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1.
The presence of calmodulin-binding proteins in three neurosecretory vesicles (bovine adrenal chromaffin granules, bovine posterior pituitary secretory granules, and rat brain synaptic vesicles) was investigated. When detergent-solubilized membrane proteins from each type of secretory organelle were applied to calmodulin-affinity columns in the presence of calcium, several calmodulin-binding proteins were retained and these were eluted by EGTA from the columns. In all three membranes, a 65-kilodalton (63 kilodaltons in rat brain synaptic vesicles) and a 53-kilodalton protein were found consistently in the EGTA eluate. 125I-Calmodulin overlay tests on nitrocellulose sheets containing transferred chromaffin and posterior pituitary secretory granule membrane proteins showed a similarity in the protein bands labeled with radioactive calmodulin. In the presence of 10(-4) M calcium, eight major protein bands (240, 180, 145, 125, 65, 60, 53, and 49 kilodaltons) were labeled with 125I-calmodulin. The presence of 10 microM trifluoperazine (a calmodulin antagonist) significantly reduced this labeling, while no labeling was seen in the presence of 1 mM EGTA. Two monoclonal antibodies (mAb 30, mAb 48), previously shown to react with a cholinergic synaptic vesicle membrane protein of approximate molecular mass of 65 kilodaltons, were tested on total membrane proteins from the three different secretory vesicles and on calmodulin-binding proteins isolated from these membranes using calmodulin-affinity chromatography. Both monoclonal antibodies reacted with a 65-kilodalton protein present in membranes from chromaffin and posterior pituitary secretory granules and with a 63-kilodalton protein present in rat brain synaptic vesicle membranes. When the immunoblotting was repeated on secretory vesicle membrane calmodulin-binding proteins isolated by calmodulin-affinity chromatography, an identical staining pattern was obtained. These results clearly indicate that an immunologically identical calmodulin-binding protein is expressed in at least three different neurosecretory vesicle types, thus suggesting a common role for this protein in secretory vesicle function.  相似文献   

2.
Calmodulin-binding proteins have been identified in human platelets by using Western blotting techniques and 125I-calmodulin. Ten distinct proteins of 245, 225, 175, 150, 90, 82 (2), 60, and 41 (2) kilodaltons (kDa) bound 125I-calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner; the binding was blocked by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N'N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), trifluoperazine, and nonradiolabeled calmodulin. Proteins of 225 and 90 kDa were labeled by antisera against myosin light chain kinase; 60- and 82-kDa proteins were labeled by antisera against the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase and caldesmon, respectively. The remaining calmodulin-binding proteins have not been identified. Calmodulin-binding proteins were degraded upon addition of Ca2+ to a platelet homogenate; the degradation could be blocked by either EGTA, leupeptin, or N-ethylmaleimide which suggests that the degradation was due to a Ca2+-dependent protease. Activation of intact platelets by thrombin, adenosine 5'-diphosphate, and collagen under conditions which promote platelet aggregation (i.e., stirring with extracellular Ca2+) also resulted in limited proteolysis of calmodulin-binding proteins including those labeled with antisera against myosin light chain kinase and the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase. Activation by the Ca2+ ionophores A23187 and ionomycin also promoted degradation of the calmodulin-binding proteins in the presence of extracellular Ca2+; however, degradation in response to the ionophores did not require stirring of the platelet suspension to promote aggregation. Many Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated enzymes are irreversibly activated in vitro by limited proteolysis. Our data indicate that limited proteolysis of Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated enzymes also occurs in the intact platelet and suggest that the proteolysis is triggered by an influx of extracellular Ca2+ associated with platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

3.
The binding of 125I-calmodulin to intact secretion granules and protein gel blots of secretion granules from pancreatic islet tissue was examined. Binding of 125I-calmodulin to intact secretion granules was Ca2+-dependent and inhibited by the calmodulin inhibitors trifluoperazine and calmidazolium. Binding was inhibited by excess (200 nM) unlabeled calmodulin, but not by parvalbumin, a Ca2+-binding protein which has little sequence homology to calmodulin. In order to study the binding of calmodulin to specific secretion granule proteins, secretion granules were solubilized, and the solubilized proteins were resolved on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose, and incubated with 125I-calmodulin. Autoradiograms of the protein gel blots revealed the presence of three major calmodulin-binding proteins with approximate molecular weights of 73,000, 64,000, and 58,000. These proteins reversibly bound calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner. Unlabeled calmodulin in the range of 0.1-1.0 nM competed with 125I-calmodulin for binding to these proteins, whereas troponin and parvalbumin were 100 and 1000-fold less effective, respectively. Trifluoperazine blocked binding to the granule proteins in a range of 10(-4) to 10(-5) M, and calmidazolium was effective between 10(-5) and 10(-6) M. Trypsin, at a concentration which did not lyse granules, markedly inhibited calmodulin binding to intact secretion granules. Protein blots from trypsin-treated granules showed that the three major calmodulin-binding proteins were absent. These results indicate that Ca2+-dependent calmodulin-binding proteins are present on the cytoplasmic surface of islet secretion granules and are consistent with the hypothesis that these proteins may play a role in secretion granule exocytosis.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
To streamline detection of calmodulin-binding proteins, blotting techniques for the electrophoretic transfer of proteins onto nitrocellulose filters, followed by overlay with 125I-calmodulin, have been adapted. Autoradiography of the 125I-calmodulin-labeled blots allows the identification and quantitation of proteins that possess affinity for calmodulin. Five protocols for suppressing nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific interactions of 125I-calmodulin with electrophoretically separated proteins were investigated. Tween 20 and bovine serum albumin alone, as well as combinations of bovine serum albumin and poly(ethylene oxide) or hemoglobin and gelatin, were evaluated as quenching and enhancing agents. Tween 20 proved highly effective for quenching nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific 125I-calmodulin binding of a 61,000-Mr rat brain protein, which was only faintly observed on blots quenched with proteins alone. However, Tween 20 dissociated 50% of 68,000-Mr proteins and 80% of 21,000-Mr 125I-labeled protein standards from the nitrocellulose filter. An alternative, the combination of bovine serum albumin followed by incubation with 15,000- to 20,000-Mr poly(ethylene oxide), proved satisfactory for the recovery of 61,000-Mr calmodulin-binding activity and for the detection of calmodulin-binding peptides (50,000 to 14,000 Mr) produced by limited proteolysis of rat brain 51,000-Mr calmodulin-binding protein. These blotting procedures for detection of calmodulin-binding proteins are compatible with a variety of one-dimensional and two-dimensional electrophoresis systems, including a two-dimensional electrophoresis system utilizing urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate in the first dimension and nonurea sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the second, a system which proved useful for resolving calmodulin-binding proteins displaying anomalous electrophoretic migration in the presence of urea.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium-binding proteins and calmodulin-binding proteins were identified in gametes and zygotes of the marine brown algae Fucus vesiculosus, Fucus distichus, and Pelvetia fastigiata using gel (SDS-PAGE) overlay techniques. A calcium current appears to be important during cell polarization in fucoid zygotes (K.R. Robinson and L.F. Jaffe, 1975, Science 187, 70-72; K.R. Robinson and R. Cone, 1980, Science 207, 77-78), but there are no biochemical data on calcium-binding proteins in these algae. By using a sensitive 45Ca2+ overlay method designed to detect high-affinity calcium-binding proteins, at least 9-11 polypeptides were detected in extracts of fucoid gametes and zygotes. All samples had calcium-binding proteins with apparent molecular weights of about 17 and 30 kDa. A 17-kDa calcium-binding protein was purified by calcium-dependent hydrophobic chromatography and was identified as calmodulin by immunological and enzyme activator criteria. A 125I-calmodulin overlay assay was used to identify potential targets of calmodulin action. Sperm contained one major calmodulin-binding protein of about 45 kDa. Eggs lacked major calmodulin-binding activity. A 72-kDa calmodulin-binding protein was prominent in zygotes from 1-65 hr postfertilization. Both calmodulin-binding proteins showed calcium-dependent binding activity. Overall, the data suggest that the appearance and distribution of certain calcium-binding and calmodulin-binding proteins are under developmental regulation, and may reflect the different roles of calcium during fertilization and early embryogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
The calmodulin-binding domain on microtubule-associated protein 2   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) binds calmodulin with a stoichiometry approaching 1-1.5 mol of calmodulin/mol of MAP2 in the presence of calcium ion. The calmodulin-binding domain(s) of MAP2 were probed by cross-linking 125I-calmodulin with partially digested MAP2, by limited digestion of the preformed 125I-calmodulin-MAP2 adduct, and by cross-linking 125I-calmodulin with the projection- and assembly-promoting portions of MAP2. Cross-linking 125I-calmodulin with partially digested MAP2 resulted in radioactive adducts of approximately 300, approximately 235, approximately 205, approximately 58, and approximately 40 kDa. The radioactive adducts with smaller molecular mass became prominent with increasing time of digestion concomitant with loss of those with higher molecular size. Limited chymotryptic digestion of preformed 125I-calmodulin-MAP2 adducts also produced a approximately 58-kDa radioactive band followed later by a approximately 40-kDa band. Brief chymotryptic digestion and subsequent centrifugation of microtubules preformed with pure tubulin and MAP2 permitted separation of microtubule-bound MAP2 fragments (molecular mass = approximately 215, approximately 180, and approximately 36 kDa) from unbound fragments (molecular mass = approximately 240, approximately 180, and approximately 140 kDa). 125I-Calmodulin cross-linked only with the microtubule-bound MAP2 fragments (forming mainly the approximately 58-kDa adduct) and not with unbound MAP2 fragments. Since the apparent molecular size of calmodulin is approximately 21 kDa on these sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, the results indicate that partial digestion of MAP2 by chymotrypsin produces a approximately 37-kDa fragment which can be further degraded to a approximately 20-kDa fragment. The approximately 37-kDa fragment that is labeled corresponds to the previously identified assembly-promoting fragment that attaches to the microtubule.  相似文献   

