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1.
DEAE-cellulose column chromatography of Neurospora crassa soluble mycelial extracts leads to the resolution of three major protein kinase activity peaks designated PKI, PKII, and PKIII.PKII activity is stimulated by Ca2+ and Neurospora or brain calmodulin. Maximal stimulation was observed at 2 µM-free Ca2+ and 1 µg/ml of the modulator. The stimulatory effect of the Ca2+-calmodulin complex was blocked by EGTA and by some calmodulin antagonists such as phenothiazine drugs or compound 48/80.PKII phosphorylates different proteins, among which histone II-A at a low concentration and CDPKS, the synthetic peptide specific for Ca2+-calmodulin dependent protein kinases, are the best substrates. Some phosphorylation can be detected in the absence of any exogenous acceptor. PKII activity assayed in the presence of histone II-A or in the absence of exogenous phosphate acceptor (autophosphorylation) co-elute in a DEAE-cellulose column at 0.28 M NaCl. As result of the autophosphorylation reaction of the purified enzyme a main phosphorylated component of 70 kDa was resolved by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. It is possible that this component is an active part of this enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Calmodulin and the regulation of smooth muscle contraction   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Calmodulin, the ubiquitous and multifunctional Ca2+-binding protein, mediates many of the regulatory effects of Ca2+, including the contractile state of smooth muscle. The principal function of calmodulin in smooth muscle is to activate crossbridge cycling and the development of force in response to a [Ca2+]i transientvia the activation of myosin light-chain kinase and phosphorylation of myosin. A distinct calmodulin-dependent kinase, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, has been implicated in modulation of smooth-muscle contraction. This kinase phosphorylates myosin light-chain kinase, resulting in an increase in the calmodulin concentration required for half-maximal activation of myosin light-chain kinase, and may account for desensitization of the contractile response to Ca2+. In addition, the thin filament-associated proteins, caldesmon and calponin, which inhibit the actin-activated MgATPase activity of smooth-muscle myosin (the cross-bridge cycling rate), appear to be regulated by calmodulin, either by the direct binding of Ca2+/calmodulin or indirectly by phosphorylation catalysed by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. Another level at which calmodulin can regulate smooth-muscle contraction involves proteins which control the movement of Ca2+ across the sarcolemmal and sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes and which are regulated by Ca2+/calmodulin, e.g. the sarcolemmal Ca2+ pump and the ryanodine receptor/Ca2+ release channel, and other proteins which indirectly regulate [Ca2+]i via cyclic nucleotide synthesis and breakdown, e.g. NO synthase and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase. The interplay of such regulatory mechanisms provides the flexibility and adaptability required for the normal functioning of smooth-muscle tissues.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Calpain I purified from human erythrocyte cytosol activates both the ATP hydrolytic activity and the ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport function of the Ca2+-translocating ATPase solubilized and purified from the plasma membrane of human erythrocytes and reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Following partial proteolysis of the enzyme by calpain I, both the initial rates of calcium ion uptake and ATP hydrolysis were increased to near maximal levels similar to those obtained upon addition of calmodulin. The proteolytic activation resulted in the loss of further stimulation of the rates of Ca2+ translocation or ATP hydrolysis by calmodulin as well as an increase of the affinity of the enzyme for calcium ion. However, the mechanistic Ca2+/ATP stoichiometric ratio was not affected by the proteolytic treatment of the reconstituted Ca2+-translocating ATPase. The proteolytic activation of the ATP hydrolytic activity of the reconstituted enzyme could be largely prevented by calmodulin. Different patterns of proteolysis were obtained in the absence or in the presence of calmodulin during calpain treatment: the 136-kDa enzyme was transformed mainly into a 124-kDa active ATPase fragment in the absence of calmodulin, whereas a 127-kDa active ATPase fragment was formed in the presence of calmodulin. This study shows that calpain I irreversibly activates the Ca2+ translocation function of the Ca2+-ATPase in reconstituted proteoliposomes by producing a calmodulin-independent active enzyme fragment, while calmodulin antagonizes this activating effect by protecting the calmodulin-binding domain against proteolytic cleavage by calpain.  相似文献   

