An in vitro assay using myosin-coated beads demonstrated that skeletal muscle myosin moves along actin filaments at 2-6 micron/s, dependent on ATP, pH, and ion concentrations.
In vitro myosin movement
In vitro quantitative assay
Myosin-bead velocity
Sheetz and Spudich (1983, Nature (Lond.), 303:31-35) showed that ATP-dependent movement of myosin along actin filaments can be measured in vitro using myosin-coated beads and oriented actin cables from Nitella. To establish this in vitro movement as a quantitative assay and to understand better the basis for the movement, we have defined the factors that affect the myosin-bead velocity. Beads coated with skeletal muscle myosin move at a rate of 2-6 micron/s, depending on the myosin preparation. This velocity is independent of myosin concentration on the bead surface for concentrations above a critical value (approximately 20 micrograms myosin/2.5 X 10(9) beads of 1 micron in diameter). Movement is optimal between pH 6.8 and 7.5, at KCl concentrations less than 70 mM, at ATP concentrations greater than 0.1 mM, and at Mg2+ concentrations between 2 and 6 mM. From the temperature dependence of bead velocity, we calculate activation energies of 90 kJ/mol below 22 degrees C and 40 kJ/mol above 22 degrees C. Different myosin species move at their own characteristic velocities, and these velocities are proportional to their actin-activated ATPase activities. Further, the velocities of beads coated with smooth or skeletal muscle myosin correlate well with the known in vivo rates of myosin movement along actin filaments in these muscles. This in vitro assay, therefore, provides a rapid, reproducible method for quantitating the ATP-dependent movement of myosin molecules on actin.
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Michael P. Sheetz
National University of Singapore
Rebecca Chasan
American Institute of Biological Sciences
James A. Spudich
Heart Failure & Transplant
The Journal of Cell Biology
Stanford University
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Sheetz et al. (Thu,) conducted a other in In vitro myosin movement. In vitro quantitative assay was evaluated on Myosin-bead velocity. An in vitro assay using myosin-coated beads demonstrated that skeletal muscle myosin moves along actin filaments at 2-6 micron/s, dependent on ATP, pH, and ion concentrations.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0ccf2e3fce92745334cf3a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.99.5.1867
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