45 results on '"Kensler RW"'
Search Results
2. Phosphorylation of cardiac myosin binding protein C releases myosin heads from the surface of cardiac thick filaments.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Craig R, and Moss RL
- Subjects
- Actins metabolism, Animals, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases metabolism, Female, Kinetics, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Transgenic, Protein Binding physiology, Cardiac Myosins metabolism, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Cytoskeleton metabolism, Heart physiology, Myocardium metabolism, Phosphorylation physiology
- Abstract
Cardiac myosin binding protein C (cMyBP-C) has a key regulatory role in cardiac contraction, but the mechanism by which changes in phosphorylation of cMyBP-C accelerate cross-bridge kinetics remains unknown. In this study, we isolated thick filaments from the hearts of mice in which the three serine residues (Ser273, Ser282, and Ser302) that are phosphorylated by protein kinase A in the m-domain of cMyBP-C were replaced by either alanine or aspartic acid, mimicking the fully nonphosphorylated and the fully phosphorylated state of cMyBP-C, respectively. We found that thick filaments from the cMyBP-C phospho-deficient hearts had highly ordered cross-bridge arrays, whereas the filaments from the cMyBP-C phospho-mimetic hearts showed a strong tendency toward disorder. Our results support the hypothesis that dephosphorylation of cMyBP-C promotes or stabilizes the relaxed/superrelaxed quasi-helical ordering of the myosin heads on the filament surface, whereas phosphorylation weakens this stabilization and binding of the heads to the backbone. Such structural changes would modulate the probability of myosin binding to actin and could help explain the acceleration of cross-bridge interactions with actin when cMyBP-C is phosphorylated because of, for example, activation of β
1 -adrenergic receptors in myocardium.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The cMyBP-C HCM variant L348P enhances thin filament activation through an increased shift in tropomyosin position.
- Author
-
Mun JY, Kensler RW, Harris SP, and Craig R
- Subjects
- Actins genetics, Actins metabolism, Amino Acid Sequence, Amino Acid Substitution, Animals, Calcium metabolism, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic genetics, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic metabolism, Carrier Proteins genetics, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Cattle, Chickens, Cytoskeleton metabolism, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Gene Expression Regulation, Humans, Mice, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Myocardium chemistry, Myocardium metabolism, Phosphorylation, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Proteins genetics, Recombinant Proteins metabolism, Sarcomeres metabolism, Sarcomeres ultrastructure, Signal Transduction, Tropomyosin genetics, Tropomyosin metabolism, Actins chemistry, Carrier Proteins chemistry, Cytoskeleton chemistry, Sarcomeres chemistry, Tropomyosin chemistry
- Abstract
Mutations in cardiac myosin binding protein C (cMyBP-C), a thick filament protein that modulates contraction of the heart, are a leading cause of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Electron microscopy and 3D reconstruction of thin filaments decorated with cMyBP-C N-terminal fragments suggest that one mechanism of this modulation involves the interaction of cMyBP-C's N-terminal domains with thin filaments to enhance their Ca(2+)-sensitivity by displacement of tropomyosin from its blocked (low Ca(2+)) to its closed (high Ca(2+)) position. The extent of this tropomyosin shift is reduced when cMyBP-C N-terminal domains are phosphorylated. In the current study, we have examined L348P, a sequence variant of cMyBP-C first identified in a screen of patients with HCM. In L348P, leucine 348 is replaced by proline in cMyBP-C's regulatory M-domain, resulting in an increase in cMyBP-C's ability to enhance thin filament Ca(2+)-sensitization. Our goal here was to determine the structural basis for this enhancement by carrying out 3D reconstruction of thin filaments decorated with L348P-mutant cMyBP-C. When thin filaments were decorated with wild type N-terminal domains at low Ca(2+), tropomyosin moved from the blocked to the closed position, as found previously. In contrast, the L348P mutant caused a significantly larger tropomyosin shift, to approximately the open position, consistent with its enhancement of Ca(2+)-sensitization. Phosphorylated wild type fragments showed a smaller shift than unphosphorylated fragments, whereas the shift induced by the L348P mutant was not affected by phosphorylation. We conclude that the L348P mutation causes a gain of function by enhancing tropomyosin displacement on the thin filament in a phosphorylation-independent way., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Zebrafish cardiac muscle thick filaments: isolation technique and three-dimensional structure.
- Author
-
González-Solá M, Al-Khayat HA, Behra M, and Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Carrier Proteins ultrastructure, Connectin ultrastructure, Fourier Analysis, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Models, Molecular, Myocardium ultrastructure, Myosins isolation & purification, Myosins ultrastructure, Zebrafish metabolism
- Abstract
To understand how mutations in thick filament proteins such as cardiac myosin binding protein-C or titin, cause familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathies, it is important to determine the structure of the cardiac thick filament. Techniques for the genetic manipulation of the zebrafish are well established and it has become a major model for the study of the cardiovascular system. Our goal is to develop zebrafish as an alternative system to the mammalian heart model for the study of the structure of the cardiac thick filaments and the proteins that form it. We have successfully isolated thick filaments from zebrafish cardiac muscle, using a procedure similar to those for mammalian heart, and analyzed their structure by negative-staining and electron microscopy. The isolated filaments appear well ordered with the characteristic 42.9 nm quasi-helical repeat of the myosin heads expected from x-ray diffraction. We have performed single particle image analysis on the collected electron microscopy images for the C-zone region of these filaments and obtained a three-dimensional reconstruction at 3.5 nm resolution. This reconstruction reveals structure similar to the mammalian thick filament, and demonstrates that zebrafish may provide a useful model for the study of the changes in the cardiac thick filament associated with disease processes., (Copyright © 2014 Biophysical Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Atomic model of the human cardiac muscle myosin filament.
