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5.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 355(1396): 539-43, 2000 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10836507

ABSTRACT

Since the basic outline of the sliding filament mechanism became apparent some 45 years ago, the principal challenge, an experimental one, has been to produce definitive evidence about the detailed molecular mechanisms by which myosin cross-bridges produce force and movement in a muscle. More recently, similar questions could be posed about other molecular motors, in non-muscle cells. This problem proved unexpectedly difficult to solve, in part because of the technical difficulty of obtaining the structural and mechanical information required about rapid events within macromolecules, especially in a working system, and this triggered many remarkable technical developments. There is now very strong evidence for a large change in shape of the myosin heads during ATP hydrolysis, consistent with a lever-arm mechanism. Whether this does indeed provide the driving force for contraction and movement--and, if so, exactly how--and whether some other processes could also play a significant role, is discussed in the light of the experimental and theoretical findings presented at this meeting, and other recent and long-term evidence.


Subject(s)
Actins/physiology , Muscle Contraction/physiology , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Myosins/physiology , Actins/chemistry , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Molecular Motor Proteins/chemistry , Molecular Motor Proteins/physiology , Myosins/chemistry , Research/trends
8.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 4(Pt 6): 366-79, 1997 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16699251

ABSTRACT

Interest in the molecular mechanism of muscle contraction led to the search for an intense source of X-rays of 1-2 A wavelength so as to be able to examine the rich X-ray diffraction patterns given by muscles during contraction. This led to the first X-ray diffraction experiments using synchrotron radiation, carried out by Holmes, Rosenbaum and Witz at DESY, Hamburg, in September 1970. In the following years, the EMBL Outstation, to utilize synchrotron radiation for biological structure determination, was established at DESY and preliminary experiments on muscle were also carried out at NINA (Daresbury). The development of time-resolved techniques for muscle diffraction was first started in the MRC Molecular Biology Laboratory in Cambridge, using rotating-anode X-ray tubes, and was then greatly extended at the EMBL Outstation, Hamburg, using the storage ring DORIS. This was a very successful venture, and helped to drive the whole technology development and to interest other potential users in the technique.

9.
Annu Rev Physiol ; 58: 1-19, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8815787

ABSTRACT

This is a personal account of some of the successive steps in our understanding of the structural mechanism of muscle contraction during the last 45 years. It describes how I, as an ex-physicist, came to be studying muscle by X-ray diffraction in 1949; how the concepts of the double array of actin and myosin filaments and, later, the overlapping filament model and the sliding filament mechanism were developed; and how further electron microscope findings of the structural polarity of muscle filaments led to the suggestion that analogous structures and mechanisms might be involved in cellular motility. The article describes briefly how synchrotron radiation has made it possible to obtain detailed structural information about contracting muscle with millisecond time resolution and discusses some of the recent major advances in the field and the prospects of reaching a full understanding of the contraction mechanism.


Subject(s)
Muscle Contraction/physiology , Muscles/physiology , Animals , Humans
10.
Biophys J ; 67(6): 2411-21, 1994 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7696481

ABSTRACT

We have used a small angle scattering system assembled on the high flux multipole wiggler beam line at CHESS (Cornell) to make very accurate spacing measurements of certain meridional and layer-line reflections from contracting muscles. During isometric contraction, the actin 27.3 A reflection increases in spacing from its resting value by approximately 0.3%, and other actin reflections, including the 59 and 51 A off-meridional reflections, show corresponding changes in spacing. When tension is augmented or diminished by applying moderate speed length changes to a contracting muscle, changes in spacing in the range of 0.19-0.24% (when scaled to full isometric tension) can be seen. The larger difference between the resting and isometric spacings suggests either nonlinearity at low tension levels or the presence of a component related to activation itself. Myosin filaments also show similar increases in axial period during slow stretch, in addition to the well known larger change associated with activation. An actin spacing change of 0.25-0.3% can also be measured during a 2 ms time frame immediately after a quick release, showing that the elastic behavior is rapid. These observations of filament extensions totaling 2-3 nm per half-sarcomere may necessitate some significant revision of the interpretation of a number of mechanical experiments in muscle, in which it has usually been assumed that virtually all of the elasticity resides in the cross-bridges.


