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1.
The flagellar calcium-binding protein (FCaBP) of the flagellated protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi associates with the flagellar membrane via its N-terminal myristate and palmitate moieties in a calcium-modulated, conformation-dependent manner. This mechanism of localization is similar to that described for neuronal calcium sensors, which undergo calcium-dependent changes in conformation, which modulate the availability of the acyl groups for membrane interaction and partner association. To test whether FCaBP undergoes a calcium-dependent conformational change and to explore the role of such a change in flagellar targeting, we first introduced point mutations into each of the two EF-hand calcium-binding sites of FCaBP to define their affinities. Analysis of recombinant EF-3 mutant (E151Q), EF-4 mutant (E188Q), and double mutant proteins showed EF-3 to be the high affinity site (Kd approximately 9 microM) and EF-4 the low affinity site (Kd approximately 120 microM). These assignments also correlated with partial (E188Q), nearly complete (E151Q), and complete (E151Q,E188Q) disruption of calcium-induced conformational changes determined by NMR spectrometry. We next expressed the FCaBP E151Q mutant and the double mutant in T. cruzi epimastigotes. These transproteins localized to the flagellum, suggesting the existence of a calcium-dependent interaction of FCaBP that is independent of its intrinsic calcium binding capacity. Several proteins were identified by FCaBP affinity chromatography that interact with FCaBP in a calcium-dependent manner, but with differential dependence on calcium-binding by FCaBP. These findings may have broader implications for the calcium acyl switch mechanism of protein regulation.  相似文献   

2.
The altered calcium binding activity of calmodulins (CaM) with point mutations can be restored toward that of wild type CaMs by the formation of a complex between CaM and a CaM binding sequence. Three different site-specific mutations resulted in selective effects on the apparent stoichiometry and affinity of CaM for calcium, with maintenance of the ability to activate myosin light chain kinase. The effects on calcium binding, however, were suppressed when the mutant CaMs were complexed with RS20, a peptide analog of a myosin light chain kinase CaM binding site. The mutations included: 1) a Glu----Ala mutation at two phylogenetically conserved calcium ligands in the second (E67A-CaM) and fourth (E140A-CaM) sites; and 2) a Ser----Phe mutation at residue 101 (S101F-CaM) which affects ion channel regulation. The mutant CaMs bind 4 calciums in the absence of magnesium, but two sites have approximately 60- to 300-fold weaker binding than wild-type CaM (SYNCAM CaM). E67A-CaM and E140A-CaM bound only two calciums and S101F-CaM bound 4 calciums in the presence of magnesium. E67A-CaM and E140A-CaM recovered the ability to bind 4 calcium ions in the presence of the RS20 CaM binding peptide. These results are consistent with models in which the calcium binding activity of CaM within a supramolecular complex is different from purified CaM and raise the possibility that the selective functional effects of in vivo mutations in the calcium binding sites of CaM might be partially due to the ability of some CaM binding proteins to select and utilize CaM conformations with calcium ligation structures different from the so-called canonical EF-hand.  相似文献   