- Author
-
Al-Khayat HA, Kensler RW, Squire JM, Marston SB, and Morris EP
- Subjects
- Carrier Proteins metabolism, Connectin, Crystallography, X-Ray, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Microscopy, Electron, Muscle Proteins metabolism, Myocardium ultrastructure, Myofibrils ultrastructure, Protein Kinases metabolism, Models, Molecular, Myocardium chemistry, Myofibrils chemistry, Myosins chemistry, Myosins ultrastructure
- Abstract
Of all the myosin filaments in muscle, the most important in terms of human health, and so far the least studied, are those in the human heart. Here we report a 3D single-particle analysis of electron micrograph images of negatively stained myosin filaments isolated from human cardiac muscle in the normal (undiseased) relaxed state. The resulting 28-Å resolution 3D reconstruction shows axial and azimuthal (no radial) myosin head perturbations within the 429-Å axial repeat, with rotations between successive 132 Å-, 148 Å-, and 149 Å-spaced crowns of heads close to 60°, 35°, and 25° (all would be 40° in an unperturbed three-stranded helix). We have defined the myosin head atomic arrangements within the three crown levels and have modeled the organization of myosin subfragment 2 and the possible locations of the 39 Å-spaced domains of titin and the cardiac isoform of myosin-binding protein-C on the surface of the myosin filament backbone. Best fits were obtained with head conformations on all crowns close to the structure of the two-headed myosin molecule of vertebrate chicken smooth muscle in the dephosphorylated relaxed state. Individual crowns show differences in head-pair tilts and subfragment 2 orientations, which, together with the observed perturbations, result in different intercrown head interactions, including one not reported before. Analysis of the interactions between the myosin heads, the cardiac isoform of myosin-binding protein-C, and titin will aid in understanding of the structural effects of mutations in these proteins known to be associated with human cardiomyopathies.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Binding of the N-terminal fragment C0-C2 of cardiac MyBP-C to cardiac F-actin.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Shaffer JF, and Harris SP
- Subjects
- Actins genetics, Actins ultrastructure, Animals, Carrier Proteins genetics, Carrier Proteins ultrastructure, Cattle, Mice, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Protein Binding, Actins metabolism, Carrier Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C), a major accessory protein of cardiac thick filaments, is thought to play a key role in the regulation of myocardial contraction. Although current models for the function of the protein focus on its binding to myosin S2, other evidence suggests that it may also bind to F-actin. We have previously shown that the N-terminal fragment C0-C2 of cardiac myosin-binding protein-C (cMyBP-C) bundles actin, providing evidence for interaction of cMyBP-C and actin. In this paper we directly examined the interaction between C0-C2 and F-actin at physiological ionic strength and pH by negative staining and electron microscopy. We incubated C0-C2 (5-30μM, in a buffer containing in mM: 180 KCl, 1 MgCl(2), 1 EDTA, 1 DTT, 20 imidazole, at pH 7.4) with F-actin (5μM) for 30min and examined negatively-stained samples of the solution by electron microscopy (EM). Examination of EM images revealed that C0-C2 bound to F-actin to form long helically-ordered complexes. Fourier transforms indicated that C0-C2 binds with the helical periodicity of actin with strong 1st and 6th layer lines. The results provide direct evidence that the N-terminus of cMyBP-C can bind to F-actin in a periodic complex. This interaction of cMyBP-C with F-actin supports the possibility that binding of cMyBP-C to F-actin may play a role in the regulation of cardiac contraction., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Three-dimensional structure of the M-region (bare zone) of vertebrate striated muscle myosin filaments by single-particle analysis.
- Author
-
Al-Khayat HA, Kensler RW, Morris EP, and Squire JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Goldfish, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Models, Molecular, Muscle, Skeletal chemistry, Muscle, Skeletal ultrastructure, Protein Conformation, Protein Multimerization, Fish Proteins chemistry, Fish Proteins ultrastructure, Myosins chemistry, Myosins ultrastructure
- Abstract
The rods of anti-parallel myosin molecules overlap at the centre of bipolar myosin filaments to produce an M-region (bare zone) that is free of myosin heads. Beyond the M-region edges, myosin molecules aggregate in a parallel fashion to yield the bridge regions of the myosin filaments. Adjacent myosin filaments in striated muscle A-bands are cross-linked by the M-band. Vertebrate striated muscle myosin filaments have a 3-fold rotational symmetry around their long axes. In addition, at the centre of the M-region, there are three 2-fold axes perpendicular to the filament long axis, giving the whole filament dihedral 32-point group symmetry. Here we describe the three-dimensional structure obtained by a single-particle analysis of the M-region of myosin filaments from goldfish skeletal muscle under relaxing conditions and as viewed in negative stain. This is the first single-particle reconstruction of isolated M-regions. The resulting three-dimensional reconstruction reveals details to about 55 Å resolution of the density distribution in the five main nonmyosin densities in the M-band (M6', M4', M1, M4 and M6) and in the myosin head crowns (P1, P2 and P3) at the M-region edges. The outermost crowns in the reconstruction were identified specifically by their close similarity to the corresponding crown levels in our previously published bridge region reconstructions. The packing of myosin molecules into the M-region structure is discussed, and some unidentified densities are highlighted., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Structure and orientation of troponin in the thin filament.
- Author
-
Paul DM, Morris EP, Kensler RW, and Squire JM
- Subjects
- Actin Cytoskeleton metabolism, Actin Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Actins chemistry, Actins metabolism, Animals, Crystallography, X-Ray, Goldfish, Models, Molecular, Tropomyosin chemistry, Actin Cytoskeleton chemistry, Troponin chemistry
- Abstract
The troponin complex on the thin filament plays a crucial role in the regulation of muscle contraction. However, the precise location of troponin relative to actin and tropomyosin remains uncertain. We have developed a method of reconstructing thin filaments using single particle analysis that does not impose the helical symmetry of actin and is independent of a starting model. We present a single particle three-dimensional reconstruction of the thin filament. Atomic models of the F-actin filament were fitted into the electron density maps and troponin and tropomyosin located. The structure provides evidence that the globular head region of troponin labels the two strands of actin with a 27.5-A axial stagger. The density attributed to troponin appears tapered with the widest point toward the barbed end. This leads us to interpret the polarity of the troponin complex in the thin filament as reversed with respect to the widely accepted model.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The myosin-binding protein C motif binds to F-actin in a phosphorylation-sensitive manner.
- Author
-
Shaffer JF, Kensler RW, and Harris SP
- Subjects
- Actins genetics, Amino Acid Motifs physiology, Animals, Binding Sites physiology, Carrier Proteins genetics, Cattle, Mice, Phosphorylation physiology, Protein Binding physiology, Protein Structure, Tertiary physiology, Rabbits, Sarcomeres genetics, Actins metabolism, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Myocardium metabolism, Sarcomeres metabolism
- Abstract
Cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C) is a regulatory protein expressed in cardiac sarcomeres that is known to interact with myosin, titin, and actin. cMyBP-C modulates actomyosin interactions in a phosphorylation-dependent way, but it is unclear whether interactions with myosin, titin, or actin are required for these effects. Here we show using cosedimentation binding assays, that the 4 N-terminal domains of murine cMyBP-C (i.e. C0-C1-m-C2) bind to F-actin with a dissociation constant (K(d)) of approximately 10 microm and a molar binding ratio (B(max)) near 1.0, indicating 1:1 (mol/mol) binding to actin. Electron microscopy and light scattering analyses show that these domains cross-link F-actin filaments, implying multiple sites of interaction with actin. Phosphorylation of the MyBP-C regulatory motif, or m-domain, reduced binding to actin (reduced B(max)) and eliminated actin cross-linking. These results suggest that the N terminus of cMyBP-C interacts with F-actin through multiple distinct binding sites and that binding at one or more sites is reduced by phosphorylation. Reversible interactions with actin could contribute to effects of cMyBP-C to increase cross-bridge cycling.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Myosin filament 3D structure in mammalian cardiac muscle.
- Author
-
Al-Khayat HA, Morris EP, Kensler RW, and Squire JM
- Subjects
- Actin Cytoskeleton chemistry, Actin Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Animals, Cardiac Myosins chemistry, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Microscopy, Electron, Protein Conformation, Rabbits, Cardiac Myosins ultrastructure, Myocardium chemistry
- Abstract
A number of cardiac myopathies (e.g. familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and dilated cardiomyopathy) are linked to mutations in cardiac muscle myosin filament proteins, including myosin and myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C). To understand the myopathies it is necessary to know the normal 3D structure of these filaments. We have carried out 3D single particle analysis of electron micrograph images of negatively stained isolated myosin filaments from rabbit cardiac muscle. Single filament images were aligned and divided into segments about 2x430A long, each of which was treated as an independent 'particle'. The resulting 40A resolution 3D reconstruction showed both axial and azimuthal (no radial) myosin head perturbations within the 430A repeat, with successive crown rotations of approximately 60 degrees , 60 degrees and 0 degrees , rather than the regular 40 degrees for an unperturbed helix. However, it is shown that the projecting density peaks appear to start at low radius from origins closer to those expected for an unperturbed helical filament, and that the azimuthal perturbation especially increases with radius. The head arrangements in rabbit cardiac myosin filaments are very similar to those in fish skeletal muscle myosin filaments, suggesting a possible general structural theme for myosin filaments in all vertebrate striated muscles (skeletal and cardiac).
