Kinetic Mechanism of the Fastest Motor Protein, Chara Myosin*
暂无分享,去创建一个
Keiichi Yamamoto | Mitsuo Ikebe | Kohji Ito | M. Ikebe | T. Kon | Toshifumi Mogami | Kohji Ito | Toshifumi Mogami | Takahide Kon | Taku Kashiyama | T. Kashiyama | Keiichi Yamamoto
[1] D. Soldati,et al. Toxoplasma gondii myosin A and its light chain: a fast, single‐headed, plus‐end‐directed motor , 2002, The EMBO journal.
[2] A. Ishijima,et al. A kinetic mechanism for the fast movement of Chara myosin. , 2003, Journal of molecular biology.
[3] T. Ando,et al. Direct observation of processive movement by individual myosin V molecules. , 2000, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[4] M. Geeves,et al. The effect of nucleotide upon a specific isomerization of actomyosin subfragment 1. , 1988, The Biochemical journal.
[5] J A Hammer,et al. Effect of ADP and Ionic Strength on the Kinetic and Motile Properties of Recombinant Mouse Myosin V* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[6] M. Geeves,et al. The limiting rate of the ATP‐mediated dissociation of actin from rabbit skeletal muscle myosin subfragment 1 , 1983, FEBS letters.
[7] J. Spudich,et al. Assays for actin sliding movement over myosin-coated surfaces. , 1991, Methods in enzymology.
[8] W H Guilford,et al. Two heads of myosin are better than one for generating force and motion. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[9] James A. Spudich,et al. How molecular motors work , 1994, Nature.
[10] S. Rosenfeld,et al. Kinetic Tuning of Myosin via a Flexible Loop Adjacent to the Nucleotide Binding Pocket* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[11] T. Yanagida,et al. The neck domain of myosin II primarily regulates the actomyosin kinetics, not the stepsize. , 2005, Journal of molecular biology.
[12] Kazuo Sutoh,et al. Requirement of Domain-Domain Interaction for Conformational Change and Functional ATP Hydrolysis in Myosin* , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[13] C. Yengo,et al. Tryptophan 512 Is Sensitive to Conformational Changes in the Rigid Relay Loop of Smooth Muscle Myosin during the MgATPase Cycle* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[14] K. Trybus,et al. Loop I can modulate ADP affinity, ATPase activity, and motility of different scallop myosins : Transient kinetic analysis of S1 isoforms , 1998 .
[15] R. F. Siemankowski,et al. Kinetics of the interaction between actin, ADP, and cardiac myosin-S1. , 1984, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[16] K. Shimada,et al. Effects of Ca(2+) and calmodulin on the motile activity of characean myosin in vitro. , 2001, Plant & cell physiology.
[17] J. Sellers,et al. Functional Divergence of Human Cytoplasmic Myosin II , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[18] D. Manstein,et al. Kinetic characterization of the catalytic domain of Dictyostelium discoideum myosin. , 1995, Biochemistry.
[19] M. Geeves,et al. Interaction of actin and ADP with the head domain of smooth muscle myosin: implications for strain-dependent ADP release in smooth muscle. , 1998, Biochemistry.
[20] Kohji Ito,et al. Some motile properties of fast characean myosin. , 2003, Journal of molecular biology.
[21] Toshio Yanagida,et al. A single myosin head moves along an actin filament with regular steps of 5.3 nanometres , 1999, Nature.
[22] E. Taylor,et al. Comparison of the myosin and actomyosin ATPase mechanisms of the four types of vertebrate muscles. , 1980, Journal of molecular biology.
[23] Clive R. Bagshaw,et al. Resolution of conformational states of Dictyostelium myosin II motor domain using tryptophan (W501) mutants: implications for the open-closed transition identified by crystallography. , 2000, Biochemistry.
[24] Robert D. Finn,et al. Pfam: clans, web tools and services , 2005, Nucleic Acids Res..
[25] S. Bernstein,et al. Kinetic Analysis of Drosophila Muscle Myosin Isoforms Suggests a Novel Mode of Mechanochemical Coupling* , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[26] E. Korn,et al. Polymerization of Acanthamoeba actin. Kinetics, thermodynamics, and co-polymerization with muscle actin. , 1976, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[27] J. Sellers,et al. Mechanism of Action of Myosin X, a Membrane-associated Molecular Motor* , 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[28] E. Kamitsubo,et al. Purification of Actin Based Motor Protein from Chara corallina , 1994 .
[29] J. Sellers,et al. Myosin VIIB from Drosophila Is a High Duty Ratio Motor* , 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[30] A. Rhoads,et al. Sequence motifs for calmodulin recognition , 1997, FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.
[31] J. Sparrow,et al. Isolation and kinetic characterisation of myosin and myosin S1 from the Drosophila indirect flight muscles , 2004, Journal of Muscle Research & Cell Motility.
[32] Amber L. Wells,et al. Myosin VI is a processive motor with a large step size , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[33] Kohji Ito,et al. Importance of the converter region for the motility of myosin as revealed by the studies on chimeric Chara myosins. , 2004, Journal of molecular biology.
[34] E. Krementsova,et al. Kinetic Characterization of a Monomeric Unconventional Myosin V Construct* , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[35] H D White,et al. ADP dissociation from actomyosin subfragment 1 is sufficiently slow to limit the unloaded shortening velocity in vertebrate muscle. , 1985, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[36] H. Sweeney,et al. Kinetic Mechanism and Regulation of Myosin VI* , 2001, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[37] Clara Franzini-Armstrong,et al. A flexible domain is essential for the large step size and processivity of myosin VI. , 2005, Molecular cell.
