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1.
Two‐pore channels (TPC) have been established as components of calcium signalling networks in plants and animals. In plants, TPC1 in the vacuolar membrane is gated open upon binding of calcium in a voltage‐dependent manner. Here, we analyzed the molecular mechanism of the Ca2+‐dependent activity of TPC1 from Arabidopsis thaliana, using site‐directed mutagenesis of its two canonical EF‐hands. Wild‐type TPC1 and TPC1‐D335A with a mutated first Ca2+ ligand in EF‐hand 1 produced channels that retained their voltage‐ and Ca2+‐dependent gating characteristics, but were less sensitive at Ca2+ concentrations <200 μm . Additional mutation of the first Ca2+ ligand in EF‐hand 2 resulted in silent TPC1‐D335A/D376A channels. Similarly, the single mutant TPC1‐D376A could not be activated up to 1 mm Ca2+, indicating that the second EF‐hand is essential for the Ca2+‐dependent channel gating. Molecular modeling suggests that EF‐hand 1 displays a low‐affinity Ca2+/Mg2+‐binding site, while EF‐hand 2 represents a high‐affinity Ca2+‐binding site. Together, our data prove that EF‐hand 2 is responsible for the Ca2+‐receptor characteristics of TPC1, while EF‐hand 1 is a structural site required to enable channel responses at physiological changes in Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

2.
It is widely believed that the selectivity of voltage-dependent calcium channels is mainly controlled by amino acid residues contained within four p-loop motifs forming the pore of the channel. An examination of the amino acid sequences of high voltage-activated calcium channels reveals that their domain III S5-H5 regions contain a highly conserved motif with homology to known EF hand calcium binding proteins, hinting that this region may contribute to channel permeation. To test this hypothesis, we used site-directed mutagenesis to replace three conserved negatively charged residues in the N-type calcium channel alpha1B subunit (Glu-1321, Asp-1323, and Glu-1332) with positively charged amino acids (lysine and arginine) and studied their effect on ion selectivity using whole cell and single channel patch clamp recordings. Whereas the wild type channels conducted barium much more effectively than calcium, the mutant displayed nearly equal permeabilities for these two ions. Individual replacement of residue 1332 or a double substitution of residues 1321 and 1323 with lysine and arginine, respectively, were equally effective. Disruption of the putative EF hand motif through replacement of the central glycine residue (1326) with proline resulted in a similar effect, indicating that the responses observed with the triple mutant were not due to changes in the net charge of the channel. Overall, our data indicate that residues outside of the narrow region of the pore have the propensity to contribute to calcium channel permeation. They also raise the possibility that interactions of calcium ions with a putative calcium binding domain at the extracellular side of the channel may underlie the differential permeabilities of the channel for barium and calcium ions.  相似文献   

3.
L-type (alpha(1C)) calcium channels inactivate rapidly in response to localized elevation of intracellular Ca(2+), providing negative Ca(2+) feedback in a diverse array of biological contexts. The dominant Ca(2+) sensor for such Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation has recently been identified as calmodulin, which appears to be constitutively tethered to the channel complex. This Ca(2+) sensor induces channel inactivation by Ca(2+)-dependent CaM binding to an IQ-like motif situated on the carboxyl tail of alpha(1C). Apart from the IQ region, another crucial site for Ca(2+) inactivation appears to be a consensus Ca(2+)-binding, EF-hand motif, located approximately 100 amino acids upstream on the carboxyl terminus. However, the importance of this EF-hand motif for channel inactivation has become controversial since the original report from our lab implicating a critical role for this domain. Here, we demonstrate not only that the consensus EF hand is essential for Ca(2+) inactivation, but that a four-amino acid cluster (VVTL) within the F helix of the EF-hand motif is itself essential for Ca(2+) inactivation. Mutating these amino acids to their counterparts in non-inactivating alpha(1E) calcium channels (MYEM) almost completely ablates Ca(2+) inactivation. In fact, only a single amino acid change of the second valine within this cluster to tyrosine (V1548Y) supports much of the functional knockout. However, mutations of presumed Ca(2+)-coordinating residues in the consensus EF hand reduce Ca(2+) inactivation by only approximately 2-fold, fitting poorly with the EF hand serving as a contributory inactivation Ca(2+) sensor, in which Ca(2+) binds according to a classic mechanism. We therefore suggest that while CaM serves as Ca(2+) sensor for inactivation, the EF-hand motif of alpha(1C) may support the transduction of Ca(2+)-CaM binding into channel inactivation. The proposed transduction role for the consensus EF hand is compatible with the detailed Ca(2+)-inactivation properties of wild-type and mutant V1548Y channels, as gauged by a novel inactivation model incorporating multivalent Ca(2+) binding of CaM.  相似文献   