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The structure of isolated cardiac Myosin thick filaments from cardiac Myosin binding protein-C knockout mice.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Harris SP
- Subjects
- Actin Cytoskeleton metabolism, Animals, Cardiac Myosins metabolism, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic, Familial genetics, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic, Familial pathology, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Secondary, Actin Cytoskeleton chemistry, Cardiac Myosins chemistry, Carrier Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
Mutations in the thick filament associated protein cardiac myosin binding protein-C (cMyBP-C) are a major cause of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Although cMyBP-C is thought to play both a structural and a regulatory role in the contraction of cardiac muscle, detailed information about the role of this protein in stability of the thick filament and maintenance of the ordered helical arrangement of the myosin cross-bridges is limited. To address these questions, the structure of myosin thick filaments isolated from the hearts of wild-type mice containing cMyBP-C (cMyBP-C(+/+)) were compared to those of cMyBP-C knockout mice lacking this protein (cMyBp-C(-/-)). The filaments from the knockout mice hearts lacking cMyBP-C are stable and similar in length and appearance to filaments from the wild-type mice hearts containing cMyBP-C. Both wild-type and many of the cMyBP-C(-/-) filaments display a distinct 43 nm periodicity. Fourier transforms of electron microscope images typically show helical layer lines to the sixth layer line, confirming the well-ordered arrangement of the cross-bridges in both sets of filaments. However, the "forbidden" meridional reflections, thought to derive from a perturbation from helical symmetry in the wild-type filament, are weaker or absent in the transforms of the cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardial thick filaments. In addition, the cross-bridge array in the absence of cMyBP-C appears more easily disordered.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. 3D structure of relaxed fish muscle myosin filaments by single particle analysis.
- Author
-
Al-Khayat HA, Morris EP, Kensler RW, and Squire JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Microscopy, Electron methods, Myosins ultrastructure, Protein Structure, Secondary, X-Ray Diffraction, Fishes metabolism, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Myosins chemistry
- Abstract
To understand the structural changes involved in the force-producing myosin cross-bridge cycle in vertebrate muscle it is necessary to know the arrangement and conformation of the myosin heads at the start of the cycle (i.e. the relaxed state). Myosin filaments isolated from goldfish muscle under relaxing conditions and viewed in negative stain by electron microscopy (EM) were divided into segments and subjected to three-dimensional (3D) single particle analysis without imposing helical symmetry. This allowed the known systematic departure from helicity characteristic of vertebrate striated muscle myosin filaments to be preserved and visualised. The resulting 3D reconstruction reveals details to about 55 A resolution of the myosin head density distribution in the three non-equivalent head 'crowns' in the 429 A myosin filament repeat. The analysis maintained the well-documented axial perturbations of the myosin head crowns and revealed substantial azimuthal perturbations between crowns with relatively little radial perturbation. Azimuthal rotations between crowns were approximately 60 degrees , 60 degrees and 0 degrees , rather than the regular 40 degrees characteristic of an unperturbed helix. The new density map correlates quite well with the head conformations analysed in other EM studies and in the relaxed fish muscle myosin filament structure modelled from X-ray fibre diffraction data. The reconstruction provides information on the polarity of the myosin head array in the A-band, important in understanding the geometry of the myosin head interaction with actin during the cross-bridge cycle, and supports a number of conclusions previously inferred by other methods. The observed azimuthal head perturbations are consistent with the X-ray modelling results from intact muscle, indicating that the observed perturbations are an intrinsic property of the myosin filaments and are not induced by the proximity of actin filaments in the muscle A-band lattice. Comparison of the axial density profile derived in this study with the axial density profile of the X-ray model of the fish myosin filaments which was restricted to contributions from the myosin heads allows the identification of a non-myosin density peak associated with the azimuthally perturbed head crown which can be interpreted as a possible location for C-protein or X-protein (MyBP-C or -X). This position for C-protein is also consistent with the C-zone interference function deduced from previous analysis of the meridional X-ray pattern from frog muscle. It appears that, along with other functions, C-(X-) protein may have the role of slewing the heads of one crown so that they do not clash with the neighbouring actin filaments, but are readily available to interact with actin when the muscle is activated.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The mammalian cardiac muscle thick filament: crossbridge arrangement.
- Author
-
Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Fourier Analysis, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Rabbits, Staining and Labeling, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Myocardium ultrastructure
- Abstract
Although skeletal muscle thick filaments have been extensively studied, information on the structure of cardiac thick filaments is limited. Since cardiac muscle differs in many physiological properties from skeletal muscle it is important to elucidate the structure of the cardiac thick filament. The structure of isolated and negatively stained rabbit cardiac thick filaments has been analyzed from computed Fourier transforms and image analysis. The transforms are detailed, showing a strong set of layer lines corresponding to a 42.9 nm quasi-helical repeat. The presence of relatively strong "forbidden" meridional reflections not expected from ideal helical symmetry on the second, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth, and tenth layer lines suggest that the crossbridge array is perturbed from ideal helical symmetry. Analysis of the phase differences for the primary reflections on the first layer line of transforms from 15 filaments showed an average difference of 170 degrees, close to the value of 180 degrees expected for an odd-stranded structure. Computer-filtered images of the isolated thick filaments unequivocally demonstrate a three-stranded arrangement of the crossbridges on the filaments and provide evidence that the crossbridge arrangement is axially perturbed from ideal helical symmetry.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The mammalian cardiac muscle thick filament: backbone contributions to meridional reflections.
- Author
-
Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Fourier Analysis, Rabbits, Staining and Labeling, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Myocardium ultrastructure
- Abstract
Information about the structure of the vertebrate striated muscle thick filament backbone is important for understanding the arrangement of both the rod portion of the myosin molecule and the accessory proteins associated with the backbone region of the filament. Although models of the backbone have been proposed, direct data on the structure of the backbone is limited. In this study, we provide evidence that electron micrographs of isolated negatively stained cardiac thick filaments contain significant information about the filament backbone. Computed Fourier transforms from isolated cardiac thick filaments show meridional (or near meridional) reflections on the 10th and 11th layer lines that are particularly strong. Comparison of Fourier filtrations of the filaments that exclude, or include, these reflections, provide evidence that these reflections originate at least in part from a series of striations on the backbone at a approximately 4 nm spacing. The striations are likely to result either from the packing of the myosin rods, or from proteins such as titin associated with the filament backbone.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Mammalian cardiac muscle thick filaments: their periodicity and interactions with actin.
