Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
Thin filament-associated actin-binding proteins have dual function,
controlling actomyosin-based contractility and cytoskeletal assembly in a
variety of muscle and non-muscle systems. In striated muscles, the
regulatory protein complex, troponin-tropomyosin, linked to thin
filaments, controls contractility by sterically blocking and unblocking
myosin-crossbridge binding on actin in response to changing Ca/2+ levels.
In smooth muscle, thin filament-associated caldesmon and calponin may
function similarly to modulate actomyosin-based motility and/or the state
of cytoskeletal assembly. To accomplish our goal to determine the
regulatory mechanisms by which these proteins function in striated and
smooth muscles, it is crucial to assess their structural interactions on
isolated and reconstituted thin filaments and their respective responses
to Ca/2+, myosin-crossbridge binding and phosphorylation. For a fuller
picture of filament function, it is also essential to understand the
structural interactions of muscle and related non-muscle actin-
cytoskeletal proteins State of the art electron microscopy, computer-
assisted image analysis and three-dimensional reconstruction will be used
to determine the arrangement of thin filament components on F-actin and to
evaluate their position and influence on actin domains. Reconstruction
will be fitted to the atomic map of F-actin to detail contacts with
specific amino acid clusters on actin monomers. Our own published
reconstructions and those of our colleagues demonstrate the feasibility of
these goals. Our continued structural studies on troponin-tropomyosin
regulated filaments will lead to an elucidation of the molecular mechanism
of relaxation and activation in skeletal and cardiac muscle. Our studies
to smooth muscle filament swill contribute to understanding the fine
tuning of the smooth muscle contractile response and the construction of
its cytoskeleton. A general understanding of the molecular mechanisms
involved in the regulation of contractility in healthy muscle tissue will
aid in our evaluation of defects occurring in disease. The control of
smooth muscle contractility, for example, is of great importance in the
regulation of vascular tone and pulmonary airway resistance, determinants
in a number of disease processes such as hypertension and asthma. The
wider significance of our goals is underscore by possible participation of
caldesmon, calponin and proteins with consensus calponin homology-domains
in such diverse cellular processes as cytokinesis, exocytosis, cortical
cytoskeleton modeling and signal transduction modulation, i.e. processes
that are essential to all normal cells and that can become aberrant in
malignancy.
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