Subject(s)
Actins/chemistry , Muscle Contraction/physiology , Myosins/chemistry , Actins/physiology , Actins/ultrastructure , Animals , Biophysical Phenomena , Biophysics , Densitometry , In Vitro Techniques , Isometric Contraction/physiology , Molecular Structure , Myosins/physiology , Myosins/ultrastructure , Rana catesbeiana , X-Ray Diffraction
11.
Biophys J ; 67(1): 283-92, 1994 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7918996

ABSTRACT

We have set up a system to rapidly freeze muscle fibers during contraction to investigate by electron microscopy the ultrastructure of active muscles. Glycerinated fiber bundles of rabbit psoas muscles were frozen in conditions of rigor, relaxation, isometric contraction, and active shortening. Freezing was carried out by plunging the bundles into liquid ethane. The frozen bundles were then freeze-substituted, plastic-embedded, and sectioned for electron microscopic observation. X-ray diffraction patterns of the embedded bundles and optical diffraction patterns of the micrographs resemble the x-ray diffraction patterns of unfixed muscles, showing the ability of the method to preserve the muscle ultrastructure. In the optical diffraction patterns layer lines up to 1/5.9 nm-1 were observed. Using this method we have investigated the myofilament lengths and concluded that there are no major changes in length in either the actin or the myosin filaments under any of the conditions explored.


Subject(s)
Actin Cytoskeleton/ultrastructure , Muscle Contraction , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/ultrastructure , Sarcomeres/ultrastructure , Actin Cytoskeleton/physiology , Animals , Cryoprotective Agents , Freezing , Isometric Contraction , Microscopy, Electron/instrumentation , Microscopy, Electron/methods , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/physiology , Muscle Relaxation , Rabbits , Sarcomeres/physiology , X-Ray Diffraction
12.
J Electron Microsc Tech ; 16(2): 160-6, 1990 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2213238

ABSTRACT

We have developed an instrument capable of freezing transient intermediates in rapid biochemical reactions for subsequent freeze-fracturing, replication, and viewing by transmission electron microscopy. The machine combines a rapid mixing unit similar to one widely used in chemical kinetics (Johnson, 1986) with a propane jet freezing unit previously used to prepare static samples for freeze-fracturing (Gilkey and Staehelin, 1986). The key element in the system is a unique thin-walled flow cell of copper that allows for injection and aging of the sample, followed by rapid freezing. During freeze-fracturing, a tangential cut is made along the wall of the flow cell to expose the sample for etching and replication. The dead time required for mixing and injection of the reactants into the flow cell is less than 5 ms. Electronic controls allow one to specify, on a millisecond time scale, any time above 5 ms between initiation of the reaction and quenching by rapid freezing.


Subject(s)
Freeze Fracturing/instrumentation , Microscopy, Electron/methods , Actins/ultrastructure , Animals , Equipment Design , Myosins/ultrastructure
15.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 226: 347-52, 1988.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3407520

ABSTRACT

In isometric contraction, a high proportion of crossbridges are always in the attached state and crossbridge cycling is slow. During shortening, crossbridges must be entering the detached state at a higher rate, as they come to the end of their working strokes. The size of the population of detached crossbridges will then depend on the re-attachment rate and it is therefore of some interest to find out whether a significant detached population can be detected. Observations on the equatorial X-ray diffraction pattern indicate that this is the case at higher speeds of shortening, for example at a speed where the detachment rate must be of the order of 200 per second. In a muscle under these conditions, the 59 A and 51 A actin layer line reflections decrease in intensity compared to their values during isometric contraction. This decrease does not appear to be associated with a change in structure of the actin-troponin-tropomyosin complex, since the second actin layer-line reflection remains virtually unchanged in intensity. Thus the change is likely to arise from either a different total number of attached crossbridges, or a different number of attached crossbridges in the tension generating state. The result provides some further evidence for specific helical labelling of the actin structure by crossbridges during contraction, as do some recent electronmicroscope studies of rapidly frozen contracting muscle.


