Myosin S1 changes the orientation of caldesmon on actin
- PMID: 8204606
- DOI: 10.1021/bi00187a043
Myosin S1 changes the orientation of caldesmon on actin
Abstract
Changes in the orientation of caldesmon bound to actin in skeletal ghost myofibrils caused by the binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) were measured by fluorescence-detected linear dichroism using fluorescence microscopy. Gizzard caldesmon, labeled with acrylodan at its two Cys residues (CaD*), bound to actin with a probe angle that was unaffected by actin-bound tropomyosin. Irrigation of fibrils with myosin S1 dissociated most of the bound CaD*, but reintroduction of CaD* resulted in its rebinding to actin, without dissociation of S1, with a 7 degrees difference in probe angle. A similar change in probe angle was also observed when a 27-kDa actin-binding C-terminal fragment of caldesmon, labeled with acrylodan at its single Cys 580 (CaD-27*), was used. Introducing MgADP, which bound to S1 in the CaD*-actin-S1 ternary complex in the fibril, reversed the bound CaD* dichroism. These results indicate that (i) myosin heads and caldesmon compete for a common actin binding site; (ii) a ternary complex of CaD*-actin-S1 can be formed with an orientation of CaD* different from that in the CaD*-actin binary complex, and (iii) MgADP, which binds to and reorients myosin S1, affects the orientation of CaD* in the ternary complex. These results are consistent with a two-state binding model of caldesmon for actin in which state 1 involves a site that is competitive with S1 binding and state 2 involves a site that is formed in the presence of bound S1.
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