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1.
Three proteins, sarcoplasmic CA2+-binding protein (SCP), Ca2+ vector protein (CaVP) and its target protein (CaVPT), are found abundantly in the higher invertebrate amphioxus. Whereas the function of SCP is likely to be related to Ca2+ and Mg2+ buffering, that of the latter two proteins, apparently linked together, is still not clear. In this study, affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies to these three proteins were used to study the extractability under physiological ionic conditions, the distribution in different tissues and the immunocytochemical localization in striated muscle. Our data show that SCP is essentially cytosolic whereas CaVP and CaVPT are partially associated with non-soluble components in amphioxus tissues. The tissue distribution, studied in transverse sections, shows that SCP is merely confined to striated muscle, whereas CaVP and CaVPT are also abundant in other tissues such as the spinal chord and the gonads. Thus the protein pair CaVP/CaVPT is likely to serve a general role in many tissues; however, no strict correlation was found in the distribution of the latter two proteins, suggesting that they may function independently. The detailed cytochemical localization of the three proteins in longitudinal sections of striated muscle revealed a discrete striation pattern in addition to a diffuse background. For SCP these striations are coincident with the Z line. The immunostaining for CaVP shows intense striations at the level of the Z lines alternating with weak striations at the M lines. For CaVPT the striations at the Z and M line are more or less of equal intensity, leading to a pattern with a 1m periodicity. The data lead to the conclusion that CaVP and CaVPT can form dynamic complexes with structural components of the sarcomere.  相似文献   

2.
A new Ca2+-binding protein, called CaVP, has been detected in muscle of the cephalochordate amphioxus and purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The Mr 18,000 protein (pI = 4.9) binds 2 Ca2+ atoms in a noncooperative way with an intrinsic binding constant of 8.2 X 10(6) M-1. Ca2+, but not Mg2+, induces a 10% increase in alpha-helical content in the metal-free protein. CaVP does not interact with chlorpromazine, but forms a Ca2+-dependent complex with melittin. In situ, CaVP forms a high affinity Ca2+-dependent complex with an Mr 36,000 protein present in muscle extracts of amphioxus. This complex has been purified by gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography, and the target protein further purified after dissociation of the complex in the presence of Ca2+-chelating agents and 6 M urea. The nearly pure Mr 36,000 protein also forms a Ca2+-dependent complex with calmodulin which, however, is less stable during electrophoresis than the CaVP-Mr 36,000 protein complex. Amphioxus CaVP does not substitute for calmodulin in a specific enzyme assay nor for troponin C in restoring Ca2+ sensitivity to skinned muscle fibers. Its polyclonal antibody does not cross-react with the latter two activators. No immunological cross-reacting counterpart of CaVP was found in organs of fish and rat. Its relative abundance in amphioxus muscle indicates that CaVP must underlie an important new limb of Ca2+ regulation in this particular muscle.  相似文献   

3.
Calcium vector protein (CaVP) from amphioxus is a two-domain, calcium-binding protein (18.3 kDa) of the calmodulin superfamily. Only two of the four EF-hand motifs (sites III and IV) have a significant binding affinity for calcium ions. We determined the solution structure of the domain containing these active sites (C-CaVP: W81-S161), in the Ca(2+)-saturated state, using NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics. The tertiary structure is similar to other Ca(2+)-binding domains containing a pair of EF-hand motifs. The apo state has spectroscopic and thermodynamic characteristics of a molten globule, with conserved secondary structure but highly fluctuating tertiary organization. Titration of C-CaVP with Ca(2+) revealed a stepwise ion binding, with a stable equilibrium intermediate in which only site III binds a calcium ion. Despite a highly fluctuating structure of the free site IV, the calcium-bound site III has a persistent structure, with similar secondary elements but different interhelix angle and hydrophobic packing relative to the fully calcium-saturated state.  相似文献   

4.
The amino acid sequence of a new Ca2+-binding protein (CaVP) from Amphioxus muscle (Cox, J. A., J. Biol. Chem. 261, 13173-13178) has been determined. The protein contains 161 amino acid residues and has a molecular weight of 18,267. The N terminus is blocked by an acetyl group. The two functional Ca2+-binding sites have been localized based on homology with known Ca2+-binding domains, on internal homology and on secondary structure prediction, and appear to be the domains III and IV. The C-terminal half of CaVP, which contains the two Ca2+-binding sites, shows a remarkable similarity with human brain calmodulin (45%) and with rabbit skeletal troponin C (40%). Functional domain III contains 2 epsilon-N-trimethyllysine residues in the alpha-helices flanking the Ca2+-binding loop. Sequence determination revealed two abortive Ca2+-binding domains in the N-terminal half of CaVP with a similarity of 24 and 30% as compared with calmodulin and troponin C, respectively. This half is also characterized by the presence of a disulfide bridge linking the N-terminal helix of domain I to the C-terminal helix of domain II. This disulfide bond is very resistant to reduction in the native state, but not in denatured CaVP. The optically interesting aromatic chromophores (2 tryptophan and 1 tyrosine residues) are all located in the nonfunctional domain II.  相似文献   

