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 Article
homodimers exist in native rabbit skeletal muscle tropomyosin and increase after denaturation-renaturation
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer 2 *, Suzanne Greuel Kidd 2, Dan L. Crimmins 1, Alfred Holtzer 2
1Howard Hughes Medical Institute Core Protein/Peptide Facility, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
2Department of Chemistry, Box 1134, Washington University, One Brookings Dr., St. Louis, Missouri 63130

*Correspondence to Marilyn Emerson Holtzer, Department of Chemistry, Box 1134, Washington University, One Brookings Dr., St. Louis, Missouri 63130

Funded by:
 General Medical Sciences; Grant Number: GM-20064

Keywords
coiled coil • homodimer-heterodimer population • tropomyosin assembly

Abstract
Native tropomyosin from rabbit skeletal muscle (RSTm) consists mainly of and coiled coils (/ 3-4/1). In some extant studies, no molecules have been found. In this study, RSTm from several different preparations was disulfide cross-linked, both preparation and cross-linking being done under nondenaturing conditions. The cross-linked product was assayed for the presence of molecules cross-linked at both C36 and C190 (=). In such cross-linked RSTm, 3-8% = is detected by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, C4 reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography, and a free-solution capillary electrophoresis experiment. This percentage becomes 4-10% when corrected for incomplete double cross-linking and is independent of protein concentration (0.1-10.0 mg/mL), indicating that the observed species are not artifacts due to intermolecular cross-linking. Upon denaturation and subsequent renaturation either by heating to 55 °C or by incubating at 45 °C followed by quenching to room temperature, or by guanidine hydrochloride exposure followed by phased renaturation by dialysis, the fraction of increases, indicating that the reassociation favors homodimer formation somewhat over random association. This result differs from the random association observed when the sulfhydryl on one of the chains is carboxyamidomethylated (Holtzer, M.E., Breiner, T., & Holtzer, A., 1984, Biopolymers 23, 1811-1833), and from the overwhelming heterodimer preferences reported for tropomyosins from other organisms (Lehrer, S.S., Qian, Y., & Hvidt, S., 1989, Science 246, 926-928; Lehrer, S.S. & Qian, Y., 1990, J. Biol. Chem. 265, 1134-1138).

Received: 30 July 1991; Accepted: 11 October 1991

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1002/pro.5560010305  About DOI