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Dive into the research topics where Eldar Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Eldar Kim.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Fluorescence Probing of Yeast Actin Subdomain 3/4 Hydrophobic Loop 262–274 ACTIN-ACTIN AND ACTIN-MYOSIN INTERACTIONS IN ACTIN FILAMENTS

Li Feng; Eldar Kim; Wei-Lih Lee; Carl Miller; Bing Kuang; Emil Reisler; Peter A. Rubenstein

Residues 262–274 form a loop between subdomains 3 and 4 of actin. This loop may play an important role in actin filament formation and stabilization. To assess directly the behavior of this loop, we mutated Ser265 of yeast actin to cysteine (S265C) and created another mutant (S265C/C374A) by changing Cys374 of S265C actin to alanine. These changes allowed us to attach a pyrene maleimide stoichiometrically to either Cys374 or Cys265. These mutations had no detectable effects on the protease susceptibility, intrinsic ATPase activity, and thermal stability of labeled or unlabeled G-actin. The presence of the loop cysteine, either labeled or unlabeled, did not affect the actin-activated S1 ATPase activity or the in vitro motility of the actin. Both mutant actins, either labeled or unlabeled, nucleated filament formation considerably faster than wild-type (WT) actin, although the critical concentration was not affected. Whereas the fluorescence of the C-terminal (WT) probe increased during polymerization, that of the loop (S265C/C374A) probe decreased, and the fluorescence of the doubly labeled actin (S265C) was ∼50% less than the sum of the fluorescence of the individual fluorophores. Quenching was also observed in copolymers of labeled WT and S265C/C374A actins. An excimer peak was present in the emission spectrum of labeled S265C F-actin and in the labeled S265C/C374A-WT actin copolymers. These results show that in the filaments, the C-terminal pyrene of a substantial fraction of monomers directly interacts with the loop pyrene of neighboring monomers, bringing the two cysteine sulfurs to within 18 Å of one another. Finally, when bound to labeled S265C/C374A F-actin, myosin S1, but not tropomyosin, caused an increase in fluorescence of the loop probe. Both proteins had no effect on excimer fluorescence. These results help establish the orientation of monomers in F-actin and show that the binding of S1 to actin subdomains 1 and 2 affects the environment of the loop between subdomains 3 and 4.


Biophysical Journal | 1995

Conformational changes in subdomain 2 of G-actin: fluorescence probing by dansyl ethylenediamine attached to Gln-41

Eldar Kim; M. Motoki; K. Seguro; Andras Muhlrad; Emil Reisler

Gln-41 on G-actin was specifically labeled with a fluorescent probe, dansyl ethylenediamine (DED), via transglutaminase reaction to explore the conformational changes in subdomain 2 of actin. Replacement of Ca2+ with Mg2+ and ATP with ADP on G-actin produced large changes in the emission properties of DED. These substitutions resulted in blue shifts in the wavelength of maximum emission and increases in DED fluorescence. Excitation of labeled actin at 295 nm revealed energy transfer from tryptophans to DED. Structure considerations and Cu2+ quenching experiments suggested that Trp-79 and/or Trp-86 serves as energy donors to DED. Energy transfer from these residues to DED on Gln-41 increased with the replacement of Ca2+ with Mg2+ and ATP with ADP. Polymerization of Mg-G-actin with MgCl2 resulted in much smaller changes in DED fluorescence than divalent cation substitution. This suggests that the conformation of loop 38-52 on actin is primed for the polymerization reaction by the substitution of Ca2+ with Mg2+ on G-actin.


Biophysical Journal | 1996

Intermolecular coupling between loop 38-52 and the C-terminus in actin filaments.

Eldar Kim; Emil Reisler

The recently reported structural connectivity in F-actin between the DNase I binding loop on actin (residues 38-52) and the C-terminus region was investigated by fluorescence and proteolytic digestion methods. The binding of copper to Cys-374 on F- but not G-actin quenched the fluorescence of dansyl ethylenediamine (DED) attached to Gin-41 by more than 50%. The blocking of copper binding to DED-actin by N-ethylmaleimide labeling of Cys-374 on actin abolished the fluorescence quenching. The quenching of DED-actin fluorescence was restored in copolymers (1:9) of N-ethylmaleimide-DED-actin with unlabeled actin. The quenching of DED-actin fluorescence by copper was also abolished in copolymers (1:4) of DED-actin and N-ethylmaleimide-actin. These results show intermolecular coupling between loop 38-52 and the C-terminus in F-actin. Consistent with this, the rate of subtilisin cleavage of actin at loop 38-52 was increased by the bound copper by more than 10-fold in F-actin but not in G-actin. Neither acto-myosin subfragment-1 (S1) ATPase activity nor the tryptic digestion of G-actin and F-actin at the Lys-61 and Lys-69 sites were affected by the bound copper. These observations suggest that copper binding to Cys-374 does not induce extensive changes in actin structure and that the perturbation of loop 38-52 environment results from changes in the intermolecular contacts in F-actin.


Biophysical Journal | 1996

Myosin-induced changes in F-actin: fluorescence probing of subdomain 2 by dansyl ethylenediamine attached to Gln-41.