5.
Calcium vector protein (CaVP), a new protein isolated from Amphioxus muscle, binds in a Ca2(+)-regulated manner to a 27 kd target protein, named CaVPT, whose function has not been elucidated yet. CaVP bears significant sequence homology to both calmodulin and skeletal muscle troponin C, especially in the C-terminal half of the molecule, which presumably contains the two functional Ca2(+)-binding sites. The N-terminal half contains two abortive EF-hands and is intramolecularly crosslinked with a disulfide bond. Using the crystallographic structures of calmodulin and striated muscle troponin C as a framework, we constructed two different three-dimensional models of CaVP and modeled the intramolecular disulfide bridge. The modeling based upon the coordinates of calmodulin yields a Ca2(+)-filled sites configuration in the N-terminal half of the molecule, even though no Ca2+ is bound in this half, whereas the troponin C-derived model generates a Ca2(+)-empty sites configuration. The models predict that neither is the Ca2(+)-filled nor in the Ca2(+)-empty sites conformation is there any steric and/or energetic obstacle for the formation of the disulfide bridge and that the disulfide bond is poorly accessible to reducing reagents. The optical properties of the Trp and Tyr residues of CaVP indicate that the calmodulin-derived model represents the most plausible prediction.  相似文献   

6.
CaVP is a calcium-binding protein from amphioxus. It has a modular composition with two domains, but only the two EF-hand motifs localized in the C-terminal domain are functional. We recently determined the solution structure of this regulatory half (C-CaVP) in the Ca(2+)-saturated form and characterized the stepwise ion binding. This paper reports the (15)N nuclear relaxation rates of the Ca(2+)-saturated C-CaVP, measured at four different NMR fields (9.39, 11.74, 14.1, and 18.7 T), which were used to map the spectral density function for the majority of the amide H(N)-N vectors. Fitting the spectral density values at eight frequencies by a model-free approach, we obtained the microdynamic parameters characterizing the global and internal movements of the polypeptide backbone. The two EF-hand motifs, including the ion binding loops, behave like compact structural units with restricted mobility as reflected in the quite uniform order parameter and short internal correlation time (< 20 nsec). Comparative analysis of the two Ca(2+) binding sites shows that site III, having a larger affinity for the metal ion, is generally more rigid, and the amide vector in the second residue of each loop is significantly less restricted. The linker fragment is animated simultaneously by a larger amplitude fast motion and a slow conformational exchange on a microsecond to millisecond time scale. The backbone dynamics of C-CaVP characterized here is discussed in relation with other well-characterized Ca(2+)-binding proteins. Supplemental material: See www.proteinscience.org  相似文献   

7.
Primary structure of the target of calcium vector protein of amphioxus   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
CaVPT, a target protein of Ca2(+)-vector from amphioxus muscle, was purified from its complex with CaVP after dissociation by 6 M urea and chromatographies on DEAE-cellulose and calmodulin-Sepharose. The amino acid sequence of CaVPT has been determined. The protein is composed of 243 residues and possesses an unblocked N terminus. Its molecular weight is 26,621, distinctly lower than the apparent molecular weight deduced from electrophoresis on sodium dodecyl sulfate-containing gels. CaVPT contains a potential Asn-linked glycosylation site, four potential protein kinase C phosphorylation sites, and two casein kinase II phosphorylation sites. From the sequence the following three particular domains can be inferred: a collagen-like N-terminal segment, rich in Pro and Ala, that resembles the N-terminal segment of skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase; next to it (from residues 33 to 50) is located a strongly amphiphilic and basic alpha-helical segment which likely binds the calcium vector protein since a proteolytic cut after Arg50, occurring occasionally during the purification of CaVPT, impairs the binding to immobilized calmodulin. This segment is followed by two immunoglobulin folds. The two immunoglobulin folds typically belong to the C2 subclass and particularly resemble those present in the neural cell surface adhesion molecules NCAM, L1, F11, MAG, TAG-1, fasciclin II, and amalgam. Recently, the presence of immunoglobulin folds of this type has been reported in some intracellular muscular proteins, namely in smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase, striated muscle C protein and titin, as well as in the nematode 600-kDa protein twitchin. From this structural study we can formulate the working hypothesis that CaVPT acts on the structure of the thick filament in muscle or regulates, perhaps via other immunoglobulin fold-containing proteins.  相似文献   

