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1.
Histidine-rich Ca(2+)-binding protein (HRC) is a 170 kDa protein that can be identified in the isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum from rabbit skeletal muscle by its ability to bind [125I]low-density lipoprotein on blots after SDS-PAGE and that appears to be bound to the junctional membrane through calcium bridges. Molecular cDNA cloning of this protein predicts the existence of a Ca(2+)-binding domain and of a distinct heavy-metal binding domain at the cystein-rich COOH-terminus. Here we demonstrate, using radioactive ligand blot techniques, that HRC protein binds 45Ca at low affinity, as well as being able to bind 65Zn, but at different sites, that are largely inhibitable by prior reductive alkylation of the protein. In contrast to Ca(2+)-binding protein calsequestrin not having detectable 65Zn-binding sites, HRC protein bound selectively to immobilized Zn2+ on IDA-agarose affinity columns. Our results also indicate that rabbit and human 140 kDa HRC protein have common properties.  相似文献   

2.
We have used four mutant calmodulins to study the regulation of human erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase by the calmodulin-dependent pathway; the conserved Glu at position 12 in each of the four Ca(2+)-binding domains of calmodulin (Glu31, Glu67, Glu104, or Glu140) was replaced by Ala. At pCa 7, where unmodified calmodulin maximally activates the erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase, all four mutants stimulated Ca(2+)-ATPase activity to the same maximal velocity. However, the concentrations of mutant calmodulins required for half-maximal activation (KCaM) were significantly higher than that for unmodified calmodulin and were strongly dependent on the domain in which the mutated Glu was located; substitution in either the first or second Ca(2+)-binding domain had little effect (2-3-fold increase in KCaM), whereas substitution in either the third or fourth domain resulted in a dramatic, 25-71-fold increase in KCaM. The same order of sensitivity was observed when the Ca2+ dependence of enzyme activation was measured at a constant 100 nM concentration of mutant calmodulin. These data point to dramatic differences in the functional significance of the replacement of the Glu at position 12 in each of the four Ca(2+)-binding domains for activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. The 2 Glu residues located in the carboxyl-terminal half of calmodulin (particularly Glu140) are crucial for activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase at physiologically significant Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
A novel Ca(2+)-binding protein, tentatively designated calgizzarin, has been purified to apparent homogeneity from chicken gizzard smooth muscle by W-7 (N-(6-aminohexyl-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide))-Sepharose affinity chromatography and ion-exchange chromatography. Application of W-7-Sepharose affinity chromatography to various tissues revealed that calgizzarin-like proteins were abundant in bovine aorta and rabbit lung. Using the same procedure, we could purify a calgizzarin-like protein from rabbit lung. Calgizzarin has a Mr of 13,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and approximately 30,000 as determined by gel filtration on a TSK G 3000SW high performance liquid chromatography column, suggesting that calgizzarin seems to be a rodlike protein. The isoelectric point of calgizzarin was found to be pH 5.8. Calgizzarin can exist as a dimer by forming a disulfide bridge. The 45Ca autoradiographic technique showed that the protein binds to Ca2+. On an alkaline/urea gel, calgizzarin migrated faster in the presence of EGTA than in the presence of CaCl2, thereby indicating a Ca(2+)-dependent conformational change in this protein. The partial amino acid sequence (65 amino acid residues) of calgizzarin was seen to be SLLAVFQRYAGREGDNLKLSKKEFRTFMNTELASFTKNQKDPAVVDRMMKRLDINSDGQLDFQEF, and two putative Ca(2+)-binding sites (GREGDNLKLSKKE and D INSDGQLDFQE) were detected. So far as the obtained 65-amino acid sequence is concerned, calgizzarin has approximately a 50% sequence homology with S-100 alpha, 47% with S-100 beta, and 39% with pEL-98 protein.  相似文献   