4.
A mutant of the small subunit of rabbit calcium-dependent protease lacking the amino-terminal one-fourth produced in Escherichia coli could associate with the native large subunit to exert protease activity. Deletion of a few carboxyl-terminal residues of this variant small subunit caused a significant decrease in the protease activity after reconstitution with the native large subunit. Loss of the fourth EF hand loop region by further truncation of the variant small subunit made interaction with the large subunit impossible. The calcium binding assay revealed that the fourth EF hand structure of the rabbit small subunit, which has been previously demonstrated to possess two calcium-binding sites, can bind calcium ions. Furthermore it was established by site-directed mutagenesis that the first EF hand structure, in addition to the fourth one, is capable of binding calcium ions. Replacement of amino acids in the EF hand structure affected interaction with the native large subunit or the calcium sensitivity of the reconstituted product. These findings indicate that the EF hand structure-domain of the small subunit is essential for the full protease activity.  相似文献   

5.
Miro is a highly conserved calcium‐binding GTPase at the regulatory nexus of mitochondrial transport and autophagy. Here we present crystal structures comprising the tandem EF hand and carboxy terminal GTPase (cGTPase) domains of Drosophila Miro. The structures reveal two previously unidentified ‘hidden’ EF hands, each paired with a canonical EF hand. Each EF hand pair is bound to a helix that structurally mimics an EF hand ligand. A key nucleotide‐sensing element and a Pink1 phosphorylation site both lie within an extensive EF hand–cGTPase interface. Our results indicate structural mechanisms for calcium, nucleotide and phosphorylation‐dependent regulation of mitochondrial function by Miro.  相似文献   

6.
Flagellar calcium binding proteins are expressed in a variety of trypanosomes and are potential drug targets for Chagas disease and African sleeping sickness. The flagellar calcium binding protein calflagin of Trypanosoma brucei (called Tb24) is a myristoylated and palmitoylated EF‐hand protein that is targeted to the inner leaflet of the flagellar membrane. The Tb24 protein may also interact with proteins on the membrane surface that may be different from those bound to flagellar calcium binding proteins (FCaBPs) in T. cruzi. We report here the NMR structure of Tb24 that contains four EF‐hand motifs bundled in a compact arrangement, similar to the overall fold of T. cruzi FCaBP (RMSD = 1.0 Å). A cluster of basic residues (K22, K25, K31, R36, and R38) located on a surface near the N‐terminal myristoyl group may be important for membrane binding. Non‐conserved residues on the surface of a hydrophobic groove formed by EF2 (P91, Q95, D103, and V108) and EF4 (C194, T198, K199, Q202, and V203) may serve as a target protein binding site and could have implications for membrane target recognition.  相似文献   

