Abstract

Myosin II and V are important for the generation and segregation of subcellular compartments. We observed that vesicular myosin II and V were associated with the protein scaffolding of a common subset of vesicles by density sedimentation, electron microscopy, and immunofluorescence. Solubilization of either myosin II or V was caused by polyphosphates with the following efficacy at 10 mM: for myosin II ATP-Mg(2+) = ATP = AMP-PNP (5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate) > pyrophosphate = tripolyphosphate > tetrapolyphosphate = ADP > cAMP = Mg(2+); and for myosin V pyrophosphate = tripolyphosphate > ATP-Mg(2+) = ATP = AMP-PNP > ADP = tetrapolyphosphate > cAMP = Mg(2+). Consequently, we suggest solubilization was not an effect of phosphorylation, hydrolysis, or disassociation of myosin from actin filaments. Scatchard analysis of myosin V binding to stripped dense vesicles showed saturable binding with a K(m) of 10 nM. Analysis of native vesicles indicates that these sites are fully occupied. Together, these data show there are over 100 myosin Vs/vesicle (100-nm radius). We propose that polyphosphate anions bind to myosin II and V and induce a conformational change that disrupts binding to a receptor.

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