4.
Intralumenal sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-binding proteins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) controls the level of intracellular Ca2+ in cardiac and skeletal muscle by storing and releasing Ca2+. A set of intralumenal SR Ca(2+)-binding proteins has been identified that may serve important roles in SR Ca2+ storage and mobilization. The most prominent of these SR proteins, calsequestrin, is discretely localized to junctional SR. Other intralumenal proteins are more widely distributed throughout the SR. All of these intralumenal SR Ca(2+)-binding proteins are acidic, stain blue with dye Stains-All, and appear to be substrates for casein kinase II. The biochemistry and cell biology of lumenal SR proteins may conform to a paradigm now emerging from the study of endoplasmic reticulum proteins.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Annexins, the Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-binding proteins, are able to induce Ca(2+)-dependent aggregation of biomembranes. All the representatives of this family contain four or eight tandem repeats, 60-80 amino acids each. All these repeats include a highly conservative 17-member amino acid consensus sequence (an endonexin fold). The central domain comprises all these repeats and contains, in addition, the site(s) with a binding affinity for Ca2+ and phospholipids. Annexins are devoid of the classical "EF-hand" Ca(2+)-binding domain and can therefore be assigned to a new family of Ca(2+)-binding proteins.  相似文献   

7.
A direct binding of HRC (histidine-rich Ca(2+)-binding protein) to triadin, the main transmembrane protein of the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) of skeletal muscle, seems well supported. Opinions are still divided, however, concerning the triadin domain involved, either the cytoplasmic or the lumenal domain, and the exact role played by Ca(2+), in the protein-to-protein interaction. Further support for colocalization of HRC with triadin cytoplasmic domain is provided here by experiments of mild tryptic digestion of tightly sealed TC vesicles. Accordingly, we show that HRC is preferentially phosphorylated by endogenous CaM K II, anchored to SR membrane on the cytoplasmic side, and not by lumenally located casein kinase 2. We demonstrate that HRC can be isolated as a complex with triadin, following equilibrium sucrose-density centrifugation in the presence of mM Ca(2+). Here, we characterized the COOH-terminal portion of rabbit HRC, expressed and purified as a fusion protein (HRC(569-852)), with respect to Ca(2+)-binding properties, and to the interaction with triadin on blots, as a function of the concentration of Ca(2+). Our results identify the polyglutamic stretch near the COOH terminus, as the Ca(2+)-binding site responsible, both for the acceleration in mobility of HRC on SDS-PAGE in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Ca(2+), and for the enhancement by high Ca(2+) of the interaction between HRC and triadin cytoplasmic segment. (c)2001 Elsevier Science.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from R. sphaeroides contains one Ca(2+) ion per enzyme that is not removed by dialysis versus EGTA. This is similar to COX from Paracoccus denitrificans [Pfitzner, U., Kirichenko, A., Konstantinov, A. A., Mertens, M., Wittershagen, A., Kolbesen, B. O., Steffens, G. C. M., Harrenga, A., Michel, H., and Ludwig, B. (1999) FEBS Lett. 456, 365-369] and is in contrast to the bovine oxidase, which binds Ca(2+) reversibly. A series of R. sphaeroides mutants with replacements of the E54, Q61, and D485 residues, which form the Ca(2+) coordination sphere in subunit I, has been generated. The substitutions for the E54 residue do not assemble normally. Mutants with the Q61 replacements are active and retain the tightly bound Ca(2+); their spectra are not perturbed by added Ca(2+) or EGTA. The D485A mutant is active, binds to Ca(2+) reversibly, like the mitochondrial oxidase, and exhibits the red shift in the heme a absorption spectrum upon Ca(2+) binding for both reduced and oxidized states of heme a. The K(d) value of 6 nM determined by equilibrium titrations is much lower than that reported for the homologous D477A mutant of Paracoccus denitrificans or for bovine COX (K(d) = 1-3 microM). The rate of Ca(2+) binding with the D485A oxidase (k(on) = 5 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)) is comparable to that observed earlier for bovine COX, but the off-rate is extremely slow (approximately 10(-3) s(-1)) and highly temperature-dependent. The k(off) /k(on) ratio (190 nM) is about 30-fold higher than the equilibrium K(d) of 6 nM, indicating that formation of the Ca(2+)-adduct may involve more than one step. Sodium ions reverse the Ca(2+)-induced red shift of heme a and dramatically decrease the rate of Ca(2+) binding to the D485A mutant COX. With the D485A mutant, 1 Ca(2+) competes with 1 Na(+) for the binding site, whereas 2 Na(+) compete with 1 Ca(2+) for binding to the bovine oxidase. This finding indicates that the aspartic residue D442 (a homologue of R. sphaeroides D485) may be the second Na(+) binding site in bovine COX. No effect of Ca(2+) binding to the D485A mutant is evident on either the steady-state enzymatic activity or several time-resolved partial steps of the catalytic cycle. It is proposed that the tightly bound Ca(2+) plays a structural role in the bacterial oxidases while the reversible binding with the mammalian enzyme may be involved in the regulation of mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

