<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<rss version="2.0">
<channel>
<title>Craig Lab</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 University of Massachusetts Medical School All rights reserved.</copyright>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig</link>
<description>Recent documents in Craig Lab</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<lastBuildDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2013 16:14:37 PST</lastBuildDate>
<ttl>3600</ttl>








<item>
<title>Electron microscopy and 3D reconstruction of F-actin decorated with cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C)</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/23</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/23</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 06:47:16 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Myosin-binding protein C (MyBP-C) is an approximately 130-kDa rod-shaped protein of the thick (myosin containing) filaments of vertebrate striated muscle. It is composed of 10 or 11 globular 10-kDa domains from the immunoglobulin and fibronectin type III families and an additional MyBP-C-specific motif. The cardiac isoform cMyBP-C plays a key role in the phosphorylation-dependent enhancement of cardiac function that occurs upon beta-adrenergic stimulation, and mutations in MyBP-C cause skeletal muscle and heart diseases. In addition to binding to myosin, MyBP-C can also bind to actin via its N-terminal end, potentially modulating contraction in a novel way via this thick-thin filament bridge. To understand the structural basis of actin binding, we have used negative stain electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction to study the structure of F-actin decorated with bacterially expressed N-terminal cMyBP-C fragments. Clear decoration was obtained under a variety of salt conditions varying from 25 to 180 mM KCl concentration. Three-dimensional helical reconstructions, carried out at the 180-mM KCl level to minimize nonspecific binding, showed MyBP-C density over a broad portion of the periphery of subdomain 1 of actin and extending tangentially from its surface in the direction of actin's pointed end. Molecular fitting with an atomic structure of a MyBP-C Ig domain suggested that most of the N-terminal domains may be well ordered on actin. The location of binding was such that it could modulate tropomyosin position and would interfere with myosin head binding to actin.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Ji Young Mun et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Carrier Proteins</category>

<category>Chickens</category>

<category>Escherichia coli</category>

<category>Mice</category>

<category>Myocardium</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Peptide Fragments</category>

<category>Protein Binding</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Secondary</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Tertiary</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Direct visualization of myosin-binding protein C bridging myosin and actin filaments in intact muscle</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/22</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/22</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 06:47:15 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Myosin-binding protein C (MyBP-C) is a thick filament protein playing an essential role in muscle contraction, and MyBP-C mutations cause heart and skeletal muscle disease in millions worldwide. Despite its discovery 40 y ago, the mechanism of MyBP-C function remains unknown. In vitro studies suggest that MyBP-C could regulate contraction in a unique way--by bridging thick and thin filaments--but there has been no evidence for this in vivo. Here we use electron tomography of exceptionally well preserved muscle to demonstrate that MyBP-C does indeed bind to actin in intact muscle. This binding implies a physical mechanism for communicating the relative sliding between thick and thin filaments that does not involve myosin and which could modulate the contractile process.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Pradeep K. Luther et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Biophysical Phenomena</category>

<category>Carrier Proteins</category>

<category>Electron Microscope Tomography</category>

<category>Freeze Substitution</category>

<category>Humans</category>

<category>Imaging, Three-Dimensional</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Ranidae</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>A molecular model of phosphorylation-based activation and potentiation of tarantula muscle thick filaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/21</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/21</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 06:47:14 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Myosin filaments from many muscles are activated by phosphorylation of their regulatory light chains (RLCs). To elucidate the structural mechanism of activation, we have studied RLC phosphorylation in tarantula thick filaments, whose high-resolution structure is known. In the relaxed state, tarantula RLCs are ~50% non-phosphorylated and 50% mono-phosphorylated, while on activation, mono-phosphorylation increases, and some RLCs become bi-phosphorylated. Mass spectrometry shows that relaxed-state mono-phosphorylation occurs on Ser35, while Ca(2+)-activated phosphorylation is on Ser45, both located near the RLC N-terminus. The sequences around these serines suggest that they are the targets for protein kinase C and myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), respectively. The atomic model of the tarantula filament shows that the two myosin heads ("free" and "blocked") are in different environments, with only the free head serines readily accessible to kinases. Thus, protein kinase C Ser35 mono-phosphorylation in relaxed filaments would occur only on the free heads. Structural considerations suggest that these heads are less strongly bound to the filament backbone and may oscillate occasionally between attached and detached states ("swaying" heads). These heads would be available for immediate actin interaction upon Ca(2)(+) activation of the thin filaments. Once MLCK becomes activated, it phosphorylates free heads on Ser45. These heads become fully mobile, exposing blocked head Ser45 to MLCK. This would release the blocked heads, allowing their interaction with actin. On this model, twitch force would be produced by rapid interaction of swaying free heads with activated thin filaments, while prolonged exposure to Ca(2+) on tetanus would recruit new MLCK-activated heads, resulting in force potentiation.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Reicy Brito et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Cell Migration Assays</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Muscles</category>