7.
We have developed a method to place an EF‐lobe in a coordinate system that recognizes the similarity of its two EF‐hand domains as well as their relationship by a pseudo‐two fold axis, z. The x‐axis connects the center of mass, calculated from α‐carbons of helices E1 and F1, with the center of mass of E2 and F2. The resulting coordinate system is intrinsic to each EF‐lobe and requires no comparison with other EF‐lobes. It has provided an intuitive and informative way to compare EF‐lobes and especially those changes associated with calcium and/or target binding. We analyzed the EF‐lobes of calmodulin and of other subfamilies with four EF‐hands. We have rationalized a complex pattern of changes of conformation associated with calcium coordination and effector binding as observed in different subfamilies of EF‐hand proteins. Proteins 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
The structure of bovine intestinal calcium-binding protein (ICaBP) has been determined crystallographically at a resolution of 2.3 A and refined by a least squares technique to an R factor of 17.8%. The refined structure includes all 600 non-hydrogen protein atoms, two bound calcium ions, and solvent consisting of one sulfate ion and 36 water molecules. The molecule consists of two helix-loop-helix calcium-binding domains known as EF hands, connected by a linker containing a single turn of helix. Helix-helix interactions are primarily hydrophobic, but also include a few strategic hydrogen bonds. Most of the hydrogen bonds, however, are found in the calcium-binding loops, where they occur both within a single loop and between the two. Examination of the hydrogen bonding patterns in the calcium-binding loops of ICaBP and the related protein, parvalbumin, reveals several conserved hydrogen bonds which are evidently important for loop stabilization. The primary and tertiary structural features which promote the formation of an EF hand were originally identified from the structure of parvalbumin. They are modified in light of the ICaBP structure and considered as they apply to other calcium-binding proteins. The C-terminal domain of ICaBP is a normal EF hand, with ion binding properties similar to those of the calmodulin hands, but the N-terminal domain is a variant hand whose calcium ligands are mostly peptide carbonyls. Relative to a normal EF hand, this domain exhibits a similar KD for calcium binding but a greatly reduced affinity for calcium analogs such as cadmium and the lanthanide series. Lanthanides in particular may be inappropriate models for calcium in this system.  相似文献   

9.
Voltage-gated sodium channels maintain the electrical cadence and stability of neurons and muscle cells by selectively controlling the transmembrane passage of their namesake ion. The degree to which these channels contribute to cellular excitability can be managed therapeutically or fine-tuned by endogenous ligands. Intracellular calcium, for instance, modulates sodium channel inactivation, the process by which sodium conductance is negatively regulated. We explored the molecular basis for this effect by investigating the interaction between the ubiquitous calcium binding protein calmodulin (CaM) and the putative sodium channel inactivation gate composed of the cytosolic linker between homologous channel domains III and IV (DIII-IV). Experiments using isothermal titration calorimetry show that CaM binds to a novel double tyrosine motif in the center of the DIII-IV linker in a calcium-dependent manner, N-terminal to a region previously reported to be a CaM binding site. An alanine scan of aromatic residues in recombinant DIII-DIV linker peptides shows that whereas multiple side chains contribute to CaM binding, two tyrosines (Tyr1494 and Tyr1495) play a crucial role in binding the CaM C-lobe. The functional relevance of these observations was then ascertained through electrophysiological measurement of sodium channel inactivation gating in the presence and absence of calcium. Experiments on patch-clamped transfected tsA201 cells show that only the Y1494A mutation of the five sites tested renders sodium channel steady-state inactivation insensitive to cytosolic calcium. The results demonstrate that calcium-dependent calmodulin binding to the sodium channel inactivation gate double tyrosine motif is required for calcium regulation of the cardiac sodium channel.  相似文献   

10.
The structure prediction of the calcium binding component of troponin (TN-C) incorporates the following assumptions: (1) TN-C contains four regions homologous to the calcium binding "EF hand" of parvalbumin. (2) The four EF hands are arranged in two pairs with overall symmetry, 222. (3) The regions of the calcium binding component of troponin which are not in the four EF hands connect the hands within each pair, one to two and three to four, and connect the pairs, region two to region three. In the resulting model there is a well-defined hydrophobic core made from side chains of all eight helical regions and of the four calcium binding loops. The Ca2+ within pairs are separated by 11 A; while the pairs of Ca2+ are separated from one another by over 30 A. Cys-98 and Tyr-109 are suggested to be sensitive spectroscopic probes. Calcium(1) is suggested to be solvent accessible and most readily replaced by a lanthanide. Because of the overall symmetry of the calcium binding component of troponin, one can anticipate that the inhibitory- and the tropomyosin binding components of troponin are similar to one another.  相似文献   