- Author
-
Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Detergents pharmacology, Fourier Analysis, Myocardium ultrastructure, Octoxynol pharmacology, Protein Binding, Rabbits, Software, Actins metabolism, Myocardium metabolism, Myocardium pathology
- Abstract
Cardiac muscle has been extensively studied, but little information is available on the detailed macromolecular structure of its thick filament. To elucidate the structure of these filaments I have developed a procedure to isolate the cardiac thick filaments for study by electron microscopy and computer image analysis. This procedure uses chemical skinning with Triton X-100 to avoid contraction of the muscle that occurs using the procedures previously developed for isolation of skeletal muscle thick filaments. The negatively stained isolated filaments appear highly periodic, with a helical repeat every third cross-bridge level (43 nm). Computed Fourier transforms of the filaments show a strong set of layer lines corresponding to a 43-nm near-helical repeat out to the 6th layer line. Additional meridional reflections extend to at least the 12th layer line in averaged transforms of the filaments. The highly periodic structure of the filaments clearly suggests that the weakness of the layer lines in x-ray diffraction patterns of heart muscle is not due to an inherently more disordered cross-bridge arrangement. In addition, the isolated thick filaments are unusual in their strong tendency to remain bound to actin by anti-rigor oriented cross-bridges (state II or state III cross-bridges) under relaxing conditions.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. 3D Structure of fish muscle myosin filaments.
- Author
-
Eakins F, AL-Khayat HA, Kensler RW, Morris EP, and Squire JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Computer Simulation, Goldfish, Microscopy, Electron, Models, Biological, Protein Structure, Tertiary, X-Ray Diffraction, Muscles metabolism, Muscles ultrastructure, Myosins chemistry
- Abstract
Myosin filaments isolated from goldfish (Carassius auratus) muscle under relaxing conditions and viewed in negative stain by electron microscopy have been subjected to 3D helical reconstruction to provide details of the myosin head arrangement in relaxed muscle. Previous X-ray diffraction studies of fish muscle (plaice) myosin filaments have suggested that the heads project a long way from the filament surface rather than lying down flat and that heads in a single myosin molecule tend to interact with each other rather than with heads from adjacent molecules. Evidence has also been presented that the head tilt is away from the M-band. Here we seek to confirm these conclusions using a totally independent method. By using 3D helical reconstruction of isolated myosin filaments the known perturbation of the head array in vertebrate muscles was inevitably averaged out. The 3D reconstruction was therefore compared with the X-ray model after it too had been helically averaged. The resulting images showed the same characteristic features: heads projecting out from the filament backbone to high radius and the motor domains at higher radius and further away from the M-band than the light-chain-binding neck domains (lever arms) of the heads., ((c) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).)
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Myosin light chain phosphorylation affects the structure of rabbit skeletal muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Kensler RW, Yang Z, Stull JT, and Sweeney HL
- Subjects
- Animals, Calcium pharmacology, Microscopy, Electron, Muscle Fibers, Skeletal drug effects, Muscle Fibers, Skeletal ultrastructure, Myosin Light Chains drug effects, Phosphorylation, Rabbits, Serum Albumin, Bovine, Muscle Fibers, Skeletal physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Muscle, Skeletal ultrastructure, Myosin Light Chains metabolism, Myosin Light Chains ultrastructure, Myosin-Light-Chain Kinase metabolism
- Abstract
To identify the structural basis for the observed physiological effects of myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation in skinned rabbit skeletal muscle fibers (potentiation of force development at low calcium), thick filaments separated from the muscle in the relaxed state, with unphoshorylated light chains, were incubated with specific, intact, myosin light chain kinase at moderate (pCa 5.0) and low (pCa 5.8) calcium and with calcium-independent enzyme in the absence of calcium, then examined as negatively stained preparations, by electron microscopy and optical diffraction. All such experimental filaments became disordered (lost the near-helical array of surface myosin heads typical of the relaxed state). Filaments incubated in control media, including intact enzyme in the absence of calcium, moderate calcium (pCa 5.0) without enzyme, and bovine serum albumin substituting for calcium-independent myosin light chain kinase, all retained their relaxed structure. Finally, filaments disordered by phosphorylation regained their relaxed structure after incubation with a protein phosphatase catalytic subunit. We suggest that the observed disorder is due to phosphorylation-induced increased mobility and/or changed conformation of myosin heads, which places an increased population of them close to thin filaments, thereby potentiating actin-myosin interaction at low calcium levels.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation and the production of functionally significant changes in myosin head arrangement on striated muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Kensler RW, Yang Z, and Sweeney HL
- Subjects
- Animals, Biophysical Phenomena, Biophysics, Horseshoe Crabs, In Vitro Techniques, Macromolecular Substances, Muscle, Skeletal chemistry, Myosin-Light-Chain Kinase metabolism, Myosins chemistry, Phosphorylation, Rabbits, Spiders, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Myosins metabolism
- Published
- 1995
19. The chicken muscle thick filament: temperature and the relaxed cross-bridge arrangement.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Woodhead JL
- Subjects
- Actin Cytoskeleton chemistry, Actomyosin chemistry, Animals, Chickens, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Microscopy, Electron, Muscle Relaxation, Negative Staining, Actin Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Actomyosin ultrastructure, Temperature
- Abstract
Although chicken myosin S1 has recently been crystallized and its structure analysed, the relaxed periodic arrangement of myosin heads on the chicken thick filament has not been determined. We report here that the cross-bridge array of chicken filaments is temperature sensitive, and the myosin heads become disordered at temperatures near 4 degrees C. At 25 degrees C, however, thick filaments from chicken pectoralis muscle can be isolated with a well ordered, near-helical, arrangement of cross-bridges as seen in negatively stained preparations. This periodicity is confirmed by optical diffraction and computed transforms of images of the filaments. These show a strong series of layer lines near the orders of a 43 nm near-helical periodicity as expected from X-ray diffraction. Both analysis of phases on the first layer line, and computer filtered images of the filaments, are consistent with a three-stranded arrangement of the myosin heads on the filament.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The effects of changes in temperature or ionic strength on isolated rabbit and fish skeletal muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Peterson S, and Norberg M
- Subjects
- Actin Cytoskeleton drug effects, Actomyosin drug effects, Animals, Goldfish, Muscles drug effects, Psoas Muscles drug effects, Psoas Muscles ultrastructure, Rabbits, Species Specificity, X-Ray Diffraction, Actin Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Actomyosin ultrastructure, Muscles ultrastructure, Osmolar Concentration, Temperature
- Abstract
Although the skeletal muscles of different vertebrate species have been assumed to be generally similar, recent X-ray diffraction and mechanical studies have demonstrated differences in the responses of these muscles to changes in physiological conditions. X-ray diffraction studies have indicated that lowering the temperature and lowering ionic strength may affect the crossbridge arrangement of rabbit thick filaments. Similar X-ray diffraction studies on the structural effects of lowering ionic strength in frog and fish muscles are less clear in interpretation, while lowering the temperature appears to have little effect in these muscles. In the present study we have compared the effects of lowering the temperature or ionic strength on the crossbridge order of isolated rabbit and fish thick filaments as observed in the electron microscope. In agreement with the X-ray results, rabbit filaments show a distinct loss of crossbridge order when stained at 4 degrees C compared to 25 degrees C, whereas fish thick filaments appear similar at both temperatures. Rabbit thick filaments, when diluted to one-fourth of the normal ionic strength (while maintaining constant EGTA and ATP concentration), showed a strong tendency to bind to actin filaments, while similarly-treated fish filaments showed little tendency to aggregate or become disordered. These results appear to support the X-ray diffraction results of other investigators, and the idea that effects of ionic strength or temperature on muscle may vary with species.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The relaxed crossbridge pattern in isolated rabbit psoas muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Stewart M