4.
A high affinity Ca2+/Mg2+ ATPase has been identified and localized in synaptic membrane subfractions. This enzyme is stimulated by low concentrations of Ca2+ (1 M) believed to approximate the range of Ca2+ in the synaptosomal cytosol (0.1 to 5.0 M). The opiate agonist levorphanol, in a concentration-dependent fashion, inhibited Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis in lysed synaptic membranes. This inhibition was reversed by naloxone, while dextrorphan, the inactive opiate isomer, was without effect. Inhibition by levorphanol was most pronounced in a subfraction of synaptic membranes (SPM-1). The inhibition of Ca2+-stimulated ATP hydrolysis was characterized by a reduction inV max for Ca2+. Levorphanol pretreatment reduced the Hill coefficient (HN) of 1.5 to 0.7, suggesting cooperative interaction between the opiate receptor and the enzyme protein. Levorphanol, but not dextrorphan, also inhibited (28%) ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake by synaptic membranes. Opiate ligand stereoisomers were tested for their effects on calmodulin stimulating of high affinity Ca2+/Mg2+ ATPase in synaptic membranes. Levorphanol (10 M), but not the inactive stereoisomer (+)dextrorphan, significantly inhibited (35%) the calmodulin-activated Ca2+-dependent ATP hydrolysis activity in a preparation of lysed synaptic membranes. Both Ca2+-dependent and calmodulin-dependent stimulation of the enzyme in the presence of optimal concentrations of the other co-substrate were inhibited by levorphanol (35–40%) but not dextrorphan. Inhibition of ATP hydrolysis was characterized by a reduction inV max for both Ca2+ and calmodulin stimulation of the enzyme. Calmodulin stimulation of enzyme activity was most pronounced in SPM-1, the membrane fraction which also exhibits the maximal opiate inhibition (40%) of the Ca2+-ATPase. The results demonstrate that opiate receptor activation inhibits a high affinity Ca2+/Mg2+ ATPase in synaptic plasma membranes in a stereospecific fashion. The inhibition of the enzyme may occur by a mechanism involving both Ca2+ and calmodulin. Inhibition of calmodulin activation may contribute to the mechanism by which opiate ligands disrupt synaptosomal Ca2+ buffering mechanisms. Changes in the cytosolic distribution of synaptosomal Ca2+ following inhibition of Ca2+/Mg2+ ATPase may underlie some of the pharmacological effects of opiate drugs.  相似文献   

5.
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase (CaMKK) phosphorylates and activates specific downstream protein kinases including CaMKI, CaMKIV and 5′-AMP-activated protein kinase. In order to examine the variety of CaMKK-mediated signaling pathways, we searched for novel CaMKK substrate(s) using N6-(1-methylbutyl)-ATP and genetically engineered CaMKKα mutant, CaMKKα (Phe230Gly), that was capable of utilizing this ATP analogue as a phosphate donor. Incubation of rat brain extracts with recombinant CaMKKα (Phe230Gly), but not with wild-type kinase, in the presence of N6-(1-methylbutyl)-ATP and Ca2+/CaM, induced significant threonine phosphorylation of a 50 kDa protein as well as CaMKI phosphorylation at Thr177. The 50 kDa CaMKK substrate was partially purified by using serial column chromatography, and was identified as Syndapin I by LC-MS/MS analysis. We confirmed that recombinant Syndapin I was phosphorylated by CaMKKα and β isoforms at Thr355in vitro. Phosphorylation of HA-Syndapin I at Thr355 in transfected HeLa cells was significantly induced by co-expression of constitutively active mutants of CaMKK isoforms. This is the first report that CaMKK is capable of phosphorylating a non-kinase substrate suggesting the possibility of CaMKK-mediated novel Ca2+-signaling pathways that are independent of downstream protein kinases.  相似文献   

6.
We isolated cDNA clones for novel protein kinases by expression screening of a cDNA library from the basidiomycetous mushroom Coprinus cinereus. One of the isolated clones was found to encode a calmodulin (CaM)-binding protein consisting of 488 amino acid residues with a predicted molecular weight of 53,906, which we designated CoPK12. The amino acid sequence of the catalytic domain of CoPK12 showed 46% identity with those of rat Ca2+/CaM-dependent protein kinase (CaMK) I and CaMKIV. However, a striking difference between these kinases is that the critical Thr residue in the activating phosphorylation site of CaMKI/IV is replaced by a Glu residue at the identical position in CoPK12. As predicted from its primary sequence, CoPK12 was found to behave like an activated form of CaMKI phosphorylated by an upstream CaMK kinase, indicating that CoPK12 is a unique CaMK with different properties from those of the well-characterized CaMKI, II, and IV. CoPK12 was abundantly expressed in actively growing mycelia and phosphorylated various proteins, including endogenous substrates, in the presence of Ca2+/CaM. Treatment of mycelia of C. cinereus with KN-93, which was found to inhibit CoPK12, resulted in a significant reduction in growth rate of mycelia. These results suggest that CoPK12 is a new type of multifunctional CaMK expressed in C. cinereus, and that it may play an important role in the mycelial growth.  相似文献   

7.
Bovine brain contains two calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase kinases which are separated on Sephacryl S-300 column. One of these kinases has been purified to homogeneity and shown to belong to the calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II family. Phosphorylation of the 63 kDa phosphodiesterase by this purified protein kinase results in the incorporation of 1.0 mol phosphate per mol subunit and an accompanying increase in Ca2+ concentrations required for the phosphodiesterase activation by calmodulin. The protein kinase undergoes autophosphorylation to incorporate 1.0 mol phosphate per mol of subunit of the enzyme and the autophosphorylated enzyme is active, independent of the presence of Ca2+. The autophosphorylation reaction as well as the protein kinase reaction are rendered Ca2+ independent in less than 15 seconds when approximately one mol phosphate per mol protein kinase is incorporated. The result suggests that activation of phosphodiesterase phosphorylation reaction may occur prior to the activation of phosphodiesterase and phosphatase during a cell Ca2+ flux via the protein kinase autophosphorylation mechanism.Abbreviations SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - EGTA ethylene glycol bis (-aminoethyl ether) - N,N,N,N tetra acetic acid - EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - cAMP cyclic adenosine 35 monophosphate This work is supported by grants from the Medical Research Council of Canada (JHW), the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Alberta (JHW and RKS) and the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Saskatchewan (RKS)  相似文献   

