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  • Title: Kinetics of the structural transition of muscle thin filaments observed by fluorescence resonance energy transfer.
    Author: Shitaka Y, Kimura C, Iio T, Miki M.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 2004 Aug 24; 43(33):10739-47. PubMed ID: 15311935.
    Abstract:
    Fluorescence resonance energy transfer showed that troponin-I changes the position on an actin filament corresponding to three states (relaxed, closed, and open) of the thin filament (Hai et al. (2002) J. Biochem. 131, 407-418). In combination with the stopped-flow method, fluorescence resonance energy transfer between probes attached to position 1, 133, or 181 of troponin-I and Cys-374 of actin on reconstituted thin filaments was measured to follow the transition between three states of the thin filament. When the free Ca(2+) concentration was increased, the transition from relaxed to closed states occurred with a rate constant of approximately 500 s(-1). For the reverse transition, the rate constant was approximately 60 s(-1). When myosin subfragment-1 was dissociated from thin filaments in the presence of Ca(2+) by rapid mixing with ATP, the transition from open to closed states occurred with a single rate constant of approximately 300 s(-1). Light-scattering measurements showed that the ATP-induced myosin subfragment-1 dissociation occurred with a rate constant of approximately 900 s(-1). In the absence of Ca(2+), the transition from open to relaxed states occurred with two rate constants of approximately 400 and approximately 80 s(-1). These transition rates are fast enough to allow the spatial rearrangement of thin filaments to be involved in the regulation mechanism of muscle contraction.
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