Phosphorylation of Myosin Regulatory Light Chains by the Molluscan Twitchin Kinase

Abstract
The unusually large (≈ 600 to > 3000 kDa) myosin‐associated proteins of the titin/twitchin superfamily are considered to be important cytoskeletal rulers for thick filament assembly in muscle. This function is maintained by approximately 60–240 modular fibronectin‐type‐III and immunoglobulin‐C2 repeats in these proteins which further contain a protein serine/threonine kinase domain of unknown function. In this study, the bacterially expressed kinase domain of Aplysia twitchin was used in order to identify a potential physiological substrate. Addition of the recombinant kinase to Aplysia actomyosin preparations resulted in the specific phosphorylation of the 19–kDa myosin regulatory light chains. The twitchin kinase phosphorylated purified light chains on Thr15 in a region which shared a high degree of similarity with the phosphorylation site for vertebrate smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase. Peptide analogs of the twitchin substrate sequence and the similar sequence in vertebrate smooth muscle myosin light chains were phosphorylated with good kinetic properties. These data reveal the first potential substrate for any of the giant protein kinases and support a dual role of twitchin in molluscan muscle as a cytoskeletal protein as well as a myosin light chain kinase.