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Title: Tryptic digestion of rabbit skeletal myofibrils: an enzymatic probe of myosin cross-bridges. Author: Chen T, Reisler E. Journal: Biochemistry; 1984 May 22; 23(11):2400-7. PubMed ID: 6477873. Abstract: Tryptic digestion of rabbit skeletal myofibrils under physiological ionic strength and pH conditions was used as a probe of cross-bridge interaction with actin in the presence of nucleotides and pyrophosphate. Under rigor conditions, digestion of myofibrils at 24 degrees C results in the formation of 25K, 110K [heavy meromyosin (HMM)], and light meromyosin (LMM) fragments as the main reaction products. Very little if any 50K peptide is generated in such digestions. In the presence of magnesium pyrophosphate, magnesium 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (MgAMPPNP), and MgATP, the main cleavage proceeds at two positions, 25K and 75K from the N-terminal portion of myosin, yielding the 25K, 50K, and 150K species. The relative amounts of the 50K, 110K, and 150K peptides and the rates of myosin heavy-chain digestion in the presence of pyrophosphate and AMPPNP indicate partial dissociation of myosin from actin. Direct centrifugation measurements of the binding of HMM and subfragment 1 (S-1) to actin in myofibrils confirm that cross-bridges partition between attached and detached states in the presence of these ligands. In the presence of MgADP, HMM and S-1 remain attached to actin at 24 degrees C. However, tryptic digestion of myofibrils containing MgADP is consistent with the existence of a mixed population of attached and detached cross-bridges, suggesting that only one head on each myosin molecule is attached to actin. As shown by tryptic digestion of myofibrils and the measurements of HMM and S-1 binding to actin, nucleotide- and pyrophosphate-induced dissociation of cross-bridges is more pronounced at 4 than at 24 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]