Proceedings of the National
Academy
of Sciences USA, vol. 102,
6873-6878 (2005)
The Lymn-Taylor contraction cycle. The recovery-stroke is between states II and III: the lever arm (in yellow) attached to the converter domain (in green) swings back to prepare for the next power-stroke. |
The two end-state structures
of the recovery-stroke. The converter domain (in green) rotates by ~60 degrees to swing the lever-arm (in yellow). It is 40Angstroem away from the ATP (in van der Waals spheres). The converter-domain orientation must be coupled to the conformation of the relay helix (in cyan) near the ATP in such a way that ATPase activity is switched on only when the Lymn-Taylor cycle is in state III. |
|
Movie 1. Overall view (Fig1 B&C of
paper):
Overall view showing the recovery stroke of Myosin. The converter
domain (green) and the lever-arm (yellow) are seen to rotate ~65
degrees
relative to the main body of myosin (orange). After the end of
this
movie, the actin fibril (not shown) comes from the right side and
re-binds
to the main body for the power stroke. The movie frames are made
from coordinate sets taken from the minimum energy path (MEP) computed
by Conjugate Peak Refinement (CPR), as described in the paper.
Here,
only the protein backbone (colored as in Figure 1B&C) and the bound
ATP (in van der Waals) are shown. File size 1Mb.
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(Low-res. version, 1Mb, as in PNAS suppl. materials)
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(High-res. version, 2.8Mb)
Movie 2.
Same as movie 1, but showing all the atoms used in the calculation.
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(Large file, 12Mb, as in PNAS suppl. materials)
Movie 3. Hinging of the converter domain
(see
Fig.2-left of paper).
Motions described in Figure 2. As movie 1, but different view
(down the SH1-helix, in purple) showing the converter domain (green)
and
the lever-arm (yellow) rotating ~65 degrees relative to the main body
of
myosin (orange), around an axis close to the axis of the
SH1-helix.
Shows the hinging point of the converter domain on the SH1-helix, and
the
linkage between the converter domain and the C-terminus of the relay
helix
(in cyan).
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(Low-res.
version, 1.5Mb, as in PNAS suppl. materials)
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(High-res. version, 5Mb)
Movie 4. Seesaw and local unwinding of the
relay helix (see
Fig.2-right
of paper).
Motions described in Figure 2 (same view and coloring as in movie
1). Shows how the closing of the Switch2 loop (orange) over the
bound ATP (van der Waals) is coupled to a large translation of the
C-terminus
of the relay helix (cyan), which accompanies the rotation of the
converter domain (of which a small
piece
is shown in green). To accomodate this rotation, the C-terminal
third of the relay helix undergoes an unwinding by 1/8th turn, breaking
the helical H-bond at residue 486. As a result of the unwinding, the
aromatic ring of Phe487 (orange) reorients and must thread between the
relay helix and the relay loop (in white).
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(Low-res. version, 0.7Mb, as in PNAS suppl. materials)
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(High-res. version, 8.5Mb)