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1.
X-ray reflectivity was used to study the interaction of the PX domain of p40(phox) protein (p40(phox)-PX) with a Langmuir monolayer of a mixture of SOPC (1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine), SOPS (1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine), and DPPtdIns(3)P (1,2-dipalmitoylphosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate) lipids supported on a buffered aqueous solution. The reflectivity is analyzed in terms of the known crystallographic structure of the p40(phox)-PX domain and a slab model that represents the lipid layer, yielding an electron density profile of the lipid layer and bound PX domains. This analysis determines the angular orientation and penetration depth of the p40(phox)-PX domain bound to the SOPC/SOPS/DPPtdIns(3)P monolayer. The best fit orientation is characterized by the following angles: theta = 30 +/- 10 degrees and phi = 140 +/- 30 degrees. These angles describe rotations, about axes in a coordinate system fixed to the domain, that are required to orient the domain with respect to the lipid layer at the interface. The protein penetrated into the lipid layer by 9 +/- 2 A, indicating that the protein penetrated into the headgroup region, but not deeply into the hydrocarbon region of the monolayer. In this analysis, polar Tyr(94) and hydrophobic Val(95) penetrated deepest into the lipid monolayer. The backbone of these residues was approximately 5 A above the headgroup-buffer interface, i.e., at the level of the SOPC/SOPS lipid phosphates. Positively charged Lys(92) and Lys(98) were also near the SOPC/SOPS lipid phosphates. This position of the protein allows for a favorable electrostatic contribution to binding.  相似文献   

2.
The C2 domain is a conserved signaling motif that triggers membrane docking in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner, but the membrane docking surfaces of many C2 domains have not yet been identified. Two extreme models can be proposed for the docking of the protein kinase C alpha (PKC alpha) C2 domain to membranes. In the parallel model, the membrane-docking surface includes the Ca(2+) binding loops and an anion binding site on beta-strands 3-4, such that the beta-strands are oriented parallel to the membrane. In the perpendicular model, the docking surface is localized to the Ca(2+) binding loops and the beta-strands are oriented perpendicular to the membrane surface. The present study utilizes site-directed fluorescence and spin-labeling to map out the membrane docking surface of the PKC alpha C2 domain. Single cysteine residues were engineered into 18 locations scattered over all regions of the protein surface, and were used as attachment sites for spectroscopic probes. The environmentally sensitive fluorescein probe identified positions where Ca(2+) activation or membrane docking trigger measurable fluorescence changes. Ca(2+) binding was found to initiate a global conformational change, while membrane docking triggered the largest fluorescein environmental changes at labeling positions on the three Ca(2+) binding loops (CBL), thereby localizing these loops to the membrane docking surface. Complementary EPR power saturation measurements were carried out using a nitroxide spin probe to determine a membrane depth parameter, Phi, for each spin-labeled mutant. Positive membrane depth parameters indicative of membrane insertion were found for three positions, all located on the Ca(2+) binding loops: N189 on CBL 1, and both R249 and R252 on CBL 3. In addition, EPR power saturation revealed that five positions near the anion binding site are partially protected from collisions with an aqueous paramagnetic probe, indicating that the anion binding site lies at or near the surface of the headgroup layer. Together, the fluorescence and EPR results indicate that the Ca(2+) first and third Ca(2+) binding loops insert directly into the lipid headgroup region of the membrane, and that the anion binding site on beta-strands 3-4 lies near the headgroups. The data support a model in which the beta-strands are tilted toward the parallel orientation relative to the membrane surface.  相似文献   