<category>Myosin-Light-Chain Kinase</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Phosphorylation</category>

<category>Serine</category>

<category>Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization</category>

<category>Spiders</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Isolation, electron microscopy and 3D reconstruction of invertebrate muscle myofilaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/20</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/20</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 06:47:13 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Understanding the molecular mechanism of muscle contraction and its regulation has been greatly influenced and aided by studies of myofilament structure in invertebrate muscles. Invertebrates are easily obtained and cover a broad spectrum of species and functional specializations. The thick (myosin-containing) filaments from some invertebrates are especially stable and simple in structure and thus much more amenable to structural analysis than those of vertebrates. Comparative studies of invertebrate filaments by electron microscopy and image processing have provided important generalizations of muscle molecular structure and function. This article reviews methods for preparing thick and thin filaments from invertebrate muscle, for imaging filaments by electron microscopy, and for determining their three dimensional structure by image processing. It also highlights some of the key insights into filament function that have come from these studies.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Roger W. Craig</author>


<category>Muscle Contraction</category>

<category>Myofibrils</category>

<category>Invertebrates</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Image Processing, Computer-Assisted</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Modulation of striated muscle contraction by binding of myosin binding protein C to actin</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/19</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/19</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 06:47:12 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C or C-protein) is a protein of the thick (myosin-containing) filaments of striated muscle thought to be involved in the modulation of cardiac contraction in response to beta-adrenergic stimulation. The mechanism of this modulation is unknown, but one possibility is through transient binding of the N-terminal end of MyBP-C to the thin (actin-containing) filaments. While such binding has been demonstrated in vitro, it was not known until recently whether such a link between thick and thin filaments also occurred in vivo. Here we review a recent paper in which electron microscopy (EM) is used to directly demonstrate MyBP-C links between myosin and actin filaments in the intact sarcomere, suggesting a possible physical mechanism for modulating filament sliding. Molecular details of MyBP-C binding to actin have recently been elucidated by EM of isolated filaments: the results suggest that MyBP-C might contribute to the modulation of contraction in part by competing with tropomyosin for binding sites on actin. New results on the structure and dynamics of the MyBP-C molecule provide additional insights into the function of this enigmatic molecule.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Pradeep K. Luther et al.</author>


<category>Carrier Proteins</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Actins</category>

<category>Electron Microscope Tomography</category>

<category>Sarcomeres</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Mini-thin filaments regulated by troponin-tropomyosin</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/18</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/18</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:08 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Striated muscle thin filaments contain hundreds of actin monomers and scores of troponins and tropomyosins. To study the cooperative mechanism of thin filaments, "mini-thin filaments" were generated by isolating particles nearly matching the minimal structural repeat of thin filaments: a double helix of actin subunits with each strand approximately seven actins long and spanned by a troponin-tropomyosin complex. One end of the particles was capped by a gelsolin (segment 1-3)-TnT fusion protein (substituting for normal TnT), and the other end was capped by tropomodulin. EM showed that the particles were 46 +/- 9 nm long, with a knob-like mass attributable to gelsolin at one end. Average actin, tropomyosin, and gelsolin-troponin composition indicated one troponin-tropomyosin attached to each strand of the two-stranded actin filament. The minifilaments thus nearly represent single regulatory units of thin filaments. The myosin S1 MgATPase rate stimulated by the minifilaments was Ca2+-sensitive, indicating that single regulatory length particles are sufficient for regulation. Ca2+ bound cooperatively to cardiac TnC in conventional thin filaments but noncooperatively to cardiac TnC in minifilaments in the absence of myosin. This suggests that thin filament Ca2+-binding cooperativity reflects indirect troponin-troponin interactions along the long axis of conventional filaments, which do not occur in minifilaments. Despite noncooperative Ca2+ binding to minifilaments in the absence of myosin, Ca2+ cooperatively activated the myosin S1-particle ATPase rate. Two-stranded single regulatory units therefore may be sufficient for myosin-mediated Ca2+-binding cooperativity. Functional mini-thin filaments are well suited for biochemical and structural analysis of thin-filament regulation.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Huiyu Gong et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Allosteric Regulation</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Ca(2+) Mg(2+)-ATPase</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Cattle</category>

