Radial equilibrium lengths of actomyosin cross-bridges in muscle.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

Radial equilibrium lengths of the weakly attached, force-generating, and rigor cross-bridges are determined by recording their resistance to osmotic compression. Radial equilibrium length is the surface-to-surface distance between myosin and actin filaments at which attached cross-bridges are, on average, radially undistorted. We previously proposed that differences in the radial equilibrium length represent differences in the structure of the actomyosin cross-bridge. Until now the radial equilibrium length had only been determined for various strongly attached cross-bridge states and was found to be distinct for each state examined. In the present work, we demonstrate that weakly attached cross-bridges, in spite of their low affinity for actin, also exert elastic forces opposing osmotic compression, and they are characterized by a distinct radial equilibrium length (12.0 nm vs. 10.5 nm for force-generating and 13.0 nm for rigor cross-bridge). This suggests significant differences in the molecular structure of the attached cross-bridges under these conditions, e.g., differences in the shape of the myosin head or in the docking of the myosin to actin. Thus, the present finding supports our earlier conclusion that there is a structural change in the attached cross-bridge associated with the transition from a weakly bound configuration to the force-generating configuration. The implications for imposing spatial constraints on modeling actomyosin interaction in the filament lattice are discussed.

Documentos Relacionados