8.
Although multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (CaM-kinases) are widely distributed in animal cells, the occurrence of CaM-kinases in the basidiomycetous mushroom has not previously been documented. When the extracts from various developmental stages from mycelia to the mature fruiting body of Coprinus cinereus were analyzed by Western blotting using Multi-PK antibodies, which had been generated to detect a wide variety of protein serine/threonine kinases (Ser/Thr kinases), a variety of stage-specific Ser/Thr kinases was detected. Calmodulin (CaM) overlay assay using digoxigenin-labeled CaM detected protein bands of 65 kDa, 58 kDa, 46 kDa, 42 kDa, and 38 kDa only in the presence of CaCl2, suggesting that these bands were CaM-binding proteins. When the CaM-binding fraction was prepared from mycelial extract of C. cinereus by CaM-Sepharose and analyzed with Multi-PK antibodies, two major immunoreactive bands corresponding to 65 kDa and 46 kDa were detected. CaM-binding fraction, thus obtained, exhibited Ca2+/CaM-dependent protein kinase activity toward protein substrates such as histones. These CaM-kinases were found to be highly expressed in the actively growing mycelia, but not in the resting mycelial cells. Mycelial growth was enhanced by the addition of CaCl2 in the culture media, but inhibited by the addition of EGTA or trifluoperazine, a potent CaM inhibitor. This suggested that CaM-dependent enzymes including CaM-kinases play crucial roles in mycelial growth of basidiomycete C. cinereus.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM) on the specific binding of [125I]omega-conotoxin GVIA (125I--CTX) to crude membranes from chick brain was investigated. When we examined the effects of the activation of various endogenous protein kinases on specific [125I]-CTX binding to crude membranes, we observed that Ca2+/CaM had an inhibitory effect regardless of whether or not the standard medium contained ATP (0.5 mM). Ca2+/CaM also had an inhibitory effect in a simple binding-assay medium containing HEPES-HCl buffer, BSA, Ca2+ and CaM, and this effect was dependent on the concentration of Ca2+. The effect of Ca2+/CaM was attenuated by the CaM antagonists W-7 and CaM-kinase II fragment (290–309). An experiment with modified ELISA using purified anti -CTX antibody indicated that Ca2+/CaM did not affect the direct binding of [125I]-CTX and CaM. These results suggest that Ca2+/CaM either directly or indirectly affects specific [125I]-CTX binding sites, probably N-type Ca2+ channels in crude membranes from chick whole brain.  相似文献   

10.
Ca2+-dependent inactivation (CDI) is a negative feedback regulation of voltage-gated Cav1 and Cav2 channels that is mediated by the Ca2+ sensing protein, calmodulin (CaM), binding to the pore-forming Cav α1 subunit. David Yue and his colleagues made seminal contributions to our understanding of this process, as well as factors that regulate CDI. Important in this regard are members of a family of Ca2+ binding proteins (CaBPs) that are related to calmodulin. CaBPs are expressed mainly in neural tissues and can antagonize CaM-dependent CDI for Cav1 L-type channels. This review will focus on the roles of CaBPs as Cav1-interacting proteins, and the significance of these interactions for vision, hearing, and neuronal Ca2+ signaling events.  相似文献   

11.
A protein, identifiable as calmodulin (CaM), has been isolated from the seedling tissue of Pharbitis nil. The method has been developed to isolate a high quality protein from plant tissue containing the high content of polyphenols. This protein was relatively heat-stable and bound to hydrophobic resin in calcium-dependent manner. It was recognized by the antibody against pea and carrot, but did not bind to antibody against Dictyostelium discoideum. This protein had Mr of 15 kDa and 18.5 kDa in the presence and absence of Ca2+, respectively, and was able to stimulate calmodulin-deficient cAMP phosphodiesterase. Based on its migration on SDS-PAGE gels, Mr and binding to anti-CaM antibodies it was deduced that calmodulin from P. nil is essentially identical to calmodulin isolated from other plants.  相似文献   