11.
Kv channel-interacting proteins (KChIPs) and neuronal calcium sensor-1 (NCS-1) have been shown to interact with Kv4 channel alpha-subunits to regulate the expression and/or gating of these channels. Here we examine the specificity and sites of these proteins for interaction with Kv channel proteins. Immunoprecipitation and green fluorescent protein imaging show that KChIPs (but not NCS-1) effectively bind to Kv4.3 protein and localize at the plasma membrane when channel proteins are coexpressed. Analysis with chimeric proteins between KChIP2 and NCS-1 reveals that the three regions of KChIP2 (the linker between the first and second EF hands, the one between the third and fourth EF hands, and the C-terminal peptide after the fourth EF hand) are necessary and sufficient for its effective binding to Kv4.3 protein. The chimera with these three KChIP2 portions slowed inactivation and facilitated recovery from inactivation of Kv4.3 current. These results indicate that the sequence difference in these three regions between KChIPs and NCS-1 determines the specificity and affinity for interaction with Kv4 protein. Because the three identified regions surround the large hydrophobic crevice based on the NCS-1 crystal structure, this crevice may be the association site of KChIPs for the channel protein.  相似文献   

12.
The functional relevance of putative Ca(2+) binding motifs previously identified with Ca(2+) overlay binding analysis within the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor isoform (RyR1) was examined using mutational analysis. EF hands between amino acid positions 4081 and 4092 (EF1) and 4116 and 4127 (EF2) were scrambled singly or in combination within the full-length rabbit RyR1 cDNA. These cDNAs were expressed in 1B5 RyR-deficient myotubes and channel function assessed using Ca(2+)-imaging techniques, [(3)H]ryanodine binding measurements, and single channel experiments. In intact myotubes, these mutations did not affect functional responses to either depolarization or RyR agonists (caffeine, 4-chloro-m-cresol) compared with wtRyR1. However, in [(3)H]ryanodine binding measurements, both Ca(2+) activation and inhibition of the EF1 mutant was significantly altered compared with wtRyR1. No high affinity [(3)H]ryanodine binding was observed in membranes expressing the EF2 mutation, although in single channel measurements, the EF2-disrupted channel could be activated by micromolar Ca(2+) concentrations. In addition, micromolar levels of ryanodine placed these channels into the classical half-conductance state, thus indicating that occupancy of high affinity ryanodine binding sites is not required for ryanodine-induced subconductance states in RyR1. Disruption of three additional putative RyR1 calcium binding motifs located between amino acid positions 4254 and 4265 (EF3), 4407 and 4418 (EF4), or 4490 and 4502 (EF5) either singly or in combination (EF3-5) did not affect functional responses in 1B5 myotubes except that the EC(50) for caffeine activation for the EF3 construct was significantly increased compared with wtRyR1. However, in [(3)H]ryanodine binding experiments, the Ca(2+)-dependent activation and inactivation of mutated RyRs containing EF3, EF4, or EF5 was unaffected when compared with wtRyR1.  相似文献   

13.
The flexibility in the structure of calmodulin (CaM) allows its binding to over 300 target proteins in the cell. To investigate the structure-function relationship of CaM, we combined methods of computer simulation and experiments based on circular dichroism (CD) to investigate the structural characteristics of CaM that influence its target recognition in crowded cell-like conditions. We developed a unique multiscale solution of charges computed from quantum chemistry, together with protein reconstruction, coarse-grained molecular simulations, and statistical physics, to represent the charge distribution in the transition from apoCaM to holoCaM upon calcium binding. Computationally, we found that increased levels of macromolecular crowding, in addition to calcium binding and ionic strength typical of that found inside cells, can impact the conformation, helicity and the EF hand orientation of CaM. Because EF hand orientation impacts the affinity of calcium binding and the specificity of CaM's target selection, our results may provide unique insight into understanding the promiscuous behavior of calmodulin in target selection inside cells.  相似文献   

