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  • Title: Effect of actin, ATP, phosphates, and pH on vanadate-induced photocleavage of myosin subfragment 1.
    Author: Muhlrad A, Peyser YM, Ringel I.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 1991 Jan 29; 30(4):958-65. PubMed ID: 1824926.
    Abstract:
    Near-UV irradiation in the presence of vanadate cleaves the heavy chain of myosin subfragment 1 at three specific sites located at 23, 31, and 74 kDa from the N-terminus. Increasing the pH from 6.0 to 8.5, gradually, reduces the efficiency of the cleavage and completely eliminates the 31-kDa cut. Actin specifically inhibits the photocleavage at the sites located 31 and 74 kDa from the N-terminus. ATP strongly protects from cleavage at the 23- and 31-kDa sites and less strongly from the cut at the 74-kDa site. ADP and pyrophosphate have similar, but less pronounced, effects as ATP. Orthophosphate inhibits the photocleavage at the 23- and 74-kDa sites with a similar efficiency. In the ternary actin-S-1-ATP complex, the photocleavage is inhibited at all sites, and the effects of actin and ATP are additive. Photocleavages affect the K+(EDTA)-, Ca2(+)-, and actin-activated ATPase activity of subfragment 1. Loss of all three ATPases is caused by cleavage at the 23-kDa site, while the cut at the 74-kDa site only leads to the loss of actin-activated ATPase activity. It is concluded that subfragment 1 contains at least two distinct phosphate binding sites, the first being part of the "consensus" ATP binding site wherein the 23-kDa photocleavage site is located. This site is responsible for the binding and hydrolysis of ATP. It is possible that the 31-kDa cleavage site is also associated with the "consensus" site through a loop. The 74-kDa cleavage site is a part of another phosphate binding site which may play a role in the regulation of the myosin-actin interaction.
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