3.
Calbindin D9k is a small EF-hand protein that binds two calcium ions with positive cooperativity. The molecular basis of cooperativity for the binding pathway where the first ion binds in the N-terminal site (1) is investigated by NMR experiments on the half-saturated state of the N56A mutant, which exhibits sequential yet cooperative binding (Linse S, Chazin WJ, 1995, Protein Sci 4:1038-1044). Analysis of calcium-induced changes in chemical shifts, amide proton exchange rates, and NOEs indicates that ion binding to the N-terminal binding loop causes significant changes in conformation and/or dynamics throughout the protein. In particular, all three parameters indicate that the hydrophobic core undergoes a change in packing to a conformation very similar to the calcium-loaded state. These results are similar to those observed for the (Cd2+)1 state of the wild-type protein, a model for the complementary half-saturated state with an ion bound in the C-terminal site (II). Thus, with respect to cooperativity in either of the binding pathways, binding of the first ion drives the conformation and dynamics of the protein far toward the (Ca2+)2 state, thereby facilitating binding of the second ion. Comparison with the half-saturated state of the analogous E65Q mutant confirms that mutation of this critical bidentate calcium ligand at position 12 of the consensus EF-hand binding loop causes very significant structural perturbations. This result has important implications regarding numerous studies that have utilized mutation of this critical residue for site deactivation.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of three mutations on the EF-hand Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) binding site of smooth muscle myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) were studied: D5S, in which an aspartate is replaced by a serine in position 5 of the loop; D9E, in which an aspartate is replaced by a glutamate in position 9; and D12E, in which the aspartate in position 12 is replaced by a glutamate. All possible combinations of the three mutations were produced. The single mutants D5S and D9E and the double mutant D5S/D9E have low affinity for Ca(2+). All the mutants containing mutation D12E are Ca(2+)-specific and have higher affinities than wild type, even when containing mutations D5S or D9E. All of the mutants studied have lower affinity for Mg(2+) than the wild-type protein. As expected, the changes in binding free energy that each mutant produces depend on the residues present at the other positions of the site, since the mutated positions are very close in the protein structure. Coupling energies are about the same for all pairs of mutants when binding Ca(2+), but can have different values when binding Mg(2+). D5S and D9E have a large negative coupling energy for Mg(2+) binding which suggests an interaction between these two positions. When mutation D12E is present, the coupling energy for Mg(2+) binding between D5S and D9E is much lower, suggesting that this interaction occurs only if an aspartate is in position 12. Glutamate in position 9 may be able to coordinate Mg(2+) directly in the double mutant D5S/D9E.  相似文献   

5.
The design of a new peptide construct from two structurally equivalent basis motifs is reported. A chimera was designed from the helical regions of a helix-turn-helix (HTH) domain, incorporating the consensus EF-hand Ca-binding loop at the turn. Two 33-residue peptides were constructed: one (P3, designed) includes the 12-residue consensus EF-hand loop, while the other (P2, control) contains the reversed EF-hand loop sequence. The Eu(III) and Ca(II) binding properties of P2 and P3 were investigated by circular dichroism and NMR. The designed peptide (P3) is 25% helical in its Eu(III)-saturated form, and 14% helical with excess Ca(II). Both the free and Eu-bound peptides have inherent solution structure, as demonstrated by the helicity induced by the addition of trifluoroethanol solvent. While Eu(III) binding stabilizes the structure of P3, it destabilizes the structure of P2. The NMR titration of P3 with Eu(III) resulted in new resonances characteristic of Ca-bound EF-hand loops. As observed for isolated EF-hands, the resonances appear within the first 0.5 equivalents of Eu(III) added, suggesting that one metal ion organizes two equivalents of peptide to fold into the back-to-back dimer structure of native EF-hands. The EuP3 chimera, but not EuP2, has significant affinity for supercoiled plasmid DNA, causing a gel shift at concentrations as low as 10 microM EuP3 (50 microM base pairs). These results show our chimeric peptide combines the characteristics of the parent motifs, maintaining both metal binding and DNA affinity.  相似文献   