<category>Gelsolin</category>

<category>Macromolecular Substances</category>

<category>Microfilaments</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Myosin Subfragments</category>

<category>Particle Size</category>

<category>Protein Binding</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

<category>Troponin</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Single particle analysis of relaxed and activated muscle thin filaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/17</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/17</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:07 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>The movement of tropomyosin from actin's outer to its inner domain plays a key role in sterically regulating muscle contraction. This movement, from a low Ca2+ to a Ca2+-induced position has been directly demonstrated by electron microscopy and helical reconstruction. Solution studies, however, suggest that tropomyosin oscillates dynamically between these positions at all Ca2+ levels, and that it is the position of this equilibrium that is controlled by Ca2+. Helical reconstruction reveals only the average position of tropomyosin on the filament, and not information on the local dynamics of tropomyosin in any one Ca2+ state. We have therefore used single particle analysis to analyze short filament segments to reveal local variations in tropomyosin behavior. Segments of Ca2+-free and Ca2+ treated thin filaments were sorted by cross-correlation to low and high Ca2+ models of the thin filament. Most segments from each data set produced reconstructions matching those previously obtained by helical reconstruction, showing low and high Ca2+ tropomyosin positions for low and high Ca2+ filaments. However, approximately 20% of segments from Ca2+-free filaments fitted best to the high Ca2+ model, yielding a corresponding high Ca2+ reconstruction. Conversely, approximately 20% of segments from Ca2+-treated filaments fitted best to the low Ca2+ model and produced a low Ca2+ reconstruction. Hence, tropomyosin position on actin is not fixed in either Ca2+ state. These findings provide direct structural evidence for the equilibration of tropomyosin position in both high and low Ca2+ states, and for the concept that Ca2+ controls the position of this equilibrium. This flexibility in the localization of tropomyosin may provide a means of sterically regulating contraction at low energy cost.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Alnoor Pirani et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Binding Sites</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Cattle</category>

<category>Image Processing, Computer-Assisted</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Multiprotein Complexes</category>

<category>Muscle Contraction</category>

<category>Muscle Proteins</category>

<category>Muscle Relaxation</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Myocardial Contraction</category>

<category>Myocardium</category>

<category>Rabbits</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

<category>Troponin</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Atomic model of a myosin filament in the relaxed state</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/15</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/15</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:06 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Contraction of muscle involves the cyclic interaction of myosin heads on the thick filaments with actin subunits in the thin filaments. Muscles relax when this interaction is blocked by molecular switches on either or both filaments. Insight into the relaxed (switched OFF) structure of myosin has come from electron microscopic studies of smooth muscle myosin molecules, which are regulated by phosphorylation. These studies suggest that the OFF state is achieved by an asymmetric, intramolecular interaction between the actin-binding region of one head and the converter region of the other, switching both heads off. Although this is a plausible model for relaxation based on isolated myosin molecules, it does not reveal whether this structure is present in native myosin filaments. Here we analyse the structure of a phosphorylation-regulated striated muscle thick filament using cryo-electron microscopy. Three-dimensional reconstruction and atomic fitting studies suggest that the 'interacting-head' structure is also present in the filament, and that it may underlie the relaxed state of thick filaments in both smooth and myosin-regulated striated muscles over a wide range of species.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>John L. Woodhead et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Cryoelectron Microscopy</category>

<category> *Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Muscle, Smooth</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Phosphorylation</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Quaternary</category>

