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Dive into the research topics where Douglas D. Root is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas D. Root.


Biophysical Journal | 1992

Cooperativity of thiol-modified myosin filaments : ATPase and motility assays of myosin function

Douglas D. Root; Emil Reisler

The effects of chemical modifications of myosins reactive cysteines on actomyosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activities and sliding velocities in the in vitro motility assays were examined in this work. The three types of modifications studied were 4-[N-[(iodoacetoxy)ethyl]-N-methylamino]-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3- diazole labeling of SH2 (based on Ajtai and Burghart. 1989. Biochemistry. 28:2204-2210.), phenylmaleimide labeling of SH1, and phenylmaleimide labeling of myosin in myofibrils under rigor conditions. Each type of modified myosin inhibited the sliding of actin in motility assays. The sliding velocities of actin over copolymers of modified and unmodified myosins in the motility assay were slowest with rigor-modified myosin and most rapid with SH2-labeled myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of similarly copolymerized myosins were lowest with SH2-labeled myosin and highest with rigor-modified myosin. The actin-activated ATPase activities of myosin subfragment-1 obtained from these modified myosins decreased in the same linear manner with the fraction of modified heads. These results are interpreted using a model in which the sliding of actin filaments over myosin filaments decreases the probability of myosin activation by actin. The sliding velocity of actin over monomeric rigor-modified myosin exceeded that over the filamentous form, which suggests for this myosin that filament structure is important for the inhibition of actin sliding in motility assays. The fact that all cysteine modifications examined inhibited the actomyosin ATPase activities and sliding velocities of actin over myosin poses questions concerning the information about the activated crossbridge obtained from probes attached to SH1 or SH2 on myosin.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1989

Copper iodide staining of protein blots on nitrocellulose membranes

Douglas D. Root; Emil Reisler

Copper iodide staining which can detect protein levels as low as 100-150 pg/mm2 on nitrocellulose membranes is described. The staining is quantitative as measured by densitometry. Staining is complete within 5 min and may be removed by washing the membrane for 15 min without loss of immunoreactivity. The stain utilizes a reddish-brown precipitate of copper iodide in highly alkaline conditions. Because of its high sensitivity, convenience, and low cost, this stain may be more practical than amido black or gold- and silver-based stains for most laboratory purposes.


Biophysical Journal | 2000

Conformational Selection During Weak Binding at the Actin and Myosin Interface

Jin Xu; Douglas D. Root

The molecular mechanism of the powerstroke in muscle is examined by resonance energy transfer techniques. Recent models suggesting a pre-cocking of the myosin head involving an enormous rotation between the lever arm and the catalytic domain were tested by measuring separation distances among myosin subfragment-2, the nucleotide site, and the regulatory light chain in the presence of nucleotide transition state analogs. Only small changes (<0.5 nm) were detected that are consistent with internal conformational changes of the myosin molecule, but not with extreme differences in the average lever arm position suggested by some atomic models. These results were confirmed by stopped-flow resonance energy transfer measurements during single ATP turnovers on myosin. To examine the participation of actin in the powerstroke process, resonance energy transfer between the regulatory light chain on myosin subfragment-1 and the C-terminus of actin was measured in the presence of nucleotide transition state analogs. The efficiency of energy transfer was much greater in the presence of ADP-AlF(4), ADP-BeF(x), and ADP-vanadate than in the presence of ADP or no nucleotide. These data detect profound differences in the conformations of the weakly and strongly attached cross-bridges that appear to result from a conformational selection that occurs during the weak binding of the myosin head to actin.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2002

A computational comparison of the atomic models of the actomyosin interface.