6.
Multiple MD simulations were performed for the full‐length wild‐type A1, the full length A1 mutations S27E and S27A, as well as the N‐terminal peptide (AMVSEFLKQAWFIDNEEQEYIKTVKG S 27 KGGPGSAVSPYPTFN) of wild‐type A1 and mutations S27E and S27A. The MD simulation trajectories of about 350 ns were generated and analyzed to examine the changes of core domain calcium binding affinity, core domain and N‐terminal domain structures, and N‐terminal domain orientation. Our results indicated that S27A and S27E mutations caused little changes on the calcium‐binding affinity of the core domain of A1. However, the S27A mutation made the N‐terminal domain of A1 less helical, and made the N‐terminal domain migrate faster toward the core domain; these impacts on A1 are beneficial to the membrane aggregation process. On the contrary, the S27E mutation made the N‐terminal domain of A1 more stable, and hindered the migration to the core domain; these changes on A1 are antagonistic for the membrane aggregation process. Our results using MD simulations provide an atomistic explanation for experimental observations that the S27E mutant showed a higher calcium concentration requirement and lower maximal extent of aggregation, while the wild‐type and two mutants S27E and S27A required identical calcium concentrations for liposome binding. Proteins 2014; 82:3327–3334. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
8.
We previously found that mutants of conserved aspartate residues of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase in the cytosolic loop, connecting transmembrane segments M6 and M7 (L6-7 loop), exhibit a strongly reduced sensitivity toward Ca(2+) activation of the transport process. In this study, yeast membranes, expressing wild type and mutant Ca(2+)-ATPases, were reacted with Cr small middle dotATP and tested for their ability to occlude (45)Ca(2+) by HPLC analysis, after cation resin and C(12)E(8) treatment. We found that the D813A/D818A mutant that displays markedly low calcium affinity was capable of occluding Ca(2+) to the same extent as wild type ATPase. Using NMR and mass spectrometry we have analyzed the conformational properties of the synthetic L6-7 loop and demonstrated the formation of specific 1:1 cation complexes of the peptide with calcium and lanthanum. All three aspartate Asp(813)/Asp(815)/Asp(818) were required to coordinate the trivalent lanthanide ion. Overall these observations suggest a dual function of the loop: in addition to mediating contact between the intramembranous Ca(2+)-binding sites and the cytosolic phosphorylation site (Zhang, Z., Lewis, D., Sumbilla, C., Inesi G., and Toyoshima, C. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 15232-15239), the L6-7 loop, in a preceding step, participates in the formation of an entrance port, before subsequent high affinity binding of Ca(2+) inside the membrane.  相似文献   

9.
S100B is a dimeric Ca(2+)-binding protein that undergoes a 90 +/- 3 degrees rotation of helix 3 in the typical EF-hand domain (EF2) upon the addition of calcium. The large reorientation of this helix is a prerequisite for the interaction between each subunit of S100B and target proteins such as the tumor suppressor protein, p53. In this study, Tb(3+) was used as a probe to examine how binding of a 22-residue peptide derived from the C-terminal regulatory domain of p53 affects the rate of Ca(2+) ion dissociation. In competition studies with Tb(3+), the dissociation rates of Ca(2+) (k(off)) from the EF2 domains of S100B in the absence and presence of the p53 peptide was determined to be 60 and 7 s(-)(1), respectively. These data are consistent with a previously reported result, which showed that that target peptide binding to S100B enhances its calcium-binding affinity [Rustandi et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 1951-1960]. The corresponding Ca(2+) association rate constants for S100B, k(on), for the EF2 domains in the absence and presence of the p53 peptide are 1.1 x 10(6) and 3.5 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1), respectively. These two association rate constants are significantly below the diffusion control ( approximately 10(9) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) and likely involve both Ca(2+) ion association and a Ca(2+)-dependent structural rearrangement, which is slightly different when the target peptide is present. EF-hand calcium-binding mutants of S100B were engineered at the -Z position (EF-hand 1, E31A; EF-hand 2, E72A; both EF-hands, E31A + E72A) and examined to further understand how specific residues contribute to calcium binding in S100B in the absence and presence of the p53 peptide.  相似文献   

10.
We examined the oligosaccharide binding to Streptomyces sp. N174 chitosanase by fluorescence spectroscopy. By means of the tryptophan fluorescence quenching, the oligosaccharide binding abilities were evaluated using the three mutant enzymes (D57A, E197A, and D201A). The enzymatic activities of the mutant enzymes were 0.5%, 20.0%, and 38.5% of that of the wild type, respectively. Scatchard plot obtained for the wild type enzyme showed a biphasic profile, suggesting that the oligosaccharide binds to the chitosanase with two different binding sites (the high affinity site and the low affinity site). In contrast, Scatchard plot for E197A exhibited a monophasic profile, in which the slope of the line corresponds to that for the low affinity binding of the wild type enzyme. A monophasic profile was also obtained for D201A, but the slope of the line was similar to that of the high affinity binding. Thus, we conclude that Glu197 and Asp201 are responsible for oligosaccharide binding at the high affinity site and the low affinity site, respectively, which correspond to the (-n) subsites and the (+n) subsites (n=1, 2, and 3). The fluorescence quenching was very weak in D57A, suggesting a strong contribution of this residue to the oligosaccharide binding.  相似文献   