3.
The C2 domain of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) is involved in the Ca2+-dependent membrane binding of this protein. To identify protein residues in the C2 domain of cPLA2 essential for its Ca2+ and membrane binding, we selectively mutated Ca2+ ligands and putative membrane-binding residues of cPLA2 and measured the effects of mutations on its enzyme activity, membrane binding affinity, and monolayer penetration. The mutations of five Ca2+ ligands (D40N, D43N, N65A, D93N, N95A) show differential effects on the membrane binding and activation of cPLA2, indicating that two calcium ions bound to the C2 domain have differential roles. The mutations of hydrophobic residues (F35A, M38A, L39A, Y96A, Y97A, M98A) in the calcium binding loops show that the membrane binding of cPLA2 is largely driven by hydrophobic interactions resulting from the penetration of these residues into the hydrophobic core of the membrane. Leu39 and Val97 are fully inserted into the membrane, whereas Phe35 and Tyr96 are partially inserted. Finally, the mutations of four cationic residues in a beta-strand (R57E/K58E/R59E/R61E) have modest and negligible effects on the binding of cPLA2 to zwitterionic and anionic membranes, respectively, indicating that they are not directly involved in membrane binding. In conjunction with our previous study on the C2 domain of protein kinase C-alpha (Medkova, M., and Cho, W. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 17544-17552), these results demonstrate that C2 domains are not only a membrane docking unit but also a module that triggers membrane penetration of protein and that individual Ca2+ ions bound to the calcium binding loops play differential roles in the membrane binding and activation of their parent proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The C2 domain is a Ca(2+)-dependent membrane-targeting module found in many cellular proteins involved in signal transduction or membrane trafficking. C2 domains are unique among membrane targeting domains in that they show a wide range of lipid selectivity for the major components of cell membranes, including phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine. To understand how C2 domains show diverse lipid selectivity and how this functional diversity affects their subcellular targeting behaviors, we measured the binding of the C2 domains of group IVa cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)) and protein kinase C-alpha (PKC-alpha) to vesicles that model cell membranes they are targeted to, and we monitored their subcellular targeting in living cells. The surface plasmon resonance analysis indicates that the PKC-alpha C2 domain strongly prefers the cytoplasmic plasma membrane mimic to the nuclear membrane mimic due to high phosphatidylserine content in the former and that Asn(189) plays a key role in this specificity. In contrast, the cPLA(2) C2 domain has specificity for the nuclear membrane mimic over the cytoplasmic plasma membrane mimic due to high phosphatidylcholine content in the former and aromatic and hydrophobic residues in the calcium binding loops of the cPLA(2) C2 domain are important for its lipid specificity. The subcellular localization of enhanced green fluorescent protein-tagged C2 domains and mutants transfected into HEK293 cells showed that the subcellular localization of the C2 domains is consistent with their lipid specificity and could be tailored by altering their in vitro lipid specificity. The relative cell membrane translocation rate of selected C2 domains was also consistent with their relative affinity for model membranes. Together, these results suggest that biophysical principles that govern the in vitro membrane binding of C2 domains can account for most of their subcellular targeting properties.  相似文献   

5.
Cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) plays a key role in the generation of arachidonic acid, a precursor of potent inflammatory mediators. Intact cPLA2 is known to translocate in a calcium-dependent manner from the cytosol to the nuclear envelope and endoplasmic reticulum. We show here that the C2 domain of cPLA2 alone is sufficient for this calcium-dependent translocation in living cells. We have identified sets of exposed hydrophobic residues in loops known as calcium-binding region (CBR) 1 and CBR3, which surround the C2 domain calcium-binding sites, whose mutation dramatically decreased phospholipid binding in vitro without significantly affecting calcium binding. Mutation of a residue that binds calcium ions (D43N) also eliminated phospholipid binding. The same mutations that prevent phospholipid binding of the isolated C2 domain in vitro abolished the calcium-dependent translocation of cPLA2 to internal membranes in vivo, suggesting that the membrane targeting is driven largely by direct interactions with the phospholipid bilayer. Using fluorescence quenching by spin-labeled phospholipids for a series of mutants containing a single tryptophan residue at various positions in the cPLA2 C2 domain, we show that two of the calcium-binding loops, CBR1 and CBR3, penetrate in a calcium-dependent manner into the hydrophobic core of the phospholipid bilayer, establishing an anchor for docking the domain onto the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
The phospholipid-binding specificities of C(2) domains, widely distributed Ca(2+)-binding modules, differ greatly despite similar three-dimensional structures. To understand the molecular basis for this specificity, we have examined the synaptotagmin 1 C(2)A domain, which interacts in a primarily electrostatic, Ca(2+)-dependent reaction with negatively charged phospholipids, and the cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)) C(2) domain, which interacts by a primarily hydrophobic Ca(2+)-dependent mechanism with neutral phospholipids. We show that grafting the short Ca(2+)-binding loops from the tip of the cPLA(2) C(2) domain onto the top of the synaptotagmin 1 C(2)A domain confers onto the synaptotagmin 1 C(2)A domain the phospholipid binding specificity of the cPLA(2) C(2) domain, indicating that the functional specificity of C(2) domains is determined by their short top loops.  相似文献   