<category>Spiders</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>E93K charge reversal on actin perturbs steric regulation of thin filaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/16</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/16</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:06 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Contraction in striated muscles is regulated by Ca2+-dependent movement of tropomyosin-troponin on thin filaments. Interactions of charged amino acid residues between the surfaces of tropomyosin and actin are believed to play an integral role in this steric mechanism by influencing the position of tropomyosin on the filaments. To investigate this possibility further, thin filaments were isolated from troponin-regulated, indirect flight muscles of Drosophila mutants that express actin with an amino acid charge reversal at residue 93 located at the interface between actin subdomains 1 and 2, in which a lysine residue is substituted for a glutamic acid. Electron microscopy and 3D helical reconstruction were employed to evaluate the structural effects of the mutation. In the absence of Ca2+, tropomyosin was in a position that blocked the myosin-binding sites on actin, as previously found with wild-type filaments. However, in the presence of Ca2+, tropomyosin position in the mutant filaments was much more variable than in the wild-type ones. In most cases (approximately 60%), tropomyosin remained in the blocking position despite the presence of Ca2+, failing to undergo a normal Ca2+-induced change in position. Thus, switching of a negative to a positive charge at position 93 on actin may stabilize negatively charged tropomyosin in the Ca2+-free state regardless of Ca2+ levels, an alteration that, in turn, is likely to interfere with steric regulation and consequently muscle activation. These results highlight the importance of actin's surface charges in determining the distribution of tropomyosin positions on thin filaments derived from troponin-regulated striated muscles.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Anthony Cammarato et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Drosophila melanogaster</category>

<category>Glutamic Acid</category>

<category>Microfilaments</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Mutation</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>An atomic model of the thin filament in the relaxed and Ca2+-activated states</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/14</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/14</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:05 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Contraction of striated muscles is regulated by tropomyosin strands that run continuously along actin-containing thin filaments. Tropomyosin blocks myosin-binding sites on actin in resting muscle and unblocks them during Ca2+-activation. This steric effect controls myosin-crossbridge cycling on actin that drives contraction. Troponin, bound to the thin filaments, couples Ca2+-concentration changes to the movement of tropomyosin. Ca2+-free troponin is thought to trap tropomyosin in the myosin-blocking position, while this constraint is released after Ca2+-binding. Although the location and movements of tropomyosin are well known, the structural organization of troponin on thin filaments is not. Its mechanism of action therefore remains uncertain. To determine the organization of troponin on the thin filament, we have constructed atomic models of low and high-Ca2+ states based on crystal structures of actin, tropomyosin and the "core domain" of troponin, and constrained by distances between filament components and by their location in electron microscopy (EM) reconstructions. Alternative models were also built where troponin was systematically repositioned or reoriented on actin. The accuracy of the different models was evaluated by determining how well they corresponded to EM images. While the initial low and high-Ca2+ models fitted the data precisely, the alternatives did not, suggesting that the starting models best represented the correct structures. Thin filament reconstructions were generated from the EM data using these starting models as references. In addition to showing the core domain of troponin, the reconstructions showed additional detail not present in the starting models. We attribute this to an extension of TnI linking the troponin core domain to actin at low (but not at high) Ca2+, thereby trapping tropomyosin in the OFF-state. The bulk of the core domain of troponin appears not to move significantly on actin, regardless of Ca2+ level. Our observations suggest a simple model for muscle regulation in which troponin affects the charge balance on actin and hence tropomyosin position.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Alnoor Pirani et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Humans</category>

<category>Microfilament Proteins</category>

<category> *Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Tertiary</category>

<category>Software</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

<category>Troponin</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>A comparison of muscle thin filament models obtained from electron microscopy reconstructions and low-angle X-ray fibre diagrams from non-overlap muscle</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/12</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/12</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:04 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>The regulation of striated muscle contraction involves changes in the interactions of troponin and tropomyosin with actin thin filaments. In resting muscle, myosin-binding sites on actin are thought to be blocked by the coiled-coil protein tropomyosin. During muscle activation, Ca2+ binding to troponin alters the tropomyosin position on actin, resulting in cyclic actin-myosin interactions that accompany muscle contraction. Evidence for this steric regulation by troponin-tropomyosin comes from X-ray data [Haselgrove, J.C., 1972. X-ray evidence for a conformational change in the actin-containing filaments of verterbrate striated muscle. Cold Spring Habor Symp. Quant. Biol. 37, 341-352; Huxley, H.E., 1972. Structural changes in actin and myosin-containing filaments during contraction. Cold Spring Habor Symp. Quant. Biol. 37, 361-376; Parry, D.A., Squire, J.M., 1973. Structural role of tropomyosin in muscle regulation: analysis of the X-ray diffraction patterns from relaxed and contracting muscles. J. Mol. Biol. 75, 33-55] and electron microscope (EM) data [Spudich, J.A., Huxley, H.E., Finch, J., 1972. Regulation of skeletal muscle contraction. II. Structural studies of the interaction of the tropomyosin-troponin complex with actin. J. Mol. Biol. 72, 619-632; O'Brien, E.J., Gillis, J.M., Couch, J., 1975. Symmetry and molecular arrangement in paracrystals of reconstituted muscle thin filaments. J. Mol. Biol. 99, 461-475; Lehman, W., Craig, R., Vibert, P., 1994. Ca2+-induced tropomyosin movement in Limulus thin filaments revealed by three-dimensional reconstruction. Nature 368, 65-67] each with its own particular strengths and limitations. Here we bring together some of the latest information from EM analysis of single thin filaments from Pirani et al. [Pirani, A., Xu, C., Hatch, V., Craig, R., Tobacman, L.S., Lehman, W. (2005). Single particle analysis of relaxed and activated muscle thin filaments. J. Mol. Biol. 346, 761-772], with synchrotron X-ray data from non-overlapped muscle fibres to refine the models of the striated muscle thin filament. This was done by incorporating current atomic-resolution structures of actin, tropomyosin, troponin and myosin subfragment-1. Fitting these atomic coordinates to EM reconstructions, we present atomic models of the thin filament that are entirely consistent with a steric regulatory mechanism. Furthermore, fitting the atomic models against diffraction data from skinned muscle fibres, stretched to non-overlap to preclude crossbridge binding, produced very similar results, including a large Ca2+-induced shift in tropomyosin azimuthal location but little change in the actin structure or apparent alteration in troponin position.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Katrina J.V. Poole et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Computer Simulation</category>

