Marilyn Emerson Holtzer
University of Washington
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Marilyn Emerson Holtzer.
Biopolymers | 2001
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Lisa Mints; Ruth Hogue Angeletti; D. André d'Avignon; Alfred Holtzer
Synthesis and CD and (13)C(alpha)-NMR studies in a near-neutral saline buffer are reported for a 65-residue peptide ((190)Tm(254)) comprising residues 190-254 of the alpha-tropomyosin chain. CD on a version disulfide cross-linked via the N-terminal cysteine side chains indicates that this dimer is highly helical and melts near 48 degrees C. The CD is independent of peptide concentration, showing that association of (190)Tm(254) stops at the two-strand level. Similar studies on the reduced version show much lower helix content at low temperature, melting points below room temperature, and the expected concentration dependence. The observed melting temperature of the reduced peptide is far below (by 27 degrees C) that expected from an extant analysis of calorimetry data on parent tropomyosin that designates (190)Tm(254) as an independently melting cooperative block. This disagreement and the pronounced nonadditivity seen when data for (190)Tm(254) are combined with extant data for other subsequences argue decisively against the concept of specific independently melting blocks within the tropomyosin chain. The data for (190)Tm(254) also serve to test recent ideas on the sequence determinants of structure and stability in coiled coils. Analysis shows that some ideas, such as the stabilizing effect of leucine in the d heptad position, find support, but others--such as the destabilizing effect of alanine in d, the dimer-disfavoring effect of beta-branching in d and its dimer-favoring effect in a, and the dimer-directing effect of asparagine in a--are more questionable in tropomyosin than in the leucine zipper coiled coils. (13)C(alpha)-NMR data at two labeled sites, L228(d) and V246(a), of (190)Tm(254) display well-separated resonances for folded and unfolded forms at each site, indicating that the transition is slow on the NMR time scale and thus demonstrating the possibility of obtaining thermodynamic and kinetic information on the transition at the residue level.
Journal of Chromatography A | 1991
Dan L. Crimmins; Marilyn Emerson Holtzer
Non-cross-linked and disulfide-cross-linked two-chain molecules comprising the alpha and/or beta chains of rabbit skeletal tropomyosin were studied by electrophoretic, chromatographic and physical methods. Elution order on C4 reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography depends markedly on the number and position of the cross-links. In the C4 reversed-phase elution medium, cross-linked and non-cross-linked species are greater than 85% helical by circular dichroism, but the non-cross-linked elute later from high-performance size-exclusion chromatography (G4000) and have molecular mass of 31,000-41,000 dalton by equilibrium ultracentrifugation. The data suggest that in the C4 reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography elution medium non-cross-linked tropomyosin exists as amphipathic single-chain alpha-helices.
Biopolymers | 1992
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Alfred Holtzer
Macromolecules | 1983
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Alfred Holtzer; Jeffrey Skolnick
Biochemistry | 1986
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Kelly Askins; Alfred Holtzer
Biopolymers | 1990
Jianming Mo; Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Alfred Holtzer
Biopolymers | 1995
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Dan L. Crimmins; Alfred Holtzer
Biopolymers | 1995
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Alfred Holtzer
Macromolecules | 1985
S. Yukioka; Ichiro Noda; Mitsuru Nagasawa; Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Alfred Holtzer
Biopolymers | 1992
Marilyn Emerson Holtzer; Alfred Holtzer