11.
Ames JB  Hamasaki N  Molchanova T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(18):5776-5787
Recoverin, a member of the EF-hand superfamily, serves as a calcium sensor in retinal rod cells. A myristoyl or related fatty acyl group covalently attached to the N-terminus of recoverin facilitates the binding of recoverin to retinal disk membranes by a mechanism known as the Ca2+-myristoyl switch. Previous structural studies revealed that the myristoyl group of recoverin is sequestered inside the protein core in the absence of calcium. The cooperative binding of two calcium ions to the second and third EF-hands (EF-2 and EF-3) of recoverin leads to the extrusion of the fatty acid. Here we present nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), fluorescence, and calcium-binding studies of a myristoylated recoverin mutant (myr-E85Q) designed to abolish high-affinity calcium binding to EF-2 and thereby trap the myristoylated protein with calcium bound solely to EF-3. Equilibrium calcium-binding studies confirm that only one Ca2+ binds to myr-E85Q under the conditions of this study with a dissociation constant of 100 microM. Fluorescence and NMR spectra of the Ca2+-free myr-E85Q are identical to those of Ca2+-free wild type, indicating that the E85Q mutation does not alter the stability and structure of the Ca2+-free protein. In contrast, the fluorescence and NMR spectra of half-saturated myr-E85Q (one bound Ca2+) look different from those of Ca2+-saturated wild type (two bound Ca2+), suggesting that half-saturated myr-E85Q may represent a structural intermediate. We report here the three-dimensional structure of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q as determined by NMR spectroscopy. The N-terminal myristoyl group of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q is sequestered within a hydrophobic cavity lined by many aromatic residues (F23, W31, Y53, F56, F83, and Y86) resembling that of Ca2+-free recoverin. The structure of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q in the N-terminal region (residues 2-90) is similar to that of Ca2+-free recoverin, whereas the C-terminal region (residues 100-202) is more similar to that of Ca2+-bound wild type. Hence, the structure of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q represents a hybrid between the structures of recoverin with zero and two Ca2+ bound. The binding of Ca2+ to EF-3 leads to local structural changes within the EF-hand that alter the domain interface and cause a 45 degrees swiveling of the N- and C-terminal domains, resulting in a partial unclamping of the myristoyl group. We propose that Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q may represent a stable intermediate state in the kinetic mechanism of the calcium-myristoyl switch.  相似文献   

12.
A molecule of the photoreceptor Ca(2+)-binding protein recoverin contains four potential EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding sites, of which only two, the second and the third, are capable of binding calcium ions. We have studied the effects of substitutions in the second, third and fourth EF-hand sites of recoverin on its Ca(2+)-binding properties and some other characteristics, using intrinsic fluorescence, circular dichroism spectroscopy and differential scanning microcalorimetry. The interaction of the two operating binding sites of wild-type recoverin with calcium increases the protein's thermal stability, but makes the environment around the tryptophan residues more flexible. The amino acid substitution in the EF-hand 3 (E121Q) totally abolishes the high calcium affinity of recoverin, while the mutation in the EF-hand 2 (E85Q) causes only a moderate decrease in calcium binding. Based on this evidence, we suggest that the binding of calcium ions to recoverin is a sequential process with the EF-hand 3 being filled first. Estimation of Ca(2+)-binding constants according to the sequential binding scheme gave the values 3.7 x 10(6) and 3.1 x 10(5) M(-1) for third and second EF-hands, respectively. The substitutions in the EF-hand 2 or 3 (or in both the sites simultaneously) do not disturb significantly either tertiary or secondary structure of the apo-protein. Amino acid substitutions, which have been designed to restore the calcium affinity of the EF-hand 4 (G160D, K161E, K162N, D165G and K166Q), increase the calcium capacity and affinity of recoverin but also perturb the protein structure and decrease the thermostability of its apo-form.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of decreased protein flexibility on the stability and calcium binding properties of calbindin D9k has been addressed in studies of a disulfide bridged calbindin D9k mutant, denoted (L39C + P43M + I73C), with substitutions Leu 39-->Cys, Ile 73-->Cys, and Pro 43-->Met. Backbone 1H NMR assignments show that the disulfide bond, which forms spontaneously under air oxidation, is well accommodated. The disulfide is inserted on the opposite end of the protein molecule with respect to the calcium sites, to avoid direct interference with these sites, as confirmed by 113Cd NMR. The effect of the disulfide bond on calcium binding was assessed by titrations in the presence of a chromophoric chelator. A small but significant effect on the cooperativity was found, as well as a very modest reduction in calcium affinity. The disulfide bond increases Tm, the transition midpoint of thermal denaturation, of calcium free calbindin D9k from 85 to 95 degrees C and Cm, the urea concentration of half denaturation, from 5.3 to 8.0 M. Calbindins with one covalent bond linking the two EF-hand subdomains are equally stable regardless if the covalent link is the 43-44 peptide bond or the disulfide bond. Kinetic remixing experiments show that separated CNBr fragments of (L39C + P43M + I73C), each comprising one EF-hand, form disulfide linked homodimers. Each homodimer binds two calcium ions with positive co-operativity, and an average affinity of 10(6) M-1. Disulfide linkage dramatically increases the stability of each homodimer. For the homodimer of the C-terminal fragment Tm increases from 59 +/- 2 without covalent linkage to 91 +/- 2 degrees C with disulfide, and Cm from approximately 1.5 to 7.5 M. The overall topology of this homodimer is derived from 1H NMR assignments and a few key NOEs.  相似文献   

