Title: Smooth muscle activation and regulation
1Smooth muscle activation and regulation
- Actin polymerization and depolymerization
2Organization of smooth muscle cells
- Contractile apparatus actin and myosin
filaments - The ratio of thin to thick filaments is much
higher in smooth muscle (151) than in skeletal
muscle (61). - Cytoskeleton compartment actin filaments and
intermediate filaments - Desmin and vimentin two major intermediate
filament proteins - The sarcomeric structure is poorly understood due
to the lack of visible cross striations within
the cells in the light or electron microscope.
3Small and Gimona model
4Components of contractile apparatus and
cytoskeleton
5The model of malleable sarcomeric structure of
contractile filament
6Smooth muscle contraction
- Sharing the mechanism of the sliding-filament,
cross-bridge cycling as proposed in striated
muscle. - Optimize the contractile filament overlap at any
cell length within its physiological range and to
maintain the ability to generate maximal force
over that length range. - Contractile activation involves cytoskeleton
rearrangements - Dynamic remodeling of the actin filament lattice
within cellular microdomains in response to local
mechanical and pharmacological events enables
the cell to maintain its external environment. - As the contraction occurs, the cytoskeletal
lattice stabilizes, solidifies, and forms a rigid
structure for transmission of tension generated
by the interaction of myosin and actin. The
integrated molecular transitions take place
within the contractile cycle.
7Thick filament regulation of smooth muscle
contraction
- The Ca2-dependent phosphorylation/dephosphorylati
on of MRLC by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK)/
myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) is thought
to control the contraction-relaxation cycle of
smooth muscle. - Smooth muscle myosin similar to striated muscle
counterpart contains two heavy chains (MHC) and
two pairs of light chains, one 20-kD regulatory
light chains (MRLC) and the other 17-kD essential
light chains (MELC). - Activated by Ca2-calmodulin, MLCK causes
phosphorylation of serine-19 and/or threonine-18
at MRLC, and MRLC phosphorylation increases
myosins actin-activated ATPase activity at least
100-fold - Once phosphorylated, the myosin cross-bridge can
bind to actin, generating force by cross-bridge
cycling. - On the other hand, dephosphorylation is brought
about by MLCP.
8Thin filament regulation of smooth muscle
contraction
- The demonstration of Ca2 sensitivity of myosin
ATPase activity in preparations containing
skeletal muscle myosin and smooth muscle thin
filament - Reports that cross-bridge cycling rates can vary
without detectable changes in MRLC
phosphorylation - Reports of dissociations between MRLC
phosphorylation and tension - Under some conditions, unphosphorylated
cross-bridges are not completely turned off,
which indicated that force is also regulated by
thin filament associated proteins
9Actins
- At least six tissue-specific isoforms
a-skeletal, a-cardiac, and a-vascular g-enteric
and g-cytoplasmic and b-cytoplasmic actins - Highly homologous in their primary structure
with most sequence differences in the N-terminal
region of the molecule. This part of the molecule
is not functionally involved in filament assembly
but is the site for interaction with various
actin binding proteins - The a-, b- and g- isoforms can be resolved by
isoelectric focusing, proceeding from the most
acidic to the least acidic - The smooth muscle actins have been associated
with the contractile filaments, whereas the
cytoplasmic actins have been associated with the
non- contractile cytoskeleton and sub-
plasmalemma cortex.
10Tropomyosin (TM)
- From four highly conserved genes a-, b-, g-,
d-TM , via alternative splicing, give rise to
more than 40 isoforms - a-TM is a major isoform in smooth muscle with
minor b-TM to form a homo- or hetero-dimer that
binds along the major groove of actin filament in
a head-to-tail manner - In vitro studies have implicated TMs in the
stabilization of the actin cytoskeleton by
protecting actin filaments from the severing
action of gelsolin and the depolymerizing action
of ADF/cofilin - X-ray studies have suggested that the activation
of smooth muscle leads to the movement of TM in a
manner similar to that in striated muscle - The movement of smooth muscle TM by myosin
binding is more easily facilitated by
phosphorylated myosin than unphosphorylated
myosin, providing for possible cross talk between
thick and thin filament regulation. - TM is necessary for full inhibition of actomyosin
ATPase activity by caldesmon
11Caldesmon (CaD)
- CaD is an actin, Tm, myosin, and calmodulin (CaM)
binding protein. - Two isoforms are produced by a single gene
through alternative splicing to generate a smooth
muscle form, h-CaD with high molecular weight of
130140 kD and a non-muscle l-CaD with low
molecular weight of 6090 kD - The difference between h- and l-CaD is a highly
charged repeating sequence, corresponding to a 35
nm-long single helical region that separates the
N-terminal domain from the C-terminal domain of
h-CaD.