[38] J. Spudich,et al. Dictyostelium myosin 25-50K loop substitutions specifically affect ADP release rates. , 1998, Biochemistry.
[39] J. Patlak,et al. A mutant heterodimeric myosin with one inactive head generates maximal displacement , 2003, The Journal of cell biology.
[40] Amber L. Wells,et al. Kinetic and Spectroscopic Evidence for Three Actomyosin:ADP States in Smooth Muscle* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[41] James A. Spudich,et al. Role of the lever arm in the processive stepping of myosin V , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[42] D. Manstein,et al. Recombinant motor domain constructs of Chara corallina myosin display fast motility and high ATPase activity. , 2003, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[43] J. Eccleston,et al. Kinetics of the interaction of 2'(3')-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl)-ATP with myosin subfragment 1 and actomyosin subfragment 1: characterization of two acto-S1-ADP complexes. , 1991, Biochemistry.
[44] K. Homma,et al. Myosin X Is a High Duty Ratio Motor* , 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[45] Clive R. Bagshaw,et al. The magnesium ion-dependent adenosine triphosphatase of myosin. Two-step processes of adenosine triphosphate association and adenosine diphosphate dissociation. , 1974, The Biochemical journal.
[46] Amber L. Wells,et al. The kinetic mechanism of myosin V. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[47] Justin E. Molloy,et al. The motor protein myosin-I produces its working stroke in two steps , 1999, Nature.
[48] B. Burnside,et al. Kinetic Mechanism of Human Myosin IIIA* , 2007, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[49] D. Sacks,et al. Monoclonal antibody to calmodulin: development, characterization, and comparison with polyclonal anti-calmodulin antibodies. , 1991, Analytical biochemistry.
[50] M. Ikebe,et al. Human Myosin III Is a Motor Having an Extremely High Affinity for Actin* , 2006, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[51] Xiang-dong Li,et al. Ca2+-induced activation of ATPase activity of myosin Va is accompanied with a large conformational change. , 2004, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[52] K C Holmes,et al. Structural mechanism of muscle contraction. , 1999, Annual review of biochemistry.
[53] T. Pollard,et al. Biochemical kinetic characterization of the Acanthamoeba myosin-I ATPase , 1996, The Journal of cell biology.
[54] M. Geeves,et al. Kinetic Analyses of a Truncated Mammalian Myosin I Suggest a Novel Isomerization Event Preceding Nucleotide Binding* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[55] K. Kohama,et al. The molecular structure of the fastest myosin from green algae, Chara. , 2000, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[56] Xiang-dong Li,et al. Activation of Myosin Va Function by Melanophilin, a Specific Docking Partner of Myosin Va* , 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[57] M. Geeves,et al. Transient Kinetic Analysis of the 130-kDa Myosin I (MYR-1 Gene Product) from Rat Liver , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[58] D. Manstein,et al. Kinetic analysis of Dictyostelium discoideum myosin motor domains with glycine-to-alanine mutations in the reactive thiol region. , 1999, Biochemistry.
[59] N. Kimura,et al. Cloning and characterization of a myosin from characean alga, the fastest motor protein in the world. , 2000, Journal of biochemistry.
[60] T. Pollard,et al. Kinetic characterization of brush border myosin-I ATPase. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[61] S. Rosenfeld,et al. The Kinetic Mechanism of Myo1e (Human Myosin-IC)* , 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[62] William H. Guilford,et al. The Light Chain Binding Domain of Expressed Smooth Muscle Heavy Meromyosin Acts as a Mechanical Lever* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[63] J. Spudich,et al. The regulation of rabbit skeletal muscle contraction. I. Biochemical studies of the interaction of the tropomyosin-troponin complex with actin and the proteolytic fragments of myosin. , 1971, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[64] M. Ikebe,et al. Myosin IXb is a single-headed minus-end-directed processive motor , 2002, Nature Cell Biology.
[65] J. Sellers,et al. Kinetic Mechanism of Non-muscle Myosin IIB , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[66] Daniel Safer,et al. Myosin VI is an actin-based motor that moves backwards , 1999, Nature.
[67] B. Foth,et al. New insights into myosin evolution and classification. , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[68] K. Kohama,et al. The fastest‐actin‐based motor protein from the green algae, Chara, and its distinct mode of interaction with actin , 1995, FEBS letters.
[69] H. Sweeney,et al. Addition of lysines to the 50/20 kDa junction of myosin strengthens weak binding to actin without affecting the maximum ATPase activity. , 2003, Biochemistry.
[70] Clive R. Bagshaw,et al. Analysis of Nucleotide Binding to DictyosteliumMyosin II Motor Domains Containing a Single Tryptophan Near the Active Site* , 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[71] E. Taylor,et al. Transient kinetics of adenosine 5'-diphosphate and adenosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) binding to subfragment 1 and actosubfragment 1. , 1982, Biochemistry.
[72] K. Homma,et al. Ca2+-dependent Regulation of the Motor Activity of Myosin V* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[73] E. M. De La Cruz,et al. Vertebrate Myosin VIIb Is a High Duty Ratio Motor Adapted for Generating and Maintaining Tension* , 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[74] B. Patterson,et al. Evidence for a novel, strongly bound acto-S1 complex carrying ADP and phosphate stabilized in the G680V mutant of Dictyostelium myosin II. , 2002, Biochemistry.
[75] L. M. Coluccio,et al. Novel 130-kDa rat liver myosin-1 will translocate actin filaments. , 1994, Cell motility and the cytoskeleton.
[76] D. Manstein,et al. Kinetic characterization of a cytoplasmic myosin motor domain expressed in Dictyostelium discoideum. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.