14.
Striated muscle thin filaments adopt different quaternary structures, depending upon calcium binding to troponin and myosin binding to actin. Modification of actin subdomain 2 alters troponin-tropomyosin-mediated regulation, suggesting that this region of actin may contain important protein-protein interaction sites. We used yeast actin mutant D56A/E57A to examine this issue. The mutation increased the affinity of tropomyosin for actin 3-fold. The addition of Ca(2+) to mutant actin filaments containing troponin-tropomyosin produced little increase in the thin filament-myosin S1 MgATPase rate. Despite this, three-dimensional reconstruction of electron microscope images of filaments in the presence of troponin and Ca(2+) showed tropomyosin to be in a position similar to that found for muscle actin filaments, where most of the myosin binding site is exposed. Troponin-tropomyosin bound with comparable affinity to mutant and wild type actin in the absence and presence of calcium, and in the presence of myosin S1, tropomyosin bound very tightly to both types of actin. The mutation decreased actin-myosin S1 affinity 13-fold in the presence of troponin-tropomyosin and 2.6-fold in the absence of the regulatory proteins. The results suggest the importance of negatively charged actin subdomain 2 residues 56 and 57 for myosin binding to actin, for tropomyosin-actin interactions, and for regulatory conformational changes in the actin-troponin-tropomyosin complex.  相似文献   

15.
The nucleotide binding properties of mutants with alterations to Asp(351) and four of the other residues in the conserved phosphorylation loop, (351)DKTGTLT(357), of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase were investigated using an assay based on the 2', 3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-8-azidoadenosine triphosphate (TNP-8N(3)-ATP) photolabeling of Lys(492) and competition with ATP. In selected cases where the competition assay showed extremely high affinity, ATP binding was also measured by a direct filtration assay. At pH 8.5 in the absence of Ca(2+), mutations removing the negative charge of Asp(351) (D351N, D351A, and D351T) produced pumps that bound MgTNP-8N(3)-ATP and MgATP with affinities 20-156-fold higher than wild type (K(D) as low as 0.006 microM), whereas the affinity of mutant D351E was comparable with wild type. Mutations K352R, K352Q, T355A, and T357A lowered the affinity for MgATP and MgTNP-8N(3)-ATP 2-1000- and 1-6-fold, respectively, and mutation L356T completely prevented photolabeling of Lys(492). In the absence of Ca(2+), mutants D351N and D351A exhibited the highest nucleotide affinities in the presence of Mg(2+) and at alkaline pH (E1 state). The affinity of mutant D351A for MgATP was extraordinarily high in the presence of Ca(2+) (K(D) = 0.001 microM), suggesting a transition state like configuration at the active site under these conditions. The mutants with reduced ATP affinity, as well as mutants D351N and D351A, exhibited reduced or zero CrATP-induced Ca(2+) occlusion due to defective CrATP binding.  相似文献   