12.
In both cardiac and slow-twitch skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) there are several systems involved in the regulation of Ca2+-ATPase function. These include substrate level regulation, covalent modification via phosphorylation-dephosphorylation of phospholamban by both cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) as well as direct CaM kinase phosphorylation of the Ca2+-ATPase. Studies comparing, the effects of PKA and CaM kinase on cardiac Ca2+-ATPase function have yielded differing results; similar studies have not been performed in slow-twitch skeletal muscle. It has been suggested recently, however, that phospholamban is not tightly coupled to the Ca2+-ATPase in SR vesicles from slow-twitch skeletal muscle. Our results indicate that assay conditions strongly influence the extent of CaM kinase-dependent Ca2+-ATPase stimulation seen in both cardiac and slow-twitch skeletal muscle. Addition of calmodulin (0.2 M) directly to the Ca2+ transport assay medium results in minimal ( 112–130% of control) stimulation of Ca2+ uptake activity when the Ca2+ uptake reaction is initiated by the addition of either ATP or Ca2+/EGTA. On the other hand, prephosphorylation of the SR by the endogenous CaM kinase and subsequent transfer of the membranes to the Ca2+ transport assay medium results in stimulation of Ca2+ uptake activity (202% of control). These effects are observable in both cardiac and slow-twitch skeletal muscle SR. PKA stimulates Ca2+ uptake markedly (215% of control) when the Ca2+ uptake reaction is initiated by the addition of prephosphorylated SR membranes or by Ca2+/EGTA but minimally (130% of control) when the Ca2+ uptake reaction is initiated by the addition of ATP. These findings imply that (a) phospholamban is coupled to the Ca2+-ATPase in slow-twitch skeletal muscle SR (as in cardiac SR), and (b) the amount of Ca2+ uptake stimulation seen upon the addition of calmodulin or PKA depends strongly on the assay conditions employed. Our observations help to explain the wide range of effects of calmodulin or PKA addition reported in previous studies. It should be noted that, since CaM kinase is now known to phosphorylate the Ca2+-ATPase in addition to phospholamban, further studies are required to determine the relative contributions of phospholambanversus Ca2+-ATPase phosphorylation in the stimulation of Ca2+-ATPase function by CaM kinase. Also, earlier studies attributing all of the effects of CaM kinase stimulation of Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-ATPase activity to phospholamban phosphorylation need to be re-examined.  相似文献   

13.
Transient receptor potential (TRP) cation channels, which are conserved across mammals, flies, fish, sea squirts, worms, and fungi, essentially contribute to cellular Ca2+ signaling. The activity of the unique TRP channel in yeast, TRP yeast channel 1 (TRPY1), relies on the vacuolar and cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration. However, the mechanism(s) of Ca2+-dependent regulation of TRPY1 and possible contribution(s) of Ca2+-binding proteins are yet not well understood. Our results demonstrate a Ca2+-dependent binding of yeast calmodulin (CaM) to TRPY1. TRPY1 activity was increased in the cmd1–6 yeast strain, carrying a non–Ca2+-binding CaM mutant, compared with the parent strain expressing wt CaM (Cmd1). Expression of Cmd1 in cmd1–6 yeast rescued the wt phenotype. In addition, in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, hypertonic shock-induced TRPY1-dependent Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ release were increased by the CaM antagonist ophiobolin A. We found that coexpression of mammalian CaM impeded the activity of TRPY1 by reinforcing effects of endogenous CaM. Finally, inhibition of TRPY1 by Ca2+–CaM required the cytoplasmic amino acid stretch E33–Y92. In summary, our results show that TRPY1 is under inhibitory control of Ca2+–CaM and that mammalian CaM can replace yeast CaM for this inhibition. These findings add TRPY1 to the innumerable cellular proteins, which include a variety of ion channels, that use CaM as a constitutive or dissociable Ca2+-sensing subunit, and contribute to a better understanding of the modulatory mechanisms of Ca2+–CaM.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of ethanol in vitro on calmodulin-dependent Ca2+-activated ATPase (CaM–Ca2+-ATPase) activity were studied in synaptic plasma membranes (SPM) prepared from the brain of normal and chronically ethanol-treated rats. In SPM from normal animals, ethanol at 50–200 mM inhibited the Ca2+-ATPase activity. Lineweaver-Burk analysis indicates that the inhibition was the result of a decreased affinity of the enzyme for calmodulin, whereas the maximum activity of the enzyme was not changed. Arrhenius analysis indicates that the enzyme activity was influenced by lipid transition of the membranes, and ethanol in vitro resulted in a shift of the transition temperature toward a lower value. From animals receiving chronic ethanol treatment (3 weeks), the SPM were resistant to the inhibitory effect of ethanol on the enzyme activity. The resistance to ethanol inhibition was correlated with a higher enzyme affinity for calmodulin and a higher transition temperature, as compared with normal SPM. Since the calmodulin-dependent Ca2+-ATPase in synaptic plasma membranes is believed to be the Ca2+ pump controlling free Ca2+ levels in synaptic terminals, its inhibition by ethanol could therefore lead to altered synaptic activity.Abbreviations used ATPase adenosine triphosphatase - CaM calmodulin - CaM–Ca2+-ATPase calmodulin-dependent Ca2+-activated ATPase - EGTA ethylene-bis(oxyethylenenitrilo)tetraacetic acid - EtOH ethanol - Hepes N—2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - SPM synaptic plasma membranes - TFP trifluoperazine - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - Km Michaelis constant - Td transition temperature - Vmax maximum velocity  相似文献   