9.
We have characterized a putative Ca(2+)-ATPase from the pathogenic bacterium Listeria monocytogenes with the locus tag lmo0841. The purified and detergent-solubilized protein, which we have named Listeria monocytogenes Ca(2+)-ATPase 1 (LMCA1), performs a Ca(2+)-dependent ATP hydrolysis and actively transports Ca(2+) after reconstitution in dioleoylphosphatidyl-choline vesicles. Despite a high sequence similarity to the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA1a) and plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA), LMCA1 exhibits important biochemical differences such as a low Ca(2+) affinity (K(0.5) ~80 μm) and a high pH optimum (pH ~9). Mutational studies indicate that the unusually high pH optimum can be partially ascribed to the presence of an arginine residue (Arg-795), corresponding in sequence alignments to the Glu-908 position at Ca(2+) binding site I of rabbit SERCA1a, but probably with an exposed position in LMCA1. The arginine is characteristic of a large group of putative bacterial Ca(2+)-ATPases. Moreover, we demonstrate that H(+) is countertransported with a transport stoichiometry of 1 Ca(2+) out and 1 H(+) in per ATP hydrolyzed. The ATPase may serve an important function by removing Ca(2+) from the microorganism in environmental conditions when e.g. stressed by high Ca(2+) and alkaline pH.  相似文献   

10.
The betagamma-crystallin superfamily consists of a class of homologous two-domain proteins with Greek-key fold. Protein S, a Ca(2+)-binding spore-coat protein from the soil bacterium Myxococcus xanthus exhibits a high degree of sequential and structural homology with gammaB-crystallin from the vertebrate eye lens. In contrast to gammaB-crystallin, which undergoes irreversible aggregation upon thermal unfolding, protein S folds reversibly and may therefore serve as a model in the investigation of the thermodynamic stability of the eye-lens crystallins. The thermal denaturation of recombinant protein S (PS) and its isolated domains was studied by differential scanning calorimetry in the absence and in the presence of Ca(2+) at varying pH. Ca(2+)-binding leads to a stabilization of PS and its domains and increases the cooperativity of their equilibrium unfolding transitions. The isolated N-terminal and C-terminal domains (NPS and CPS) obey the two-state model, independent of the pH and Ca(2+)-binding; in the case of PS, under all conditions, an equilibrium intermediate is populated. The first transition of PS may be assigned to the denaturation of the C-terminal domain and the loss of domain interactions, whereas the second one coincides with the denaturation of the isolated N-terminal domain. At pH 7.0, in the presence of Ca(2+), where PS exhibits maximal stability, the domain interactions at 20 degrees C contribute 20 kJ/mol to the overall stability of the intact protein.  相似文献   

