Structural highlights
Function
[TPM1_PIG] Binds to actin filaments in muscle and non-muscle cells. Plays a central role, in association with the troponin complex, in the calcium dependent regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction. Smooth muscle contraction is regulated by interaction with caldesmon. In non-muscle cells is implicated in stabilizing cytoskeleton actin filaments.
Evolutionary Conservation
Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf.
Publication Abstract from PubMed
Tropomyosin is a 400A-long coiled coil that polymerizes to form a continuous filament that associates with actin in muscle and numerous non-muscle cells. Tropomyosin and troponin together form a calcium-sensitive switch that is responsible for thin-filament regulation of striated muscle. Subtle structural features of the molecule, including non-canonical aspects of its coiled-coil motif, undoubtedly influence its association with f-actin and its role in thin filament regulation. Previously, careful inspection of native diffraction intensities was sufficient to construct a model of tropomyosin at 9A resolution in a spermine-induced crystal form that diffracts anisotropically to 4A resolution. Single isomorphous replacement (SIR) phasing has now provided an empirical determination of the structure at 7A resolution. A novel method of heavy-atom analysis was used to overcome difficulties in interpretation of extremely anisotropic diffraction. The packing arrangement of the molecules in the crystal, and important aspects of the tropomyosin geometry such as non-uniformities of the pitch and variable bending and radius of the coiled coil are evident.
Crystal structure of tropomyosin at 7 Angstroms resolution.,Whitby FG, Phillips GN Jr Proteins. 2000 Jan 1;38(1):49-59. PMID:10651038[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Whitby FG, Phillips GN Jr. Crystal structure of tropomyosin at 7 Angstroms resolution. Proteins. 2000 Jan 1;38(1):49-59. PMID:10651038