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Document Description
Title
Slow
skeletal
muscle
actin
:
confirmation
and
further
insights
Author
Mercer
,
Robert
C.
C.
,
1985-
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2010.
Biochemistry
Date
2010
Pagination
xii, 151 leaves : col. ill.
Subject
Actin;
Genetic
regulation;
Osteichthyes--Physiology;
Striated
muscle;
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biochemistry
Discipline
Biochemistry
Language
Eng
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
(leaves
121-151)
Abstract
1)
The
1°
structures
of
three
sarcomeric
actin
isoforms
were
inferred
from
cDNA
sequences:
Atlantic
herring
(Clupea
harengus)
fast
skeletal
muscle
actin
,
Acc#
GQ455648;
Atlantic
herring
slow
skeletal
muscle
actin
,
Acc#
EF495203;
and
Atlantic
Mackerel
(Scomber
scombrus)
fast
skeletal
muscle
actin
,
Acc#
EF607093.
The
two
herring
skeletal
muscle
actin
cDNAs
possess
different
non-coding
regions
and are
concluded
to
arise
from
different
genes.
--
2)
Sequence
comparisons
demonstrate
that
actin
from a
given
type
of
skeletal
muscle
has been
conserved
across
teleost
evolution.
Herring
slow
muscle
actin
and
salmonid
slow
muscle
actin
(Salmo
trutta;
Acc#
AF267426
[Mudalige
et.al.
2007])
share
a
single
substitution
,
Gin
354
Ala
(herr:sal)
,
while
, in
addition
to this
substitution
the
fast
skeletal
muscle
actins
from
Atlantic
herring
and
atlantic
salmon
(Salmo
salar;
Acc#
AF304406
[Mudalige
et.al.
2007])
contain
Ser
160
Thr
for a
total
of
two
substitutions.
--
3)
There are
thirteen
inferred
substitutions
between
fast
and
slow
skeletal
muscle
actins
isolated
from
Atlantic
herring
,
six
that are
non-conservative
in
nature.
This
is
a
record
for
two
vertebrate
sarcomeric
actins.
The
replacements
(non-conservative
underlined)
are:
residues:
2
,
3
,
103
,
155
,
160
,
165
,
278
,
281
,
310
,
329
,
358
,
360
and
363.
Most
of the
heterogeneity
occurs
after
residue
100.
Also of
note
is
the
exchange
of
Gin
(fast
actin)
for
Asp
(slow
actin)
at
position
360
,
which
endows
the
slow
type
isoform
with a
greater
negative
charge
in the
neutral
pH
range.
Comparison
with the
actin
found
in the
skeletal
muscles
of the
rabbit
demonstrates
11
replacements
(five
non-conservative)
with
herring
slow
skeletal
muscle
actin
and
four
(one
non-conservative)
when
compared
to
herring
fast
skeletal
muscle.
--
4)
Two
skeletal
muscle
actins
of
non-identical
net-charge
were
detected
by
alkaline
urea
PAGE
in the
slow
skeletal
muscle
of the
following
species
-
mackerel
and
smelt
-
but not in
other
teleosts
(halibut
and
tiliapia)
,
primitive
fish
(hagfish
and
lamprey)
,
birds
or
amphibians.
--
5)
Herring
slow
skeletal
muscle
G-actin
(CaATP)
is
less
resistant
to
thermal
, and
chemical
,
-induced
denaturation
(as
monitored
by
electronic
circular
dichroism)
than its
fast
muscle
counterpart.
Thermal
melting
temperatures
(Tms)
and
[urea]
unfolding
midpoints
,
respectively
,
are:
50°C
and
55°C;
3.5
M
and
4.0
M.
A
rate
of
unfolding
for
slow
skeletal
muscle
actin
was
determined
, in the
presence
of
0.1
mM
EDTA
, to be
6.5xl0"4
sec
_1.
The
fast
skeletal
muscle
isolated
from
Atlantic
mackerel
has a
Tm
of
55°C
and a
midpoint
of
unfolding
in the
presence
of
urea
of
4.0
M.
--
6)
Fast
skeletal
muscle
G-actin
from
Atlantic
mackerel
contains
a
non-conservative
substitution
in
common
with
slow
skeletal
muscle
actin:
Ser
155
Ala
(herr
fast:
mack
fast/herr
slow).
This
finding
rules
out
the
identity
of this
residue
as a
contributor
to the
observed
instability.
--
7)
Herring
slow
skeletal
muscle
G-actin
(CaATP)
is
less
resistant
to
cleavage
by
subtilisin
and
thrombin
than the
fast
muscle
counterpart.
Subtilisin
cleavage
between
residues
48
and
49
was
confirmed
by
Edman
sequencing
of
Western
blotted
peptides.
Of the
two
actin
isoforms
,
only
slow
skeletal
muscle
actin
could
be
cleaved
by
thrombin.
The
fast
skeletal
muscle
actin
isolated
from
mackerel
, in
spite
of the
present
substitutions
,
behaves
as the
other
fast
skeletal
muscle
actins
when
subjected
to
subtilisin
and
thrombin
exposure.
--
8)
Fluorescence
spectra
of
all
G-actins
(Ca
-
2'-deoxy
3'
O-
(N'-
Methylanthraniloyl)
ATP)
studied
is
characterized
by
emission
maxima
at
43
0
nm;
demonstrating
a
virtual
identity
of the
nucleotide
binding
pockets
of the
three
isoforms.
Emission
intensity
was
reduced
in the
case
of the
slow
muscle
actin
,
consistent
with
it
having
a
weaker
affinity
for the
nucleotide.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a3302050
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(16.41
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Mercer_RobertCC.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
79542.cpd