Abstract
When myofibrils prepared from chicken leg muscle were treated with a solution containing 0.1 mM CaCl2 and 30 micrograms/ml of leupeptin, alpha-connectin, which exists as a longitudinal thin filament in a sarcomere, was split into beta-connectin and a 1,200-kDa subfragment. The native subfragment was successfully purified without using any denaturant: It was extracted with 1 M KI solution from the Ca-treated myofibrils and purified by TSKgel G6000PW column chromatography. About 10 mg of the subfragment was yielded from 100 g of starting muscle. Using immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy, we show here that polyclonal antibodies against the 1,200-kDa subfragment bind to the Z-disk and the epitope, which is about 0.34 micron apart from the Z-disk at a sarcomere length of 2.6 microns; the 1,200-kDa subfragment constitutes the proximal region of connectin filaments. Purified alpha-actinin decorated alpha-connectin and the 1,200-kDa subfragment on nitrocellulose blots of myofibrillar proteins separated by SDS-PAGE. Therefore, we conclude that connectin filaments are anchored to the Z-disk by the binding of the 1,200-kDa subfragment to alpha-actinin.
Published Version
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