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  1. Myosin - Wikipedia

    Myosins (/ ˈmaɪəsɪn, - oʊ -/ [1][2]) are a family of motor proteins (though most often protein complexes) best known for their roles in muscle contraction and in a wide range of other motility processes in …

  2. What Is Myosin? Structure, Function, and Roles - Biology Insights

    Jun 22, 2025 · Myosin is a motor protein that converts chemical energy from adenosine triphosphate (ATP) into mechanical force, facilitating movement on a cellular level. This large protein family is …

  3. Myosin: Structure, Synthesis, Classification, and Functions

    Aug 27, 2024 · Explore myosin structure, synthesis, classification, and functions. Learn how this protein drives muscle contraction and cellular processes.

  4. Myosin - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    Myosin is a molecular motor that converts chemical energy into mechanical force [1].

  5. Myosin - New World Encyclopedia

    A major contractile protein in muscle cells, myosin serves as a "molecular motor" for the conversion of chemical energy into cellular contraction (White et al. 1998). Without actin, myosin is just another …

  6. Myosin: Fundamental Properties and Structure - Springer

    Myosins are a superfamily of molecular motors that convert the chemical energy of ATP hydrolysis into directed motion along the filamentous protein actin.

  7. Myosin - Washington University in St. Louis

    Components: Contains 3 proteins Creatine kinase M protein (165 kD) Myomesin (190 kD) : Binds to myosin, titin & light meromyosin Myosin: Disorders 5 Myopathy: Acquired Myosin-loss (Acute …