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Fishes, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Microscopy, Electron, Platinum, Rabbits, Ranidae, Species Specificity, Staining and Labeling, Muscles ultrastructure
- Abstract
Rabbit muscle is a major source of material for biochemical experiments and spin labelling studies of contraction, and so it is important to establish how closely this material resembles the frog and fish muscles usually used for structural studies. Previous studies have shown that relaxed rabbit muscle thick filaments lose the characteristic order of their crossbridges when they are cooled below about 15-19 degrees C, whereas the order of fish and frog muscles is retained above 0 degrees C. The lack of order has frustrated attempts to examine rabbit thick filament structure and has raised questions about how closely they might resemble other thick filaments. We have therefore developed a procedure for preserving the crossbridge order in isolated filaments. Electron microscopy of these thick filaments after either negative staining or metal shadowing has shown that the crossbridge pattern has a 43 nm axial repeat and is based on three near-helical strands. Computed transforms of either type of image show a series of layer lines confirming that the native relaxed pattern has been preserved, and computer reconstructions show the individual crossbridges lying on a slightly perturbed 3-stranded lattice. These data indicate an unexpectedly high degree of similarity between the rabbit and frog patterns and indicate that, in fully preserved material, there is little structural difference between the two thick filaments at the temperature at which each normally functions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Effects of phosphorylation by myosin light chain kinase on the structure of Limulus thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Chantler PD, Kensler RW, and Woodhead JL
- Subjects
- Actin Cytoskeleton chemistry, Actin Cytoskeleton metabolism, Animals, Calcium pharmacology, Calmodulin pharmacology, Fourier Analysis, Horseshoe Crabs, Microscopy, Electron, Muscle Relaxation, Myosins chemistry, Phosphorylation, Actin Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Myosin-Light-Chain Kinase metabolism, Myosins metabolism
- Abstract
The results discussed in the preceding paper (Levine, R. J. C., J. L. Woodhead, and H. A. King. 1991. J. Cell Biol. 113:563-572.) indicate that A-band shortening in Limulus muscle is a thick filament response to activation that occurs largely by fragmentation of filament ends. To assess the effect of biochemical changes directly associated with activation on the length and structure of thick filaments from Limulus telson muscle, a dually regulated tissue (Lehman, W., J. Kendrick-Jones, and A. G. Szent Gyorgyi. 1973. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 37:319-330.) we have examined the thick filament response to phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains. In agreement with the previous work of J. Sellers (1981. J. Biol. Chem. 256:9274-9278), Limulus myosin, incubated with partially purified chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and [gamma 32P]-ATP, binds 2 mol phosphate/mole protein. On autoradiographs of SDS-PAGE, the label is restricted to the two regulatory light chains, LC1 and LC2. Incubation of long (greater than or equal to 4.0 microns) thick filaments, separated from Limulus telson muscle under relaxing conditions, with either intact MLCK in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, or Ca2(+)-independent MLCK obtained by brief chymotryptic digestion (Walsh, M. P., R. Dabrowska, S. Hinkins, and D. J. Hartshorne. 1982. Biochemistry. 21:1919-1925), causes significant changes in their structure. These include: disordering of the helical surface arrangement of myosin heads as they move away from the filament backbone; the presence of distal bends and breaks, with loss of some surface myosin molecules, in each polar filament half; and the production of shorter filaments and end-fragments. The latter structures are similar to those produced by Ca2(+)-activation of skinned fibers (Levine, R. J. C., J. L. Woodhead, and H. A. King. J. Cell Biol. 113:563-572). Rinsing experimental filament preparations with relaxing solution before staining restores some degree of order of the helical surface array, but not filament length. We propose that outward movement of myosin heads and thick filament shortening in Limulus muscle are responses to activation that are dependent on phosphorylation of regulatory myosin light chains. Filament shortening may be due, in large part, to breakage at the filament ends.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Polymorphic nexuses in the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris.
- Author
-
Brink PR, Dewey MM, Colflesh DE, and Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Bivalvia ultrastructure, Freeze Fracturing, Intestines ultrastructure, Microscopy, Electron, Nephropidae ultrastructure, Nervous System ultrastructure, Phylogeny, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Oligochaeta ultrastructure
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Isolation of mouse myocardial gap junctions.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Goodenough DA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Fractionation methods, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Female, Male, Membrane Proteins isolation & purification, Mice, Microscopy, Electron, Molecular Weight, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Myocardium ultrastructure
- Abstract
A new method is presented for the isolation of an enriched fraction of mouse myocardial gap junctions without the use of exogenous proteases. The junctions appear well preserved morphologically and similar to their appearance in situ. Contaminants of the preparation include fragments of the fascia adherens region of the intercalated disk. SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the preparation reveals seven major bands with apparent mol wt of 28,000; 31,000; 33,500; 43,000; 47,000; 49,000; and 57,000. Only the bands at 38,000; 31,000; 33,500; and possibly the diffuse band at 47,000 copurify with the morphologically assayed gap junctions. Evidence is presented that the peptides at 43,000 and 57,000 are contained within the contaminating fascia adherens.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Glial cells in the earthworm ventral nerve cord make an A-type nexus.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Brink P, and Dewey MM
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Freeze Fracturing, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Neuroglia ultrastructure, Oligochaeta ultrastructure
- Abstract
Nexuses have been demonstrated between glial cell processes in the earthworm ventral nerve cord. The nexuses have been demonstrated by freeze-cleavage to be A-type neuxuses, thus demonstrating for the first time the type of nexus present in the Annelida. If the nexal cleavage pattern has physiological significance then the results suggest that physiologically the nexuses of the earthworm may be similar to those of vertebrates.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The septum of the lateral axon of the earthworm: a thin section and freeze-fracture study.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Brink PR, and Dewey MM
- Subjects
- Action Potentials, Animals, Axons physiology, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Desmosomes ultrastructure, Freeze Fracturing, Microscopy, Electron, Axons ultrastructure, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Oligochaeta ultrastructure
- Abstract
Septa occur between the axonal segments in the lateral giant septate axon of the nerve cord of the earthworm. This septum is demonstrated here to be permeable to fluorescein and to exhibit a negligible time delay for impulse transmission. Periodic anastomoses between the two lateral axons of the nerve cord are revealed by fluorescein. The permeability of the septum is correlated with the demonstration that nexuses occur along the septum. In thin sections, the nexuses may appear as long septilaminar or pentalaminar membrane appositions, but most frequently appear as a series of short or punctate membrane appositions. In freeze-fracture replicas, the nexuses appear as particles 10-12 nm in diameter on the PF face and as pits on the EF face. The particles and pits are arranged in plaques, in anastomosing strands, or most frequently in small plaques with strands of particles or pits emerging from the periphery. In addition to the nexuses, a junction characterized by the presence of 31 nm diameter hemispherical densities on the cytoplasmic surfaces of the septal membranes is revealed in thin sections. The densities are paired on the adjacent septal membranes, and most frequently are shown by optical diffraction to be arranged on the membrane surfaces in hexagonal or rhomboidal lattices with a centre-to-centre spacing of 34.8 nm. In freeze-fracture replicas, an array of particles and pits with a similar lattice symmetry and spacing to the arrays of hemispherical densities is demonstrated.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Molecular organization of Limulus thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Kensler RW, Stewart M, and Haselgrove JC
- Subjects
- Animals, Tropomyosin analysis, X-Ray Diffraction, Horseshoe Crabs anatomy & histology, Muscles anatomy & histology
- Published
- 1982