11.
We have used near-infrared (NIR) vibronic fluorescence spectroscopy to study the vibrational structure of ligands associated with model complexes of the lanthanide Yb(3+). This technique exploits the similar binding properties of the lanthanide Yb(3+) to probe Ca(2+)-binding sites in proteins. The (NIR) fluorescence of complexed Yb(3+) exhibits, in addition to main 0-0 (2F5/2----2F7/2) electronic transition of Yb(3+), weak vibronic sidebands which provide infrared-like, local vibrational spectra of the chelates (inner sphere ligands) of Yb(3+). A similar approach has been used for the lanthanide Gd(3+) (MacGregor, R.B., Jr (1989) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 274, 312-316) which fluoresces in the UV and which is usually complicated by amino-acid residues fluorescing in the same spectral region. In this same spectral region, other complications in studying photosynthetic membranes occur in the form of the excitation wavelength being actinic, promoting photodegradation of the membranes, as well as the reabsorption of Gd(3+) fluorescence. NIR excitation and fluorescence detection of Yb(3+) avoid these problems when studying photosynthetic membranes. A preliminary study has been conducted here on rat muscle parvalbumin.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic studies of Ca(2+)-binding proteins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
M Jackson  P I Haris  D Chapman 《Biochemistry》1991,30(40):9681-9686
The secondary structures of calmodulin and parvalbumin are well established from X-ray diffraction and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic studies, which indicate that these proteins are predominantly alpha-helical in character. Recent infrared studies have nevertheless suggested that the helical structures present in these proteins in solution are not the standard alpha-helix but rather some kind of distorted helices [Trewhella, J., et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 1294]. The evidence for this was the unusually low amide I frequency for calmodulin and troponin C in 2H2O solution. The studies presented here, however, suggest that the helical structures in these proteins are not significantly distorted, for two reasons. First, distorted helical structures have weaker hydrogen bonds than the standard alpha-helix and would therefore be expected to absorb at a higher rather than a lower frequency. Second, distorted helical structures would absorb at an unusual frequency in H2O solutions which is not the case for the proteins studied here. The band frequency of these proteins is observed to occur at a frequency observed with other proteins known to contain predominantly alpha-helical structures. Quantitative analysis of the FT-IR spectra of calmodulin (67% alpha-helix) and parvalbumin (68% alpha-helix) in H2O in the presence of Ca2+ gives helical contents similar to those reported by X-ray studies. This raises the question as to why these proteins in H2O show a normal frequency for the presence of alpha-helical structures and an abnormal frequency in 2H2O. Addition of deuterated glycerol to the proteins in 2H2O solutions results in a significant shift of absorbance to higher frequency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
M K Manion  Z Su  M Villain  J E Blalock 《FASEB journal》2000,14(10):1297-1306
Calmodulin (CaM), as well as other Ca(2+) binding motifs (i.e., EF hands), have been demonstrated to be Ca(2+) sensors for several ion channel types, usually resulting in an inactivation in a negative feedback manner. This provides a novel target for the regulation of such channels. We have designed peptides that interact with EF hands of CaM in a specific and productive manner. Here we have examined whether these peptides block certain Ca(2+)-permeant channels and inhibit biological activity that is dependent on the influx of Ca(2+). We found that these peptides are able to enter the cell and directly, as well as indirectly (through CaM), block the activity of glutamate receptor channels in cultured neocortical neurons and a nonselective cation channel in Jurkat T cells that is activated by HIV-1 gp120. As a consequence, apoptosis mediated by an influx of Ca(2+) through these channels was also dose-dependently inhibited by these novel peptides. Thus, this new type of Ca(2+) channel blocker may have utility in controlling apoptosis due to HIV infection or neuronal loss due to ischemia.  相似文献   

15.
The use of competitive isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) to measure high-affinity binding constants has been largely restricted to systems with a single binding site or multiple identical sites. This study demonstrates the extension of this approach to proteins with two nonequivalent EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding sites--rat beta parvalbumin and the S55D/E59D variant of rat alpha parvalbumin. The method involves simultaneous (global) least-squares analysis of titrations with Ca(2+), with Mg(2+), with Ca(2+) in the presence of Mg(2+), and with Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) in the presence of a competitive chelator (EDTA or EGTA). The Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) binding constants obtained for rat beta agree well with estimates obtained by flow dialysis. Although the Ca(2+) affinity of alpha S55D/E59D is too high to measure by flow dialysis, it was amenable to analysis using the ITC-based approach. The combined S55D and E59D mutations increase the Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) affinities of the mutated binding site by factors of 14 and 26, respectively. This behavior is consistent with that seen previously for the rat beta S55D variant.  相似文献   

16.
The three-dimensional structures of the magnesium- and manganese-bound forms of calbindin D9k were determined to 1.6 A and 1.9 A resolution, respectively, using X-ray crystallography. These two structures are nearly identical but deviate significantly from both the calcium bound form and the metal ion-free (apo) form. The largest structural differences are seen in the C-terminal EF-hand, and involve changes in both metal ion coordination and helix packing. The N-terminal calcium binding site is not occupied by any metal ion in the magnesium and manganese structures, and shows little structural deviation from the apo and calcium bound forms. 1H-NMR and UV spectroscopic studies at physiological ion concentrations show that the C-terminal site of the protein is significantly populated by magnesium at resting cell calcium levels, and that there is a negative allosteric interaction between magnesium and calcium binding. Calcium binding was found to occur with positive cooperativity at physiological magnesium concentration.  相似文献   