Douglas D. Root

Several atomic models of the actomyosin interface have been proposed based on the docking together of their component structures using electron microscopy and resonance energy-transfer measurements. Although these models are in approximate agreement in the location of the binding interfaces when myosin is tightly bound to actin, their relationships to molecular docking simulations based on computational free-energy calculations are investigated here. Both rigid-docking and flexible-docking conformational search strategies were used to identify free-energy minima at the interfaces between atomic models of myosin and actin. These results suggest that the docking model produced by resonance energy-transfer data is closer to a free-energy minimum at the interface than are the available atomic models based on electron microscopy. The conformational searches were performed using both scallop and chicken skeletal muscle myosins and identified similarly oriented actin-binding interfaces that serve to validate that these models are at the global minimum. These results indicate that the existing docking models are close to but not precisely at the lowest-energy initial contact site for strong binding between myosin and actin that should represent an initial contact between the two proteins; therefore, conformational changes are likely to be important during the transition to a strongly bound complex.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2002

The dance of actin and myosin: A structural and spectroscopic perspective

Douglas D. Root

Actin and myosin interact in a cyclic series of steps linked to the hydrolysis of ATP that are representative of an ancient and widespread molecular mechanism. Spectroscopic findings are related to the analysis of the actin and myosin structures and results from kinetics, fibers, single molecules, electron microscopy, genetics, and a variety of other biophysical and biochemical studies on actin and myosin to provide an overview of the steps in this molecular process. The synthesis of the key findings from these fields reveals a highly efficient engine that amplifies subtle changes in the active site into unsurpassed molecular displacements. Recent developments in resonance energy-transfer spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography are enabling a detailed elucidation of the stages of a large power stroke that concurs with evidences from diverse lines of structural and kinetic inquiry. A complete image of actin and myosin motility appears to include twists, tilts, steps, and dynamics from both partners that could be described as a molecular dance.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1990

Copper iodide staining and determination of proteins adsorbed to microtiter plates

Douglas D. Root; Emil Reisler

Copper iodide staining and determination of proteins adsorbed to polystyrene microtiter plates are described. The minimum amount of copper iodide-stained protein detected in densitometric measurements is approximately 20 pg/mm2. Enzyme immunoassay readers may also be used for the determination of copper iodide-stained proteins, but are less sensitive than densitometers. The densitometric readings of copper iodide-stained proteins vary linearly with the amount of protein present as verified by enzymatic and radioactive probes. Staining is complete in 2-3 min and may be removed by a 30-min treatment with EDTA without loss of adsorbed protein or immunoreactivity. The exact amount of protein adsorbed to microtiter plate wells can be measured by using protein bound and stained on nitrocellulose as a calibration curve. Copper iodide staining is a rapid, convenient, and inexpensive alternative to radioactive measurements of similar parameters.


Biochemistry | 2009

Close proximity of myosin loop 3 to troponin determined by triangulation of resonance energy transfer distance measurements.

Dipesh A. Patel; Douglas D. Root

Cooperative activation of the thin filament is known to be influenced by the tight binding of myosin to actin, but the molecular mechanism underlying this contribution of myosin is not well understood. To better understand the structural relationship of myosin with the regulatory troponin complex, resonance energy transfer measurements were used to map the location of troponin relative to a neighboring myosin bound to actin using atomic models. Using a chicken troponin T isoform that contains a single cysteine near the binding interface between troponins T, I, and C, this uniquely labeled cysteine on troponin was found to be remarkably near loop 3 of myosin. This loop has previously been localized near the actin and myosin interface by chemical cross-linking methods, but its functional contributions have not been established. The implications of this close proximity are examined by molecular modeling, which suggests that only restricted conformations of actomyosin can accommodate the presence of troponin at this location near the cross-bridge. This potential for interaction between troponin and myosin heads that bind near it along the thin filament raises the possibility of models in which direct myosin and troponin interactions may play a role in the regulatory mechanism.


Plant Physiology | 2018

Arabidopsis ACTIN-DEPOLYMERIZING FACTOR3 Is Required for Controlling Aphid Feeding from the Phloem

Hossain A. Mondal; Joe Louis; Lani Archer; Monika Patel; Vamsi J. Nalam; Sujon Sarowar; Vishala Sivapalan; Douglas D. Root; Jyoti Shah