7.
The neutron reflectivity technique is applied to determine the adsorptive interaction of the 13.5-kDa actin-binding protein hisactophilin from Dictyostelium discoideum with lipid monolayers at a lateral pressure of 21 mN/m < or = pi < or = 25 mN/m at the air-water interface. We compare binding of natural hisactophilin exhibiting a myristic acid chain membrane anchor at the N-terminus (DIC-HIS) and a fatty acid-deficient genetic product expressed in Escherichia coli (EC-HIS). It is demonstrated that only the natural hisactophilin DIC-HIS is capable of mediating the strong binding of monomeric actin to the monolayer, where it forms a layer of about 40 A thickness corresponding to the average diameter of actin monomers. Monolayers composed of pure dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine with fully deuterated hydrocarbon tails and headgroup (DMPC-d67) and 1:1 mixtures of this lipid with chain deuterated dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG-d54) are studied on subphases consisting either of fully deuterated buffer (D2O) or of a 9:1 H2O/D2O buffer that matches the scattering length density of air (CMA buffer). The reflectivity data are analyzed in terms of layer models, consisting of one to three layers, depending on the contrast of the buffer and the system. We show that both protein species bind tightly to negatively charged 1:1 DMPC-d67/DMPG-d54 monolayers, thereby forming a thin and most probably monomolecular protein layer of 12-15 A thickness. We find that the natural protein (DIC-HIS) partially penetrates into the lipid monolayer, in contrast to chain-deficient species (EC-HIS), which forms only an adsorbed layer. The coverage of the monolayer with DIC-HIS strongly depends on the presence of anionic DMPG in the monolayer. At a bulk protein concentration of 1.5 micrograms/ml, the molar ratio of bound protein to lipid is about 1:45 for the 1:1 lipid mixture but only 1:420 for the pure DMPC.  相似文献   

8.
X-ray reflectivity measurements are used to determine the configuration of the C2 domain of protein kinase Cα (PKCα-C2) bound to a lipid monolayer of a 7:3 mixture of 1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and 1-stearoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine supported on a buffered aqueous solution. The reflectivity is analyzed in terms of the known crystallographic structure of PKCα-C2 and a slab model representation of the lipid layer. The configuration of lipid-bound PKCα-C2 is described by two angles that define its orientation, θ = 35° ± 10° and φ =210° ± 30°, and a penetration depth (=7.5 ± 2 Å) into the lipid layer. In this structure, the β-sheets of PKCα-C2 are nearly perpendicular to the lipid layer and the domain penetrates into the headgroup region of the lipid layer, but not into the tailgroup region. This configuration of PKCα-C2 determined by our x-ray reflectivity is consistent with many previous findings, particularly mutational studies, and also provides what we believe is new molecular insight into the mechanism of PKCα enzyme activation. Our analysis method, which allows us to test all possible protein orientations, shows that our data cannot be explained by a protein that is orientated parallel to the membrane, as suggested by earlier work.  相似文献   

