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Title: Crosslinking by thiol disulfide interchange of 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)-treated light chain and heavy chain of rabbit skeletal myosin. Author: Mocz G, Biro EN, Balint M. Journal: Eur J Biochem; 1982 Sep 01; 126(3):603-9. PubMed ID: 6754373. Abstract: Interchain disulfide crosslinks between the heavy-chain fragment in heavy meromyosin and myosin light chain 2, generated by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid (Nbs2), are formed under appropriate ionic conditions at neutral pH as revealed by liberation of the chromogenic 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid. The presence of the original or of a slightly digested light chain 2 reduces the rate of the reaction of heavy meromyosin with Nbs2-modified light chain 2 by 32 - 39%, if Ca2+ is present. Dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in absence of reducing agents shows that Nbs2-modified light chain 2 attaches to the heavy chain in the region of the 21-kDa fragment of heavy meromyosin, which contains the essential thiol groups and which has been located at the subfragment 1/subfragment 2 junction of myosin [Balint, M., Wolf, I., Tarcsafalvi, A., Gergely, J. and Sreter, F. A. (1978) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 190, 793-799]. Modification of thiol-1 groups with iodoacetamide as well as crosslinking the thiol-1 and thiol-2 groups by the bifunctional reagent p-N,N'-phenylenedimaleimide prior to incubation with Nbs2-modified light chain 2 has no substantial effect on the crosslinking reaction. This indicates that other thiol groups are involved in the binding of Nbs2-modified light chain 2 to the heavy chain. An examination of K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ and actin-activated Mg2+ ATPase activities of heavy meromyosin that had been crosslinked with Nbs2-modified light chain 2 shows only a slight change in comparison with intact heavy meromyosin, indicating that crosslinking had not altered significantly the hydrolytic site. Crosslinking of Nbs2-modified light chain 2 to light-chain-2-deficient heavy meromyosin restored the original light-chain-2-dependent Ca2+ sensitivity of the tryptic fragmentation of heavy meromyosin, suggesting that crosslinking takes place at the proper binding site for light 2.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]