15.
Summary The Ca2+ channel blockers felodipine and bepridil are known to affect selectively functions of calmodulin. We studied their effects on calmodulin binding and ATPase activities of calmodulin-containing and calmodulin-depleted rabbit heart sarcolemma. Both drugs as well as the specific anti-calmodulin drug calmidazolium at a concentration of 50 µM, inhibited the Ca2+-stimulated calmodulin binding to calmodulin-depleted sarcolemma. Within the concentration range of 3 to 100 µM all three drugs also progressively inhibited Ca2+ pumping ATPase in calmodulin containing sarcolemma, although the enzyme was assayed at saturating Ca2+ (100 µM). The inhibitory potency of calmidazolium and bepridil, but not that of felodipine, increased when the membrane protein concentration in the ATPase assay was lowered. At low membrane protein concentration 30 µM calmidazolium completely blocked calmodulin-dependent Ca2+ pumping ATPase, whereas the inhibition caused by 30 µM felodipine or bepridil remained partially. A similar inhibition pattern of the drugs was found in the calmodulin binding experiments. Within a concentration range of 3 to 30 µM, all three drugs had negligible effects on the basal Ca2+ pumping ATPase which was measured in calmodulin-depleted sarcolemma. In conclusion, the characteristics of the anti-calmodulin action of felodipine on the rabbit heart sarcolemmal Ca2+ pumping ATPase are not different from those of bepridil. Both drugs may inhibit the enzyme by interference with the Ca2+-stimulated binding of calmodulin.Abbreviations Ca2+ pumping ATPase Ca2+ stimulated Mg2+-dependent ATP hydrolyzing activity - Na+ pumping ATPase Na+-stimulated K+- and Mg2+-dependent ATP hydrolyzing activity - Tris-maleate tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethane hydrogen maleate - Hepes N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - Mes 2-(N-morpholino) ethane sulfonic acid and Egta, ethylene glycol bis (p-amino ethylether)-N,N,N,N tetraacetic acid  相似文献   

16.
Dosemeci  Ayse  Choi  Calvin 《Neurochemical research》1997,22(9):1151-1157
A major protein in the postsynaptic density fraction is -CAM kinase II, the -subunit of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. Autophosphorylation of the postsynaptic density-associated CaM kinase II is likely to be a crucial event in the induction of activity-dependent synaptic modification. This study focuses on the regulation and consequences of Ca2+-independent autophosphorylation of the enzyme. In isolated postsynaptic densities, a sub-stochiometric level of autophosphorylation in the presence of Ca2+ is sufficient to trigger maximal Ca2+-independent autophosphorylation of -CaM Kinase II. A major fraction of the sites phosphorylated in the absence of Ca2+ can be dephosphorylated by the endogenous phosphatase activity in the preparation. Ca2+-independent autophosphorylation is correlated with a drastic decrease in calmodulin binding to postsynaptic densities. This may represent a physiological mechanism that lowers the calmodulin trapping capacity of the organelle, thus increasing the availability of calmodulin to other elements within a spine.  相似文献   