8.
Calmodulin was isolated and purified to homogeneity from dog pancreas. Highly purified subcellular fractions were prepared from dog pancreas by zonal sucrose-density ultracentrifugation and assayed for their ability to bind 125I-calmodulin in vitro. Proteins contained in these fractions were also examined for binding of 125I-calmodulin after their separation by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in SDS. Calmodulin-binding proteins were detected in all subcellular fractions except the zymogen granule and zymogen-granule membrane fractions. One calmodulin-binding protein (Mr 240,000), observed in a washed smooth-microsomal fraction, has properties similar to those of alpha-fodrin. The postribosomal-supernatant fraction contained three prominent calmodulin-binding proteins, with apparent Mr values of 62,000, 50,000 and 40,000. Calmodulin-binding proteins, prepared from a postmicrosomal-supernatant fraction by Ca2+-dependent affinity chromatography on immobilized calmodulin, exhibited calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase, protein phosphatase and protein kinase activities. In the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, phosphorylation of smooth-muscle myosin light chain and brain synapsin and autophosphorylation of a Mr-50,000 protein were observed. Analysis of the protein composition of the preparation by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis revealed a major protein of Mr 50,000 which bound 125I-calmodulin. This protein shares characteristics with the calmodulin-dependent multifunctional protein kinase (kinase II) recently observed to have a widespread distribution. The possible role of calmodulin-binding proteins and calmodulin-regulated enzymes in the regulation of exocrine pancreatic protein synthesis and secretion is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The 125I-calmodulin gel overlay procedure was used to evaluate the effect of a heparin treatment on the calmodulin-binding proteins of bull spermatozoa. At concentrations that increase the in vitro fertilization rate of in vitro-matured oocytes, heparin induced a decrease in the binding to calmodulin (CaM) in 3 sperm proteins of 28, 30, and 49 kDa. The binding of these proteins to CaM was higher when Ca2+ was absent from the overlay procedure, and this binding was negatively correlated to the fertilization rate. These results suggest that sperm capacitation is associated with a decrease in the binding of CaM to the 28, 30, and 49 kDa sperm CaM-binding proteins. Implications of such a decrease are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Calcium- and calmodulin-regulated ATPase and protein kinase activities are shown to be strongly associated with brain actomyosin. Similar enzymatic activities and an invariable polypeptide profile on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were obtained for brain actomyosin taken through a solubilization-precipitation cycle (1.0-0.1 M KCl), or precipitated from buffers containing 1% Triton X-100 or 10 mM EDTA and 10 mM EGTA. These data suggest a specific complex of brain actomyosin with a protein kinase similar to calmodulin-dependent kinase II, a 190-kDa calmodulin-binding protein (P190), and a calmodulin-like polypeptide. P190 was the major substrate for endogenous calcium-dependent phosphorylation. 125I-Calmodulin overlay technique revealed four major calmodulin-binding polypeptides associated with brain actomyosin: 50- and 60-kDa subunits of the calmodulin-dependent kinase II, P190, and a high molecular weight polypeptide which is probably fodrin. A fraction enriched in P190 had Ca2(+)- and calmodulin-stimulated MgATPase activity, but not myosin-like K-EDTA ATPase activity. The lack of immunological cross-reactivity between brain myosin heavy chain and P190 confirmed that they are distinct molecules.  相似文献   