16.
The 337-372 sequence of the factor VIIIa A1 subunit contains interactive sites for both zymogen factor X and the active enzyme, factor Xa. Solid phase binding studies indicated that factor Xa possessed a >20-fold higher affinity for the isolated A1 subunit of factor VIIIa compared with factor X. Heparin completely inhibited zero-length cross-linking of the 337-372 peptide to factor Xa but not to factor X. In the presence of calcium, factor Xa showed greater affinity for heparin than factor X. Studies using factor Xa mutants in which heparin-binding exosite residues were individually replaced by Ala showed that the R240A mutant was defective in recognition of the Lys36 cleavage site, generating the A137-372 intermediate with approximately 20% the catalytic efficiency of wild type. This defect likely resulted from an approximately 4-fold increase in Km for the A1 substrate because kcat values for the wild type and mutant were equivalent. Cleavage of the A1-A2 domain junction by factor Xa R240A was not blocked by the 337-372 peptide. Studies using mutant factor VIII where clustered acidic residues in the 337-372 segment were replaced by Ala showed that a factor VIIIa D361A/D362A/D363A mutant possessed a approximately 1.6-fold increase in Km for factor X compared with wild type. However, similar Km values were observed for recombinant factor X and R240A substrates. These results indicate that the binding regions of factor X and factor Xa for A1 domain overlap and that both utilize acidic residues 361-363. Furthermore, factor Xa but not factor X interacts with high affinity at this site via residues contained within the heparin-binding exosite of the proteinase.  相似文献   

17.
We have modified the stability of porcine phospholipase A2 by charge engineering. The mutations are situated at the N-terminal of a major helix and are N89D and N89D/E92Q. This engineering has significantly altered the activity of the enzyme to aggregated and monomeric substrates. A N89D/E92K mutant is more stable but considerably less active than wild type. An N89D mutant is more stable and of similar activity to wild type. The substantial change in activity may be due to direct interaction of residue 92 with aggregated substrate or may be via second calcium binding. Second calcium binding may be more probable as activity against monomers is also affected. Additional calcium binding may therefore be an important way of manipulating the activity of phospholipase A2.  相似文献   

18.
Calmyrin is a myristoylated calcium binding protein that contains four putative EF-hands. Calmyrin interacts with a number of proteins, including presenilin-2 (PS2). However, the biophysical properties of calmyrin, and the molecular mechanisms that regulate its binding to different partners, are not well understood. By site-directed mutagenesis and Ca2+ binding studies, we found that calmyrin binds two Ca2+ ions with a dissociation constant of approximately 53 microM, and that the two C-terminal EF-hands 3 and 4 bind calcium. Using ultraviolet spectroscopy, circular dichroism (CD), and NMR, we found that Ca(2+)-free and -bound calmyrin have substantially different protein conformations. By yeast two-hybrid assays, we found that both EF-hands 3 and 4 of calmyrin must be intact for calmyrin to interact with PS2-loop sequences. Pulse-chase studies of HeLa cells transfected with calmyrin expression constructs indicated that wild-type (Wt) calmyrin has a half-life of approximately 75 min, whereas a mutant defective in myristoylation turns over more rapidly (half-life of 35 min). By contrast, the half-lives of calmyrin mutants with a disrupted EF-hand 3 or EF-hand 4 were 52 and 170 min, respectively. Using immunofluorescence staining of HeLa cells transfected with Wt and mutant calmyrin cDNAs, we found that both calcium binding and myristoylation are important for dynamic intracellular targeting of calmyrin. Double immunofluorescence microscopy indicated that Wt and myristoylation-defective calmyrin proteins colocalize efficiently and to the same extent with PS2, whereas calmyrin mutants defective in calcium binding display less colocalization with PS2. Our results suggest that calmyrin functions as a calcium sensor and that calcium binding sequences in calmyrin are important for interaction with the PS2 loop.  相似文献   