9.
Rabphilin-3A is a neuronal C2 domain tandem containing protein involved in vesicle trafficking. Both its C2 domains (C2A and C2B) are able to bind phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, a key player in the neurotransmitter release process. The rabphilin-3A C2A domain has previously been shown to bind inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3; phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate headgroup) in a Ca2+-dependent manner with a relatively high affinity (50 microm) in the presence of saturating concentrations of Ca2+. Moreover, IP3 and Ca2+ binding to the C2A domain mutually enhance each other. Here we present the Ca2+-bound solution structure of the C2A domain. Structural comparison with the previously published Ca2+-free crystal structure revealed that Ca2+ binding induces a conformational change of Ca2+ binding loop 3 (CBL3). Our IP3 binding studies as well as our IP3-C2A docking model show the active involvement of CBL3 in IP3 binding, suggesting that the conformational change on CBL3 upon Ca2+ binding enables the interaction with IP3 and vice versa, in line with a target-activated messenger affinity mechanism. Our data provide detailed structural insight into the functional properties of the rabphilin-3A C2A domain and reveal for the first time the structural determinants of a target-activated messenger affinity mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Site-directed spin labeling was used to determine the membrane orientation and insertion of the C2A domain from synaptotagmin I. A series of single cysteine mutants of the C2A domain of synaptotagmin I was prepared and labeled with a sulfhydryl specific spin label. Upon Ca2+ or membrane binding, the EPR line shapes of these mutants reveal dramatic decreases in label mobility within the Ca2+-binding loops. This loss in mobility is likely due in part to a reduction in local backbone fluctuations within the loop regions. Power saturation was then used to determine the position of each spin-labeled site along the bilayer normal, and these EPR distance constraints were used along with the high-resolution solution structure of C2A to generate a model for the orientation and position of the domain at the membrane interface. This model places the polypeptide backbone of both the first and third Ca2+-binding loops in contact with the membrane interface, with several labeled side chains lying within the bilayer interior. All three Ca2+-binding sites lie near a plane defined by the lipid phosphates. This model indicates that there is some desolvation of this domain upon binding and that hydrophobic as well as electrostatic interactions contribute to the binding of C2A. When compared to the C2 domain from cPLA2 (Frazier et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 6282), a similar orientation for the beta-sandwich region is found; however, the cPLA2 C2 domain is translocated 5-7 A deeper into the membrane hydrocarbon. This difference in depth is consistent with previous biophysical data and with the difference that long-range electrostatic interactions and desolvation are expected to make to the binding of these two C2 domains.  相似文献   

11.
The NH2-terminal alpha fragments of human complement proteases C1-r and C1-s were obtained by limited proteolysis of the native proteins with trypsin, and isolated. C1-r alpha extended from residues 1 to 208 of C1-r A chain, with at least two cleavage sites within disulfide loops, after lysine 134 and arginine 202. C1-s alpha comprised residues 1-192 of the C1-s A chain, with one cleavage site within a disulfide loop, after arginine 186. C1-r alpha was monomeric either in the presence or absence of Ca2+ but formed Ca2(+)-dependent dimers with native C1-s. C1-s alpha dimerized in the presence of Ca2+ and formed Ca2(+)-dependent tetramers (C1-s alpha-C1-r-C1-r-C1-s alpha) with native C1-r. C1-r alpha and C1-s alpha associated in the presence of Ca2+ to form C1-r alpha-C1-s alpha heterodimers. Equilibrium dialysis studies indicated that each alpha region binds Ca2+ with a dissociation constant ranging from 19 microM (native proteins) to 38 microM (fragments). C1-r alpha, C1-r alpha-C1-s alpha, and the native C1-s-C1-r-C1-r-C1-s tetramer bound 0.9, 1.9, and 4.0 Ca2+ atoms/mol, respectively, whereas dimers C1-s alpha-C1-s alpha and C1-s-C1-s incorporated 2.9 and 3.0 Ca2+ atoms/mol. It is concluded that each alpha region contains one high affinity Ca2+ binding site. This 1:1 stoichiometry is maintained upon heterologous (C1-r-C1-s) interaction, whereas the homologous (C1-s-C1-s) interaction provides one additional binding site.  相似文献   

12.
Many bacterial toxins bind to and gain entrance to target cells through specific interactions with membrane components. Using neutron reflectivity, we have characterized the structure of mixed DPPE:GM(1) lipid monolayers before and during the binding of cholera toxin (CTAB(5)) or its B-subunit (CTB(5)). Structural parameters such as the density and thickness of the lipid layer, extension of the GM(1) oligosaccharide headgroup, and orientation and position of the protein upon binding are reported. The density of the lipid layer was found to decrease slightly upon protein binding. However, the A-subunit of the whole toxin is clearly located below the B-pentameric ring, away from the monolayer, and does not penetrate into the lipid layer before enzymatic cleavage. Using Monte Carlo simulations, the observed monolayer expansion was found to be consistent with geometrical constraints imposed on DPPE by multivalent binding of GM(1) by the toxin. Our findings suggest that the mechanism of membrane translocation by the protein may be aided by alterations in lipid packing.  相似文献   

13.
The ubiquitous C2 domain is a conserved Ca2+ triggered membrane-docking module that targets numerous signaling proteins to membrane surfaces where they regulate diverse processes critical for cell signaling. In this study, we quantitatively compared the equilibrium and kinetic parameters of C2 domains isolated from three functionally distinct signaling proteins: cytosolic phospholipase A2-alpha (cPLA2-alpha), protein kinase C-beta (PKC-beta), and synaptotagmin-IA (Syt-IA). The results show that equilibrium C2 domain docking to mixed phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine membranes occurs at micromolar Ca2+ concentrations for the cPLA2-alpha C2 domain, but requires 3- and 10-fold higher Ca2+ concentrations for the PKC-beta and Syt-IA C2 domains ([Ca2+](1/2) = 4.7, 16, 48 microM, respectively). The Ca2+ triggered membrane docking reaction proceeds in at least two steps: rapid Ca2+ binding followed by slow membrane association. The greater Ca2+ sensitivity of the cPLA2-alpha domain results from its higher intrinsic Ca2+ affinity in the first step compared to the other domains. Assembly and disassembly of the ternary complex in response to rapid Ca2+ addition and removal, respectively, require greater than 400 ms for the cPLA2-alpha domain, compared to 13 ms for the PKC-beta domain and only 6 ms for the Syt-IA domain. Docking of the cPLA2-alpha domain to zwitterionic lipids is triggered by the binding of two Ca2+ ions and is stabilized via hydrophobic interactions, whereas docking of either the PKC-beta or the Syt-IA domain to anionic lipids is triggered by at least three Ca2+ ions and is maintained by electrostatic interactions. Thus, despite their sequence and architectural similarity, C2 domains are functionally specialized modules exhibiting equilibrium and kinetic parameters optimized for distinct Ca2+ signaling applications. This specialization is provided by the carefully tuned structural and electrostatic parameters of their Ca2+ and membrane-binding loops, which yield distinct patterns of Ca2+ coordination and contrasting mechanisms of membrane docking.  相似文献   

14.
Malmberg NJ  Van Buskirk DR  Falke JJ 《Biochemistry》2003,42(45):13227-13240
C2 domains are protein modules found in numerous eukaryotic signaling proteins, where their function is to target the protein to cell membranes in response to a Ca(2+) signal. Currently, the structure of the interface formed between the protein and the phospholipid bilayer is inaccessible to high-resolution structure determination, but EPR site-directed spin-labeling can provide a detailed medium-resolution view of this interface. To apply this approach to the C2 domain of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)), single cysteines were introduced at all 27 positions in the three Ca(2+)-binding loops and labeled with a methanethiosulfonate spin-label. Altogether, 24 of the 27 spin-labeled domains retained Ca(2+)-activated phospholipid binding. EPR spectra of these 24 labeled domains obtained in the presence and absence of Ca(2+) indicate that Ca(2+) binding triggers subtle changes in the dynamics of two localized regions within the Ca(2+)-binding loops: one face of the loop 1 helix and the junction between loops 1 and 2. However, no significant changes in loop structure were detected upon Ca(2+) binding, nor upon Ca(2+)-triggered docking to membranes. EPR depth parameters measured in the membrane-docked state allow determination of the penetration depth of each residue with respect to the membrane surface. Analysis of these depth parameters, using an improved, generalizable geometric approach, provides the most accurate picture of penetration depth and angular orientation currently available for a membrane-docked peripheral protein. Finally, the observation that Ca(2+) binding does not trigger large rearrangements of the membrane-docking loops favors the electrostatic switch model for Ca(2+) activation and disfavors, or places strong constraints on, the conformational switch model.  相似文献   

15.
Translocation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) to Golgi and ER in response to intracellular calcium mobilization is regulated by its calcium-dependent lipid-binding, or C2, domain. Although well studied in vitro, the biochemical characteristics of the cPLA2C2 domain offer no predictive value in determining its intracellular targeting. To understand the molecular basis for cPLA2C2 targeting in vivo, the intracellular targets of the synaptotagmin 1 C2A (Syt1C2A) and protein kinase Calpha C2 (PKCalphaC2) domains were identified in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells and compared with that of hybrid C2 domains containing the calcium binding loops from cPLA2C2 on Syt1C2A and PKCalphaC2 domain backbones. In response to an intracellular calcium increase, PKCalphaC2 targeted plasma membrane regions rich in phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate, and Syt1C2A displayed a biphasic targeting pattern, first targeting phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-rich regions in the plasma membrane and then the trans-Golgi network. In contrast, the Syt1C2A/cPLA2C2 and PKCalphaC2/cPLA2C2 hybrids targeted Golgi/ER and colocalized with cPLA2C2. The electrostatic properties of these hybrids suggested that the membrane binding mechanism was similar to cPLA2C2, but not PKCalphaC2 or Syt1C2A. These results suggest that primarily calcium binding loops 1 and 3 encode structural information specifying Golgi/ER targeting of cPLA2C2 and the hybrid domains.  相似文献   

16.
Calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) is proposed to regulate the type alpha of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)alpha), which has a dominant role in the release of arachidonic acid (AA), via phosphorylation of Ser515 of the enzyme. However, the exact role of CaM kinase in the activation of cPLA(2)alpha has not been well established. We investigated the effects induced by transfection with mutant cPLA(2)alpha and inhibitors for CaM and CaM kinase on the Ca(2+)-stimulated release of AA and translocation of cPLA(2)alpha. The mutation of Ser515 to Ala (S515A) did not change cPLA(2)alpha activity, although S228A and S505A completely and partially decreased the activity, respectively. Stimulation with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2), 1 mM) and A23187 (10 microM) markedly released AA in C12 cells expressing S515A and wild-type cPLA(2)alpha, but the responses in C12-S505A, C12-S727A, and C12-S505A/S515A/S727A (AAA) cells were reduced. In HEK293T cells expressing cPLA(2)alpha, A23187 caused the translocation of the wild-type, the every mutants, cPLA(2)alpha-C2 domain, and cPLA(2)alpha-Delta397-749 lacking proposed phosphorylation sites such as Ser505 and Ser515. Treatment with inhibitors of CaM (W-7) and CaM kinase (KN-93) at 10 microM significantly decreased the release of AA in C12-cPLA(2)alpha cells and C12-S515A cells. KN-93 inhibited the A23187-induced translocation of the wild-type, S515A, AAA and cPLA(2)alpha-Delta397-749, but not cPLA(2)alpha-C2 domain. Our findings show a possible effect of CaM kinase on cPLA(2)alpha in a catalytic domain A-dependent and Ser515-independent manner.  相似文献   

17.
Corbin JA  Evans JH  Landgraf KE  Falke JJ 《Biochemistry》2007,46(14):4322-4336
The C2 domain is a ubiquitous, conserved protein signaling motif widely found in eukaryotic signaling proteins. Although considerable functional diversity exists, most C2 domains are activated by Ca2+ binding and then dock to a specific cellular membrane. The C2 domains of protein kinase Calpha (PKCalpha) and cytosolic phospholipase A2alpha (cPLA2alpha), for example, are known to dock to different membrane surfaces during an intracellular Ca2+ signal. Ca2+ activation targets the PKCalpha C2 domain to the plasma membrane and the cPLA2alpha C2 domain to the internal membranes, with no detectable spatial overlap. It is crucial to determine how such targeting specificity is achieved at physiological bulk Ca2+ concentrations that during a typical signaling event rarely exceed 1 muM. For the isolated PKCalpha C2 domain in the presence of physiological Ca2+ levels, the target lipids phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) are together sufficient to recruit the PKCalpha C2 domain to a lipid mixture mimicking the plasma membrane inner leaflet. For the cPLA2alpha C2 domain, the target lipid phosphatidylcholine (PC) appears to be sufficient to drive membrane targeting to an internal membrane mimic at physiological Ca2+ levels, although the results do not rule out a second, unknown target molecule. Stopped-flow kinetic studies provide additional information about the fundamental molecular events that occur during Ca2+-activated membrane docking. In principle, C2 domain-directed intracellular targeting, which requires coincidence detection of multiple signals (Ca2+ and one or more target lipids), can exhibit two different mechanisms: messenger-activated target affinity (MATA) and target-activated messenger affinity (TAMA). The C2 domains studied here both utilize the TAMA mechanism, in which the C2 domain Ca2+ affinity is too low to be activated by physiological Ca2+ signals in most regions of the cell. Only when the C2 domain nears its target membrane, which provides a high local concentration of target lipid, is the effective Ca2+ affinity increased by the coupled binding equilibrium to a level that enables substantial Ca2+ activation and target docking. Overall, the findings emphasize the importance of using physiological ligand concentrations in targeting studies because super-physiological concentrations can drive docking interactions even when an important targeting molecule is missing.  相似文献   