12CaD
- An elongated protein containing two relatively
compact domains at the N- and the C-terminal ends
- The C-terminal domains are responsible for actin
binding and inhibition of myosin ATPase activity
in vitro. - Binding of CaM or phosphorylation of sites
between the two C-terminal actin binding domains
can reverse some of the inhibitory actions of CaD
in vitro. - The N-terminal half of the molecule has been
shown to bind myosin and, in vitro, tether myosin
to actin in conjunction with C-terminal actin
binding domains of CaD
13Domain structure of CaD
14Calponin (CaP)
- CaP is an actin binding protein that also binds
to CaM, myosin, desmin, and phospholipids - There are three different isoforms encoded by
separate genes and expressed in smooth muscle (h1
basic CaP), cardiac muscle (h2 neutral CaP), and
non-muscle cells (acidic CaP), respectively. - In smooth muscle, CaP interacts with F-actin and
inhibits the actomyosin Mg-ATPase activity in
vitro. When phosphorylated in vitro by either
CaMKII or PKC, the inhibitory action of CaP on
the actin-myosin interaction is reversed - Smooth muscle CaP is an elongated molecule (MW
32 kD) of 18 nm long - The domain structure containing a CaP homology
domain (CH), followed by a TnI-like domain, and
three C-terminal repeat sequence. The CH domain
in smooth muscle CaP is thought to localize the
signaling molecules to the actin cytoskeleton
since this domain can bind to ERK. - Both TnI-like domain and C-terminal repeat can
bind to actin.
15Domain structure of CaP
16Actin polymerization and depolymerization
- Actin exists in two forms, globular (G) monomer
and filamentous (F) polymer. - G-actin contains bound ATP, which, on
polymerization, is transformed into
F-actin-bound-ADP and Pi - At intermediate concentration of free G-actin
subunits, the filaments loose actin-ADP at the
minusend (pointed end) and assemble actin-ATP at
the plus-end (barbed end). This phenomenon is
called treadmilling of actin filament
polymerization/depolymerization. - The treadmilling of actin filament is the basic
mechanism for motility in nonmuscle cells
17Actin associated proteins in actin filament
polymerization and deplymerization
- Proteins that bind to G-actin
- -profilin, thymosin
- Proteins that nucleate F-actin
- -formin, Arp2/3 (also branching effect)
- Proteins that bind to F-actin ends and control
polymerization - - cofilin, gelsolin severing, and capping at
the plus end - - gCAP39, capZ capping at the plus end
- - tropomodulin capping at the minus end
- - severin severing, and capping
- - villin crosslinking, severing, and capping
- Proteins that attach actin to the plasma
membrane Ezrin/Radixin/Moesin (ERM) protein
family - Proteins that crosslink/branch F-actin filamin,
fimbrin, a-actinin, fascin, spectrin
18Arp2/3 complex downstream target of multiple
signaling pathways leading to actin assembly
- Seven conserved subunits including Arp2 and
Arp3 (Machesky et al., 1994). - Generates new actin filaments in a
stimulus-responsive and spatially controlled
fashion.
19Arp 2/3 complex mediates branching of actin
filaments
20Physiological functions
- Using the methods of DNase inhibition and actin
affecting drugs (phalloidin, cytochalasin, and
latrunculin), Mehta and Gunst first found that
the G-actin content was 30 lower in extracts of
muscle strips activated with acetylcholine than
in extracts from unstimulated muscle strips. The
decrease in G-actin in response to contractile
stimulation was prevented by inhibitors of actin
polymerization with no effect on MRLC
phosphorylation. - Actin polymerization in smooth muscle is
functionally related to contractile activity
under physiological conditions - Bárány and his colleagues found a rapid exchange
of the G-actin bound-ATP in intact arterial
smooth muscle, indicating that dynamic
rearrangement of actin filament occurs in intact
smooth muscle. - All these studies have suggested that
polymerization of G-actin monomer into
filamentous F-actin may play an important role in
contractile activation in smooth muscle
independent of activation of myosin ATPase
activity in response to MRLC phosphorylation.
