Title of article :
Structural Evidence for the Interaction of C-protein (MyBP-C) with Actin and Sequence Identification of a Possible Actin-binding Domain
Author/Authors :
John M. Squire، نويسنده , , Pradeep K. Luther، نويسنده , , Carlo Knupp، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
C-protein (MyBP-C) is a myosin-binding protein that is usually seen in two sets of seven to nine positions in the C-zones in each half of the vertebrate striated muscle A-band. Skeletal muscle C-protein is a modular structure containing ten sub-domains (C1 to C10) of which seven are immunoglobulin-type domains and three (C6, C7 and C9) are fibronectin-like domains. Cardiac muscle C-protein has an extra N-terminal domain (C0) and also some sequence insertions, one of which provides phosphorylation sites. It is conceivable that C-protein has both a structural and regulatory role within the sarcomere. The precise mode of binding of C-protein to the myosin filament has not been determined. However, detailed ultrastructural studies have suggested that C-protein, which binds to myosin, can give rise to a longer periodicity (about 435 Å) than the intrinsic myosin filament repeat of 429 Å. The reason for this has remained a puzzle for over 25 years. Here we show by modelling and computation that the presence of this longer periodicity could be explained if the myosin-binding part of C-protein binds to myosin with the expected 429 Å repeat, but if there are systematic interactions of the N-terminal end of C-protein with the neighbouring actin filaments in the hexagonal lattice of filaments in the A-band. We also show that if they occur these interactions would probably only arise in defined muscle states. Further analysis of the MyBP-C sequence identifies a possible actin-binding domain in the Pro-Ala-rich sequence found at the N terminus of skeletal MyBP-C and between domains C0 and C1 in the cardiac sequence.
Keywords :
myosin cross-bridges , hypertrophic cardiomyopathy , vertebrate striated muscle , cardiac muscle , actin-binding proteins
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology