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1.
Calcineurin (CN), a Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent serine/threonine protein phosphatase, is a heterodimer composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). The activity of CNA is under the control of two functionally distinct, but structurally similar Ca(2+)-regulated proteins, CaM and CNB. The crystal structure of the holoenzyme reveals that the N-terminus and C-terminus of CNB and the N-terminus of CNA each have a long arm not involved in the active site. We constructed a fusion of the genes of CaM, CNB and CNA in that order using linker primers containing six and ten codons of glycine. A single-chain CaM-CNB-CNA (CBA) complex was expressed and purified to near homogeneity. The single-chain complex was fully soluble, and had biochemical properties and kinetic parameters similar to single-chain CNB-CNA (BA) activated by CaM. It was not regulated by CaM and CNB, but was strongly stimulated by Mn2+, Ni2+ and Mg2+. Intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy of the complex showed a change in the environment of tryptophan in the presence of Ca2+ and circular dichroism (CD) spectropolarimetry revealed an increase in alpha-helical content. Our findings suggest that fusion of CaM, CNB and CNA does not prevent the structural changes required for their functioning; in particular, CaM within the complex could still interact correctly with CN in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

2.
Hou Q  Yi X  Jiang G  Wei Q 《FEBS letters》2004,577(1-2):294-298
Calcineurin (CN) is a heterodimer consisting of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). The crystal structure shows that three residues or regions of CNA are mainly responsible for the interaction with CNB: the CNB binding helix (BBH), the N-terminus, and Glu53 that forms a salt bridge with Lys134 of CNB. In this report, we try to find the role that the salt bridge plays in the interaction between CNA and CNB. We found that mutation of Glu53 greatly reduced its responsiveness to CNB in the phosphatase assay and also that mutation of Lys134 of CNB affected its ability to activate the phosphatase activity of CNA. Structural analysis showed that disruption of the salt bridge affected the compact association of CNA and CNB. Thus, the salt bridge appears to help to stabilize CN and transfer the effects of CNB binding to CNA to activate its phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

3.
钙调神经磷酸酶(calcineurin,CN)是唯一依赖于Ca2+和钙调蛋白(calmodulin,CaM)的丝氨酸/苏氨酸型蛋白磷酸酶,由1个催化亚基CNA和1个调节亚基CNB组成. CNA 有3种亚型,最常见的是由CNA1基因编码的α亚型(CNAα). 在克隆CNA1基因cDNA的过程中,发现了1种新的人CNA1转录本-CNAα4. 与CNA1基因的其它转录本相比,CNAα4缺失第2外显子,其编码蛋白质由454个氨基酸组成,具有比其它3种CNAα亚型更短的磷酸酶催化结构域. CNAα4具有与CNAα1相似的CaM亲和力,但是其激活活化T细胞核因子(nuclear factor of activated T cells,NFAT)的活性明显强于CNAα1,提示CNAα4所缺失的氨基酸序列(Ala20 Thr86)并非CNA催化结构域所必需,相反,Ala20-Thr86缺失可能有助于其酶活性中心与NFAT的结合并发挥作用.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Shen X  Li H  Ou Y  Tao W  Dong A  Kong J  Ji C  Yu S 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(17):11407-11413
The protein serine/threonine phosphatase calcineurin (CN) is activated by calmodulin (CaM) in response to intracellular calcium mobilization. A widely accepted model for CN activation involves displacement of the CN autoinhibitory peptide (CN(467-486)) from the active site upon binding of CaM. However, CN activation requires calcium binding both to the low affinity sites of CNB and to CaM, and previous studies did not dissect the individual contributions of CNB and CaM to displacement of the autoinhibitory peptide from the active site. In this work we have produced separate CN fragments corresponding to the CNA regulatory region (CNRR(381-521), residues 381-521), the CNA catalytic domain truncated at residue 341, and the CNA-CNB heterodimer with CNA truncated at residue 380 immediately after the CNB binding helix. We show that the separately expressed regulatory region retains its ability to inhibit CN phosphatase activity of the truncated CN341 and CN380 and that the inhibition can be reversed by calcium/CaM binding. Tryptophan fluorescence quenching measurements further indicate that the isolated regulatory region inhibits CN activity by occluding the catalytic site and that CaM binding exposes the catalytic site. The results provide new support for a model in which calcium binding to CNB enables CaM binding to the CNA regulatory region, and CaM binding then instructs an activating conformational change of the regulatory region that does not depend further on CNB. Moreover, the secondary structural content of the CNRR(381-521) was tentatively addressed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The results indicate that the secondary structure of CNRR(381-521) fragment is predominantly random coil, but with significant amount of beta-strand and alpha-helix structures.  相似文献   