28. Electron microscopic and optical diffraction analysis of the structure of scorpion muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Levine RJ, and Stewart M
- Subjects
- Animals, Computers, Electron Probe Microanalysis methods, Horseshoe Crabs anatomy & histology, Hydrolyzable Tannins, Muscles ultrastructure, Species Specificity, Spiders anatomy & histology, Staining and Labeling, Uranium, X-Ray Diffraction methods, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Organometallic Compounds, Scorpions anatomy & histology
- Abstract
We rapidly and gently isolated thick filaments from scorpion tail muscle by a modification of the technique previously described for isolating Limulus thick filaments. Images of negatively stained filaments appeared to be highly periodic, with a well-preserved myosin cross-bridge array. Optical diffraction patterns of the electron micrograph images were detailed and similar to optical diffraction patterns from Limulus and tarantula thick filaments. Analysis of the optical diffraction patterns and computed Fourier transforms, together with the appearance of the filaments in the micrographs, suggested a model for the filaments in which the myosin cross-bridges were arranged on four helical strands with 12 cross-bridges per turn of each strand, thus giving the observed repeat every third cross-bridge level. Comparison of the scorpion thick filaments with those isolated from the closely related chelicerate arthropods, Limulus and tarantula, revealed that they were remarkably similar in appearance and helical symmetry but different in diameter.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. An electron microscopic and optical diffraction analysis of the structure of Limulus telson muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Levine RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Microscopy, Electron, X-Ray Diffraction, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Horseshoe Crabs ultrastructure, Muscles ultrastructure, Myosins
- Abstract
Long, thick filaments (greater than 4.0 micrometer) rapidly and gently isolated from fresh, unstimulated Limulus muscle by an improved procedure have been examined by electron microscopy and optical diffraction. Images of negatively stained filaments appear highly periodic with a well-preserved myosin cross-bridge array. Optical diffraction patterns of the electron micrographs show a wealth of detail and are consistent with a myosin helical repeat of 43.8 nm, similar to that observed by x-ray diffraction. Analysis of the optical diffraction patterns, in conjunction with the appearance in electron micrographs of the filaments, supports a model for the filament in which the myosin cross-bridges are arranged on a four-stranded helix, with 12 cross-bridges per turn or each helix, thus giving an axial repeat every third level of cross-bridges (43.8 nm).
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Structure of Limulus and other invertebrate thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Kensler RW, Reedy M, Hoffman W, Davidheiser S, and Davies RE
- Subjects
- Animals, Horseshoe Crabs, Microscopy, Electron, Scorpions, Species Specificity, Spiders, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Muscles ultrastructure, Myofibrils ultrastructure
- Abstract
We have demonstrated remarkable similarity among the skeletal muscles of chelicerate arthropods with respect to the cross-bridge arrangement on the surface of their thick filaments. The latter, gently isolated from the muscles of three representative species (Limulus telson , tarantula leg and scorpion leg and tail) have been examined by electron microscopy and optical diffraction using both negatively stained and unidirectionally metal shadowed preparations. The filaments are highly periodic and produce clear and detailed diffraction patterns. The cross-bridge projections form integral surface helices, with an axial spacing of 14.5 nm between adjacent crowns and a major axial repeat every 43.5 nm. We have demonstrated previously that Limulus filaments are four-stranded and analysis of both electron micrographs and their transforms, as well as optical reconstructions of the arachnid filaments is consistent with their also having a four-start surface helix, which is right-handed in all cases. Of all those examined, thus far, only Limulus thick filaments have been demonstrated to change length under various conditions. Shortened Limulus filaments isolated from K+-stimulated fibers retain the 43.5 nm axial repeat periodicity and 14.5 nm axial spacing between crowns. In preliminary analysis of negatively stained and metal shadowed preparations, we see no systematic change with respect to screw or rotational symmetry in short as compared with long filaments. A few of the former have a very slightly increased diameter (3-4 nm) in the middle of each filament arm. This region often shows disorder on optical transforms. From our results we cannot rule out the possibility that disaggregation and reaggregation of thick filament proteins accompany the changes in length of Limulus thick filaments.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Position of Mercenaria regulatory light-chain Cys50 site on the surface of myosin visualized by electron microscopy.
- Author
-
Chantler PD and Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Avidin, Binding Sites, Microscopy, Electron, Bivalvia genetics, Cysteine, Myosins
- Abstract
Mercenaria regulatory light-chains, specifically labelled at cysteine 50 with N-iodoacetyl-N'-biotinylhexylenediamine, were rebound to regulatory light-chain denuded scallop myosin, and the hybrid myosin formed was decorated with avidin. These hybrid myosins were visualized by rotary-shadowing electron microscopy. Three distinct images of avidin-decorated hybrid myosin molecules were obtained. These comprise singly decorated molecules, where the avidin is bound symmetrically or asymmetrically with respect to the two heads of myosin, in addition to "figures-of-five", where two myosin molecules associate with a centrally placed avidin molecule. Analysis of these images indicates that the Mercenaria regulatory light-chain Cys50 site is located 15 to 35 A from the head-rod junction when the light-chain is bound in situ to myosin. Implications with respect to head topology and probe studies are discussed.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Structure of Limulus telson muscle thick filaments.
- Author
-
Stewart M, Kensler RW, and Levine RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Computers, Macromolecular Substances, Myosins, Optics and Photonics, Horseshoe Crabs ultrastructure, Muscles ultrastructure
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. AN ultrastructural study of cross-bridge arrangement in the frog thigh muscle thick filament.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Stewart M
- Subjects
- Animals, Computers, Microscopy, Electron, Models, Structural, Rana pipiens, Actin Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Muscles ultrastructure
- Abstract
We have developed thick filament isolation methods that preserve the relaxed cross-bridge order of frog thick filaments such that the filaments can be analyzed by the convergent techniques of electron microscopy, optical diffraction, and computer image analysis. Images of the filaments shadowed by using either unidirectional shadowing or rotary shadowing show a series of subunits arranged along a series of right-handed near-helical strands that occur every 43 nm axially along the filament arms. Optical filtrations of images of these shadowed filaments show 4-5 subunits per half-turn of the strands, consistent with a three-stranded arrangement of the cross-bridges, thus supporting our earlier results from negative staining and computer-image analysis. The optical diffraction patterns of the shadowed filaments show a departure from the pattern expected for helical symmetry consistent with the presence of cylindrical symmetry and a departure of the cross-bridges from helical symmetry. We also describe a modified negative staining procedure that gives improved delineation of the cross-bridge arrangement. From analysis of micrographs of these negatively stained filament tilted about their long axes, we have computed a preliminary three-dimensional reconstruction of the filament that clearly confirms the three-stranded arrangement of the myosin heads.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The effect of lanthanum on the nexus of the anterior byssus retractor muscle of Mytilus edulis L.
- Author
-
Brink PR, Kensler RW, and Dewey MM
- Subjects
- Animals, Bivalvia drug effects, Cell Membrane ultrastructure, Freeze Fracturing, Intercellular Junctions drug effects, Muscles ultrastructure, Bivalvia ultrastructure, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Lanthanum pharmacology
- Abstract
The nexus of the anterior byssus retractor muscle (ABRM) of Mytilus has been observed with freeze-fracture techniques. Pits appear in the EF face and particles in the PF face, designating it as an A-type nexus. Under control conditions (lanthanum-free) the center-to-center spacing of pits and particles ranged from 14.0 nm to 15.5 nm. When lanthanum chloride (5 mM) was used in incubation media before fixation and glycerination, marked changes in the nexal membrane were observed. These changes involved close packing and long-range ordering of pits in the EF face, as shown by optical diffraction. In the presence of lanthanum the center-to-center spacing of the pits was 11.7 nm, while the particles remained at a spacing of 15.0 nm. From this we conclude that specific agents can alter the array of pits and particles in a nexus (gap junction).
