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1.
Functional domain structure of calcineurin A: mapping by limited proteolysis   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
M J Hubbard  C B Klee 《Biochemistry》1989,28(4):1868-1874
Limited proteolysis of calcineurin, the Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatase, with clostripain is sequential and defines four functional domains in calcineurin A (61 kDa). In the presence of calmodulin, an inhibitory domain located at the carboxyl terminus is rapidly degraded, yielding an Mr 57,000 fragment which retains the ability to bind calmodulin but whose p-nitrophenylphosphatase is fully active in the absence of Ca2+ and no longer stimulated by calmodulin. Subsequent cleavage(s), near the amino terminus, yield(s) an Mr 55,000 fragment which has lost more than 80% of the enzymatic activity. A third, slower, proteolytic cleavage in the carboxyl-terminal half of the protein converts the Mr 55,000 fragment to an Mr 42,000 polypeptide which contains the calcineurin B binding domain and an Mr 14,000 fragment which binds calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner with high affinity. In the absence of calmodulin, clostripain rapidly severs both the calmodulin-binding and the inhibitory domains. The catalytic domain is preserved, and the activity of the proteolyzed 43-kDa enzyme is increased 10-fold in the absence of Ca2+ and 40-fold in its presence. The calcineurin B binding domain and calcineurin B appear unaffected by proteolysis both in the presence and in the absence of calmodulin. Thus, calcineurin A is organized into functionally distinct domains connected by proteolytically sensitive hinge regions. The catalytic, inhibitory, and calmodulin-binding domains are readily removed from the protease-resistant core, which contains the calcineurin B binding domain. Calmodulin stimulation of calcineurin is dependent on intact inhibitory and calmodulin-binding domains, but the degraded enzyme lacking these domains is still regulated by Ca2+.  相似文献   

2.
Yang SA  Klee CB 《Biochemistry》2000,39(51):16147-16154
Limited proteolysis of calcineurin in the presence of Ca(2+) suggested that its calmodulin-binding domain, readily degraded by proteases, was unfolded while calcineurin B was compactly folded [Hubbard, M. J., and Klee, C. B. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 1868-1874]. Moreover, in the crystal structure of calcineurin, with the four Ca(2+) sites of calcineurin B occupied, the calmodulin-binding domain is not visible in the electron density map [Kissinger, C. R., et al. (1995) Nature 378, 641-644]. Limited proteolysis of calcineurin in the presence of EGTA, shows that, when the low affinity sites of calcineurin B are not occupied, the calmodulin-binding domain is completely protected against proteolytic attack. Slow cleavages are, however, detected in the linker region between the calmodulin-binding and the autoinhibitory domains of calcineurin A. Upon prolonged exposure to the protease, selective cleavages in carboxyl-terminal end of the first helix and the central helix linker of calcineurin B and the calcineurin B-binding helix of calcineurin A are also detected. Thus, Ca(2+) binding to the low-affinity sites of calcineurin B affects the conformation of calcineurin B and induces a conformational change of the regulatory domain of calcineurin A, resulting in the exposure of the calmodulin-binding domain. This conformational change is needed for the partial activation of the enzyme in the absence of calmodulin and its full activation by calmodulin. A synthetic peptide corresponding to the calmodulin-binding domain is shown to interact with a peptide corresponding to the calcineurin B-binding domain, and this interaction is prevented by calcineurin B in the presence but not the absence of Ca(2+). These observations provide a mechanism to explain the dependence on Ca(2+) binding to calcineurin B for calmodulin activation and for the 10-20-fold increase in affinity of calcineurin for Ca(2+) upon removal of the regulatory domain by limited proteolysis [Stemmer, P. M., and Klee, C. B. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 6859-6866].  相似文献   

3.
Carruthers NJ  Stemmer PM 《Biochemistry》2008,47(10):3085-3095
Calcineurin is a Ca (2+)/calmodulin-activated Ser/Thr phosphatase important in cellular actions resulting in memory formation, cardiac hypertrophy, and T-cell activation. This enzyme is subject to oxidative inactivation by superoxide at low micromolar concentrations and by H 2O 2 at low millimolar concentrations. On the basis of the hypothesis that oxidation of Met residues in calmodulin-binding domains inhibits binding to calmodulin, purified calcineurin was used to study the susceptibility of Met residues to oxidation by H 2O 2. The rate for oxidation of Met 406 in the calmodulin-binding domain was determined to be 4.4 x 10 (-3) M (-1) s (-1), indicating a high susceptibility to oxidation. Functional repercussions of Met 406 oxidation were evaluated using native enzyme and a calcineurin mutant in which Met 406 was exchanged for Leu. Measurement of fluorescent calmodulin binding demonstrated that oxidation of Met 406 results in a 3.3-fold decrease in the affinity of calmodulin for calcineurin. Calcineurin activation exhibited a loss in cooperativity with respect to calmodulin following Met 406 oxidation as shown by a reduction in the Hill slope from 1.88 to 0.86. Maximum phosphatase activity was unaffected by Met oxidation. Changes in the calcineurin-calmodulin interaction were accompanied by a 40% loss in the ability of calmodulin to stimulate binding of immunophilin/immunosuppressant to calcineurin. All effects on calmodulin binding to the native enzyme by the treatment with H 2O 2 could be reversed by treating the enzyme with methionine sulfoxide reductase. These results indicate that the calmodulin-binding domain of calcineurin is susceptible to oxidation at Met 406 and that oxidation disrupts calmodulin binding and enzyme activation. Oxidation-dependent decreases in the affinity of calmodulin for calcineurin can potentially modulate calmodulin-dependent signaling and calmodulin distribution.  相似文献   

4.
The Ca(2+)-dependent activation of calcineurin phosphatase activity is regulated by an autoinhibitory element (residues 457-482) located 43 residues COOH-terminal of the calmodulin-binding domain (residues 390-414). Removal of residues 457-482 does not result in full Ca(2+)/calmodulin-independent activity. Full activity in the absence of Ca(2+) requires the removal of residues 420-457. In the present study the presence of additional autoinhibitory elements within residues 420-457 was tested using two calcineurin A subunit COOH-terminal region constructs containing residues 420-511 (AI(420-511)) or 328-511 (AI(328-511)). Using recombinant, Ca(2+)/calmodulin-independent calcineurin, AI(420-511) and AI(328-511) were three- to fourfold more potent inhibitors of calcineurin phosphatase activity than the synthetic calcineurin autoinhibitory peptide(457-482). Calmodulin reversed the inhibition of calcineurin phosphatase activity by AI(328-511) but not AI(420-511). Kinetic studies indicated that AI(420-511) exhibited mixed-type inhibition and that the enzyme/substrate/inhibitor complex is partially active. These results indicate that (i) additional autoinhibitory elements are present within residues 420-457, (ii) calmodulin-binding to the autoinhibitory domain neutralizes the inhibitory function of the 420-457 autoinhibitory segment, (iii) the full-length autoinhibitory domain is a mixed-type inhibitor of calcineurin phosphatase activity, and (iv) the enzyme/substrate/inhibitor complex is partially catalytically active.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of calmodulin with calcineurin, a calcium- and calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatase, was investigated using a solid-phase assay. Binding of 125I-calmodulin by calcineurin immobilized on nitrocellulose membrane filters was of high affinity, reversible, and calcium-dependent. Complex binding kinetics reflected a time- and calcium/calmodulin-dependent conformational change of calcineurin which was shown to be ligand-induced renaturation. After renaturation and removal of calmodulin, immobilized calcineurin exhibited simple 125I-calmodulin binding kinetics with a single class of independent sites. The maximum stoichiometry of 125I-calmodulin binding to immobilized calcineurin was 0.1 mol/mol. The association rate (K1 = 8.9 x 10(3) M-1 S-1) and the dissociation rate (K-1 = 8.5 x 10(-5) s-1) yielded a dissociation constant of Kd = 10 nM. Equilibrium binding analyses gave a Kd value of 16 nM. The affinity of 125I-calmodulin for immobilized calcineurin was half that of unmodified calmodulin. Using equilibrium competition experiments, we determined, for the first time, the dissociation constant for the binding of native calmodulin by calcineurin in solution, Kd less than or equal to 0.1 nM (Kd for 125I-calmodulin = 0.23 +/- 0.09 nM). The effects of ionic strength and pH on 125I-calmodulin binding to immobilized calcineurin were characterized. The dissociation rate was dependent on free calcium concentration, with half-maximal rate at 700 nM calcium. 125I-Calmodulin equilibrium binding by the immobilized A subunit of calcineurin exhibited half the affinity of the holoenzyme, Kd = 30 nM. The described phenomenon, of reversible denaturation associated with immobilization of a protein on nitrocellulose, may be a general one open to exploitation in other systems.  相似文献   

6.
Hepatitis C (HCV) E2 glycoprotein is involved in virus attachment and entry, and its structural organization is largely unknown. Characterization of a panel of human monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs) to HCV by competition studies has led to an immunogenic organization model of E2 with three domains designated A, B, and C and epitopes in each domain having similar structural and functional properties. Domain A contains nonneutralizing epitopes, and domains B and C contain neutralizing epitopes. The isolation and characterization of three new HMAbs within domain A for a total of six provide support for this model. All six domain A HMAbs do not neutralize HCV retroviral pseudotype particle (HCVpp) infection on Huh-7 cells, and all six HMAbs have similar binding affinity and maximum binding, B(max), a relative indicator of epitope density, as other neutralizing HMAbs, suggesting that neutralization is epitope specific and not by binding to any surface epitope. The dose-dependent neutralizing activity of CBH-7, an HMAb to a domain C epitope in spatial proximity to domain A, and of CBH-5, a domain B HMAb to a more distant epitope, were tested in the presence and absence of each domain A HMAb. No enhancement or reduction in CBH-7 or CBH-5 neutralizing activity was observed, indicating that the potential induction of nonneutralizing antibodies should not be a central issue for HCV vaccine design. To assess whether domain A is involved in the structural changes as part of a pH-dependent virus envelope fusion process, changes in antibody binding patterns to normal pH and acid pH-treated HCVpp were measured. Antibody binding affinity of HMAbs to HCVpp was not affected by low pH. However, the B(max) values for low-pH-treated HCVpp with antibodies to domain A increased 46%, for domain C (CBH-7) they increased 23%, and for domain B (CBH-5) there was a decrease of 12%. Collectively, the organization and function of HCV E2 antigenic domains are roughly analogous to the large envelope glycoprotein E organizational structure for other flaviviruses with three distinct structural and functional domains.  相似文献   

7.
Chimeric Fc gamma R have been generated between the mouse high affinity receptor for IgG (Fc gamma RI) and the low affinity receptor for IgG (Fc gamma RII) by exchanging the first two domains of the three-domain extracellular structure of Fc gamma RI with the homologous two-domain extracellular structure of Fc gamma RII. Studies of the affinity and specificity of binding of mouse Ig classes to these receptors defined functional regions of Fc gamma RI and showed some surprising results. After removal of the third extracellular domain of Fc gamma RI, the remaining two domains (domains 1 and 2) retained the capacity to bind Ig in the form of immune complexes, however, they bound monomeric IgG2a with a reduced affinity. Surprisingly, these two domains in the absence of the third domain bound not only IgG2a but also IgG1 and IgG2b, i.e., the third domain of Fc gamma RI suppresses the intrinsic capacity of the first two domains to act as a low affinity Fc gamma RII-like molecule. Linking the third extracellular domain of Fc gamma RI to the two extracellular domains of Fc gamma RII resulted in a receptor that retained the specificity and affinity of Fc gamma RII. Thus, the removal of domain 3 from Fc gamma RI resulted in the conversion of Fc gamma RI to an "Fc gamma RII-like" receptor. These findings indicate that domains 1 and 2 of Fc gamma RI form an Ig-binding motif, and although domain 3 is not essential for Fc binding by Fc gamma RI, it plays a crucial role in determining the specific high affinity interaction of Fc gamma RI with IgG2a.  相似文献   

8.
We have evaluated the possibility that a major, abundant cellular substrate for protein kinase C might be a calmodulin-binding protein. We have recently labeled this protein, which migrates on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis with an apparent Mr of 60,000 from chicken and 80,000-87,000 from bovine cells and tissues, the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS). The MARCKS proteins from both species could be cross-linked to 125I-calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Phosphorylation of either protein by protein kinase C prevented 125I-calmodulin binding and cross-linking, suggesting that the calmodulin-binding domain might be located at or near the sites of protein kinase C phosphorylation. Both bovine and chicken MARCKS proteins contain an identical 25-amino acid domain that contains all 4 of the serine residues phosphorylated by protein kinase C in vitro. In addition, this domain is similar in sequence and structure to previously described calmodulin-binding domains. A synthetic peptide corresponding to this domain inhibited calmodulin binding to the MARCKS protein and also could be cross-linked to 125I-calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner. In addition, protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of the synthetic peptide inhibited its binding and cross-linking to 125I-calmodulin. The peptide bound to fluorescently labeled 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-calmodulin with a dissociation constant of 2.8 nM, and inhibited the calmodulin-dependent activation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase with an IC50 of 4.8 nM. Thus, the peptide mimics the calmodulin-binding properties of the MARCKS protein and probably represents its calmodulin-binding domain. Phosphorylation of these abundant, high affinity calmodulin-binding proteins by protein kinase C in intact cells could cause displacement of bound calmodulin, perhaps leading to activation of Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent processes.  相似文献   

9.
10.
This study describes a novel mode of activation for the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase calcineurin. Using purified calcineurin from Dictyostelium discoideum we found a reversible, Ca(2+)/calmodulin-independent activation by the long chain unsaturated fatty acids arachidonic acid, linoleic acid, and oleic acid, which was of the same magnitude as activation by Ca(2+)/calmodulin. Half-maximal stimulation of calcineurin occurred at fatty acid concentrations of approximately 10 microM with either p-nitrophenyl phosphate or RII phosphopeptide as substrates. The methyl ester of arachidonic acid and the saturated fatty acids palmitic acid and arachidic acid did not activate calcineurin. The activation was shown to be independent of the regulatory subunit, calcineurin B. Activation by Ca(2+)/calmodulin and fatty acids was not additive. In binding assays with immobilized calmodulin, arachidonic acid inhibited binding of calcineurin to calmodulin. Therefore fatty acids appear to mimic Ca(2+)/calmodulin action by binding to the calmodulin-binding site.  相似文献   

11.
Monoclonal antibodies for human thrombomodulin, a cofactor for thrombin-catalyzed activation of protein C, were prepared and their epitopes characterized. All six antibodies (MFTM-1-MFTM-6) bound to an elastase-digested active fragment of thrombomodulin, which contains six consecutive EGF domains. Binding of thrombomodulin to these antibodies did not depend on Ca2+ concentration. MFTM-4, MFTM-5, and MFTM-6 strongly inhibited protein C activation by thrombin and thrombomodulin. MFTM-4 and MFTM-5 inhibited thrombin binding to fixed thrombomodulin and bound to a recombinant mutant EGF456 protein, which contained the fourth, fifth, and sixth EGF domains of thrombomodulin. However, MFTM-6 did not inhibit thrombin binding to thrombomodulin and did not bind to EGF456 protein. Binding of thrombomodulin to fixed MFTM-4 or MFTM-5 was competitively inhibited by a recombinant mutant EGF45 protein which contained the fifth and sixth EGF-domains. These results suggest that epitopes of MFTM-4 and MFTM-5 are located in the fifth EGF domain of thrombomodulin. Thus, the binding site for thrombin is located in the fifth EGF domain. These results also suggest that an epitope for MFTM-6 is located at a region near the binding site for gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues of protein C via Ca2+ on thrombomodulin.  相似文献   

12.
A S Manalan  C B Klee 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1382-1390
In affinity selection, calcineurin selects from a population of randomly modified calmodulins those species with which it prefers to interact. The method shows that acetylation of lysines affects calmodulin so as to interfere with its ability to interact with calcineurin. Monoacetylation of any lysine of calmodulin reduces its affinity for calcineurin by 5-10-fold. Multiple acetylations amplify the loss of affinity; none of the modifications are imcompatible with activity. The lack of selectivity of calcineurin against any particular modified lysine indicates that the loss of affinity reflects changes induced by the removal of the charged groups and suggests an important role for electrostatic interactions in the cooperative structural transitions which calmodulin undergoes upon binding its target proteins or calcium. In the presence of calcineurin, a large and specific decrease in the rate of acetylation of Lys-75 and -148 of calmodulin is observed. The reactivity of the same residues is greatly increased in the presence of calcium alone [Giedroc, D. P., Sinha, S. K., Brew, K., & Puett, D. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 13406-13413]. Lys-75, located in the central helix, and the C-terminal Lys-148 [Babu, Y. S., Sacks, J. S., Greenhouse, T. J., Bugg, C. E., Means, A. R., & Cook, W. J. (1985) Nature (London) 315, 37-40] may act as sensors of the calmodulin allosteric transitions. Their reactivity changes in opposite directions in response to calcium-induced or calcineurin-induced structural changes. The reactivity of other residues such as Lys-21, decreased in the presence of calcineurin but not calcium, is also affected by a conformational change which is induced specifically by calcineurin.  相似文献   

13.
Ye Q  Li X  Wong A  Wei Q  Jia Z 《Biochemistry》2006,45(3):738-745
Calcineurin is a calmodulin-binding protein in brain and the only serine/threonine protein phosphatase under the control of Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM), which plays a critical role in coupling Ca2+ signals to cellular responses. CaM up-regulates the phosphatase activity of calcineurin by binding to the CaM-binding domain (CBD) of calcineurin subunit A. Here, we report crystal structural studies of CaM bound to a CBD peptide. The chimeric protein containing CaM and the CBD peptide forms an intimate homodimer, in which CaM displays a native-like extended conformation and the CBD peptide shows alpha-helical structure. Unexpectedly, the N-terminal lobe from one CaM and the C-terminal lobe from the second molecule form a combined binding site to trap the peptide. Thus, the dimer provides two binding sites, each of which is reminiscent of the fully collapsed conformation of CaM commonly observed in complex with, for example, the myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) peptide. The interaction between the peptide and CaM is highly specific and similar to MLCK.  相似文献   

14.
Effect of metal ions on the activity of the catalytic domain of calcineurin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Calcineurin (CN) is a heterodimer, composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). There are four functional domains present in CNA, which are catalytic domain (CNa), CNB-binding domain (BBH), CaM-binding domain (CBH) and autoinhibitory domain (AI). It has been shown previously that the in vitro activity of calcineurin is relied primarily on the binding of metal ions. Mn2+ and Ni2+ are the most crucial cation-activators for this enzyme. In order to determine which domain(s) in CN is functionally regulated by metal ions, the rat CNA alpha subunit and its catalytic domain (CNa) were cloned and expressed in E. coli. The effects of Mn2+, Ni2+ and Mg2+ on the catalytic activity of these purified proteins were examined. Our results demonstrate that all the metal ions tested in this study activated either CNA or CNa. However, the activation degree of CNa by the metal ions was much higher than that of CNA. In term of different metal ions, the activating extents to CNA and CNa were different. To CNA, the activating order from high to low was Mg2+ > > Ni2+ > Mn2+, but Mn2+ > Ni2+ > > Mg2+ to CNa. No effect of CaM/Ca2+ and CNB/Ca2+ on the activity of CNa was observed in our experiments. Moreover, a weak interaction (or untight coordination binding) between metal ions and the enzyme molecule was also identified. These results suggest that the activation of these enzymes by the exogenous metal ions might be via both regulating fragment of CNA (including BBH, CBH and AI) and catalytic domain (CNa), and mainly via regulating fragment to CNA and mainly via catalytic domain to CNa. The activating extents of metal ions via catalytic domain were higher than that via regulating fragment. The results obtained in this study should be very useful for understanding the molecular mechanism underlying the interaction between calcineurin and metal ions, especially Mn2+, Ni2+ and Mg2+.  相似文献   

15.
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-stimulated phosphatase from bovine brain, was hydrolyzed by calpain I from human erythrocytes. In the absence of calmodulin, calpain rapidly transformed the 60-kilodalton (kDa) catalytic subunit of calcineurin into a transient 57-kDa fragment and thereafter a 43-kDa limit fragment. In the presence of calmodulin, the 60-kDa subunit was sequentially proteolyzed to a 55-kDa fragment and then a 49-kDa fragment. Upon proteolysis in the absence or presence of calmodulin, the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity (assayed in the presence of calmodulin) was increased by 300%. The 43- and the 49-kDa fragments were found to (i) remain associated with the small subunit (17 kDa), (ii) have lost the ability to bind and to be activated by calmodulin, and (iii) have phosphatase activity that was still stimulated by Mn2+ or Ni2+. The 43- + 17-kDa form had similar Km values for various substrates, but the Vmax values were increased compared with the native enzyme. It is proposed that (i) a 43-kDa core segment of the 60-kDa subunit of calcineurin contained the catalytic domain, the small subunit-binding domain, and the metal ion (Mn2+ and (or) Ni2+) binding site; and (ii) two distinct types of inhibitory domains exist near the end(s) of the large subunit, one of which is calmodulin regulated, while the other is calmodulin independent.  相似文献   

16.
Monoclonal antibodies against human beta-glucocerebrosidase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Monoclonal antibodies were obtained against the membrane-bound lysosomal enzyme beta-glucocerebrosidase (acid beta-glucosidase), which is deficient in Gaucher's disease. BALB/c mice were immunized with homogeneous enzyme protein extracted from a sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gel. The mice were subsequently hyperimmunized with partially purified enzyme prior to fusion of spleen cells with myeloma cells. After fusion, 32 primary hybrid cell populations were obtained which continued to produce antibodies against beta-glucocerebrosidase after prolonged time of culture. All antibodies reacted with both native and denatured enzyme. Four primary cell populations were subcloned and the antibodies produced were characterized. The antibodies were all four of the IgG1 subclass. Three of these antibodies bind to protein A whereas one does not. The results of binding assays indicated that three of the antibodies react with the same antigenic domain (epitope 1), but the fourth with a different one (epitope 2). Probably two antigenic determinants are present in epitope 1 since one of the antibodies with specificity for epitope 1 is inactivated after iodination by the chloramine-T procedure whereas a second one is not.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Here we describe a small family of proteins, termed MCIP1 and MCIP2 (for myocyte-enriched calcineurin interacting protein), that are expressed most abundantly in striated muscles and that form a physical complex with calcineurin A. MCIP1 is encoded by DSCR1, a gene located in the Down syndrome critical region. Expression of the MCIP family of proteins is up-regulated during muscle differentiation, and their forced overexpression inhibits calcineurin signaling to a muscle-specific target gene in a myocyte cell background. Binding of MCIP1 to calcineurin A requires sequence motifs that resemble calcineurin interacting domains found in NFAT proteins. The inhibitory action of MCIP1 involves a direct association with the catalytic domain of calcineurin, rather than interference with the function of downstream components of the calcineurin signaling pathway. The interaction between MCIP proteins and calcineurin may modulate calcineurin-dependent pathways that control hypertrophic growth and selective programs of gene expression in striated muscles.  相似文献   