6.
Wang X  Huang Y  Li L  Wei Q 《IUBMB life》2012,64(9):748-756
Calcineurin (CN) is the only serine/threonine specific protein phosphatase regulated by Ca(2+) /calmodulin (CaM), which is composed of catalytic A subunit (CNA) and regulatory B subunit (CNB). Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor associated factor 3 (TRAF3) is an essential component in the Toll like receptors and TNF receptors (TNFRs) pathways. The TRAF domain of TRAF3 interacts with a large range of proteins, which share consensus sequences known as TRAF interacting motifs (TIMs). By sequence alignment, we identified two potential TIMs in CNB. However, the relation between TRAF3 and CN has not been reported before. To explore this, we highly expressed the former insoluble TRAF domain of TRAF3 in soluble form by using CaM fusion system for the first time. We demonstrated that the TRAF domain of TRAF3 interacted with CNB. On further investigation, over-expression of TRAF3 inhibited endogenous CN's activity, which decreased NFAT reporter activity and IL-2 production. Knock-down of TRAF3 partially enhanced CN's activity. The possible mechanism was that TRAF3 functioned as ubiquitin E3 ligase for CN and promoted its degradation. ? 2012 IUBMB IUBMB Life IUBMB Life, 64(9): 748-756, 2012.  相似文献   

7.
Calcineurin (CN), a heterodimer composed of a catalytic subunit, calcineurin A (CNA) and regulatory subunit, calcineurin B (CNB), is involved in many cellular processes. We investigated the denaturation of CNA by urea in the presence or absence of CNB and found that CNB protected CNA against urea. The phosphatase activity of CNA that had been exposed to low urea concentrations (below 4 M), in the presence CNB, was higher than that of the separately urea-treated subunits mixed just prior to assay. In order to analyze the protection of CNA by CNB, we investigated the K(m) and V(max), and intrinsic fluorescence, of CNA that had been exposed to various concentrations of urea in the presence or absence of CNB. CN had an increased V(max) and decreased K(m) when exposed to 1 to 2 M urea. In addition, the kinetic parameters and intensity of intrinsic fluorescence of the AB complex and isolated subunits were quite different in 3 M urea. These results indicate that CNB not only plays an important role in regulating CNA, but also protects it against denaturation by urea.  相似文献   

8.
Wang H  Du Y  Xiang B  Lin W  Li X  Wei Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(15):4461-4468
Calcineurin is composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). CNA contains the catalytic domain and three regulatory domains: a CNB-binding domain (BBH), a C-terminal calmodulin-binding domain (CBD), and an autoinhibitory domain (AID). We constructed a series of mutants of CNA to explore the regulatory role of its C-terminal regulatory domain and CaM. We demonstrated a more precise mechanism of CNA regulation by C-terminal residues 389-511 in the presence of CNB. First, we showed that residues 389-413, which were identified in previous work as constituting a CaM binding domain (CBD), also have an autoinhibiting function. We also found that residues 389-413 were not sufficient for CaM binding and that the CBD comprises at least residues 389-456. In conclusion, two distinct segments of the C-terminal regulatory region (389-511) of CNA inhibit enzyme activity: residues 389-413 interact with the CNB binding helix (BBH), and residues 457-482 with the active center of CNA.  相似文献   

9.
Wang H  Zhou CL  Lei H  Zhang SD  Zheng J  Wei Q 《IUBMB life》2008,60(8):549-554
Calcineurin (CN), the Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependant protein phosphatase, is the target for immunosuppressive drugs cyclosporine A (CsA) and FK506. These immunosuppressants can inhibit CN activity after binding with respective immunophilins. Based on the model of screening by using p-nitrophenyl phosphate as a substrate for preliminary screening and (32)P-labeled 19-residue phosphopeptide as a specific substrate for final determination, we found Kaempferol, a natural flavonol, could inhibit CN activity in purified enzyme and Jurkat T-cells. Unlike CsA and FK506, CN inhibition by kaempferol is independent of matchmaker protein and the inhibitory manner is noncompetitive. Through investigation of inhibitions for CNA and a series of its truncated mutants, we suggested that Kaempferol could directly act on the catalytic domain. Data also indicated that the CN inhibition by kaempferol could be enhanced when the enzyme was activated in the presence of CaM and CNB. CNB is necessary for mediating inhibition of enzyme by kaempferol. The result of RT-PCR also indicated that kaempferol had an inhibitory activity against IL-2 gene expression in activated Jurkat cells. All data suggested that kaempferol could be a new immunosuppressant of CN.  相似文献   