11.
The intestinal brush-border membrane contains a high concentration of calmodulin bound to a 105,000 dalton (105 kDa) protein. Binding of radioiodinated calmodulin to this protein does not require calcium but is inhibited by trifluoperazine and excess unlabelled calmodulin. Recent evidence suggests that the 105 kDa protein in conjunction with calmodulin may be involved in the regulation of calcium transport across the brush-border membrane. In this report, we evaluated the binding of the 105 kDa protein to other radioiodinated calcium-binding proteins including the vitamin D-dependent intestinal calcium-binding protein. We observed that troponin C and S100 beta protein both bound strongly to the 105 kDa protein. The binding of S100 beta was inhibited by EGTA, but was little affected by trifluoperazine and excess unlabelled S100 beta, whereas that of troponin C was inhibited by trifluoperazine and excess unlabelled troponin C, but was little affected by EGTA. Both troponin C and S100 beta bound to a large number of proteins to which calmodulin did not bind. The vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein (calbindin) from chick intestine and rat kidney also bound to the 105 kDa protein, albeit more weakly than troponin C, S100 beta and calmodulin. The binding of the calbindins was increased by EGTA and was little affected by trifluoperazine and excess unlabelled calbindin. Parvalbumin, rat osteocalcin, and alpha-lactalbumin showed little binding to any brush-border membrane protein. Our results indicate that the 105 kDa calmodulin-binding protein of the intestinal brush border can bind to a variety of calcium-binding proteins all of which contain homologous regions thought to be the calcium-binding sites. Only the binding of troponin C resembles the binding of calmodulin, however, in being inhibited by trifluoperazine and excess unlabelled ligand. The functional significance of these observations in terms of regulating calcium transport across the brush-border membrane remains to be established.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
We have developed a simplified procedure for the production of metabolically labeled calmodulin. We used bacterial clones (Escherichia coli) that were found to express VU-1 calmodulin, a calmodulin that is fully active with a variety of calmodulin-regulated enzymes. VU-1 calmodulin was labeled with sulfur-35 in bacteria maintained in a sulfur-free medium. Calmodulin was then purified by chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose. Under these conditions, the specific activity of the proteins was 150 to 400 cpm/fmol of calmodulin. To demonstrate the utility of this labeled VU-1 calmodulin, we examined the calmodulin-binding proteins in aortic myocyte preparation from Day 0 and Day 15 cultures by using both the gel and the nitrocellulose overlay protocols. The results showed that calmodulin-binding proteins are easily detected by the two procedures and that the profile of these target proteins changed in myocyte with time in culture. While most of these calmodulin-binding proteins have not been identified, the relative mobility on SDS-PAGE gels suggests that myosin light chain kinase (Mr approximately 137,000) was detected by these methods. We demonstrated here that the nitrocellulose overlay was faster than the gel overlay and that this technique can be useful for the study of calmodulin-binding proteins.  相似文献   