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Nexus of frog ventricle.
- Author
-
Kensler RW, Brink P, and Dewey MM
- Subjects
- Animals, Anura, Fixatives, Freeze Fracturing, Heart Ventricles, Liver ultrastructure, Models, Structural, Rana pipiens, Intercellular Junctions ultrastructure, Myocardium ultrastructure
- Abstract
Here were demonstrate in Rana pipiens ventricle a nexus with very unusual morphology. This tissue has been reported previously to lack nexuses. The nexus appears in thin sections of ventricle, fixed in aldehyde and OsO4 or permanganate as a series of punctate membrane appositions regularly alternating with regions of membrane separation. The junctional width at membrane appositions, as determined by microdensitometry and optical measurements, is 15-17 nm, and the width of the electron-translucent region between the junctional membranes is 1.8 nm. These values correspond closely to similar measurements of the more typical nexues in frog liver. Along the nexus the mean distance between punctate appositions is 74.5 nm. Freeze-cleave replicas of the nexuses between myocardial cells show particles 10.4 nm in diameter arranged in arrays of up to nine linked circles or partial circles on the PF-face and similar arrays of pits of shallow grooves on the EF-face. The mean diameter of the circles on both membrane fracture faces is 76.7 nm comparsion of the thin-sectioned and freeze-cleaved nexuses demonstrates an excellent correspondence between the spacing of membrane appositions along the junction and the diameters of the freeze-cleaved circles of particles and pits or grooves.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Fibre types in Limulus telson muscles: morphology and histochemistry.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Davidheiser S, Kelly AM, Kensler RW, Leferovich J, and Davies RE
- Subjects
- Animals, Histocytochemistry, Microscopy, Electron, Muscles enzymology, Myosins analysis, Horseshoe Crabs anatomy & histology, Muscles ultrastructure, NADH Tetrazolium Reductase analysis, NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases analysis
- Abstract
Using a variety of techniques, we have demonstrated the presence of at least two fibre types in Limulus median telson levator muscle. By light and electron microscopy, large (2,156 microns 2 mean cross-sectional area) fibres have A-bands of 4.1 microns, one-half I bands of 2.15 microns and Z lines less than or equal to 0.5 microns in width. Few mitochondria are found in these fibres, which comprise 54% of those present in a given microscope field and which occupy 82% of the total cross-sectional area. Small fibres (484 microns 2 mean cross-sectional area) have A bands of 6.3 microns, one-half I bands of 3.1 microns and Z lines between 0.5 and 1.0 microns in width and are rich in mitochondria. Although small fibres comprise nearly one-half (46%) of the fibres in a field, they occupy only 18% of the total cross-sectional area. Histochemical staining for alkaline-stable myofibrillar ATPase activity and mitochondrial reduced beta-nicotinamide adenine nucleotide (beta-NADH) tetrazolium reductase activity confirms the presence of two fibre types. The large fibres react positively for the myofibrillar ATPase activity and negatively for the mitochondrial enzyme activity. The reverse is seen with the small fibres. Some fibres of intermediate size, having intermediate staining characteristics, were also observed. Native gel electrophoresis of both myofibrillar and purified myosin preparations supports the observed differences in myofibrillar ATPase activity in that two myosin isozymes are resolved on pyrophosphate gels. Although the thick filaments isolated from unstimulated small fibres are longer (greater than 6.0 microns) than those isolated from unstimulated large fibres (4.26 microns), all have a similar appearance with respect to the arrangement of myosin heads on their surfaces, and similar diameters. The implications of the observed heterogeneity of fibre types is discussed with reference to previously reported phenomena in Limulus telson muscle, including changes in length of thick filaments on fibre stimulation and the shape of the length-tension curve obtained from fibre bundles.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Structure and paramyosin content of tarantula thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Kensler RW, Reedy MC, Hofmann W, and King HA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytoskeleton analysis, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Microscopy, Electron, Myofibrils ultrastructure, Optics and Photonics, Spiders analysis, Staining and Labeling, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Spiders ultrastructure, Tropomyosin analysis
- Abstract
Muscle fibers of the tarantula femur exhibit structural and biochemical characteristics similar to those of other long-sarcomere invertebrate muscles, having long A-bands and long thick filaments. 9-12 thin filaments surround each thick filament. Tarantula muscle has a paramyosin:myosin heavy chain molecular ratio of 0.31 +/- 0.079 SD. We studied the myosin cross-bridge arrangement on the surface of tarantula thick filaments on isolated, negatively stained, and unidirectionally metal-shadowed specimens by electron microscopy and optical diffraction and filtering and found it to be similar to that previously described for the thick filaments of muscle of the closely related chelicerate arthropod, Limulus. Cross-bridges are disposed in a four-stranded right-handed helical arrangement, with 14.5-nm axial spacing between successive levels of four bridges, and a helical repeat period every 43.5 nm. The orientation of cross-bridges on the surface of tarantula filaments is also likely to be very similar to that on Limulus filaments as suggested by the similarity between filtered images of the two types of filaments and the radial distance of the centers of mass of the cross-bridges from the surfaces of both types of filaments. Tarantula filaments, however, have smaller diameters than Limulus filaments, contain less paramyosin, and display structure that probably reflects the organization of the filament backbone which is not as apparent in images of Limulus filaments. We suggest that the similarities between Limulus and tarantula thick filaments may be governed, in part, by the close evolutionary relationship of the two species.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Structure of short thick filaments from Limulus muscle.
- Author
-
Levine RJ and Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Horseshoe Crabs, Macromolecular Substances, Microscopy, Electron, Muscle Contraction, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Muscles analysis
- Abstract
Shortened Limulus thick filaments, isolated from stimulated muscle, are structurally similar to long filaments, isolated from unstimulated muscle, except for length. Both have 3-fold screw symmetry with a helical repeat at approximately 43 nm, axial spacing of 14.5 nm between successive crowns of crossbridges and 4-fold rotational symmetry as estimated from the Bessel argument, by analysis of optical transforms of electron micrograph negatives of negatively stained samples. Both short and long filaments also have similar radii for the location of their crossbridges, thus similar diameters. Equal numbers of subunits/helical strand are also apparent on images of metal-shadowed long and short filaments. Since these data argue against molecular reorganization during filament shortening, it is suggested that the change in length of Limulus thick filaments may occur by reversible disaggregation of constituent protein molecules.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Crossbridge and backbone structure of invertebrate thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Kensler RW, and Levitt P
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Arrangement of myosin heads in relaxed thick filaments from frog skeletal muscle.