10.
Wang HL  Du YW  Xiang BQ  Lin WL  Wei Q 《IUBMB life》2007,59(6):388-393
Calcineurin (CN) is the common receptor for two immunophilin-immunosuppressant complexes, Cyp-CsA and FKBP-FK506. Calcineurin is composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). CNA contains the catalytic domain and three regulatory domains: a CNB-binding domain (BBH, 350-370), a calmodulin- binding domain (CBD, 389-413), and an autoinhibitory domain (AID, 457-482). To investigate the effects of these three regulatory domains on the inhibition of CN by the two drugs we constructed three C-terminal deletion mutants: CNAabc (1-456), CNAab (1-388) and CNAa (1-347). Inhibition of CNA and its derivatives by the two drugs was examined and compared with inhibition by peptides (AID [457-482] and LCBD [389-456], CBD and the extension of the AID were included). Our results show that the BBH is critical for inhibition of CN by Cyp-CsA and FKBP-FK506. The LCBD has no effect and the AID reduces the inhibition of CN by two complexes. In addition, LCBD and AID as autoinhibitors may inhibit enzyme activity via different sites.  相似文献   

11.
Liu P  Huang C  Wang HL  Zhou K  Xiao FX  Qun W 《FEBS letters》2004,577(1-2):205-208
Calcineurin (CN) is a heterodimer composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). Loop 7 lies within the CNA catalytic domain. To investigate the role of Loop 7 in enzyme activity, we systematically examined all its residues by site-directed deletion mutation. Our results show that the Loop 7 residues are important for enzyme activity. Besides deleting residues V314, Y315 or N316, enzyme activity also increased dramatically when residues D313 or K318 were deleted. In contrast, almost all activity was lost when L312 or N317 were deleted. Ni2+ and Mn2+ were effective activators for all active mutants. However, whereas the wild-type enzyme was more efficiently activated by Ni2+ than by Mn2+ with 32P-labeled R(II) peptide as substrate, the reverse was true in all the mutants. We also found that the effect of Loop 7 on enzyme activity was substrate dependent, and involved interactions between Loop 7 residues and the unresolved part of the CN crystal structure near the auto-inhibitory domain and catalytic site.  相似文献   

12.
Liu P  Huang C  Jia Z  Yi F  Yu DY  Wei Q 《Biochimie》2005,87(2):215-221
Calcineurin is composed of a catalytic subunit A (CNA) and a regulatory subunit B (CNB). In addition to the catalytic core, CNA further contains three non-catalytic domains--CNB binding domain (BBH), calmodulin binding domain (CBD), and autoinhibitory domain (AI). To investigate the effect of these three domains on the activity of CNA, we have constructed domain deletion mutants CNAa (catalytic domain only), CNAac (CNAa and CBD), and CNAaci (CNAa, CBD and AI). By using p-nitrophenylphosphate and (32)P-labeled R(II) peptide as substrates, we have systematically examined the phosphatase activities, kinetics, and regulatory effects of Mn(2+)/Ni(2+) and Mg(2+). The results show that the catalytic core has the highest activity and the order of activity of the remaining constructs is CNAac>CNAaci>CNA. Sequential removal of the non-catalytic domains corresponds to concurrent increases of the phosphatase activity assayed under several conditions. This observation clearly demonstrates that non-catalytic domains negatively regulate the enzyme activity and act as intra-molecular inhibitors, possibly through restraining the conformation elasticity of the catalytic core required for optimal catalysis or interfering with substrate access. The sequential domain deletion favors activation of the enzyme by Mn(2+)/Ni(2+) but not by Mg(2+) (except for CNAa), suggesting that enzyme activation by Mn(2+)/Ni(2+) is mainly mediated via the catalytic domain, whereas activation by Mg(2+) is via both the catalytic core and non-catalytic domains.  相似文献   