19.
Recoverin is an N-myristoylated 23 kDa calcium-binding protein from retina, which modulates the Ca2+-sensitive deactivation of rhodopsin via Ca2+-dependent inhibition of rhodopsin kinase. It was shown by intrinsic and bis-ANS probe fluorescence, circular dichroism, and differential scanning calorimetry that myristoylated recombinant recoverin interacts specifically with zinc ions. Similar to the calcium binding, the binding of zinc to Ca2+-loaded recoverin additionally increases its alpha-helical content, hydrophobic surface area, and environmental mobility/polarity of its tryptophan residues. In contrast to the calcium binding, the binding of zinc decreases thermal stability of the Ca2+-loaded protein. Zn2+-titration of recoverin, traced by bis-ANS fluorescence, reveals binding of a single Zn2+ ion per protein molecule. It was shown that the double-mutant E85Q/E121Q with inactivated Ca2+-binding EF-hands 2 and 3 (Alekseev, A. M.; Shulga-Morskoy, S. V.; Zinchenko, D. V.; Shulga-Morskaya, S. A.; Suchkov, D. V.; Vaganova, S. A.; Senin, I. I.; Zargarov, A. A.; Lipkin, V. M.; Akhtar, M.; Philippov, P. P. FEBS Lett. 1998, 440, 116-118), which can be considered as an analogue of the apo-protein, binds Zn2+ ion as well. Apparent zinc equilibrium binding constants evaluated from spectrofluorimetric Zn2+-titrations of the protein are 1.4 x 10(5) M(-1) (dissociation constant 7.1 microM) for Ca2+-loaded wild-type recoverin and 3.3 x 10(4) M(-1) (dissociation constant 30 microM) for the E85Q/E121Q mutant (analogue of apo-recoverin). Study of the binding of wild-type recoverin to ROS membranes showed a zinc-dependent increase of its affinity for the membranes, without regard to calcium content, suggesting further solvation of a protein myristoyl group upon Zn2+ binding. Possible implications of these findings to the functioning of recoverin are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Magnesium levels in cardiac myocytes change in cardiovascular diseases. Intracellular free magnesium (Mg(i)) inhibits L-type Ca(2+) currents through Ca(V)1.2 channels in cardiac myocytes, but the mechanism of this effect is unknown. We hypothesized that Mg(i) acts through the COOH-terminal EF-hand of Ca(V)1.2. EF-hand mutants were engineered to have either decreased (D1546A/N/S/K) or increased (K1543D and K1539D) Mg(2+) affinity. In whole-cell patch clamp experiments, increased Mg(i) reduced both Ba(2+) and Ca(2+) currents conducted by wild type (WT) Ca(V)1.2 channels expressed in tsA-201 cells with similar affinity. Exposure of WT Ca(V)1.2 to lower Mg(i) (0.26 mM) increased the amplitudes of Ba(2+) currents 2.6 +/- 0.4-fold without effects on the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation. In contrast, increasing Mg(i) to 2.4 or 7.2 mM reduced current amplitude to 0.5 +/- 0.1 and 0.26 +/- 0.05 of the control level at 0.8 mM Mg(i). The effects of Mg(i) on peak Ba(2+) currents were approximately fit by a single binding site model with an apparent K(d) of 0.65 mM. The apparent K(d) for this effect of Mg(i) was shifted approximately 3.3- to 16.5-fold to higher concentration in D1546A/N/S mutants, with only small effects on the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation. Moreover, mutant D1546K was insensitive to Mg(i) up to 7.2 mM. In contrast to these results, peak Ba(2+) currents through the K1543D mutant were inhibited by lower concentrations of Mg(i) compared with WT, consistent with approximately fourfold reduction in apparent K(d) for Mg(i), and inhibition of mutant K1539D by Mg(i) was also increased comparably. In addition to these effects, voltage-dependent inactivation of K1543D and K1539D was incomplete at positive membrane potentials when Mg(i) was reduced to 0.26 or 0.1 mM, respectively. These results support a novel mechanism linking the COOH-terminal EF-hand with modulation of Ca(V)1.2 channels by Mg(i). Our findings expand the repertoire of modulatory interactions taking place at the COOH terminus of Ca(V)1.2 channels, and reveal a potentially important role of Mg(i) binding to the COOH-terminal EF-hand in regulating Ca(2+) influx in physiological and pathophysiological states.  相似文献   

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