14.
G Lu  P C Sehnke    R J Ferl 《The Plant cell》1994,6(4):501-510
Arabidopsis GF14 omega was originally described because of its apparent association with a DNA-protein complex; it is a member of the 14-3-3 kinase regulatory protein family that is conserved throughout eukaryotes. Here, we demonstrated that recombinant GF14 omega is expressed in Escherichia coli as a dimer. Blot binding and electrophoretic mobility shift analyses indicated that GF14 omega binds calcium. Equilibrium dialysis further demonstrated that GF14 omega binds an equimolar amount of calcium with an apparent binding constant of 5.5 x 10(4) M-1 under physiological conditions. The C-terminal domain, which contains a potential EF hand motif, is responsible for the calcium binding. The C-terminal domain also cross-reacted with the anti-GF14 omega monoclonal antibody. In addition, GF14 omega is phosphorylated by Arabidopsis protein kinase activity at a serine residue(s) in vitro. Therefore, GF14 omega protein has biochemical properties consistent with potential signaling roles in plants. The presence of a potential EF hand-like motif in the highly conserved C terminus of 14-3-3 proteins together with the calcium-dependent multiple functions attributed to the 14-3-3 proteins indicate that the C terminus EF hand is a common functional element of this family of proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Activation of BK(Ca) channels by direct Ca(2+) binding and membrane depolarization occur via independent and additive molecular processes. The "calcium bowl" domain is critically involved in Ca(2+)-dependent gating, and we have hypothesized that a sequence within this domain may resemble an EF hand motif. Using a homology modeling strategy, it was observed that a single Ca(2+) ion may be coordinated by the oxygen-containing side chains of residues within the calcium bowl (i.e., (912)ELVNDTNVQFLD(923)). To examine these predictions directly, alanine-substituted BK(Ca) channel mutants were expressed in HEK 293 cells and the voltage and Ca(2+) dependence of macroscopic currents were examined in inside-out membrane patches. Over the range of 1-10 microM free Ca(2+), single point mutations (i.e., E912A and D923A) produced rightward shifts in the steady-state conductance-voltage relations, whereas the mutants N918A or Q920A had no effect on Ca(2+)-dependent gating. The double mutant E912A/D923A displayed a synergistic shift in Ca(2+)-sensitive gating, as well as altered kinetics of current activation/deactivation. In the presence of 1, 10, and 80 mM cytosolic Mg(2+), this double mutation significantly reduced the Ca(2+)-induced free energy change associated with channel activation. Finally, mutations that altered sensitivity of the holo-channel to Ca(2+) also reduced direct (45)Ca binding to the calcium bowl domain expressed as a bacterial fusion protein. These findings, along with other recent data, are considered in the context of the calcium bowl's high affinity Ca(2+) sensor and the known properties of EF hands.  相似文献   

16.
The regulatory light chains (RLCs) located on the myosin head, regulate the interaction of myosin with actin in response to either Ca2+ or phosphorylation signals. The RLCs belong to a family of calcium binding proteins and are composed of four "EF hand" ancestral calcium binding motifs (numbered I to IV). To determine the role of the first EF hand (EF hand I) in the regulatory process, chimaeric light chains were constructed by protein engineering, by switching this region between smooth muscle and skeletal muscle myosin RLCs. For example, chimaera G(I)S consisted of EF hand I of the smooth muscle (gizzard) RLC and EF hands II to IV of the skeletal muscle RLC, whereas chimaera S(I)G consisted of EF hand I of the skeletal muscle RLC and EF hands II to IV of the smooth muscle RLC. The chimaeric RLCs were expressed in Escherichia coli using the pLcII expression system, and after isolation and purification their regulatory properties were compared with those of wild-type smooth and skeletal muscle myosin RLCs. The chimaeric RLCs bound to the myosin heads in scallop striated muscle myofibrils from which the endogenous RLCs had been removed ("desensitized" myofibrils) with similar affinities to those of the wild-type smooth and skeletal muscle RLCs. Both chimaeric RLCs were able to regulate the actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of scallop myosin: G(I)S inhibited the ATPase in the presence and absence of Ca2+, like the wild-type skeletal muscle RLC, while S(I)G inhibited the myosin ATPase in the absence of Ca2+, and this inhibition was relieved on Ca2+ addition, in the same way as the wild-type smooth muscle RLC. Thus the type of regulation that the RLCs confer on the myosin is determined by the source of EF hands II to IV rather than that of EF hand I.  相似文献   