13.
Peng L  Qi Y  Wu H  Wei Q 《IUBMB life》2011,63(1):14-20
We have shown previously that glycyrol has an inhibitory effect on the immune response in mice by reducing calcineurin activity (Li et al., 2010, Pharm Biol 48:1177–1184). Here, we investigated the interaction of glycyrol with calcineurin A (CNA, catalytic A subunit of calcineurin) by spectroscopic methods and docking. We showed that glycyrol binds to CNA via hydrophobic interactions in a ratio of 1:1, and the main binding site is in the catalytic domain of CNA close to the calcineurin B subunit-binding domain. Binding of glycyrol changes the secondary structure of CNA, and this effect may possibly inhibit CN activity.  相似文献   

14.
The Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase calcineurin (CN), a heterodimer composed of a catalytic subunit A and an essential regulatory subunit B, plays critical functions in various cellular processes such as cardiac hypertrophy and T cell activation. It is the target of the most widely used immunosuppressants for transplantation, tacrolimus (FK506) and cyclosporin A. However, the structure of a large part of the CNA regulatory region remains to be determined, and there has been considerable debate concerning the regulation of CN activity. Here, we report the crystal structure of full-length CN (β isoform), which revealed a novel autoinhibitory segment (AIS) in addition to the well-known autoinhibitory domain (AID). The AIS nestles in a hydrophobic intersubunit groove, which overlaps the recognition site for substrates and immunosuppressant-immunophilin complexes. Indeed, disruption of this AIS interaction results in partial stimulation of CN activity. More importantly, our biochemical studies demonstrate that calmodulin does not remove AID from the active site, but only regulates the orientation of AID with respect to the catalytic core, causing incomplete activation of CN. Our findings challenge the current model for CN activation, and provide a better understanding of molecular mechanisms of CN activity regulation.  相似文献   

15.
Gao ZH  Zhong G 《Gene》1999,228(1-2):51-59
Calcineurin B (CnB) and calmodulin (CaM) are two structurally similar but functionally distinct 'EF-hand' Ca2+-binding proteins. CnB is the regulatory subunit of the CaM-stimulated protein phosphatase, calcineurin. CaM is a unique multifunctional protein that interacts with and modulates the activity of many target proteins. CnB and CaM are both required for the full activation of the phosphatase activity of calcineurin and are not interchangeable. The two proteins recognize distinct binding sites on calcineurin A subunit (CnA) and perform different functions. Phage-displayed peptide libraries (pIII and pVIII libraries) were screened with CnB and CaM to isolate peptides that could then be compared to determine if there were binding preferences of the two proteins. The Ca2+-dependent binding of phage-displayed peptides to CnB and CaM is specifically blocked by synthetic peptides derived from the CnB-binding domain of CnA and the CaM-binding domain of myosin light chain kinase respectively. Both CnB- and CaM-binding peptides have a high content of tryptophan and leucine, but CnB-binding peptides are more hydrophobic than CaM-binding peptides. CnB-binding peptides are negatively charged with clusters of hydrophobic residues rich in phenylalanine, whereas the CaM-binding peptides are positively charged and often contain an Arg/Lys-Trp motif. The binding preferences identified with peptide libraries are consistent with the features of the CnB-binding domains of all CnA isoforms and the CaM-binding domains of CaM targets.  相似文献   

16.
The calcineurin (CN) B subunit (CNB) is the regulatory subunit of CN, which is the only serine/threonine-specific protein phosphatase regulated by Ca2+/CaM. It has been shown to have potential as an anticancer agent, and has a positive effect on the phagocytic index and coefficient. We report here that CNB binds to proteasome subunit alpha type 7 (PSMA7) and inhibits the transactivation activity of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) via the proteasome pathway. In addition, we show that CNB represses the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which is regulated by HIF-1α. These results indicate that CNB modulates cellular proteasome activity via a specific interaction with PSMA7. This may provide a molecular basis for its anticancer and antiviral activities.  相似文献   