Eldar Kim; Carl Miller; M. Motoki; K. Seguro; Andras Muhlrad; Emil Reisler

Actin labeled at Gln-41 with dansyl ethylenediamine (DED) via transglutaminase reaction was used for monitoring the interaction of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) with the His-40-Gly-42 site in the 38-52 loop on F-actin. Proteolytic digestions of F-actin with subtilisin and trypsin, and acto-S1 ATPase measurements on heat-treated F-actin revealed that the labeling of Gln-41 had a stabilizing effect on subdomain 2 and the actin filaments. DED on Gln-41 had no effect on the values of K(m) and Vmax of the acto-S1 ATPase and the sliding velocities of actin filaments in the in vitro motility assays. This suggests either that S1 does not bind to the 40-42 site on actin or that such binding is not functionally important. The binding of monoclonal antidansyl IgG to DED-F-actin did not affect acto-S1 binding in the absence of nucleotides, indicating that the 40-42 site does not contribute much to rigor acto-S1 binding. Myosin-induced changes in subdomain 2 on actin were manifested through an increase in the fluorescence of DED-F-actin, a decrease in the accessibility of the probe to collisional quenchers, and a partial displacement of antidansyl IgG from actin by S1. It is proposed that these changes in the 38-52 loop on actin originate from S1 binding to other myosin recognition sites on actin.


Biophysical Chemistry | 2000

Intermolecular dynamics and function in actin filaments.

Eldar Kim; Emil Reisler

Structural models of F-actin suggest that three segments in actin, the DNase I binding loop (residues 38-52), the hydrophobic plug (residues 262-274) and the C-terminus, contribute to the formation of an intermolecular interface between three monomers in F-actin. To test these predictions and also to assess the dynamic properties of intermolecular contacts in F-actin, Cys-374 pyrene-labeled skeletal alpha-actin and pyrene-labeled yeast actin mutants, with Gln-41 or Ser-265 replaced with cysteine, were used in fluorescence experiments. Large differences in Cys-374 pyrene fluorescence among copolymers of subtilisin-cleaved (between Met-47 and Gly-48) and uncleaved alpha-actin showed both intra- and intermolecular interactions between the C-terminus and loop 38-52 in F-actin. Excimer band formation due to intermolecular stacking of pyrene probes attached to Cys-41 and Cys-265, and Cys-41 and Cys-374, in mutant yeast F-actin confirmed the proximity of these residues on the paired sites (to within 18 A) in accordance with the models of F-actin structure. The dynamic properties of the intermolecular interface in F-actin formed by loop 38-52, plug 262-274 and the C-terminus may account for the observed cross-linking of these sites with reagents < 18 A. The functional importance of actin filament dynamics was demonstrated by the inhibition of the in vitro motility in the Gln-41-Cys-374 cross-linked actin filaments.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Tropomyosin-troponin regulation of actin does not involve subdomain 2 motions.

Jack H. Gerson; Eldar Kim; Andras Muhlrad; Emil Reisler

Dynamic properties of F-actin structure prompted suggestions (Squire, J. M., and Morris, E. P. (1998)FASEB J. 12, 761–771) that actin subdomain 2 movements play a role in thin-filament regulation. Using fluorescently labeled yeast actin mutants Q41C, Q41C/C374S, and D51C/C374S and azidonitrophenyl putrescine (ANP) Gln41-labeled α-actin, we monitored regulation-linked changes in subdomain 2. These actins had fully regulated acto-S1 ATPase activities, and emission spectra of regulated Q41CAEDANS/C374S and D51CAEDANS/C374S filaments did not reveal any calcium-dependent changes. Fluorescence energy transfer in these F-actins mostly occurred from Trp340 and Trp356 to 5-(2((acetyl)amino)ethyl)amino-naphthalene-1-sulfonate (AEDANS)-labeled Cys41 or Cys51 of adjacent same strand protomers. Our results show that fluorescence energy transfer between these residues is similar in the mostlyblocked (−Ca2+) and closed(+Ca2+) states. Ca2+ also had no effect on the excimer band in the pyrene-labeled Q41C-regulated actin, indicating virtually no change in the overlap of pyrenes on Cys41 and Cys374. ANP quenching of rhodamine phalloidin fluorescence showed that neither Ca2+ nor S1 binding to regulated α-actin affects the phalloidin-probe distance. Taken together, our results indicate that transitions between the blocked,closed, and open regulatory states involve no significant subdomain 2 movements, and, since the cross-linked α-actin remains fully regulated, that subdomain 2 motions are not essential for actin regulation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2000

Cross-linking constraints on F-actin structure

Eldar Kim; Willy Wriggers; Martin Phillips; Kevin Kokabi; Peter A. Rubenstein; Emil Reisler


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001

Probing the structure of F-actin: cross-links constrain atomic models and modify actin dynamics.

Albina Orlova; Vitold E. Galkin; Margaret S. VanLoock; Eldar Kim; Alexander Shvetsov; Emil Reisler; Edward H. Egelman


Biochemistry | 1998

Intrastrand Cross-Linked Actin between Gln-41 and Cys-374. III. Inhibition of Motion and Force Generation with Myosin†

Eldar Kim; Elena Bobkova; Carl Miller; Albina Orlova; György Hegyi; Edward H. Egelman; Andras Muhlrad; Emil Reisler


Biochemistry | 1998

Intrastrand cross-linked actin between Gln-41 and Cys-374. I. Mapping of sites cross-linked in F-actin by N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl) putrescine.

György Hegyi; Marianna Mak; Eldar Kim; Marshall Elzinga; Andras Muhlrad; Emil Reisler

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Emil Reisler

University of California

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Carl Miller

University of California

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György Hegyi

Eötvös Loránd University

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Andras Muhlrad

University of California

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Andras Muhlrad

University of California

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Elena Bobkova

University of California

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K. Seguro

University of California

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M. Motoki

University of California

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