Regulatory proteins of lobster striated muscle

Abstract
The regulatory proteins of lobster muscles consist of tropomyosin and of troponin. Troponin contains a 17,000 chain weight component, two closely related components of about 30,000 and a 52,000 chain weight component. In addition to troponin, tropomyosin is required for the inhibition of the magnesium activated actomyosin ATPase activity in the absence of calcium and for the reversal of this inhibition by calcium. Lobster tropomyosin interacts with rabbit actin and lobster troponin interacts with rabbit tropomyosin. The 30,000 doublet component corresponds to the troponin-I of rabbit and inhibits the ATPase activity of actomyosin both in the presence and in the absence of calcium. The 17,000 component corresponds to the troponin-C of rabbit; it binds calcium and reverses the inhibition of the ATPase activity by troponin-I in the presence of calcium. No more than 1 mol of calcium is bound by a mole of troponin-C or by troponin. The 52,000 component interacts with tropomyosin and has been tentatively identified as troponin-T; however, it has not been demonstrated as yet that this component had a role in the regulation of lobster actomyosin.