18.
Cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2)alpha responds to the rise in cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) attending cell stimulation by moving to intracellular membranes, releasing arachidonic acid (AA) from these membranes, and thereby initiating the synthesis of various lipid mediators. Under some conditions, however, cPLA2alpha translocation occurs without any corresponding changes in [Ca2+]i. The signal for such responses has not been identified. Using confocal microscopy to track fluorescent proteins fused to cPLA2alpha or cPLA2alpha's C2 domain, we find that AA mimics Ca2+ ionophores in stimulating cPLA(2)alpha translocations to the perinuclear ER and to a novel site, the lipid body. Unlike the ionophores, AA acted independently of [Ca2+](i) rises and did not translocate the proteins to the Golgi. AA's action did not involve its metabolism to eicosanoids or acylation into cellular lipids. Receptor agonists also stimulated translocations targeting lipid bodies. We propose that AA is a signal for Ca2+-independent cPLA2alpha translocation and that lipid bodies are common targets of cPLA2alpha and contributors to stimulus-induced lipid mediator synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Landgraf KE  Malmberg NJ  Falke JJ 《Biochemistry》2008,47(32):8301-8316
Protein kinase C isoform alpha (PKCalpha) is a ubiquitous, conventional PKC enzyme that possesses a conserved C2 domain. Upon activation by cytoplasmic Ca (2+) ions, the C2 domain specifically binds to the plasma membrane inner leaflet where it recognizes the target lipids phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP 2). The membrane penetration depth and docking angle of the membrane-associated C2 domain is not well understood. The present study employs EPR site-directed spin labeling and relaxation methods to generate a medium-resolution model of the PKCalpha C2 domain docked to a membrane of lipid composition similar to the plasma membrane inner leaflet. The approach measures EPR depth parameters for 10 function-retaining spin labels coupled to the C2 domain, and for spin labels coupled to depth calibration molecules. The resulting depth parameters, together with the known structure of the free C2 domain, provide a sufficient number of constraints to define two membrane docking geometries for C2 domain bound to physiological membranes lacking or containing PIP 2, respectively. In both the absence and presence of PIP 2, the two bound Ca (2+) ions of the C2 domain lie near the anionic phosphate plane in the headgroup region, consistent with the known ability of the Ca (2+) and membrane-binding loops (CMBLs) to bind the headgroup of the PS target lipid. In the absence of PIP 2, the polybasic lipid binding site on the beta3-beta4 hairpin is occupied with PS, but in the presence of PIP 2 this larger, higher affinity target lipid competitively displaces PS and causes the long axis of the domain to tilt 40 +/- 10 degrees toward the bilayer normal. The ability of the beta3-beta4 hairpin site to bind PS as well as PIP 2 extends the lifetime of the membrane-docked state and is predicted to enhance the kinase turnover number of PKCalpha during a single membrane docking event. In principle, PIP 2-induced tilting of the C2 domain could modulate the activity of membrane-docked PKCalpha as it diffuses between membrane regions with different local PS and PIP 2 concentrations. Finally, the results demonstrate that EPR relaxation methods are sufficiently sensitive to detect signaling-induced changes in the membrane docking geometries of peripheral membrane proteins.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of ceramide on Ca2+-dependent translocation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) to membranes was studied. Pretreatment of platelets with sphingomyelinase or C6-ceramide (N-hexanoylsphingosine) led to apparent enhancement of Ca2+-ionophore A23187-stimulated arachidonic acid release but did not affect the cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) activity. Under these conditions, the cPLA2 proteins in membranes increased significantly, compared with those by A23187 alone. Sphingomyelinase and C6-ceramide, but not C6-dihydroceramide, a control analog of C6-ceramide, also facilitated the Ca2+-dependent increase in the cPLA2 protein, as well as the activity, in membranes induced by addition of Ca2+ into platelet lysate. Protein kinase Calpha, which possesses a Ca2+-dependent lipid binding domain, was increased in membranes in a Ca2+-dependent manner, but the increase was not accelerated by sphingomyelinase or C6-ceramide. These findings suggest that ceramide in membranes potentiates Ca2+-dependent cPLA2 translocation from cytosol to membranes, probably through modification of membrane phospholipid organization.  相似文献   

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