| Molecular polarity in tropomyosin-troponin T co-crystals Biophysical Journal, Volume 73, Issue 4, 1 October 1997, Pages 1763-1770 D. Cabral-Lilly, L.S. Tobacman, J.P. Mehegan and C. Cohen Abstract New features of the structure and interactions of troponin T and tropomyosin have been revealed by electron microscopy of so-called double-diamond co-crystals. These co-crystals were formed using rabbit alpha2 tropomyosin complexed with troponin T from either skeletal or cardiac muscle, which have different lengths in the amino-terminal region, as well as a bacterially expressed skeletal muscle troponin T fragment of 190 residues that lacks the amino-terminal region. Differences in the images of the co-crystals have allowed us to establish the polarities of both the troponin T subunit and tropomyosin in the projected lattice. Moreover, in agreement with their sequences, the amino-terminal region of a bovine cardiac muscle troponin T isoform appears to be longer than that from the rabbit skeletal muscle troponin T isoform and to span more of the amino terminus of tropomyosin at the head-to-tail filament joints. Images of crystals tilted relative to the electron beam also reveal the supercoiling of the tropomyosin filaments in this lattice. Based on these results, a three-dimensional model of the double-diamond lattice has been constructed. Abstract | PDF (2568 kb) |
| Platform Y: Muscle Regulatory Proteins Biophysical Journal, Volume 94, Issue , 1 February 2008, Pages 321-324 Full Text | PDF (78 kb) |
| Tropomyosin: Does resolution lead to reconciliation? Current Biology, Volume 4, Issue 7, 1 July 1994, Pages 624-626 M.K. Reedy, M.C. Reedy and F. Schachat Summary New electron microscopic data provide direct evidence in support of the classical steric-blocking model for regulation of actin–myosin interactions by tropomyosin. Summary | Full Text | PDF (411 kb) |
Copyright © 1980 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 32, Issue 1, 485-502, 1 October 1980
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(80)84985-X
Research Article
G.N. Phillips, J.P. Fillers and C. Cohen
Movements of tropomyosin play an essential role in muscle regulation. This fibrous protein is a two-chain alpha-helical coiled coil that bonds head to tail to form cables wound in the two long grooves of the actin helix. The regulatory switch consists of tropomyosin and a "globular" Ca2+-sensitive protein complex called troponin. The structure of the tropomyosin filaments has now been determined by x-ray crystallography to approximately 15 A resolution. The complete sequence of alpha-tropomyosin is known; by using mercury markers on the cysteine residues the ends of the molecules in the filaments have been identified. Details of the coiled-coil structure have also been visualized by refinement of models against the diffraction data. The average pitch of the coiled coil is approximately 137 A, so that each tropomyosin molecule can make similar contacts with seven actin monomers. The electron density map also indicates that departures from the alpha-helical coiled coil occur in a few localized regions of the molecule, especially at the overlapping ends. Motions of tropomyosin in the crystal lattice are displaced by the character of the Bragg reflections and the strong diffuse scatter. These effects depend markedly on temperature. It appears that the molecular filaments fluctuate freely in a direction perpendicular to their axes. Moreover, the C-terminal half of the molecule "unfolds" to some degree at less than physiological temperatures. Crystallographic results on co-crystals of tropomyosin and a component of troponin (TnT) suggest that this subunit consists of structurally distinct domains, so that the troponin complex is not in fact simply "globular". The interactions of the extended alpha-helical region of TnT may "stiffen" tropomyosin and influence its motions. We picture the tropomyosin/troponin switch in muscle as a restless cable, perpetually making and breaking bonds as it vibrates on the thin filament. These movements of tropomyosin probably depend on two aspects of its design: the regular pattern of coiled-coil linkages with actin; and the aperiodic features that allow flexibility and motion.