<category>Humans</category>

<category>Microfilament Proteins</category>

<category>Microfilaments</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Models, Biological</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Muscle Contraction</category>

<category>Muscles</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Secondary</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Tertiary</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

<category>Troponin</category>

<category>X-Ray Diffraction</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Structure and function of myosin filaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/13</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/13</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:04 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Myosin filaments interact with actin to generate muscle contraction and many forms of cell motility. X-ray and electron microscopy (EM) studies have revealed the general organization of myosin molecules in relaxed filaments, but technical difficulties have prevented a detailed description. Recent studies using improved ultrastructural and image analysis techniques are overcoming these problems. Three-dimensional reconstructions using single-particle methods have provided many new insights into the organization of the myosin heads and tails. Docking of atomic structures into cryo-EM density maps suggests how regulated myosin filaments are 'switched off', bringing about muscle relaxation. Additionally, sequence analysis suggests probable interactions between myosin tails in the backbone, whereas crystallographic and EM studies are starting to reveal tail interactions directly in three dimensions.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Roger W. Craig et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Microfilaments</category>

<category>Models, Biological</category>

<category>Muscle Contraction</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Muscle, Smooth</category>

<category>Myosin Subfragments</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Tropomyosin and the steric mechanism of muscle regulation</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/10</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/10</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:03 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Contraction in all muscles must be precisely regulated and requisite control systems must be able to adjust to changes in physiological and myopathic stimuli. In this chapter, we outline the structural evidence for a steric mechanism that governs muscle activity. The mechanism involves calcium and myosin induced changes in the position of tropomyosin along actin-based thin filaments. This process either blocks or uncovers myosin crossbridge binding sites on actin and consequently regulates crossbridge cycling on thin filaments, the sliding of thin and thick filaments and muscle shortening and force production.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>William Lehman et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Adenosine Triphosphate</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category>Humans</category>

<category>Kinetics</category>

<category>Microfilaments</category>

<category>Models, Biological</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Molecular Conformation</category>

<category>Muscles</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Protein Conformation</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Tertiary</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Fast skeletal muscle regulatory light chain is required for fast and slow skeletal muscle development</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/11</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/11</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:03 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>In skeletal muscle, the myosin molecule contains two sets of noncovalently attached low molecular weight proteins, the regulatory (RLC) and essential (ELC) light chains. To assess the functional and developmental significance of the fast skeletal isoform of the RLC (RLC-f), the murine fast skeletal RLC gene (Mylpf) was disrupted by homologous recombination. Heterozygotes containing an intronic neo cassette (RLC-/+) had approximately one-half of the amount of the RLC-f mRNA compared to wild-type (WT) mice but their muscles were histologically normal in both adults and neonates. In contrast, homozygous mice (RLC-/-) had no RLC-f mRNA or protein and completely lacked both fast and slow skeletal muscle. This was likely due to interference with mRNA processing in the presence of the neo cassette. These RLC-f null mice died immediately after birth, presumably due to respiratory failure since their diaphragms lacked skeletal muscle. The body weight of newborn RLC-f null mice was decreased 30% compared to heterozygous or WT newborn mice. The lack of skeletal muscle formation in the null mice did not affect the development of other organs including the heart. In addition, we found that WT mice did not express the ventricular/slow skeletal RLC isoform (RLC-v/s) until after birth, while it was expressed normally in the embryonic heart. The lack of skeletal muscle formation observed in RLC-f null mice indicates the total dependence of skeletal muscle development on the presence of RLC-f during embryogenesis. This observation, along with the normal function of the RLC-v/s in the heart, implicates a coupled, diverse pathway for RLC-v/s and RLC-f during embryogenesis, where RLC-v/s is responsible for heart development and RLC-f is necessary for skeletal muscle formation. In conclusion, in this study we demonstrate that the Mylpf gene is critically important for fast and slow skeletal muscle development.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Yingcai Wang et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Animals, Newborn</category>

