths, the effect of smooth muscle tropomyosin was found to be dependent on the ionic strength. At low ionic strength (20 mM) smooth muscle tropomyosin inhibits the ATPase activity by 60%, while at high ionic strength (120 mM) it potentiates the ATPase activity three- to five-fold. Therefore, the difference in the effect of smooth muscle and skeletal muscle tropomyosin on the acto-S1 ATPase activity was due to a greater fraction of the tropomyosin-actin complex being turned on in the absence of S1 with smooth muscle tropomyosin than with skeletal muscle tropomyosin. Using well-oriented gels of actin and of reconstituted specimens from vertebrate smooth muscle thin filament proteins suitable for X-ray diffraction, we localized the position of tropomyosin on actin under different levels of acto-S1 ATPase activity. By analysing the equatorial X-ray pattern of the oriented specimens in combination with solution scattering experiments, we conclude that tropomyosin is located at a binding radius of about 3.5 nm on the f-actin helix under all conditions studied. Furthermore, we find no evidence that the azimuthal position of tropomyosin is different for smooth muscle tropomyosin at various ionic strengths, or vertebrate tropomyosin, since the second actin layer-line intensity (at 17.9 nm axial and 4.3 nm radial spacing), which was shown in skeletal muscle to be a sensitive measure of this parameter, remains strong and unchanged. Differences in the ATPase activity are not necessarily correlated with different positions of tropomyosin on f-actin. The same conclusion is drawn from our observations that, although the regulatory protein caldesmon inhibits the ATPase activity in native and reconstituted vertebrate smooth muscle thin filaments at a molar ratio of actin/tropomyosin/caldesmon of 28:7:1, the second actin layer-line remains strong. Only adding caldesmon in excess reduces the intensity of the second actin layer-line, from which the binding radius of caldesmon can be estimated to be about 4 nm. The lack of predominant meridional reflections in oriented specimens, with caldesmon present, suggests that caldesmon does not project away from the thin filament as troponin molecules in vertebrate striated muscle in agreement with electron micrographs of smooth muscle thin filaments. In freshly prepared native smooth muscle thin filaments we observed a Ca(2+)-sensitive reversible bundling effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Abstract
In the present study we have used a quantitative immunoblotting method to measure the caldesmon content of a variety of smooth muscles with distinctly different contractile phenotypes. Two tonic vascular smooth muscles and several phasic smooth muscles were examined. The caldesmon, actin and myosin contents of each muscle type were measured. Smooth muscle from large arteries (i.e. bovine aorta and porcine carotid artery) had the lowest caldesmon content and phasic muscles (e.g. rat uterus and guinea pig taenia coli) had the highest. The molar ratio of monomeric caldesmon to monomeric actin was 1:205 for the aorta and carotid artery versus 1:22-28 for the taenia coli and uterus. The molar ratio of caldesmon to monomeric myosin heavy chain was 1:9 for the aorta and carotid versus 1:2 for the uterus and taenia coli. The caldesmon contents of canine trachealis and rabbit ileum were intermediate between these extremes. Evidence was found for the presence of both tissue- and species-specific caldesmon isoforms. The relatively high caldesmon content in rat uterus and guinea pig taenia coli suggests the possibility that the contractile phenotype associated with phasic smooth muscles may be dependent on the presence of caldesmon.
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Actin-caldesmon-myosin-subfragment-1 ternary complex viewed by electron microscopy. Competitive actin binding region for caldesmon and myosin subfragment-1. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY 1991; 196:219-24. [PMID: 2001701 DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1991.tb15807.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/29/2022]
Abstract
An earlier electron microscopic study using different caldesmon forms complexed with actin revealed that the aggregates produced display regular periodic striation after antibody labeling of the 35-kDa caldesmon fragment. This approach provides further evidence that a caldesmon fragment, even as small as 15 kDa, can induce actin filaments to assemble into bundles. The observed difference in the compactness of these structures, depending on the use of the 15-kDa fragment instead of the 35-kDa fragment, suggests the existence of more than one actin-binding site in the caldesmon molecule. In this study, the caldesmon-induced process of F-actin association was investigated in the presence of skeletal myosin subfragment-1, using light-scattering methods, cosedimentation experiment and electron microscopic techniques. We show that the actin-caldesmon association is partially destabilized in the presence of subfragment-1 and this leads to a ternary complex formation. Immunogold labelling of the actin filaments still reveals the presence of caldesmon within this structure. This latter result strengthens the hypothesis that actin has a site(s) able to bind both caldesmon and myosin subfragment-1, as detected by recent NMR observations. This evidence is discussed with respect to the regulatory function of caldesmon during smooth muscle contraction.
