Hartshorne D J, Ito M, Erdödi F
Muscle Biology Group, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721, USA.
J Muscle Res Cell Motil. 1998 May;19(4):325-41. doi: 10.1023/a:1005385302064.
This review has presented some of the recent data on myosin phosphatase from smooth muscle. Although it is not conclusive, it is likely that most of the myosin phosphatase activity is represented by a holoenzyme composed of three subunits. These are: a catalytic subunit of 38 kDa of the type 1 phosphatase, probably the delta isoform (i.e. PP1c delta); a subunit of about 20 kDa whose function is not established; and a larger subunit that is thought to act as a target subunit. This is termed the myosin phosphatase target subunit, MYPT. Various isoforms of MYPT exist and the relatively minor distinctions are in the C-terminal leucine zipper motifs and/or with inserts in the central region. Many regions of the molecule are highly conserved, including the ankyrin repeats in the N-terminal part of the molecule and the sequence around the phosphorylation site. In addition, these isoforms all contain the four residue PP1c-binding motif (Arg/Lys-Val/Ile-Xaa-Phe). MYPT has been detected in a variety of cells and thus is not unique to smooth muscle. With phosphorylated myosin as substrate, the phosphatase activity of PP1c is low and is enhanced on addition of MYPT. It is assumed that MYPT functions as a target subunit and binds to both PP1c and substrate. The N-terminal fragment of MYPT is responsible for the activation of PP1c activity, but how much of the N-terminal sequence is required is not established. An important point is that activation is not a general effect and is specific for myosin. It is not known if other substrates may be targeted to MYPT. There are two binding sites for PP1c on MYPT: a strong site in the N-terminal segment (containing the 4-residue motif) and a weaker site in the ankyrin repeats, possibly in repeats 5, 6 and 7. The location(s) of the myosin-binding sites on MYPT is controversial, and binding of myosin, or light chain, to both N- and C-terminal fragments has been reported. Regulation of myosin phosphatase activity involves changes in subunit interactions, although molecular mechanisms are not defined. There are basically two theories proposed for phosphatase inhibition (i.e. as seen in the agonist-induced increase in Ca2+ sensitivity). One hypothesis is that phosphorylation of Myosin light chain phosphatase MYPT (at residue 654 or 695 of the gizzard MYPT isoforms or an equivalent residue) inhibits the activity of the MP holoenzyme. The kinase involved is not established, but may be an unidentified endogenous kinase or a RhoA-activated kinase. The latter is an attractive possibility because there is convincing evidence that RhoA plays a crucial role in the Ca(2+)-sensitizing process in smooth muscle. A second idea involves arachidonic acid. This is released via phospholipase A2 and could either interact directly with MYPT and cause dissociation of the holoenzyme (thus effectively reducing the phosphatase activity to that of the isolated catalytic subunit), or it could activate a kinase that would phosphorylate MYPT and inhibit the phosphatase. It is possible that MP activity may also be activated, for example, following increases in cAMP and/or cGMP. Evidence in support of this is very limited and under in vivo conditions the phosphorylation of MYPT by the respective kinases has not been demonstrated. There is, however, a tentative hypothesis based on in vitro data that phosphorylation of MYPT by PKA alters its cellular localization. This involves a shuttle between the dephosphorylated membrane-bound and inhibited state (at least towards P-myosin) to a phosphorylated cytosolic or cytoskeletal, and active state. The pathway(s) discussed above originates at the cell membrane and is carried via one or more messengers to the level of the contractile apparatus where it is manifested by regulation of phosphatase activity. Various components of the route have been identified, including RhoA and the atypical PKC isoforms, but more remain to be discovered. It is possible that more than one pathway, or cascade, is
本综述介绍了一些关于平滑肌肌球蛋白磷酸酶的最新数据。尽管尚无定论,但很可能大多数肌球蛋白磷酸酶活性由一个由三个亚基组成的全酶代表。这三个亚基分别是:1型磷酸酶的38 kDa催化亚基,可能是δ同工型(即PP1cδ);一个约20 kDa的亚基,其功能尚未明确;以及一个较大的亚基,被认为作为靶亚基起作用。这个亚基被称为肌球蛋白磷酸酶靶亚基,即MYPT。存在多种MYPT同工型,相对较小的差异在于C端亮氨酸拉链基序和/或中央区域的插入序列。分子的许多区域高度保守,包括分子N端部分的锚蛋白重复序列和磷酸化位点周围的序列。此外,这些同工型都含有四个残基的PP1c结合基序(精氨酸/赖氨酸 - 缬氨酸/异亮氨酸 - Xaa - 苯丙氨酸)。MYPT已在多种细胞中被检测到,因此并非平滑肌所特有。以磷酸化肌球蛋白为底物时,PP1c的磷酸酶活性较低,添加MYPT后活性增强。推测MYPT作为靶亚基,与PP1c和底物都结合。MYPT的N端片段负责激活PP1c活性,但所需的N端序列长度尚未确定。一个重要的点是,这种激活不是普遍效应,而是对肌球蛋白具有特异性。尚不清楚其他底物是否可以靶向MYPT。MYPT上有两个PP1c结合位点:一个在N端片段中的强结合位点(包含4个残基的基序)和一个在锚蛋白重复序列中的较弱结合位点,可能在重复序列5、6和7中。MYPT上肌球蛋白结合位点的位置存在争议,并且已有报道称肌球蛋白或轻链与N端和C端片段都能结合。肌球蛋白磷酸酶活性的调节涉及亚基相互作用的变化,尽管分子机制尚未明确。关于磷酸酶抑制(如在激动剂诱导的Ca2 +敏感性增加中所见)基本上提出了两种理论。一种假设是肌球蛋白轻链磷酸酶MYPT(在砂囊MYPT同工型的654或695位残基或等效残基处)的磷酸化会抑制MP全酶的活性。所涉及的激酶尚未确定,但可能是一种未鉴定的内源性激酶或RhoA激活的激酶。后者是一个有吸引力的可能性,因为有令人信服的证据表明RhoA在平滑肌的Ca(2 +)敏感化过程中起关键作用。另一种观点涉及花生四烯酸。它通过磷脂酶A2释放,可能直接与MYPT相互作用并导致全酶解离(从而有效地将磷酸酶活性降低到分离的催化亚基的活性水平),或者它可以激活一种激酶,该激酶会使MYPT磷酸化并抑制磷酸酶。例如,在cAMP和/或cGMP增加后,MP活性也可能被激活。支持这一点的证据非常有限,并且在体内条件下,各自激酶对MYPT的磷酸化尚未得到证实。然而,基于体外数据有一个初步假设,即PKA对MYPT的磷酸化会改变其细胞定位。这涉及从去磷酸化的膜结合和抑制状态(至少对P - 肌球蛋白而言)到磷酸化的胞质或细胞骨架以及活性状态的穿梭。上述途径起源于细胞膜,并通过一种或多种信使传递到收缩装置水平,在那里通过磷酸酶活性的调节表现出来。该途径的各种组分已被鉴定,包括RhoA和非典型PKC同工型,但仍有更多有待发现。可能存在不止一条途径或级联反应,