<category>Crosses, Genetic</category>

<category>Female</category>

<category>Fetal Heart</category>

<category>Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental</category>

<category>Genes, Lethal</category>

<category>Genotype</category>

<category>Male</category>

<category>Mice</category>

<category>Mice, Inbred C57BL</category>

<category>Mice, Knockout</category>

<category>Muscle Fibers, Fast-Twitch</category>

<category>Muscle Fibers, Slow-Twitch</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Myocardium</category>

<category>Myosin Light Chains</category>

<category>Polymerase Chain Reaction</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Ca2+ -induced tropomyosin movement in scallop striated muscle thin filaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/8</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/8</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:02 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Striated muscle contraction in most animals is regulated at least in part by the troponin-tropomyosin (Tn-Tm) switch on the thin (actin-containing) filaments. The only group that has been suggested to lack actin-linked regulation is the mollusks, where contraction is regulated through the myosin heads on the thick filaments. However, molluscan gene sequence data suggest the presence of troponin (Tn) components, consistent with actin-linked regulation, and some biochemical and immunological data also support this idea. The presence of actin-linked (in addition to myosin-linked) regulation in mollusks would simplify our general picture of muscle regulation by extending actin-linked regulation to this phylum as well. We have investigated this question structurally by determining the effect of Ca(2+) on the position of Tm in native thin filaments from scallop striated adductor muscle. Three-dimensional reconstructions of negatively stained filaments were determined by electron microscopy and single-particle image analysis. At low Ca(2+), Tm appeared to occupy the "blocking" position, on the outer domain of actin, identified in earlier studies of regulated thin filaments in the low-Ca(2+) state. In this position, Tm would sterically block myosin binding, switching off filament activity. At high Ca(2+), Tm appeared to move toward a position on the inner domain, similar to that induced by Ca(2+) in regulated thin filaments. This Ca(2+)-induced movement of Tm is consistent with the hypothesis that scallop thin filaments are Ca(2+) regulated.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>HyunSuk Jung et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Calcium</category>

<category> *Microfilaments</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Muscle Contraction</category>

<category> *Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Pectinidae</category>

<category>Protein Conformation</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

<category>Vertebrates</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Structural basis for the regulation of muscle contraction by troponin and tropomyosin</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/9</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/9</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:02 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>The molecular switching mechanism governing skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction couples the binding of Ca2+ on troponin to the movement of tropomyosin on actin filaments. Despite years of investigation, this mechanism remains unclear because it has not yet been possible to directly assess the structural influence of troponin on tropomyosin that causes actin filaments, and hence myosin-crossbridge cycling and contraction, to switch on and off. A C-terminal domain of troponin I is thought to be intimately involved in inducing tropomyosin movement to an inhibitory position that blocks myosin-crossbridge interaction. Release of this regulatory, latching domain from actin after Ca2+ binding to TnC (the Ca2+ sensor of troponin that relieves inhibition) presumably allows tropomyosin movement away from the inhibitory position on actin, thus initiating contraction. However, the structural interactions of the regulatory domain of TnI (the "inhibitory" subunit of troponin) with tropomyosin and actin that cause tropomyosin movement are unknown, and thus, the regulatory process is not well defined. Here, thin filaments were labeled with an engineered construct representing C-terminal TnI, and then, 3D electron microscopy was used to resolve where troponin is anchored on actin-tropomyosin. Electron microscopy reconstruction showed how TnI binding to both actin and tropomyosin at low Ca2+ competes with tropomyosin for a common site on actin and drives tropomyosin movement to a constrained, relaxing position to inhibit myosin-crossbridge association. Thus, the observations reported reveal the structural mechanism responsible for troponin-tropomyosin-mediated steric interference of actin-myosin interaction that regulates muscle contraction.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Agnieszka Galinska-Rakoczy et al.</author>