14.
To streamline detection of calmodulin-binding proteins, blotting techniques for the electrophoretic transfer of proteins onto nitrocellulose filters, followed by overlay with 125I-calmodulin, have been adapted. Autoradiography of the 125I-calmodulin-labeled blots allows the identification and quantitation of proteins that possess affinity for calmodulin. Five protocols for suppressing nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific interactions of 125I-calmodulin with electrophoretically separated proteins were investigated. Tween 20 and bovine serum albumin alone, as well as combinations of bovine serum albumin and poly(ethylene oxide) or hemoglobin and gelatin, were evaluated as quenching and enhancing agents. Tween 20 proved highly effective for quenching nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific 125I-calmodulin binding of a 61,000-Mr rat brain protein, which was only faintly observed on blots quenched with proteins alone. However, Tween 20 dissociated 50% of 68,000-Mr proteins and 80% of 21,000-Mr 125I-labeled protein standards from the nitrocellulose filter. An alternative, the combination of bovine serum albumin followed by incubation with 15,000- to 20,000-Mr poly(ethylene oxide), proved satisfactory for the recovery of 61,000-Mr calmodulin-binding activity and for the detection of calmodulin-binding peptides (50,000 to 14,000 Mr) produced by limited proteolysis of rat brain 51,000-Mr calmodulin-binding protein. These blotting procedures for detection of calmodulin-binding proteins are compatible with a variety of one-dimensional and two-dimensional electrophoresis systems, including a two-dimensional electrophoresis system utilizing urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate in the first dimension and nonurea sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the second, a system which proved useful for resolving calmodulin-binding proteins displaying anomalous electrophoretic migration in the presence of urea.  相似文献   

15.
Calcineurin, a major calmodulin-binding protein of brain, is a heterodimer composed of a 61,000 Mr calmodulin-binding subunit, calcineurin A, and a 19,000 Mr Ca2+-binding subunit, calcineurin B. The discovery of a calmodulin-regulated protein phosphatase in rabbit skeletal muscle with a similar subunit structure led to the identification of calcineurin as a protein phosphatase (AA Stewart, TS Ingebritsen, A Manalan, CB Klee, P Cohen (1982) FEBS Lett 137:80-84). Using rabbit polyclonal antibodies to bovine brain calcineurin, both subunits of calcineurin can be identified in crude homogenates of bovine brain by an immunoblotting technique. In crude homogenates of bovine skeletal and cardiac muscle, a 59,000-61,000 Mr doublet and a 15,000 Mr species (the electrophoretic mobility of calcineurin B) are also detected by this technique. The cross-reactivity of these species with antibodies to brain calcineurin indicates antigenic similarity between the muscle proteins and calcineurin, and suggests the existence of a family of structurally related calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatases. Like calcineurin, the 61,000 Mr subunits in skeletal and cardiac muscle bind calmodulin and are detected in crude tissue extracts by 125I-calmodulin gel overlay. Thus, both the 125I-calmodulin gel overlay method and the immunoblotting technique are useful in screening crude preparations, in which detection of calmodulin-stimulated protein phosphatase activity may be complicated by the many phosphatases present.  相似文献   

16.
The location of calmodulin in the pea plasma membrane   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Plasma membrane has been prepared from pea seedlings in the presence of [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid (EGTA). Calmodulin has been detected in these plasma membrane preparations using calcium overlay techniques, immunoblots, quantitation with antibodies raised against spinach calmodulin, phosphodiesterase activation, mobility shift, and heat stability. EGTA-stable calmodulin represents 0.5-1% of the total plasma membrane protein, and it is the only detectable calcium-binding protein in plasma membrane isolated under these conditions. The anti-spinach calmodulin reacts only with the N-terminal region of spinach calmodulin representing residues 1-106. The positioning of EGTA-stable calmodulin in the plasma membrane has been probed with trypsin and anti-spinach calmodulin. The data suggest that the calmodulin N-terminal region representing residues 1-106 projects from the membrane and could be available for binding other proteins. Calcium-dependent calmodulin binding to the plasma membrane has also been detected. Calcium-dependent calmodulin-binding proteins have been characterized using calmodulin overlay methods. The exposure of calmodulin-binding domains of most of these proteins from the plasma membrane is further suggested by their reaction with azidoiodinated calmodulin.  相似文献   