17.
S100A4 takes part in control of tumour cell migration and contributes to metastatic spread in in vivo models. In the active dimeric Ca(2+)-bound state it interacts with multiple intracellular targets. Conversely, oligomeric forms of S100A4 are linked with the extracellular function of this protein. We report the 1.5A X-ray crystal structure of Ca(2+)-bound S100A4 and use it to identify the residues involved in target recognition and to derive a model of the oligomeric state. We applied stopped-flow analysis of tyrosine fluorescence to derive kinetics of S100A4 activation by Ca(2+) (k(on)=3.5 microM(-1)s(-1), k(off)=20s(-1)).  相似文献   

18.
The analysis of the 23Na-NMR signal shape variations in the presence of vesicles of light sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) shows the existence of sodium sites on the membranes with Kd values of about 10 mM. Other monovalent cations displace Na+ from SR fragments in a competitive manner according to the row K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+ greater than Li+. Calcium ions also reduce Na+ binding, the Na+ desorption curve being of a two-stage nature, which, as suggested, indicates the existence of two types of Ca(2+)-sensitive Na+ binding sites (I and II). Sites of type I and II are modified by Ca2+ in submicromolar and millimolar concentrations, respectively. Analysis of sodium (calcium) desorption produced by calcium (sodium) allowed us to postulate the competition of these two cations for sites I and identity of these sites to high-affinity Ca(2+)-binding ones on the Ca(2+)-ATPase. Sites I weakly interact with Mg2+ (KappMg approximately 30 mM). Reciprocal effects of sodium and calcium on binding of each other to sites II cannot be described by a simple competition model, which indicates nonhomogeneity of these sites. A portion of sites I (approximately 70%) interacts with Mg2+ (KappMg = 3-4 mM). The pKa value of sites II is nearly 6.0. The number of sites II is three times greater than that of sites I. In addition, sites with intermediate affinity for Ca2+ were found with Kd values of 2-5 microM. These sites were revealed due to the reducing of the sites II affinity for Na+ upon Ca2+ binding to SR membranes. It can thus be concluded that in nonenergized SR there are binding sites for monovalent cations of at least three types: (1) sites I (which also bind Ca2+ at low concentrations), (2) magnesium-sensitive sites II and (3) magnesium-insensitive sites II.  相似文献   

19.
Penta-EF-hand (PEF) proteins such as ALG-2 (apoptosis-linked gene 2 product) and the calpain small subunit are a newly classified family of Ca(2+)-binding proteins that possess five EF-hand-like motifs. We identified two mutually homologous PEF proteins, designated DdPEF-1 and DdPEF-2 (64% amino acid residue identities), in the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum. Both PEF proteins showed a higher similarity to mammalian ALG-2 and peflin (Group I PEF proteins) than to calpain and sorcin subfamily (Group II PEF proteins) in the first EF-hand (EF-1) regions. Northern blot analyses revealed that DdPEF-1 and DdPEF-2 were constitutively expressed throughout development of Dictyostelium, but their levels of expression were developmentally regulated. In situ hybridization analyses demonstrated that DdPEF-1 was expressed in both the anterior prestalk and the posterior prespore regions of the tipped aggregate, slugs and early culminants. On the other hand, DdPEF-2 was dominantly expressed in the anterior tip region of these multicellular structures. Both PEF proteins were detected as 22-23-kDa proteins in soluble fractions in the presence of EGTA but in particulate fractions in the presence of Ca(2+) by Western blotting using specific monoclonal antibodies. Together with the finding of PEF-like sequences in DNA databases of plants, fungi and protists, our results strongly suggest that Group I PEF proteins are ubiquitously present in all eukaryotes and play important roles in basic cellular functions.  相似文献   

20.
A 21,000-dalton Ca(2+)-binding protein (Walsh, M.P., Valentine, K.A., Ngai, P.K., Carruthers, C.A., and Hollengerg, M.D. (1984) Biochem. J. 224, 117-127) was purified from the rat brain and through the use of oligonucleotide probe based on partial amino acid sequence, cDNA clones were obtained from rat brain cDNA library. The complete amino acid sequence deduced from the cDNA contains 191 residues and has a calculated molecular mass of 22,142 daltons. There are three potential Ca(2+)-binding sites like the EF hands in the sequence. It displays striking sequence homology with visinin and recoverin, retina-specific Ca(2+)-binding proteins. Northern blot analysis revealed that the protein is highly and specifically expressed in the brain.  相似文献   

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