17.
Mu- and m-calpain are cysteine proteases requiring micro- and millimolar Ca2+ concentrations for their activation in vitro. Among other mechanisms, interaction of calpains with membrane phospholipids has been proposed to facilitate their activation by nanomolar [Ca2+] in living cells. Here the interaction of non-autolysing, C115A active-site mutated heterodimeric human mu-calpain with phospholipid bilayers was studied in vitro using protein-to-lipid fluorescence resonance energy transfer and surface plasmon resonance. Binding to liposomes was Ca2+-dependent, but not selective for specific phospholipid head groups. [Ca2+]0.5 for association with lipid bilayers was not lower than that required for the exposure of hydrophobic surface (detected by TNS fluorescence) or for enzyme activity in the absence of lipids. Deletion of domain V reduced the lipid affinity of the isolated small subunit (600-fold) and of the heterodimer (10- to 15-fold), thus confirming the proposed role of domain V for membrane binding. Unexpectedly, mutations in the acidic loop of the 'C2-like' domain III, a putative Ca2+ and phospholipid-binding site, did not affect lipid affinity. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that in vitro membrane binding of mu-calpain is due to the exposed hydrophobic surface of the active conformation and does not reduce the Ca2+ requirement for activation.  相似文献   

18.
Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase 1 (PDP1) catalyzes dephosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) in the mammalian pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC), whose activity is regulated by the phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle by the corresponding protein kinases (PDHKs) and phosphatases. The activity of PDP1 is greatly enhanced through Ca2+ -dependent binding of the catalytic subunit (PDP1c) to the L2 (inner lipoyl) domain of dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2), which is also integrated in PDC. Here, we report the crystal structure of the rat PDP1c at 1.8 A resolution. The structure reveals that PDP1 belongs to the PPM family of protein serine/threonine phosphatases, which, in spite of a low level of sequence identity, share the structural core consisting of the central beta-sandwich flanked on both sides by loops and alpha-helices. Consistent with the previous studies, two well-fixed magnesium ions are coordinated by five active site residues and five water molecules in the PDP1c catalytic center. Structural analysis indicates that, while the central portion of the PDP1c molecule is highly conserved among the members of the PPM protein family, a number of structural insertions and deletions located at the periphery of PDP1c likely define its functional specificity towards the PDC. One notable feature of PDP1c is a long insertion (residues 98-151) forming a unique hydrophobic pocket on the surface that likely accommodates the lipoyl moiety of the E2 domain in a fashion similar to that of PDHKs. The cavity, however, appears more open than in PDHK, suggesting that its closure may be required to achieve tight, specific binding of the lipoic acid. We propose a mechanism in which the closure of the lipoic acid binding site is triggered by the formation of the intermolecular (PDP1c/L2) Ca2+ binding site in a manner reminiscent of the Ca2+ -induced closure of the regulatory domain of troponin C.  相似文献   

19.
Calcineurin (CN) is a Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent serine/threonine protein phosphatase and is involved in many physiological processes such as T-cell activation and cardiac hypertrophy. The crystal structures of CN and its complexes with FKBP12-FK506 and cyclophilin-cyclosporin showed that the two structurally unrelated immunophilins-immunosuppressants bind to a common composite surface made up of the residues from both catalytic subunit and regulatory subunit of CN. The recognition of the immunophilins and immunosuppressive drugs is achieved by common but few distinct CN residues. However, the binding pattern of FKBP12-FK506 such as hydrogen bonding is significantly different from that of CyPA-CsA. This common but distinct recognition may indicate capacity of the composition surface for binding of other inhibitory proteins. The recognition site and the active site are adjacent and form an "L" shaped cleft. This implies that the immunophilin recognition site may also serve as a recognition site to define the narrow substrate specificity of calcineurin.  相似文献   

20.
The regulatory subunits of cAMP‐dependent protein kinase (PKA) are the major receptors of cAMP in most eukaryotic cells. As the cyclic nucleotide binding (CNB) domains release cAMP and bind to the catalytic subunit of PKA, they undergo a major conformational change. The change is mediated by the B/C helix in CNB‐A, which extends into one long helix that now separates the two CNB domains and docks onto the surface of the catalytic subunit. We explore here the role of three key residues on the B/C helix that dock onto the catalytic subunit, Arg226, Leu233, and Met 234. By replacing each residue with Ala, we show that each contributes significantly to creating the R:C interface. By also deleting the second CNB domain (CNB‐B), we show furthermore that CNB‐B is a critical part of the cAMP‐induced conformational switch that dislodges the B/C helix from the surface of the catalytic subunit. Without CNB‐B the Ka for activation by cAMP increases from 80 to 1000 nM. Replacing any of the key interface residues with Ala reduces the Ka to 25–40 nM. Leu233 and M234 contribute to a hydrophobic latch that binds the B/C helix onto the large lobe of the C‐subunit, while Arg226 is part of an electrostatic switch that couples the B/C helix to the phosphate binding cassette where the cAMP docks.  相似文献   

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