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In vitro phosphorylation of tropomyosin by a kinase from chicken embryo.

A tropomyosin kinase has been partially purified from the leg muscle of 11-day-old chick embryos by ammonium sulfate precipitation and DEAE and phosphocellulose chromatography. The tropomyosin kinase requires Mg2+ for its activity, but Ca2+ and cyclic AMP are not needed. Increase in KC1 concentration decreased the tropomyosin kinase activity with over 90% inhibition at 0.2 M KC1. The alpha-tropomyosin subunit from rabbit and chicken skeletal muscle was phosphorylated about five times faster than the beta-tropomyosin subunit. Smooth muscle tropomyosin from chicken gizzard was not phosphorylated. The in vitro phosphorylation site in rabbit and chicken skeletal tropomyosins is a single serine residue close to the COOH terminus, a region intimately engaged in the head to tail polymerization of tropomyosin. Since the amino acid sequences of rabbit alpha- and beta-tropomyosin and chicken alpha-tropomyosin in this region are known, their phosphorylation sites can be unambiguously assigned as the penultimate residue, serine 283.[1]

References

  1. In vitro phosphorylation of tropomyosin by a kinase from chicken embryo. Montgomery, K., Mak, A.S. J. Biol. Chem. (1984) [Pubmed]
 
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