Adenosine diphosphate and strain sensitivity in myosin motors

Author:

Holmes K. C.,Trentham D. R.,Simmons R.,Nyitrai Miklós1,Geeves Michael A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biosciences, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NJ, UK

Abstract

The release of adenosine diphosphate (ADP) from the actomyosin cross–bridge plays an important role in the adenosine–triphosphate–driven cross–bridge cycle. In fast contracting muscle fibres, the rate at which ADP is released from the cross–bridge correlates with the maximum shortening velocity of the muscle fibre, and in some models the rate of ADP release defines the maximum shortening velocity. In addition, it has long been thought that the rate of ADP release could be sensitive to the load on the cross–bridge and thereby provide a molecular explanation of the Fenn effect. However, direct evidence of a strain–sensitive ADP–release mechanism has been hard to come by for fast muscle myosins. The recently published evidence for a strain–sensing mechanism involving ADP release for slower muscle myosins, and in particular non–muscle myosins, is more compelling and can provide the mechanism of processivity for motors such as myosin V. It is therefore timely to examine the evidence for this strain–sensing mechanism. The evidence presented here will argue that a strain–sensitive mechanism of ADP release is universal for all myosins but the basic mechanism has evolved in different ways for different types of myosin. Furthermore, this strain–sensing mechanism provides a way of coordinating the action of multiple myosin motor domains in a single myosin molecule, or in complex assemblies of myosins over long distances without invoking a classic direct allosteric or cooperative communication between motors.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference51 articles.

1. fast mover fast skeletal muscle 200 ca 100 >100 Batra et al. (1999) slow skeletal and cardiac 100 ca 50 100 Siemankowski & White (1984)

2. Dd myosin II 200 ca 50 >20 Batra et al. (1999)

3. Dd myosin IB 100 ca 50 UP1

4. strain sensor myosin IIa 0.7 3 Kovacs et al. (2003)

5. myosin IIb 0.2 0.7 Wang et al. (2003)

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