Although more than 50 years have passed since the monumental discovery of Huxley and Hanson that muscle contraction results from relative sliding between actin and myosin filaments, coupled with ATP… Click to show full abstract
Although more than 50 years have passed since the monumental discovery of Huxley and Hanson that muscle contraction results from relative sliding between actin and myosin filaments, coupled with ATP hydrolysis, the mechanism underlying the filament sliding still remains to be a mystery. It is generally believed that the myofilament sliding is caused by cyclic attachment-detachment between myosin heads in myosin filaments and myosin-binding sites in actin filaments. Attempts to prove the myosin head movement using techniques of X-ray diffraction and chemical probes attached to myosin heads have failed to obtain clear results because of the asynchronous nature of myosin head movement. Using the gas environmental chamber (EC) attached to an electron microscope, we succeeded in recording myosin head movement in hydrated myosin filaments, coupled with ATP hydrolysis with the following results: (1)In the absence of actin filaments, myosin heads fluctuate around a definite neutral position, so that their time-averaged position remains unchanged; (2) On ATP application, myosin heads bind with ATP to be in the charged-up state, M-ADP-Pi, and perform a recovery stroke in the direction away from the myosin filament central bare zone and stay in the post-recovery stroke position; (3) In the actin-myosin filament mixture, myosin heads form rigor linkages with actin, and bind with applied ATP to be in the charged-up state, M-ADP-Pi, and perform a power stroke in the direction towards the myosin filament bare zone, while releasing ADP and Pi to stay in the post-power stroke position; (4) In both recovery and power strokes, myosin heads in the non charged-up state return to the neutral position. These results indicate that the charged-up myosin heads decide their direction of movement without being guided by actin filaments.
               
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