<category>Actins</category>

<category>Humans</category>

<category>Image Processing, Computer-Assisted</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron, Transmission</category>

<category>Models, Biological</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Multiprotein Complexes</category>

<category>Muscle Contraction</category>

<category>Protein Engineering</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Quaternary</category>

<category>Recombinant Proteins</category>

<category>Tropomyosin</category>

<category>Troponin</category>

<category>Troponin I</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Three-dimensional reconstruction of tarantula myosin filaments suggests how phosphorylation may regulate myosin activity</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/6</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/6</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:01 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Muscle contraction involves the interaction of the myosin heads of the thick filaments with actin subunits of the thin filaments. Relaxation occurs when this interaction is blocked by molecular switches on these filaments. In many muscles, myosin-linked regulation involves phosphorylation of the myosin regulatory light chains (RLCs). Electron microscopy of vertebrate smooth muscle myosin molecules (regulated by phosphorylation) has provided insight into the relaxed structure, revealing that myosin is switched off by intramolecular interactions between its two heads, the free head and the blocked head. Three-dimensional reconstruction of frozen-hydrated specimens revealed that this asymmetric head interaction is also present in native thick filaments of tarantula striated muscle. Our goal in this study was to elucidate the structural features of the tarantula filament involved in phosphorylation-based regulation. A new reconstruction revealed intra- and intermolecular myosin interactions in addition to those seen previously. To help interpret the interactions, we sequenced the tarantula RLC and fitted an atomic model of the myosin head that included the predicted RLC atomic structure and an S2 (subfragment 2) crystal structure to the reconstruction. The fitting suggests one intramolecular interaction, between the cardiomyopathy loop of the free head and its own S2, and two intermolecular interactions, between the cardiac loop of the free head and the essential light chain of the blocked head and between the Leu305-Gln327 interaction loop of the free head and the N-terminal fragment of the RLC of the blocked head. These interactions, added to those previously described, would help switch off the thick filament. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest how phosphorylation could increase the helical content of the RLC N-terminus, weakening these interactions, thus releasing both heads and activating the thick filament.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Lorenzo Alamo et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Crystallography, X-Ray</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron, Transmission</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category>Molecular Sequence Data</category>

<category>Myosin Light Chains</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

<category>Phosphorylation</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Quaternary</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Secondary</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Tertiary</category>

<category>Sequence Analysis, DNA</category>

<category>Spiders</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Understanding the organisation and role of myosin binding protein C in normal striated muscle by comparison with MyBP-C knockout cardiac muscle</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/7</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/7</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:01 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) is a component of the thick filament of striated muscle. The importance of this protein is revealed by recent evidence that mutations in the cardiac gene are a major cause of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Here we investigate the distribution of MyBP-C in the A-bands of cardiac and skeletal muscles and compare this to the A-band structure in cardiac muscle of MyBP-C-deficient mice. We have used a novel averaging technique to obtain the axial density distribution of A-bands in electron micrographs of well-preserved specimens. We show that cardiac and skeletal A-bands are very similar, with a length of 1.58+/-0.01 mum. In normal cardiac and skeletal muscle, the distributions are very similar, showing clearly the series of 11 prominent accessory protein stripes in each half of the A-band spaced axially at 43-nm intervals and starting at the edge of the bare zone. We show by antibody labelling that in cardiac muscle the distal nine stripes are the location of MyBP-C. These stripes are considerably suppressed in the knockout mouse hearts as expected. Myosin heads on the surface of the thick filament in relaxed muscle are thought to be arranged in a three-stranded quasi-helix with a mean 14.3-nm axial cross bridge spacing and a 43 nm helix repeat. Extra "forbidden" meridional reflections, at orders of 43 nm, in X-ray diffraction patterns of muscle have been interpreted as due to an axial perturbation of some levels of myosin heads. However, in the MyBP-C-deficient hearts these extra meridional reflections are weak or absent, suggesting that they are due to MyBP-C itself or to MyBP-C in combination with a head perturbation brought about by the presence of MyBP-C.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Pradeep K. Luther et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Carrier Proteins</category>

