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Title: Evidence for functional differences between two flagellar dynein ATPases. Author: Penningroth SM, Peterson DD. Journal: Cell Motil Cytoskeleton; 1986; 6(6):586-94. PubMed ID: 2948677. Abstract: Energy coupling in flagellar motility was investigated using demembranated, reactivated sea urchin spermatozoa (Arbacia punctulata). The ATP-dependence of ATPase activity was investigated for ATP concentrations ranging from 4 microM to 600 microM ATP. Using Eadie-Scatchard plot analysis, we identified two axonemal dynein ATPase activities. Their apparent Michaelis constants were calculated to be equal to 4 microM and 161 microM ATP, and they were referred to, respectively, as the high-affinity dynein ATPase (HADA) and the low-affinity dynein ATPase (LADA). Investigation of movement-coupled ATPase activity (difference between the ATPase activities of reactivated and broken, immotile spermatozoa) indicated that HADA and LADA were both 65% movement-coupled. The apparent Michaelis constants of movement-coupled HADA and LADA, 12 microM and 271 microM ATP, respectively, were two- to four-fold greater than the apparent Michaelis constants of movement-uncoupled HADA and LADA. The apparent Michaelis constants for force generation and beat frequency of reactivated spermatozoa were determined to be 24 microM and 290 microM ATP, respectively. These results raise the possibility that flagellar force generation is controlled primarily by movement-coupled HADA, and that flagellar beat frequency is controlled primarily by movement-coupled LADA. Thus, mechanochemical activity in flagellar motility may be divided between two enzymatically and functionally distinct classes of flagellar dyneins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]