Subject(s)
Actins/physiology , Muscle Contraction , Muscles/physiology , Tropomyosin/physiology , Troponin/physiology , Animals , Kinetics , X-Ray Diffraction
16.
J Muscle Res Cell Motil ; 8(1): 39-54, 1987 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3496357

ABSTRACT

Low-angle X-ray diffraction diagrams were obtained from chemically skinned frog sartorius muscles under low ionic strength relaxing conditions. Experiments on single muscle fibres from rabbit muscle and on muscle proteins in solution have suggested the presence of a 'low ionic strength attached state' of the myosin crossbridges to actin, in which the overall ATP splitting and force-generating cycle is still blocked. This opened up the possibility that structural information about one of the intermediate states in the crossbridge cycle might be obtained under these conditions. Using synchrotron radiation as a high intensity X-ray source we were able to record the appropriate diffraction diagrams with short exposure times and were able to compare the same muscles at normal and at low ionic strength. Changes in the intensities of the equatorial reflections an increase in the 143 A meridional intensity can be interpreted in a similar way. However, these attached bridges do not give rise to changes in the actin-based layer line reflections, nor is their presence associated with a weakening of the myosin layer line pattern. These results provide further evidence for the existence of bound states of crossbridges, in which their orientation relative to actin is not sharply defined.


Subject(s)
Muscles/diagnostic imaging , Actins/metabolism , Animals , Ions , Muscles/metabolism , Myosins/metabolism , Radiography , Rana esculenta , Temperature , X-Ray Diffraction
17.
J Mol Biol ; 188(3): 325-42, 1986 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3735425

ABSTRACT

The pattern given by contracting frog muscle can be followed with high time resolution using synchrotron radiation as a high-intensity X-ray source. We have studied the behaviour of the second actin layer-line (axial spacing of approximately 179 A) at an off-meridional spacing of approximately 0.023 A-1, a region of the diagram that is sensitive to the position of tropomyosin in the thin filaments. In confirmation of earlier work, we find that there is a substantial increase in the intensity of this part of the pattern during contraction. We find that the reflection reaches half its final intensity about 17 milliseconds after the stimulus at 6 degrees C. The changes in the equatorial reflections, which arise from movement of crossbridges towards the thin filaments, occur with a delay of about 12 to 17 milliseconds relative to this change in the actin pattern. In over-stretched muscle, where thick and thin filaments no longer overlap, the changes in the actin second layer-line still take place upon stimulation with a time course and intensity similar to that observed at full overlap. This indicates that tropomyosin movement, in response to calcium binding to troponin, is the first structural step in muscular contraction, and is the prerequisite for myosin binding. A change in intensity similar to that found in contracting muscle is seen in rigor, where tropomyosin is probably locked in the active position. During relaxation the earlier stages in the decrease in intensity of the second actin layer-line take place significantly sooner after the last stimulus than tension decay. In over-stretched muscles the intensity decay is appreciably faster than in the same muscles at rest length, where attached crossbridges may interfere with the return of tropomyosin to its resting position.


Subject(s)
Muscle Contraction , Muscles/analysis , X-Ray Diffraction , Actins , Animals , Muscle Relaxation , Ranidae , Temperature , Time Factors
18.
J Muscle Res Cell Motil ; 6(2): 153-61, 1985 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2993356

ABSTRACT

A number of recent observations by probe and X-ray methods on the behaviour of crossbridges during contraction is considered in relation to the energetics of the process. It is shown that a self-consistent picture of the crossbridge cycle, compatible with these observations and involving strongly and weakly attached crossbridges, can be obtained providing that the tension-generating part of the crossbridge stroke is only about 40 A i.e. about one-third of the usually accepted value. The myosin head subunits in the tension-generating bridges could have a configuration close to that of rigor. A mechanism is suggested whereby rapid tension recovery after quick releases up to 120 A could still be produced by such a system.


