Abstract
The presence of an altered form of the heavy chain component of myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) in avian dystrophic pectoral muscle was confirmed by Triton-urea-acetic acid polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The potential functional significance of this altered form of S-1 was evaluated by measuring the ATPase activity of the unregulated acto-S-1 complex using all possible pairwise combinations of actin and S-1 from normal (N) and dystrophic (D) muscle. (NN, DD, ND, DN, where the first letter designates the actin and the second letter the S-1). With conventionally purified actin and S-1, NN not equal to DD not equal to ND not equal to DN, implying both N actin not equal to D actin and N S-1 not equal to D S-1 functionally. An alternate purification scheme for actin resulted in preparations from normal and dystrophic muscles of actin Mg-polymers with the same rheology (viscosity vs shear rate) and critical concentration for polymerization. When these actins were combined with more highly purified preparations of S-1, the adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity of the acto-S-1 complex did not vary with changes in the pairwise composition and responded similarly to variation of the actin or adenosine triphosphate (ATP) concentration. In experiments with actin activation of intact myosin, no differences were observed between myosin from normal vs dystrophic muscle. The different isozymes of myosin present in normal and dystrophic chicken pectoral muscles are functionally equivalent as ATPases in their interactions with unregulated actin.
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