<category>Fourier Analysis</category>

<category>Microscopy, Electron</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Myocardium</category>

<category>Myocytes, Cardiac</category>

<category>Protein Structure, Tertiary</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Analysis of tarantula skeletal muscle protein sequences and identification of transcriptional isoforms</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/4</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/4</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:00 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>BACKGROUND: Tarantula has been used as a model system for studying skeletal muscle structure and function, yet data on the genes expressed in tarantula muscle are lacking.</p>
<p>RESULTS: We constructed a cDNA library from Aphonopelma sp. (Tarantula) skeletal muscle and got 2507 high-quality 5'ESTs (expressed sequence tags) from randomly picked clones. EST analysis showed 305 unigenes, among which 81 had more than 2 ESTs. Twenty abundant unigenes had matches to skeletal muscle-related genes including actin, myosin, tropomyosin, troponin-I, T and C, paramyosin, muscle LIM protein, muscle protein 20, a-actinin and tandem Ig/Fn motifs (found in giant sarcomere-related proteins). Matches to myosin light chain kinase and calponin were also identified. These results support the existence of both actin-linked and myosin-linked regulation in tarantula skeletal muscle. We have predicted full-length as well as partial cDNA sequences both experimentally and computationally for myosin heavy and light chains, actin, tropomyosin, and troponin-I, T and C, and have deduced the putative peptides. A preliminary analysis of the structural and functional properties was also carried out. Sequence similarities suggested multiple isoforms of most myofibrillar proteins, supporting the generality of multiple isoforms known from previous muscle sequence studies. This may be related to a mix of muscle fiber types.</p>
<p>CONCLUSION: The present study serves as a basis for defining the transcriptome of tarantula skeletal muscle, for future in vitro expression of tarantula proteins, and for interpreting structural and functional observations in this model species.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Jingui Zhu et al.</author>


<category>Amino Acid Sequence</category>

<category>Animals</category>

<category>DNA</category>

<category>Expressed Sequence Tags</category>

<category>Gene Expression Profiling</category>

<category>Gene Library</category>

<category>Molecular Sequence Data</category>

<category>Muscle Proteins</category>

<category>Muscle, Skeletal</category>

<category>Protein Isoforms</category>

<category>Sequence Alignment</category>

<category>Sequence Analysis, DNA</category>

<category>Spiders</category>

</item>






<item>
<title>Head-head interaction characterizes the relaxed state of Limulus muscle myosin filaments</title>
<link>http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/5</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/craig/5</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:02:00 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Regulation of muscle contraction via the myosin filaments occurs in vertebrate smooth and many invertebrate striated muscles. Studies of unphosphorylated vertebrate smooth muscle myosin suggest that activity is switched off through an intramolecular interaction between the actin-binding region of one head and the converter and essential light chains of the other, inhibiting ATPase activity and actin interaction. The same interaction (and additional interaction with the tail) is seen in three-dimensional reconstructions of relaxed, native myosin filaments from tarantula striated muscle, suggesting that such interactions are likely to underlie the off-state of myosin across a wide spectrum of the animal kingdom. We have tested this hypothesis by carrying out cryo-electron microscopy and three-dimensional image reconstruction of myosin filaments from horseshoe crab (Limulus) muscle. The same head-head and head-tail interactions seen in tarantula are also seen in Limulus, supporting the hypothesis. Other data suggest that this motif may underlie the relaxed state of myosin II in all species (including myosin II in nonmuscle cells), with the possible exception of insect flight muscle. The molecular organization of the myosin tails in the backbone of muscle thick filaments is unknown and may differ between species. X-ray diffraction data support a general model for crustaceans in which tails associate together to form 4-nm-diameter subfilaments, with these subfilaments assembling together to form the backbone. This model is supported by direct observation of 4-nm-diameter elongated strands in the tarantula reconstruction, suggesting that it might be a general structure across the arthropods. We observe a similar backbone organization in the Limulus reconstruction, supporting the general existence of such subfilaments.</p>

	]]>
</description>

<author>Fa-Qing Zhao et al.</author>


<category>Animals</category>

<category>Cryoelectron Microscopy</category>

<category>Horseshoe Crabs</category>

<category>Image Processing, Computer-Assisted</category>

<category>Models, Molecular</category>

<category> *Muscle Contraction</category>

<category>Muscles</category>

<category>Myosins</category>

</item>





</channel>
</rss>