8.
CaVP (calcium vector protein) is a Ca(2+) sensor of the EF-hand protein family which is highly abundant in the muscle of Amphioxus. Its three-dimensional structure is not known, but according to the sequence analysis, the protein is composed of two domains, each containing a pair of EF-hand motifs. We determined recently the solution structure of the C-terminal domain (Trp81-Ser161) and characterized the large conformational and dynamic changes induced by Ca(2+) binding. In contrast, the N-terminal domain (Ala1-Asp86) has lost the capacity to bind the metal ion due to critical mutations and insertions in the two calcium loops. In this paper, we report the solution structure of the N-terminal domain and its backbone dynamics based on NMR spectroscopy, nuclear relaxation, and molecular modeling. The well-resolved three-dimensional structure is typical of a pair of EF-hand motifs, joined together by a short antiparallel beta-sheet. The tertiary arrangement of the two EF-hands results in a closed-type conformation, with near-antiparallel alpha-helices, similar to other EF-hand pairs in the absence of calcium ions. To characterize the internal dynamics of the protein, we measured the (15)N nuclear relaxation rates and the heteronuclear NOE effect in (15)N-labeled N-CaVP at a magnetic field of 11.74 T and 298 K. The domain is mainly monomeric in solution and undergoes an isotropic Brownian rotational diffusion with a correlation time of 7.1 ns, in good agreement with the fluorescence anisotropy decay measurements. Data analysis using a model-free procedure showed that the amide backbone groups in the alpha-helices and beta-strands undergo highly restricted movements on a picosecond to nanosecond time scale. The amide groups in Ca(2+) binding loops and in the linker fragment also display rapid fluctuations with slightly increased amplitudes.  相似文献   

9.
Parvalbumin (PV) and the homologous protein oncomodulin (OM) contain three EF-hand motifs, but the first site (AB) cannot bind Ca2+. Here we aimed to recreate the putative ancestral proteins [D19-28E]PV and [D19-28E]OM by replacing the 10-residue-long nonfunctional loop in the AB site by a 12-residue canonical loop. To create an optical conformational probe we also expressed the homologs with a F102W replacement. Unexpectedly, in none of the proteins did the mutation reactivate the AB site. The AB-remodeled parvalbumins bind two Ca2+ ions with strong positive cooperativity (nH = 2) and moderate affinity ([Ca2+]0.5 = 2 microM), compared with [Ca2+]0.5 = 37 nM and nH = 1 for the wild-type protein. Increasing Mg2+ concentrations changed nH from 2 to 0.65, but without modification of the [Ca2+]0. 5-value. CD revealed that the Ca2+ and Mg2+ forms of the remodeled parvalbumins lost one-third of their alpha helix content compared with the Ca2+ form of wild-type parvalbumin. However, the microenvironment of single Trp residues in the hydrophobic cores, monitored using intrinsic fluorescence and difference optical density, is the same. The metal-free remodeled parvalbumins possess unfolded conformations. The AB-remodeled oncomodulins also bind two Ca2+ with [Ca2+]0.5 = 43 microM and nH = 1.45. Mg2+ does not affect Ca2+ binding. Again the Ca2+ forms display two-thirds of the alpha-helical content in the wild-type, while their core is still strongly hydrophobic as monitored by Trp and Tyr fluorescence. The metal-free oncomodulins are partially unfolded and seem not to possess a hydrophobic core. Our data indicate that AB-remodeled parvalbumin has the potential to regulate cell functions, whereas it is unlikely that [D19-28E]OM can play a regulatory role in vivo. The predicted evolution of the AB site from a canonical to an abortive EF-hand may have been dictated by the need for stronger interaction with Mg2+ and Ca2+, and a high conformational stability of the metal-free forms.  相似文献   

