Abstract

The motor function of smooth muscle myosin is activated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain (RLC) at Ser19. However, the molecular mechanism by which the phosphorylation activates the motor function is not yet understood. In the present study, we focused our attention on the role of the central helix of RLC for regulation. The flexible region at the middle of the central helix (Gly95-Pro98) was substituted or deleted to various extents, and the effects of the deletion or substitution on the regulation of the motor activity of myosin were examined. Deletion of Gly95-Asp97, Gly95-Thr96, or Thr96-Asp97 decreased the actin-translocating activity of myosin a little, but the phosphorylation-dependent regulation of the motor activity was not disrupted. In contrast, the deletion of Gly95-Pro98 of RLC completely abolished the actin translocating activity of phosphorylated myosin. However, the unregulated myosin long subfragment 1 containing this RLC mutant showed motor activity the same as that containing the wild type RLC. Since long subfragment 1 motor activity is unregulated by phosphorylation, i.e. constitutively active, these results suggest that the deletion of these residues at the central helix of RLC disrupts the phosphorylation-mediated activation mechanism but not the motor function of myosin itself. On the other hand, the elimination of Pro98 or substitution of Gly95-Pro98 by Ala resulted in the activation of actin translocating activity of dephosphorylated myosin, whereas it did not affect the motor activity of phosphorylated myosin. Together, these results clearly indicate the importance of the hinge at the central helix of RLC on the phosphorylation-mediated regulation of smooth muscle myosin.

Highlights

  • The motor activity of vertebrate smooth muscle as well as non-muscle cell myosin is regulated by phosphorylation of the 20,000 dalton light chain (LC20) of myosin [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We found that the change in the structure of the hinge region significantly altered the motor function of smooth muscle myosin

  • The most notable findings were: 1) the deletion of all four residues (⌬GTDP) abolished the activation effect of phosphorylation on myosin motor activity; and 2) two mutant LC20s in which the four residues were substituted for Ala (GTDP/AAAA) or a proline residue in the hinge was deleted (⌬P) conferred the phosphorylation-independent motor activity on smooth muscle myosin, i.e. the inhibitory function of dephosphorylated LC20 was diminished

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Summary

Introduction

The motor activity of vertebrate smooth muscle as well as non-muscle cell myosin is regulated by phosphorylation of the 20,000 dalton light chain (LC20) of myosin [1,2,3,4,5]. The motor function of smooth muscle myosin is activated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain (RLC) at Ser19.

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