- Author
-
Stewart M and Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Animals, Macromolecular Substances, Microscopy, Electron, Models, Biological, Rana pipiens, X-Ray Diffraction, Muscles ultrastructure, Myosins
- Abstract
The distribution of myosin heads on the surface of frog skeletal muscle thick filaments has been determined by computer processing of electron micrographs of isolated filaments stained with tannic acid and uranyl acetate. The heads are arranged in three strands but not in a strictly helical manner and so the structure has cylindrical symmetry. This accounts for the "forbidden" meridional reflections seen in diffraction patterns. Each layer-line therefore represents the sum of terms of Bessel orders 0, +/- 3, +/- 6, +/- 9 and so on. These terms interact so that, unlike a helical object without terms from overlapping Bessel orders, as the azimuth is changed, the amplitude on a layer-line at a particular radius varies substantially and its phase does not alter linearly. Consequently, a three-dimensional reconstruction cannot be produced from a single view. We have therefore used tilt series of three individual filaments to decompose the data on layer-lines 0 to 6 into terms of Bessel orders up to +/- 9 using a least-squares procedure. These data had a least-squares residual of 0.32 and enabled a three-dimensional reconstruction to be obtained at a nominal resolution of 6 nm. This showed, at a radius of about 10 nm, three strands of projecting morphological units with three units spaced along each strand every 42.9 nm axially. We have identified these units with pairs of myosin heads. Successive units along a strand are perturbed axially, azimuthally and radially from the positions expected if the structure was perfectly helical. This may simply be a consequence of steric restrictions in packing the heads on the thick filament surface, but could also reflect an underlying non-helical arrangement of myosin tails, which would be consistent with the thick filament shaft being constructed from three subfilaments in which the tails were arranged regularly. There was also material at a radius of about 6 nm spaced 42.9 nm axially, which we tentatively identified with accessory proteins. The filament shaft had a pronounced pattern of axial staining.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Arrangement of myosin heads on Limulus thick filaments.
- Author
-
Levine RJ, Chantler PD, and Kensler RW
- Subjects
- Adenosine Triphosphate analogs & derivatives, Adenosine Triphosphate pharmacology, Animals, Cross-Linking Reagents, Models, Molecular, Muscles drug effects, Muscles ultrastructure, Myosins metabolism, Potassium Chloride pharmacology, Protein Conformation, Vanadates pharmacology, Horseshoe Crabs ultrastructure, Myosins ultrastructure
- Abstract
The two myosin heads with a single surface subunit on thick filaments from chelicerate arthropod muscle may originate from the same, or from axially sequential molecules, as suggested by three-dimensional reconstructions. The resolution attained in the reconstructions, however, does not permit one to distinguish unequivocally between these two possible arrangements. We examined the effect of 0.6 M KCl on relaxed thick filaments separated from Limulus muscle and filaments in which nearest myosin heads were cross-linked by the bifunctional agent, 3,3'-dithio-bis[3'(2')-O-[6-propionylamino)hexanoyl]adenosine 5'-triphosphate (bis22ATP), in the presence of vanadate (Vi). In high salt, surface myosin dissolved from both native, relaxed filaments and those exposed to 1-2 mM dithiothreitol after cross-linking, but was retained on filaments with cross-linked heads. Since bis22ATP must form intermolecular bonds between myosin heads within each subunit to prevent myosin solubilization in high salt, we conclude that each of these heads originates from a different myosin molecule, as was previously predicted by the reconstructions.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Determination of the handedness of the crossbridge helix of Limulus thick filaments.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Levine RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Microscopy, Electron, Models, Chemical, Optics and Photonics, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Horseshoe Crabs ultrastructure, Muscles ultrastructure
- Abstract
Thick filaments, isolated in their long conformation from unstimulated Limulus telson muscles, were shadowed with platinum or platinum-carbon and examined using electron microscopy and optical diffraction techniques. All filaments showed evidence of a right-handed surface helix, which had a major repeat at approx. 43 nm. In fortuitously oriented specimens the subunits, presumably crossbridges, which comprised the helical strands were clearly delineated. Optical transforms obtained from images of shadowed filaments confirmed the helical repeat at approx. 43 nm and could be readily interpreted as patterns expected from a one-surface view of the four-stranded filament structure we have previously reported. The striking resemblance between optically filtered images of shadowed filaments and the computed reconstruction of the one-surface filament further confirm our model for the myosin lattice of the Limulus thick filament.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. An ultrastructural study of crossbridge arrangement in the fish skeletal muscle thick filament.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Stewart M
- Subjects
- Animals, Fourier Analysis, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Microscopy, Electron, Myosins ultrastructure, X-Ray Diffraction, Cyprinidae anatomy & histology, Goldfish anatomy & histology, Muscles ultrastructure
- Abstract
A procedure has been developed for isolating gold-fish skeletal muscle thick filaments that preserves the near-helical arrangement of the myosin cross-bridges under relaxing conditions. These filaments have been examined by electron microscopy and computer image analysis. Electron micrographs of the negatively stained filaments showed a clear periodicity associated with the crossbridges, with an axial repeat every 42.9 nm. Computed Fourier transforms of the negatively stained filaments showed a series of layer lines confirming this periodicity, and were similar to the X-ray diffraction patterns of fish muscle obtained by J. Hartford and J. Squire. Analysis of the computed transform data and filtered images of the isolated fish filaments demonstrated that the myosin crossbridges lie along three strands. Platinum shadowing demonstrated that the strands have a right-handed orientation, and computed transforms and filtered images of the shadowed filaments suggest that the crossbridges are perturbed both axially and azimuthally from an ideal helical arrangement.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Three-dimensional reconstruction of thick filaments from Limulus and scorpion muscle.
- Author
-
Stewart M, Kensler RW, and Levine RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Computers, Electron Probe Microanalysis, Models, Biological, Muscles ultrastructure, Myosins, Species Specificity, Staining and Labeling, Uranium, X-Ray Diffraction, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Horseshoe Crabs anatomy & histology, Organometallic Compounds, Scorpions anatomy & histology
- Abstract
We have produced three dimensional reconstructions, at a nominal resolution of 5 nm, of thick filaments from scorpion and Limulus skeletal muscle, both of which have a right-handed four-stranded helical arrangement of projecting subunits. In both reconstructions there was a distinct division of density within projecting subunits consistent with the presence of two myosin heads. Individual myosin heads appeared to be curved, with approximate dimensions of 16 X 5 X 5 nm and seemed more massive at one end. Our reconstructions were consistent with the two heads in a projecting subunit being arranged either antiparallel or parallel to each other and directed away from the bare zone. Although we cannot exclude the second of these interpretations, we favor the first as being more consistent with both filament models and also because it would enable easy phosphorylation of light chains. The antiparallel interpretation requires that the two heads within a subunit derive from different myosin molecules. In either interpretation, the two heads have different orientations relative to the thick filament shaft.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Frog skeletal muscle thick filaments are three-stranded.
- Author
-
Kensler RW and Stewart M
- Subjects
- Animals, Computers, Microscopy, Electron, Rana pipiens, X-Ray Diffraction, Muscles ultrastructure
- Abstract
A procedure has been developed for isolating and negatively staining vertebrate skeletal muscle thick filaments that preserves the arrangement of the myosin crossbridges. Electron micrographs of these filaments showed a clear periodicity associated with crossbridges with an axial repeat of 42.9 nm. Optical diffraction patterns of these images showed clear layer lines and were qualitatively similar to published x-ray diffraction patterns, except that the 1/14.3-nm meridional reflection was somewhat weaker. Computer image analysis of negatively stained images of these filaments has enabled the number of strands to be established unequivocally. Both reconstructed images from layer line data and analysis of the phases of the inner maxima of the first layer line are consistent only with a three-stranded structure and cannot be reconciled with either two- or four-stranded models.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.