10.
The N-domain of troponin C (residues 1-90) regulates muscle contraction through conformational changes induced by Ca2+ binding. A mutant form of the isolated domain of avian troponin C (F29W) has been used in previous studies to observe conformational changes that occur upon Ca2+ binding, and pressure and temperature changes. Here we set out to determine whether the point mutation itself has any effects on the protein structure and its stability to pressure and temperature in the absence of Ca2+. Molecular dynamics simulations of the wild-type and mutant protein structures suggested that both structures are identical except in the main chain and the loop I region near the mutation site. Also, the simulations proposed that an additional cavity had been created in the core of the mutant protein. To determine whether such a cavity would affect the behavior of the protein when subjected to high pressures and temperatures, we performed 1H-NMR experiments at 300, 400, and 500 MHz on the wild-type and F29W mutant forms of the chicken N-domain troponin C in the absence of Ca2+. We found that the mutant protein at 5 kbar pressures had a destabilized beta-sheet between the Ca2+-binding loops, an altered environment near Phe-26, and reduced local motions of Phe-26 and Phe-75 in the core of the protein, probably due to a higher compressibility of the mutant. Under the same pressure conditions, the wild-type domain exhibited little change. Furthermore, the hydrophobic core of the mutant protein denatured at temperatures above 47 degrees C, while the wild-type was resistant to denaturation up to 56 degrees C. This suggests that the partially exposed surface mutation (F29W) significantly destabilizes the N-domain of troponin C by altering the packing and dynamics of the hydrophobic core.  相似文献   

11.
Calcium vector protein (CaVP) is an EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding protein, which is unique to the protochordate, amphioxus. CaVP is supposed to act as a Ca(2+) signal transductor, but its exact function remains unknown. Not only its function but also its exact evolutionary relationship to other Ca(2+)-binding proteins is unclear. To investigate the evolution of CaVP, we have determined the complete sequences of CaVP cDNAs from two amphioxus species, Branchiostoma lanceolatum and B. floridae, whose open reading frame cDNA and amino acid sequences show 96.5 and 98.2% identity, respectively. We have also elucidated the structure of the gene of B. floridae CaVP, which is made up of seven exons and six introns. The positions of four of the six introns (introns 1, 2, 3, and 5) are identical with those of calmodulin, troponin C, and the Spec protein of the sea urchin. These latter proteins belong to the so-called troponin C superfamily (TnC superfamily) and thus CaVP likely also belongs to this family. Intron 6 is positioned in the 3' noncoding region and is unique to CaVP, so it may represent a landmark of the CaVP lineage only. The position of intron 4 is not conserved in the genes of the TnC superfamily or CaVP, and seems to result from either intron sliding or the addition of an intron (randomly inserted into or close to domain III) to the genes of the TnC superfamily during their evolution.  相似文献   

12.
T F Busby  K C Ingham 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):6127-6135
A better understanding of the structure and function of C1 requires knowledge of the regions (domains) of the subcomponents that are responsible for Ca2+-dependent assembly. Toward this end, C1-s was digested with trypsin in the presence of Ca2+, a treatment that rapidly degraded the B chain, leaving a 56-kDa fragment comprised of a complete A chain disulfide linked to a small (less than 4-kDa) residual piece of the B chain. The purified fragment, referred to as C1-s-A, was shown by fast exclusion chromatography to be similar to C1-s in its ability to (1) reversibly dimerize in the presence of Ca2+, (2) substitute for C1-s in the formation of C1-r2-s2 tetramers, and (3) associate with C1-r and C1q to form macromolecular C1. Although C1-s-A was itself catalytically and hemolytically inactive, it competitively inhibited the expression of the hemolytic activity of C1-s in a reconstitution assay. When heated in the absence of Ca2+, C1-s exhibited a low-temperature transition (LTT) near 31 degrees C and a high-temperature transition (HTT) near 51 degrees C, similar to those previously observed in the homologous protein C1-r [Busby, T. F., & Ingham, K. C. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 5564-5571]. The midpoint of the LTT was shifted to 58 degrees C in 5 mM Ca2+ whereas the HTT was unaffected by Ca2+. C1-s-A exhibited only a LTT whose midpoint and Ca2+ dependence were similar to those of the LTT in C1-s. The HTT, which was accompanied by a loss of esterolytic activity, was reproduced in a plasmin-derived fragment representing the catalytic domain. These results provide strong support for the structural and functional independence of the catalytic and interaction domains of C1-s and strengthen current models regarding the role of these domains in various interactions. They also provide direct proof for the occurrence of Ca2+ binding sites on the A chain and demonstrate that all or most of the sites on C1-s that are responsible for its interaction with C1-r and C1q are located on the A chain.  相似文献   