21Contractile stimulation inducing the formation of
linkages between the cytoskeleton and integrin
proteins
- Receptor coupled G-protein (Rho) activation by
extracellular stimulation of carbachol may
involve in actin reorganization in human airway
smooth muscle. - Signaling cascade of integrin activation to
remodeling of cytoskeleton in regulation of
smooth muscle contraction - Cholinergic receptor stimulation recruits actin-
and integrin- binding proteins (e.g. a-actinin,
vinculin, talin, focal adhesion kinase, and
paxillin) from the cytoplasm to the membrane
cytoskeleton. - Depletion of paxillin and focal adhesion kinase
led to loss of force in tracheal smooth muscle
tissues
22Linkages between the cytoskeleton and integrin
proteins
- Nonphosphorylatable paxillin mutants in tracheal
muscle inhibits tension development and actin
polymerization, without affecting MRLC
phosphorylation - Down-regulation of profilin, an actin regulatory
protein, was found to attenuate the force
development of arterial smooth muscle as well - Membrane cytoskeletal linker proteins (e.g.
a-actinin, vinculin, talin etc.) and integrin
associated proteins (e.g. FAK, and paxillin)
plays an important role in reorganization of
actin filament polymerization and
depolymerization in the membrane/cytoskeletal
compartment during smooth muscle contraction. - Contractile stimulation could induce formation of
the structural linkage between the cytoskeleton
and integrin proteins that mediate tension
transmission between the contractile apparatus
and the extracellular matrix in smooth muscle.
23Actin binding protein regulation of actin filament
- Formin and Arp 2/3 complexes (actin related
proteins 2 and 3, seven strongly associated
subunits) are the two nucleating proteins that
facilitate the polymerization of actin filament. - While the formin protein induces a linear form of
actin filament, the Arp 2/3 protein complex
branches the actin filaments to form a network
within the cells. - Profilin is an actin binding protein to promote
the nucleotide exchange of G-actin and to
increase the polymerization rate of actin
filament formation. - Cofilin associated with actin depolymerization
factor (ADF/cofilin), gelsolin, severin, are
known to cut off the actin filament and involved
in depolymerization of actin filament.
24Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASp)
- Originally described in fibroblasts could induce
actin polymerization in connection with the small
GTPase cdc42 - WASp family proteins bind to Arp2/3 complex and
induce Arp2/3 complex activation and the
nucleation of actin filaments - WASp contains a family of homologous proteins
found in different cells. - All families of WASp contain a conserved region
at the C-terminus with a proline-rich (PRO)
region followed by one or two WH2 (also called V
for verproline homology) domain, a central (C)
region and an acidic (A) domain. The PRO region
binds profilin and SH3-containing adaptor
proteins, WH2 domain for binding G-actin, and A
domain for Arp 2/3 binding. On the other hand,
two domains at the the N-terminus, the GBD domain
binds small G-protein Cdc42, and WH1 for F-actin
binding.
25Domain structures of WASp family protein
26Mechanism
- In the unstimulated conditions, the WASp molecule
has the inhibitory interaction between the N- and
C-terminus and burries the binding site for Arp
2/3. Upon stimulation, Cdc42 binding to GBD
domain activates WASp, and unfold the N-and
C-terminal domains of the molecule, and expose
the binding site for Arp 2/3, finally initiate
the actin filament polymerization .
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29Signaling pathway by WASp regulation in smooth
muscle
- The signaling cascades by profilin and its
upstream regulator, p130 Crk-associated substrate
are necessary for regulation of actin filament
polymerization and force generation in arterial
smooth muscle in response to contractile
stimulation. - Small GTPase Cdc42 regulates actin polymerization
and also tension development during contractile
stimulation of tracheal smooth muscle. - Crk II regulation of N-WASp-mediated activation
of the Arp2/3 complex is also necessary for actin
polymerization and tension development in
response to muscarinic stimulation in tracheal
smooth muscle. - These studies provide evidence showing that the
signaling pathway by the regulation of WASp
activation upon contractile stimulation cause the
reorganization of the actin filament network and
smooth muscle contraction. - Newly formed actin filaments may localize
beneath the cell membrane (dense bodies) and may
be critical for the transmission of tension from
the contractile apparatus to adhesion sites on
the membrane during contractile stimulation.