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    Date Issued1992 (1)1991 (1)1989 (1)Author
    Gatti, Jean-Luc (3)
    Moss, Anthony G. (3)Witman, George B. (3)King, Stephen M. (2)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Cell Biology (3)Document TypeJournal Article (2)Book Chapter (1)KeywordAnimals (3)Cell Biology (3)Centrifugation, Density Gradient (3)Dynein ATPase (3)Male (3)View MoreJournalThe Journal of biological chemistry (1)The Journal of cell biology (1)

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    The motile beta/IC1 subunit of sea urchin sperm outer arm dynein does not form a rigor bond

    Moss, Anthony G.; Gatti, Jean-Luc; Witman, George B. (1992-09-01)
    We used in vitro translocation and cosedimentation assays to study the microtubule binding properties of sea urchin sperm outer arm dynein and its beta/IC1 subunit. Microtubules glided on glass-absorbed sea urchin dynein for a period of time directly proportional to the initial MgATP2- concentration and then detached when 70-95% of the MgATP2- was hydrolyzed. Detachment resulted from MgATP2- depletion, because (a) perfusion with fresh buffer containing MgATP2- reconstituted binding and gliding, (b) microtubules glided many minutes with an ATP-regenerating system at ATP concentrations which alone supported gliding for only 1-2 min, and (c) microtubules detached upon total hydrolysis of ATP by an ATP-removal system. The products of ATP hydrolysis antagonized binding and gliding; as little as a threefold excess of ADP/Pi over ATP resulted in complete loss of microtubule binding and translocation by the beta/IC1 subunit. In contrast to the situation with sea urchin dynein, microtubules ceased gliding but remained bound to glass-absorbed Tetrahymena outer arm dynein when MgATP2- was exhausted. Cosedimentation assays showed that Tetrahymena outer arm dynein sedimented with microtubules in an ATP-sensitive manner, as previously reported (Porter, M.E., and K. A. Johnson. J. Biol. Chem. 258: 6575-6581). However, the beta/IC1 subunit of sea urchin dynein did not cosediment with microtubules in the absence of ATP. Thus, this subunit, while capable of generating motility, lacks both structural and rigor-type microtubule binding.
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    Purification and characterization of Salmo gairdneri outer arm dynein

    Moss, Anthony G.; Gatti, Jean-Luc; King, Stephen M.; Witman, George B. (1991-01-01)
    Dyneins are multimeric ATPases, which make up the inner and outer arms that bridge the outer doublet microtubules of eukaryotic cilia and flagella. They are responsible for the generation of sliding between outer doublets, which in turn is the basis for the formation and propagation of bending waves in both cilia and flagella. Outer arm dyneins are composed of two to three ATPases of Mr > 400,000, referred to as the α, β, and, where appropriate, γ heavy chains. Trout sperm is a new source of vertebrate dynein. Sperm can be repeatedly obtained in large quantities from the same trout (up to 4 × 10 spermatozoa per ejaculate), their axonemes can be readily isolated, and the dynein can be extracted efficiently and without significant proteolytic degradation. The advantages of trout sperm have permitted the detailed characterization of trout outer arm dynein to progress rapidly, so that it is now one of the best characterized of all dyneins. This chapter presents an overview of trout physiology and spermatogenesis for those not well acquainted with teleost physiology and anatomy and describes the methods for purification and characterization of Salmo gairdneri outer arm dynein.
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    Outer arm dynein from trout spermatozoa. Purification, polypeptide composition, and enzymatic properties

    Gatti, Jean-Luc; King, Stephen M.; Moss, Anthony G.; Witman, George B. (1989-07-05)
    Extraction of isolated axonemes from trout (Salmo gairdneri) sperm with 0.6 M NaCl removed 97% of the outer arms, approximately 12% of the protein, and approximately 50% of the MgATPase activity. Fractionation of this high salt extract by sucrose density gradient centrifugation yielded a single peak of ATPase activity with an apparent sedimentation coefficient of 19 S. Electrophoretic analysis showed that this 19 S particle was composed of two heavy chains (termed alpha and beta; Mr 430,000 and 415,000, respectively), five intermediate molecular weight chains (IC1-IC5; Mr 85,000, 73,000, 65,000, 63,000, and 57,000), and six light chains (LC1-LC6; Mr 22,000-6,000). A similar complex was obtained following further purification by DEAE-Sephacel column chromatography. Quantitative densitometry of Coomassie Blue-stained gels indicated that the heavy and intermediate chains were present in equimolar amounts. Electron microscopic examination of the 19 S particles revealed that it consisted of two globular heads joined together by a Y-shaped stem. The 19 S particle had a specific MgATPase activity of 1.1 +/- 0.3 mumol of phosphate released/min/mg and exhibited an apparent Km for MgATP2- of 40 +/- 16 microM. MnATP2- and CaATP2- were hydrolyzed at rates 100 and 80% that of MgATP2-, respectively. The Mg-ATPase activity was inhibited by vanadate, but not by ouabain or oligomycin, and exhibited a high activity between pH 7.0 and 10.0 with a maximum at pH 9.0-9.5. ATP was the preferred nucleotide, although GTP and CTP (but not ITP) did interact with the dynein to a minor extent. Based on its origin, sedimentation coefficient, polypeptide composition, and enzymatic properties, we conclude that this two-headed 19 S particle represents the entire trout sperm axonemal outer arm dynein. This dynein is probably exemplary of the outer arm dyneins of other vertebrates.
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