13.
The structural properties of myristoylated forms of recombinant recoverin of the wild type and of its mutants with damaged second and/or third Ca(2+)-binding sites were studied by fluorimetry and circular dichroism. The interaction of wild-type recoverin with calcium ions was shown to induce unusual structural rearrangements in its molecule. In particular, protein binding with Ca2+ ions results in an increase in the mobility of the environment of Trp residues, in higher hydrophobicity, and in elevated thermal stability (its thermal transition shifts by 15 degrees C to higher temperatures) but has almost no effect on its secondary structure. Similar structural changes induced by Ca2+ are also characteristic of the -EF2 mutant of recoverin whose second Ca(2+)-binding site is modified and cannot bind calcium ions. The structural properties of the -EF3 and -EF2,3 mutants (whose third or simultaneously second and third Ca(2+)-binding sites, respectively, are modified and damaged) are practically indifferent to calcium ions.  相似文献   

14.
Ca2+-dependent inactivation (CDI) and facilitation (CDF) of the Ca(v)1.2 Ca2+ channel require calmodulin binding to a putative IQ motif in the carboxy-terminal tail of the pore-forming subunit. We present the 1.45 A crystal structure of Ca2+-calmodulin bound to a 21 residue peptide corresponding to the IQ domain of Ca(v)1.2. This structure shows that parallel binding of calmodulin to the IQ domain is governed by hydrophobic interactions. Mutations of residues I1672 and Q1673 in the peptide to alanines, which abolish CDI but not CDF in the channel, do not greatly alter the structure. Both lobes of Ca2+-saturated CaM bind to the IQ peptide but isoleucine 1672, thought to form an intramolecular interaction that drives CDI, is buried. These findings suggest that this structure could represent the conformation that calmodulin assumes in CDF.  相似文献   

15.
T F Busby  K C Ingham 《Biochemistry》1987,26(17):5564-5571
Fluorescent probes and other methods have been used to investigate the thermal stability of activated C1r and functionally intact fragments isolated from tryptic digests of the protein. This enzyme exhibits two irreversible transitions that differ with respect to their sensitivity to metal ions. The high-temperature transition occurs with a midpoint near 53 degrees C in 0.02 M tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane buffer and 0.15 M NaCl, pH 7.4. It is relatively insensitive to Ca2+ and ionic strength and is accompanied by a loss of catalytic activity. The low-temperature transition is most easily observed in the presence of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid and is completely abolished by 100 microM Ca2+. Its midpoint varies between 26 degrees C at low ionic strength and 40 degrees C in the presence of 0.5 M NaCl. The low-temperature transition results in extensive polymerization of the protein without loss of the esterolytic activity or the ability to react with C1 inhibitor; however, the ability to reconstitute hemolytically active C1 or even bind to C1s in the presence of Ca2+ is destroyed. A highly purified N-terminal fragment generated by tryptic digestion of C1r in the presence of Ca2+ retained its ability to interact with C1s, disrupting the formation of C1s dimers in the presence of Ca2+. In the absence of Ca2+, this fragment displays only a low-temperature transition that is very similar to the one observed with the whole protein and that destroys its ability to bind to C1s. Addition of Ca2+ stabilizes this fragment, shifting the midpoint of its melting transition upward by more than 20 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The influence of amino acid substitutions and deletions on the stability of bovine calbindin D9k, the smallest protein known with a pair of EF-hand calcium-binding sites, has been studied using circular dichroism and ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy. The five modifications are confined to one of the two Ca2+ -binding sites. The Ca2+-loaded forms of the wild-type and mutant calbindins are too stable to be significantly denatured by heating at 90 degrees C or by adding 8 M urea. For the Ca2+-free (apo) forms thermal unfolding appears to be only half complete at 90 degrees C, while denaturation is complete in 7-8 M urea. Four of the mutant proteins show reduced resistance towards unfolding by urea, but one of the modified proteins (Glu-17----Gln) shows an increased stability, presumably because of a reduced electrostatic repulsion in the native state. According to X-ray crystallographic data the OH group of the single tyrosine of calbindin (Tyr-13) is hydrogen-bonded to the carboxyl group of Glu-35, thus linking the two alpha helices flanking the N-terminal Ca2+ site. The pK of ionization of the Tyr-13 hydroxyl group was over 13 for calcium forms of the wild-type protein, between 12.3 and 12.8 for the calcium form of three mutants and between 11.5 and 11.7 for the apoproteins. Significant differences in pH stability between wild type and mutants were observed in the calcium forms, but were not apparent in the apo forms.  相似文献   