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Stoichiometry and stability of caldesmon in native thin filaments from sheep aorta smooth muscle. Biochem J 1990; 272:305-10. [PMID: 2268260 PMCID: PMC1149699 DOI: 10.1042/bj2720305] [Citation(s) in RCA: 36] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
Ca2(+)-regulated native thin filaments were extracted from sheep aorta smooth muscle. The caldesmon content determined by quantitative gel electrophoresis was 0.06 caldesmon molecule/actin monomer (1 caldesmon molecule per 16.3 actin monomers). Dissociation of caldesmon and tropomyosin from the thin filament and the depolymerization of actin was measured by sedimenting diluted thin filaments. Actin critical concentration was 0.05 microM at 10.1 and 0.13 at 10.05 compared with 0.5 microM for pure F-actin. Tropomyosin was tightly bound, with half-maximal dissociation at less than 0.3 microM thin filaments (actin monomer) under all conditions. Caldesmon dissociation was independent of tropomyosin and not co-operative. The concentration of thin filaments where 50% of the caldesmon was dissociated (CD50) ranged from 0.2 microM (actin monomer) at 10.03 to 8 microM at 10.16 in a 5 mM-MgCl2, pH 7.1, buffer. Mg2+, 25 mM at constant I, increased CD50 4-fold. CD50 was 4-fold greater at 10(-4) M-Ca2+ than at 10(-9) M-Ca2+. Aorta heavy meromyosin (HMM).ADP.Pi complex (2.5 microM excess over thin filaments) strongly antagonized caldesmon dissociation, but skeletal-muscle HMM.ADP.Pi did not. The behaviour of caldesmon in native thin filaments was indistinguishable from caldesmon in reconstituted synthetic thin filaments. The variability of Ca2(+)-sensitivity with conditions observed in thin filament preparations was shown to be related to dissociation of regulatory caldesmon from the thin filament.
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Characterization of the carboxyl-terminal 10-kDa cyanogen bromide fragment of caldesmon as an actin-calmodulin-binding region. J Biol Chem 1990. [DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9258(18)77246-3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 52] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/17/2022] Open
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Abstract
The regulatory system of smooth muscle thin filaments is thought to involve a major calcium-calmodulin and actin binding protein: caldesmon. A dissective approach was used to isolate a 35 kDa C-terminal fragment of the molecule and to produce antibodies reacting against both the intact and the 15 kDa N-terminal end of this parental fragment. While this purified 15 kDa caldesmon fragment demonstrates a weak actin association, we observed that it cross-links actin filaments into loose bundles. These structures were labelled with a selective antibody and showed regular periodic striation with repeats of approximately 40 nm. This work brings additional information to previous reports using an actin and calmodulin binding 25 kDa C-terminal fragment of the caldesmon molecule [(1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 2869-2875]. We demonstrate that a purified fragment corresponding to a sequence smaller than 96 amino acids, which contains no cystein residue, is able to interact with actin at a single site which is not the calmodulin modulated.
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Calcium regulated thin filaments from molluscan catch muscles contain a caldesmon-like regulatory protein. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 1990; 11:302-12. [PMID: 2254439 DOI: 10.1007/bf01766668] [Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
The thin filaments of the anterior byssus retractor muscle of the edible mussel Mytilus and the transluscent and opaque adductors of the oyster Crassostrea have been isolated and their properties investigated. We find that the thin filaments from all three muscles can activate skeletal muscle myosin ATPase in the presence of calcium but that the activity is inhibited in its absence. The filaments contain a protein which interacts with antibodies to vertebrate smooth muscle caldesmon on immunoblots. The antibodies relieve the inhibition of the thin-filament-activated myosin MgATPase. They can also bundle the thin filaments. We conclude that a caldesmon-like protein is present in molluscan muscle. As in the vertebrate smooth muscle, it could act as part of a control mechanism in addition to the myosin regulatory system. Vertebrate smooth muscle caldesmon can crosslink actin and myosin and it has been suggested that it may in this way contribute to the latch state. A similar interaction may be involved in the catch mechanism in molluscan muscle.
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Caldesmon and the structure of smooth muscle thin filaments: electron microscopy of isolated thin filaments. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 1990; 11:176-85. [PMID: 2351755 DOI: 10.1007/bf01766496] [Citation(s) in RCA: 66] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
Native and synthetic vertebrate smooth muscle thin filaments have been examined by electron microscopy in order to determine the arrangement of the regulatory protein caldesmon. In synthetic filaments of actin-caldesmon, long slender molecules were sometimes seen running along the thin filament, suggesting that caldesmon can associate with actin along its length, while at other times lateral projections were observed. In native filaments, containing actin, caldesmon and tropomyosin, we found no evidence for lateral projections extending from the filaments, suggesting that caldesmon does not act as a crosslinking protein in vivo. In contrast, elongated molecules were clearly seen following the long pitch actin helices. We suggest that these may represent an association of caldesmon and tropomyosin. Antibodies developed against an N-terminal fragment of caldesmon caused thin filaments to aggregate laterally into arrays displaying approximately 35-38 nm repeats; thin filament aggregates with this periodicity were obtained previously (Lehman et al., 1989) using antibodies to the C-terminal segment of caldesmon. These results suggest that both ends of caldesmon are closely associated with the shaft of the thin filament, supporting a model in which the elongated caldesmon molecule runs along the filament, possibly interacting with tropomyosin, following the long pitch actin helices.
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Abstract
Recent estimates of molecular weight and cDNA sequencing indicate that smooth muscle caldesmons are considerably smaller than previously thought. The anomalous behaviour of these proteins during SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis can be correlated with their high acidic amino acid content. The results suggest a need to re-evaluate the stoichiometric relations of caldesmon to tropomyosin and actin in thin filaments and its presumed 1:1 interaction with calmodulin.
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