19.
Genomic clones containing the full coding sequences of the two subunits of the Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatase, calcineurin, were isolated from a Drosophila melanogaster genomic library using highly conserved human cDNA probes. Three clones encoded a 19.3-kDa protein whose sequence is 88% identical to that of human calcineurin B, the Ca(2+)-binding regulatory subunit of calcineurin. The coding sequences of the Drosophila and human calcineurin B genes are 69% identical. Drosophila calcineurin B is the product of a single intron-less gene located at position 4F on the X chromosome. Drosophila genomic clones encoding a highly conserved region of calcineurin A, the catalytic subunit of calcineurin, were used to locate the calcineurin A gene at position 21 EF on the second chromosome of Drosophila and to isolate calcineurin A cDNA clones from a Drosophila embryonic cDNA library. The structure of the calcineurin A gene was determined by comparison of the genomic and cDNA sequences. Twelve exons, spread over a total of 6.6 kilobases, were found to encode a 64.6-kDa protein 73% identical to either human calcineurin A alpha or beta. At the nucleotide level Drosophila calcineurin A cDNA is 67 and 65% identical to human calcineurin A alpha and beta cDNAs, respectively. Major differences between human and Drosophila calcineurins A are restricted to the amino and carboxyl termini, including two stretches of repetitive sequences in the carboxyl-terminal third of the Drosophila molecule. Motifs characteristic of the putative catalytic centers of protein phosphatase-1 and -2A and calcineurin are almost perfectly conserved. The calmodulin-binding and auto-inhibitory domains, characteristic of all mammalian calcineurins A, are also conserved. A remarkable feature of the calcineurin A gene is the location of the intron/exon junctions at the boundaries of the functional domains and the apparent conservation of the intron/exon junctions from Drosophila to man.  相似文献   

20.
Calcineurin, a calmodulin-regulated phosphatase, is composed of two distinct subunits (A and B) and requires certain metal ions for activity. The binding of the two most potent activators, Ni2+ and Mn2+, to calcineurin and its subunits has been studied. Incubation of the protein with 63Ni2+ (or 54Mn2+) followed by gel filtration to separate free and protein-bound ions indicated that calcineurin could maximally bind 2 mol/mol of Ni2+ or Mn2+. While isolated A subunit also bound 2 mol/mol of Ni2+, no Mn2+ binding was demonstrated for either isolated A or B subunit. When bindings were monitored by nitrocellulose filter assay, only 1 mol/mol bound Ni2+ or Mn2+ was detected, suggesting that the two Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding sites had different relative affinities and that only metal ions bound at the higher affinity sites were detected by the filter assay. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding by only 30%. Preincubation of the protein with Zn2+ decreased the filter assay-measured Ni2+ or Mn2+ binding by 90 or 17%, respectively. The results suggest that the higher affinity sites are a Ni2+-specific site and a distinct Mn2+-specific site. Preincubation of calcineurin with Mn2+ (or Ni2+) decreased the gel filtration-determined Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding from 2 to 1 mol/mol suggesting that calcineurin also contains a site which binds either metal ion. The time course of Ni2+ (or Mn2+) binding was correlated with that of the enzyme activation, and the extent of deactivation of the Ni2+-activated calcineurin by EDTA or by incubation with Ca2+ and calmodulin (Pallen, C. J., and Wang, J. H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6134-6141) was correlated with the release of the bound ions, thus suggesting that the bound ion is directly responsible for enzyme activation.  相似文献   

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