17.
A marked induction of 125I-calmodulin binding proteins (185kDa and 115kDa) occurred in the rat kidney in response to treatment with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (100 ng/day s.c. x 7d). These 125I-calmodulin binding proteins, measured by the gel overlay procedure, exhibited calcium dependence and were abolished in the presence of excess unlabelled calmodulin. The response was tissue specific: there was no change in 125I-calmodulin binding in rat testis, heart, and brain and only a modest elevation of binding to one calmodulin binding protein in the intestinal mucosa. These results are particularly important in suggesting that the calmodulin signal transduction mechanism may, via changes in its acceptor proteins, participate in mediating some biological effects of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3.  相似文献   

18.
Bovine adrenal medullae were homogenized in the presence or in the absence of EGTA and different subcellular fractions were prepared by differential and density gradient centrifugations. In the presence of the chelating agent, 69% of the total calmodulin, measured by radioimmunoassay, was present in the cytosol; the rest was bound to different membrane-containing fractions (nuclei, microsomal, and crude granule fraction). When the chelating agent was omitted, 43% of the calmodulin was present in the cytosol, the remaining calmodulin being membrane-bound. Further resolution of the crude granule fraction by sucrose density centrifugation demonstrated that the distribution of calmodulin in the density gradient was similar to the distribution of chromaffin granules rather than to that of mitochondria, Golgi elements, and lysosomes. In this case, there was also more calmodulin bound to chromaffin granules when EGTA was omitted from the density gradient. Experiments with 125I-calmodulin indicated the presence of high-affinity binding sites (KD = 1.3 X 10(-8) M; Bmax = 30 pmol/mg protein) for calmodulin in chromaffin granule membranes. Further, photoaffinity crosslinking experiments with 125I-calmodulin followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography indicated the presence of three calmodulin-binding polypeptide complexes (84,000; 41,000; and 38,000 daltons) in chromaffin granule membranes. These polypeptides were not labelled when either Ca2+ was omitted or an excess of nonradioactive calmodulin was present in the photolysis buffer, indicating the Ca2+ dependency and the specificity of the interaction. On the basis of the results described, it is suggested that the cellular levels of Ca2+ control the cellular distribution of calmodulin and its binding to specific chromaffin granule membrane proteins. Further, it is also suggested that the interactions between calmodulin and granule proteins might play a role in stimulus-secretion coupling.  相似文献   

19.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(5):1644-1647
Purified chloroplasts from spinach and pea leaves were subfractionated into envelope, thylakoid, and stroma fractions and were analyzed for calmodulin-binding proteins using a 125I-calmodulin gel overlay assay. Calmodulin binding was primarily associated with a major polypeptide (Mr 33,000) in the envelope membrane fraction. In contrast, major calmodulin-binding proteins were not detected in the thylakoid or stroma fractions. Our results provide the first evidence of calmodulin- binding proteins in the chloroplast envelope, and raise the possibility that calmodulin may contribute to the regulation of chloroplast function through its interaction with calmodulin-binding proteins in the chloroplast envelope. In addition, our results combined with those of other investigators support the proposal that subcellular organelles may be a primary site of calmodulin action.  相似文献   

20.
Calmodulin was detected in dogfish erythrocyte lysates by means of phosphodiesterase activation. Anucleate dogfish erythrocyte cytoskeletons bound calmodulin. Binding of calmodulin was calcium- dependent, concentration-dependent, and saturable. Cytoskeletons consisted of a marginal band of microtubules containing primarily tubulin, and trans-marginal band material containing actin and spectrinlike proteins. Dogfish erythrocyte ghosts and cytoskeletons were found to contain a calcium-dependent calmodulin-binding protein, CBP, by two independent techniques: (a) 125I-calmodulin binding to cytoskeletal proteins separated by SDS PAGE, and (b) in situ azidocalmodulin binding in whole anucleate ghosts and cytoskeletons. CBP, with an apparent molecular weight of 245,000, co-migrated with the upper band of human and dogfish erythrocyte spectrin. CBP was present in anucleate ghosts devoid of marginal bands and absent from isolated marginal bands. CBP therefore appears to be localized in the trans- marginal band material and not in the marginal band. Similarities between CBP and high molecular weight calmodulin-binding proteins from mammalian species are discussed.  相似文献   

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