Green peach aphid feeding from the sieve elements is shown to be restricted by ACTIN-DEPOLYMERIZING FACTOR3, thus implicating actin-dependent process in controlling insect feeding from the phloem. The actin cytoskeleton network has an important role in plant cell growth, division, and stress response. Actin-depolymerizing factors (ADFs) are a group of actin-binding proteins that contribute to reorganization of the actin network. Here, we show that the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ADF3 is required in the phloem for controlling infestation by Myzus persicae Sülzer, commonly known as the green peach aphid (GPA), which is an important phloem sap-consuming pest of more than fifty plant families. In agreement with a role for the actin-depolymerizing function of ADF3 in defense against the GPA, we show that resistance in adf3 was restored by overexpression of the related ADF4 and the actin cytoskeleton destabilizers, cytochalasin D and latrunculin B. Electrical monitoring of the GPA feeding behavior indicates that the GPA stylets found sieve elements faster when feeding on the adf3 mutant compared to the wild-type plant. In addition, once they found the sieve elements, the GPA fed for a more prolonged period from sieve elements of adf3 compared to the wild-type plant. The longer feeding period correlated with an increase in fecundity and population size of the GPA and a parallel reduction in callose deposition in the adf3 mutant. The adf3-conferred susceptibility to GPA was overcome by expression of the ADF3 coding sequence from the phloem-specific SUC2 promoter, thus confirming the importance of ADF3 function in the phloem. We further demonstrate that the ADF3-dependent defense mechanism is linked to the transcriptional up-regulation of PHYTOALEXIN-DEFICIENT4, which is an important regulator of defenses against the GPA.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2018

Whole length myosin binding protein C stabilizes myosin S2 as measured by gravitational force spectroscopy

Rohit Singh; James W. Dunn; Motamed M. Qadan; Nakiuda Hall; Kathy K. Wang; Douglas D. Root

The mechanical stability of the myosin subfragment-2 (S2) was tested with simulated force spectroscopy (SFS) and gravitational force spectroscopy (GFS). Experiments examined unzipping S2, since it required less force than stretching parallel to the coiled coil. Both GFS and SFS demonstrated that the force required to destabilize the light meromyosin (LMM) was greater than the force required to destabilize the coiled coil at each of three different locations along S2. GFS data also conveyed that the mechanical stability of the S2 region is independent from its association with the myosin thick filament using cofilaments of myosin tail and a single intact myosin. The C-terminal end of myosin binding protein C (MyBPC) binds to LMM and the N-terminal end can bind either S2 or actin. The force required to destabilize the myosin coiled coil molecule was 3 times greater in the presence of MyBPC than in its absence. Furthermore, the in vitro motility assay with full length slow skeletal MyBPC slowed down the actin filament sliding over myosin thick filaments. This study demonstrates that skeletal MyBPC both enhanced the mechanical stability of the S2 coiled coil and reduced the sliding velocity of actin filaments over polymerized myosin filaments.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2013

Asymmetric Myosin Binding to the Thin Filament as Revealed by a Fluorescent Nanocircuit

Pilar G. Coffee Castro-Zena; Douglas D. Root

The interplay between myosin, actin, and striated muscle regulatory proteins involves complex cooperative interactions that propagate along the thin filament. A repeating unit of the tropomyosin dimer, troponin heterotrimer, and the actin protofilament heptamer is sometimes assumed to be able to bind myosin at any of its seven actins when activated even though the regulatory proteins are asymmetrically positioned along this repeating unit. Analysis of the impact of this asymmetry on actin and myosin interactions by sensitized emission luminescence resonance energy transfer spectroscopy and a unique fluorescent nanocircuit design reveals that the troponin affects the structure and function of myosin heads bound nearby in a different manner than myosin heads bound further away from the troponin. To test this hypothesis, a fluorescent nanocircuit reported the position of the myosin lever arm only when the myosin was bound adjacent to the troponin, or in controls, only when the myosin was bound distant from the troponin. Confirming the hypothesis, the myosin lever arm is predominantly in the pre powerstroke orientation when bound near troponin, but is predominantly in the post powerstroke orientation when bound distant from troponin. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that troponin is responsible for the formation of myosin binding target zones along the thin filament.

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James W. Dunn

University of North Texas

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Kuan Wang

National Institutes of Health

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Rohit Singh

University of North Texas

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Emil Reisler

University of California

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Jin Xu

University of Massachusetts Lowell

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Nakiuda Hall

University of North Texas

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Kathy K. Wang

University of North Texas

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Amal Akel

University of North Texas

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Cynthia Y. Ma

University of North Texas

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