17.
We have demonstrated the presence of a Ca2+-dependent/calmodulin-stimulated protein kinase (PK) in chloronema cells of the mossFunaria hygrometrica. The kinase, with a molecular mass of 70,000 daltons (PK70), was purified to homogeneity using ammonium sulphate fractionation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and calmodulin (CaM)-agarose affinity chromatography. The kinase activity was stimulated at a concentration of 50 (AM free Ca2+, and was further enhanced 3–5-fold with exogenously added 3–1000 nm moss calmodulin (CaM). Autophosphorylation was also stimulated with Ca2+ and CaM. Underin vitro conditions, PK70 phosphorylated preferentially lysine-rich substrates such as HIIIS and HVS. This PK shares epitopes with the maize Ca2+-dependent/calmodulin-stimulated PK (CCaMK) and also exhibits biochemical properties similar to the maize, lily, and tobacco CCaMK. We have characterized it as a moss CCaMK.  相似文献   

18.
The bovine heart calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase can be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, resulting in a decrease in the enzyme's affinity for calmodulin. The phosphorylation of calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase is blocked by Ca2+ and calmodulin and reversed by the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase. The dephosphorylation is accompanied by an increase in the affinity of the phosphodiesterase for calmodulin. The CaM-dependent phosphodiesterase isozymes of heart and brain are regulated by calmodulin, but the affinity for calmodulin are different. Furthermore, the bovine heart CaM-dependent phosphodiesterase isozyme in stimulated at much lower Ca2+ concentration than the bovine brain isozymes. Results from this study suggest that the activity of this phosphodiesterase is precisely regulated by cross-talk between Ca2+ and cAMP signalling pathways.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+-activated chloride channels encoded by TMEM16A and 16B are important for regulating epithelial mucus secretion, cardiac and neuronal excitability, smooth muscle contraction, olfactory transduction, and cell proliferation. Whether and how the ubiquitous Ca2+ sensor calmodulin (CaM) regulates the activity of TMEM16A and 16B channels has been controversial and the subject of an ongoing debate. Recently, using a bioengineering approach termed ChIMP (Channel Inactivation induced by Membrane-tethering of an associated Protein) we argued that Ca2+-free CaM (apoCaM) is pre-associated with functioning TMEM16A and 16B channel complexes in live cells. Further, the pre-associated apoCaM mediates Ca2+-dependent sensitization of activation (CDSA) and Ca2+-dependent inactivation (CDI) of some TMEM16A splice variants. In this review, we discuss these findings in the context of previous and recent results relating to Ca2+-dependent regulation of TMEM16A/16B channels and the putative role of CaM. We further discuss potential future directions for these nascent ideas on apoCaM regulation of TMEM16A/16B channels, noting that such future efforts will benefit greatly from the pioneering work of Dr. David T. Yue and colleagues on CaM regulation of voltage-dependent calcium channels.  相似文献   

20.
We surveyed genome sequences from the basidiomycetous mushroom Coprinopsis cinerea and isolated a cDNA homologous to CMKA, a calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMK) in Aspergillus nidulans. We designated this sequence, encoding 580 amino acids with a molecular weight of 63,987, as CoPK02. CoPK02 possessed twelve subdomains specific to protein kinases and exhibited 43, 35, 40% identity with rat CaMKI, CaMKII, CaMKIV, respectively, and 40% identity with CoPK12, one of the CaMK orthologs in C. cinerea. CoPK02 showed significant autophosphorylation activity and phosphorylated exogenous proteins in the presence of Ca2+/CaM. By the CaM-overlay assay we confirmed that the C-terminal sequence (Trp346-Arg358) was the calmodulin-binding site, and that the binding of Ca2+/CaM to CoPK02 was reduced by the autophosphorylation of CoPK02. Since CoPK02 evolved in a different clade from CoPK12, and showed different gene expression compared to that of CoPK32, which is homologous to mitogen-activated protein kinase-activated protein kinase, CoPK02 and CoPK12 might cooperatively regulate Ca2+-signaling in C. cinerea.  相似文献   

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