Subject(s)
Muscle Contraction , Muscles/analysis , Myosins/analysis , Actins/analysis , Actins/physiology , Animals , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Fluorescence Polarization , Models, Biological , Models, Molecular , Muscles/physiology , Myosins/physiology , X-Ray Diffraction
19.
J Exp Biol ; 115: 17-30, 1985 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3897443

ABSTRACT

The basic features of the sliding-filament crossbridge mechanism are reviewed briefly, and some recent objections involving supposed changes in A-filament lengths are discussed. X-ray diffraction studies on live muscles show no sign of a decrease in axial spacing during contraction, and it is unlikely that a stepwise shortening or depolymerization of A-filaments would provide a plausible contraction mechanism. Thus electron microscope observations which occasionally are reported to show such length changes probably arise from experimental artefact, of which there are many sources. The factors which govern tension and speed in muscle contraction are described. Since all vertebrate striated muscles which have been studied have A-bands of at least approximately the same length, they are likely to have rather similar maximum isometric tensions. The design probably matches this tension to the strength of the filaments themselves. The large variations in shortening speeds between different muscles and different animals arise because of corresponding variations in the rates of particular steps in the crossbridge cycle and in the rate of ATP splitting by the actin-myosin complex involved. Questions concerning the nature and the speed of the activation mechanism are also discussed.


Subject(s)
Muscle Contraction , Muscle Proteins/physiology , Animals , Horseshoe Crabs/physiology , Models, Biological , Vertebrates
20.
J Muscle Res Cell Motil ; 5(6): 613-55, 1984 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6335887

ABSTRACT

Adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMPPNP), a nonhydrolysable analogue of ATP, has been used to arrest the crossbridge cycle of muscular contraction in one of its hypothetical intermediate states. Whole frog sartorius muscles were chemically demembranated, and it was found possible to cycle such skinned muscles reversibly between the relaxed and rigor states. The effect of binding of AMPPNP on the structure and spatial arrangement of the crossbridges of such muscles was studied using low-angle X-ray diffraction, with simultaneous recording of the mechanical effects, starting from the rigor state. Saturating concentrations of MgAMPPNP produce a characteristic decrease of about 50% in the original rigor isometric tension with a concomitant increase in muscle length by 0.13%. The equatorial X-ray diffraction pattern is modified in the following way: the lattice dimensions and the intensity of the (10) equatorial reflection do not change, while the intensity of the (11) equatorial reflection increases slightly. These observations of very small equatorial changes could be explained by assuming that in these muscles (as distinct from others such as rabbit psoas) the analogue does not produce a significant degree of detachment of crossbridges; that is, there are only AMPPNP-modified attached ones. The changes in the meridional X-ray diffraction pattern are more pronounced: the meridional reflection at 14.5 nm decreases in intensity, and the meridional reflection at 7.2 nm increases considerably: the intensity of all the actin-based off-meridional layer-lines decreases. There are no signs of the characteristic relaxed layer-lines, and the changes in the layer-line intensities are probably due to there being a single population of AMPPNP-modified attached crossbridges, rather than a mixture of attached and detached crossbridges. Thus the AMPPNP X-ray pattern, both equatorially and meridionally, is somewhat similar to the rigor one, indicating that most of the crossbridges remain attached. On the other hand, the fact that there are some changes in the layer-line intensities of the AMPPNP frog pattern, without the appearance of any signs of a relaxed equatorial pattern, indicates that the attached crossbridges are in a structural state that is different from rigor, one is not seeing, apparently, simply a mixture of rigor and relaxed states. Our tentative interpretation of this result is that there may be a structural change in the crossbridge near to the junction with S2, with less significant changes occurring in the parts of the crossbridge close to actin.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Triphosphate/analogs & derivatives , Adenylyl Imidodiphosphate/pharmacology , Muscles/drug effects , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Glycerol , Muscle Contraction/drug effects , Muscle Relaxation , Muscle Rigidity , Muscles/anatomy & histology , Rana esculenta , X-Ray Diffraction
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