17.
Factor IX is an indispensable protein required in the blood coagulation cascade. It binds to the surface of phospholipid membrane by means of a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain situated at the N terminus. Recently, we showed that physiological concentrations of Mg2+ ions affect the native conformation of the Gla domain and in doing so augment the biological activity of factor IXa and binding affinity with its binding protein even in the presence of Ca2+ ions. Here we report on the crystal structures of the Mg2+/Ca2+-bound and Ca2+-bound (Mg2+-free) factor IX Gla domain (IXGD1-46) in complex with its binding protein (IX-bp) at 1.55 and 1.80 A resolutions, respectively. Three Mg2+ and five Ca2+ ions were bound in the Mg2+/Ca2+-bound IXGD1-46, and the Mg2+ ions were replaced by Ca2+ ions in Mg2+-free IXGD1-46. Comparison of Mg2+/Ca2+-bound with Ca2+-bound structures of the complexes showed that Mg2+ ion, which formed a bridge between IXGD1-46 and IX-bp, forced IXGD1-46 to rotate 4 degrees relative to IX-bp and hence might be the cause of a more tight interaction between the molecules than in the case of the Mg2+-free structure. The results clearly suggest that Mg2+ ions are required to maintain native conformation and in vivo function of factor IX Gla domain during blood coagulation.  相似文献   

18.
Ca2+-binding properties of the following proteins, classified as members of the troponin C (TNC) superfamily have been discussed: TNCs, calmodulins (CaMs), vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding proteins (CaBPs), myosin light chains (LCs), S-100 chains, parvalbumins (PVs), oncomodulin (OCM), sarcoplasmic calcium binding proteins (SCPs), calcineurin B (CB) and calcium vector protein (CaVP). Assuming the most probable domain pairing, the Ca2+-binding constants of these proteins have been predicted from their sequences using the method presented in the preceding paper. The results are critically compared with the available experimental data. For some proteins (TNCs, CaMs, CaBPs, LCs, CB and CaVP) our predictions are consistent with the experimental results. For the others, substantial discrepancies between the predicted and measured KCa values are observed. They result from some structural peculiarities of those proteins: a unique, three-domain organization in the case of PVs and OCM, unusual sequences of binding loops in the case of S-100 and a lack of a standard helix-loop-helix organization of Ca2+-binding domains in the case of SCPs.  相似文献   

19.
Interactions of Ca2+ binding proteins, pike (Esox lucius) parvalbumins pI 4.2 and 5.0, and bovine and human alpha-lactalbumins, with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles were studied by means of scanning microcalorimetry and intrinsic tyrosine and tryptophan fluorescence methods. The interactions of pike parvalbumins are modulated by Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding to the protein and induce some changes in the physical properties of both the proteins and liposomes. Liposomes increased thermal stability of Ca2+-loaded parvalbumin and decreased thermal stability of both Mg2+-loaded and metal-free protein. The interaction of parvalbumin with liposomes affects the phase transition from gel to liquid-crystalline state in liposomes. Ca2+-loaded alpha-lactalbumin interacts with liposomes in its native state while the metal-free protein binds to the liposomes mainly in its thermally denatured state. The results of the microcalorimetric and spectrofluorometric studies are supported by data obtained by means of gel-chromatography on Sepharose 4B. It may be suggested that these metal-modulated interactions of Ca2+-binding proteins with membranes have some functional significance.  相似文献   

20.
Rabphilin-3A is a neuronal C2 domain tandem containing protein involved in vesicle trafficking. Both its C2 domains (C2A and C2B) are able to bind phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, a key player in the neurotransmitter release process. The rabphilin-3A C2A domain has previously been shown to bind inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3; phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate headgroup) in a Ca2+-dependent manner with a relatively high affinity (50 microm) in the presence of saturating concentrations of Ca2+. Moreover, IP3 and Ca2+ binding to the C2A domain mutually enhance each other. Here we present the Ca2+-bound solution structure of the C2A domain. Structural comparison with the previously published Ca2+-free crystal structure revealed that Ca2+ binding induces a conformational change of Ca2+ binding loop 3 (CBL3). Our IP3 binding studies as well as our IP3-C2A docking model show the active involvement of CBL3 in IP3 binding, suggesting that the conformational change on CBL3 upon Ca2+ binding enables the interaction with IP3 and vice versa, in line with a target-activated messenger affinity mechanism. Our data provide detailed structural insight into the functional properties of the rabphilin-3A C2A domain and reveal for the first time the structural determinants of a target-activated messenger affinity mechanism.  相似文献   

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