Abstract
The contractile apparatus of smooth muscle is malleable to accommodate stress and strain exerted on the muscle cell and to maintain optimal contractility. Structural lability of smooth muscle myosin filaments is believed to play an important role in the cell's malleability. However, the mechanism and regulation of myosin filament formation is still poorly understood. In the present in vitro study, using a static light scattering method, length distributions were obtained from suspensions of short myosin filaments (SFs) formed by rapid dilution or long ones (LFs) formed by slow dialysis. The distributions indicated the presence of dynamic equilibriums between soluble myosin and the SFs; i.e.: trimers, hexamers and mini filaments, covering the range up to 0.75µm. The LFs were more stable, exhibiting favorable sizes at about 1.25, 2.4 and 4.5µm. More distinct distributions were obtained from filaments adsorbed to a glass surface, by evanescent wave scattering and local electric field enhancement. Addition of telokin (TL) to the suspensions of unphosphorylated SFs resulted in widening of the soluble range, while in the case of the LFs this shift was larger, and accompanied by reduced contribution of the soluble myosin species. Such changes were largely absent in the case of phosphorylated myosin. In contrast, the presence of Mg·ATP resulted in elongation of the filaments and clear separation of filaments from soluble myosin species. Thus, TL and Mg·ATP appeared to modify the distribution of myosin filament lengths, i.e., increasing the lengths in preparing for phosphorylation, or reducing it to aid dephosphorylation.
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