17.
Many essential physiological processes are regulated by the modulation of calcium concentration in the cell. The EF‐hand proteins represent a superfamily of calcium‐binding proteins involved in calcium signaling and homeostasis. Secretagogin is a hexa‐EF‐hand protein that is highly expressed in pancreatic islet of Langerhans and neuroendocrine cells and may play a role in the trafficking of secretory granules. We present the X‐ray structure of Danio rerio secretagogin, which is 73% identical to human secretagogin, in calcium‐free form at 2.1‐Å resolution. Secretagogin consists of the three globular domains each of which contains a pair of EF‐hand motifs. The domains are arranged into a V‐shaped molecule with a distinct groove formed at the interface of the domains. Comparison of the secretagogin structure with the solution structure of calcium‐loaded calbindin D28K revealed a striking difference in the spatial arrangement of their domains, which involves ~180° rotation of the first globular domain with respect to the module formed by the remaining domains. Proteins 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
We examine how a variety of cationic channels discriminate between ions of differing charge. We construct models of the KcsA potassium channel, voltage gated sodium channel and L-type calcium channel, and show that they all conduct monovalent cations, but that only the calcium channel conducts divalent cations. In the KcsA and sodium channels divalent ions block the channel and prevent any further conduction. We demonstrate that in each case, this discrimination and some of the more complex conductance properties of the channels is a consequence of the electrostatic interaction of the ions with the charges in the channel protein. The KcsA and sodium channels bind divalent ions strongly enough that they cannot be displaced by other ions and thereby block the channel. On the other hand, the calcium channel binds them less strongly such that they can be destabilized by the repulsion of another incoming divalent ion, but not by the lesser repulsion from monovalent ions.  相似文献   

19.
We examine how a variety of cationic channels discriminate between ions of differing charge. We construct models of the KcsA potassium channel, voltage gated sodium channel and L-type calcium channel, and show that they all conduct monovalent cations, but that only the calcium channel conducts divalent cations. In the KcsA and sodium channels divalent ions block the channel and prevent any further conduction. We demonstrate that in each case, this discrimination and some of the more complex conductance properties of the channels is a consequence of the electrostatic interaction of the ions with the charges in the channel protein. The KcsA and sodium channels bind divalent ions strongly enough that they cannot be displaced by other ions and thereby block the channel. On the other hand, the calcium channel binds them less strongly such that they can be destabilized by the repulsion of another incoming divalent ion, but not by the lesser repulsion from monovalent ions.  相似文献   

20.
We examined the structure and the distribution of binding activities within bacterially produced fragments of Drosophila alpha spectrin. By electron microscopy, purified spectrin fragments resembled the corresponding regions of native spectrin. The contour lengths of recombinant spectrin molecules were proportional to the length of their coding sequences, which is consistent with current models of spectrin structure in which individual segments of the polypeptide contribute independently to the structure of the native molecule. We localized two sites at which calcium may regulate spectrin function. First, a site responsible for calmodulin binding to Drosophila alpha spectrin was identified near the junction of repetitive segments 14 and 15. Second, a domain of Drosophila alpha spectrin that includes two EF hand calcium-binding sequences bound 45Ca in blot overlay assays. EF hand sequences from a homologous domain of Drosophila alpha actinin did not bind calcium under the same conditions.  相似文献   

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