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. 1988 Jul;54(1):135-48.
doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(88)82938-2.

Characterization of the myosin adenosine triphosphate (M.ATP) crossbridge in rabbit and frog skeletal muscle fibers

Affiliations

Characterization of the myosin adenosine triphosphate (M.ATP) crossbridge in rabbit and frog skeletal muscle fibers

M Schoenberg. Biophys J. 1988 Jul.

Abstract

In the presence of ATP and absence of Ca2+, muscle crossbridges have either MgATP or MgADP.Pi bound at the active site (S. B. Marston and R. T. Tregear, Nature [Lond.], 235:22:1972). The behavior of these myosin adenosine triphosphate (M.ATP) crossbridges, both in relaxed skinned rabbit psoas and frog semitendinosus fibers, was analyzed. At very low ionic strength, T = 5 degrees C, mu = 20 mM, these crossbridges spend a large fraction of the time attached to actin. In rabbit, the attachment rate constants at low salt are 10(4) - 10(5) s-1, and the detachment rate constants are approximately 10(4) s-1. When ionic strength is increased up to physiological values by addition of 140 mM potassium propionate, the major effect is a weakening of the crossbridge binding constant approximately 30-40-fold. This effect occurs because of a large decrease, approximately 100-fold, in the crossbridge attachment rate constants. The detachment rate constants decrease only 2-3-fold. The effect of ionic strength on crossbridge binding in the fiber is very similar to the effect of ionic strength on the binding of myosin subfragment-1 to unregulated actin in solution. Thus, the effect of increasing ionic strength in fibers appears to be a direct effect on crossbridge binding rather than an effect on troponin-tropomyosin. The finding that crossbridges with ATP bound at the active site can and do attach to actin over a wide range of ionic strengths strongly suggests that troponin-tropomyosin keeps a muscle relaxed by blocking a step subsequent to crossbridge attachment. Thus, rather than troponin-tropomyosin serving to keep a muscle relaxed by inhibiting attachment, it seems quite possible that the main way in which troponin-tropomyosin regulates muscle activity is by preventing the weakly-binding relaxed crossbridges from going on through the crossbridge cycle into more strongly-binding states.

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