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1.
We have developed a stable analog for the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate with two occluded Ca2+ at the transport sites (E2PCa2) of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase. This is normally a transient intermediate state during phosphoenzyme isomerization from the ADP-sensitive to ADP-insensitive form and Ca2+ deocclusion/release to the lumen; E1PCa2E2PCa2E2P + 2Ca2+. Stabilization was achieved by elongation of the Glu40-Ser48 loop linking the Actuator domain and M1 (1st transmembrane helix) with four glycine insertions at Gly46/Lys47 and by binding of beryllium fluoride (BeFx) to the phosphorylation site of the Ca2+-bound ATPase (E1Ca2). The complex E2Ca2·BeF3 was also produced by lumenal Ca2+ binding to E2·BeF3 (E2P ground state analog) of the elongated linker mutant. The complex was stable for at least 1 week at 25 °C. Only BeFx, but not AlFx or MgFx, produced the E2PCa2 structural analog. Complex formation required binding of Mg2+, Mn2+, or Ca2+ at the catalytic Mg2+ site. Results reveal that the phosphorylation product E1PCa2 and the E2P ground state (but not the transition states) become competent to produce the E2PCa2 transient state during forward and reverse phosphoenzyme isomerization. Thus, isomerization and lumenal Ca2+ release processes are strictly coupled with the formation of the acylphosphate covalent bond at the catalytic site. Results also demonstrate the critical structural roles of the Glu40-Ser48 linker and of Mg2+ at the catalytic site in these processes.  相似文献   

2.
The actuator (A) domain of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase not only plays a catalytic role but also undergoes large rotational movements that influence the distant transport sites through connections with transmembrane helices M1 and M2. Here we explore the importance of long helix M2 and its junction with the A domain by disrupting the helix structure and elongating with insertions of five glycine residues. Insertions into the membrane region of M2 and the top junctional segment impair Ca2+ transport despite reasonable ATPase activity, indicating that they are uncoupled. These mutants fail to occlude Ca2+. Those at the top segment also exhibited accelerated phosphoenzyme isomerization E1P → E2P. Insertions into the middle of M2 markedly accelerate E2P hydrolysis and cause strong resistance to inhibition by luminal Ca2+. Insertions along almost the entire M2 region inhibit the dephosphorylated enzyme transition E2 → E1. The results pinpoint which parts of M2 control cytoplasm gating and which are critical for luminal gating at each stage in the transport cycle and suggest that proper gate function requires appropriate interactions, tension, and/or rigidity in the M2 region at appropriate times for coupling with A domain movements and catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
As a stable analog for ADP-sensitive phosphorylated intermediate of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase E1PCa2·Mg, a complex of E1Ca2·BeFx, was successfully developed by addition of beryllium fluoride and Mg2+ to the Ca2+-bound state, E1Ca2. In E1Ca2·BeFx, most probably E1Ca2·BeF3, two Ca2+ are occluded at high affinity transport sites, its formation required Mg2+ binding at the catalytic site, and ADP decomposed it to E1Ca2, as in E1PCa2·Mg. Organization of cytoplasmic domains in E1Ca2·BeFx was revealed to be intermediate between those in E1Ca2·AlF4 ADP (transition state of E1PCa2 formation) and E2·BeF3·(ADP-insensitive phosphorylated intermediate E2P·Mg). Trinitrophenyl-AMP (TNP-AMP) formed a very fluorescent (superfluorescent) complex with E1Ca2·BeFx in contrast to no superfluorescence of TNP-AMP bound to E1Ca2·AlFx. E1Ca2·BeFx with bound TNP-AMP slowly decayed to E1Ca2, being distinct from the superfluorescent complex of TNP-AMP with E2·BeF3, which was stable. Tryptophan fluorescence revealed that the transmembrane structure of E1Ca2·BeFx mimics E1PCa2·Mg, and between those of E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP and E2·BeF3. E1Ca2·BeFx at low 50–100 μm Ca2+ was converted slowly to E2·BeF3 releasing Ca2+, mimicking E1PCa2·Mg → E2P·Mg + 2Ca2+. Ca2+ replacement of Mg2+ at the catalytic site at approximately millimolar high Ca2+ decomposed E1Ca2·BeFx to E1Ca2. Notably, E1Ca2·BeFx was perfectly stabilized for at least 12 days by 0.7 mm lumenal Ca2+ with 15 mm Mg2+. Also, stable E1Ca2·BeFx was produced from E2·BeF3 at 0.7 mm lumenal Ca2+ by binding two Ca2+ to lumenally oriented low affinity transport sites, as mimicking the reverse conversion E2P· Mg + 2Ca2+E1PCa2·Mg.Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA1a),2 a representative member of the P-type ion transporting ATPases, catalyze Ca2+ transport coupled with ATP hydrolysis (Fig. 1) (19). The enzyme forms phosphorylated intermediates from ATP or Pi in the presence of Mg2+ (1013). In the transport cycle, the enzyme is first activated by cooperative binding of two Ca2+ ions at high affinity transport sites (E2 to E1Ca2, steps 1–2) (14) and autophosphorylated at Asp351 with MgATP to form the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1P, step 3), which reacts with ADP to regenerate ATP in the reverse reaction. Upon this E1P formation, the two bound Ca2+ are occluded in the transport sites (E1PCa2). Subsequent isomeric transition to the ADP-insensitive form (E2PCa2), i.e. loss of ADP sensitivity at the catalytic site, results in rearrangement of the Ca2+ binding sites to deocclude Ca2+, reduce the affinity, and open the lumenal gate, thus releasing Ca2+ into the lumen (E2P, steps 4–5). Finally Asp351-acylphosphate in E2P is hydrolyzed to form the Ca2+-unbound inactive E2 state (steps 6 and 7). Mg2+ bound at the catalytic site is required as a physiological catalytic cofactor in phosphorylation and dephosphorylation and thus for the transport cycle. The cycle is totally reversible, e.g. E2P can be formed from Pi in the presence of Mg2+ and absence of Ca2+, and subsequent Ca2+ binding at lumenally oriented low affinity transport sites of E2P reverses the Ca2+-releasing step and produces E1PCa2, which is then decomposed to E1Ca2 by ADP.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Ca2+ transport cycle of Ca2+-ATPase.Various intermediate structural states in the transport cycle were fixed as their structural analogs produced by appropriate ligands such as AMP-PCP (non-hydrolyzable ATP analog) or metal fluoride compounds (phosphate analogs), and their crystal structures were solved at the atomic level (1522). The three cytoplasmic domains, N, P, and A, largely move and change their organization state during the transport cycle, and the changes are coupled with changes in the transport sites. Most remarkably, in the change from E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP (the transition state for E1PCa2 formation, E1PCa2·ADP·Mg) to E2·BeF3 (the ground state E2P·Mg) (2325), the A domain largely rotates by more than 90° approximately parallel to the membrane plane and associates with the P domain, thereby destroying the Ca2+ binding sites, and opening the lumenal gate, thus releasing Ca2+ into the lumen (see Fig. 2). E1PCa2·Ca·AMP-PN formed by CaAMP-PNP without Mg2+ is nearly the same as E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP and E1Ca2·CaAMP-PCP in their crystal structures (17, 18, 22).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 2.Structure of SERCA1a and its change during processing of phosphorylated intermediate. E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP (the transition state analog for phosphorylation E1PCa2·ADP·Mg) and E2·BeF3 (the ground state E2P analog (25)) were obtained from the Protein Data Bank (PDB accession code 1T5T (17) and 2ZBE (21), respectively). Cytoplasmic domains N (nucleotide binding), P (phosphorylation), and A (actuator), and 10 transmembrane helices (M1–M10) are indicated. The arrows on the domains, M1′ and M2 (Tyr122) in E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP, indicate their approximate motions predicted for E1PCa2·ADP·MgE2P·Mg. The phosphorylation site Asp351, TGES184 of the A domain, Arg198 (tryptic T2 site) on the Val200 loop (DPR198AV200NQD) of the A domain, and Thr242 (proteinase K site) on the A/M3-linker are shown. Seven hydrophobic residues gather in the E2P state to form the Tyr122-hydrophobic cluster (Y122-HC); Tyr122/Leu119 on the top part of M2, Ile179/Leu180/Ile232 of the A domain, and Val705/Val726 of the P domain. The overall structure of E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP is virtually the same as those of E1Ca2·CaAMP-PCP and E1PCa2·Ca·AMP-PN (17, 18, 22).Despite these atomic structures, yet unsolved is the structure of E1PCa2·Mg, the genuine physiological intermediate E1PCa2 with bound Mg2+ at the catalytic site without the nucleotide. Its stable structural analog has yet to be developed. E1PCa2·Mg is the major intermediate accumulating almost exclusively at steady state under physiological conditions. Its rate-limiting isomerization results in Ca2+ deocclusion/release producing E2P·Mg as a key event for Ca2+ transport. In E1Ca2·CaAMP-PCP, E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP, and E1PCa2·Ca·AMP-PN, the N and P domains are cross-linked and strongly stabilized by the bound nucleotide and/or Ca2+ at the catalytic site, thus they are crystallized (17, 18, 22). Kinetically, E1PCa2·Ca formed with CaATP is markedly stabilized due to Ca2+ binding at the catalytic Mg2+ site, and its isomerization to E2P is strongly retarded in contrast to E1PCa2·Mg (26, 27). Thus, the bound Ca2+ at the catalytic Mg2+ site likely produces a significantly different structural state from that with bound Mg2+.Therefore, it is now essential to develop a genuine E1PCa2·Mg analog without bound nucleotide and thereby gain further insight into the structural mechanism in the Ca2+ transport process. It is also crucial to further clarify the structural importance of Mg2+ as the physiological catalytic cation. In this study, we successfully developed the complex E1Ca2·BeFx, most probably E1Ca2·BeF3, as the E1PCa2·Mg analog by adding beryllium fluoride (BeFx) to the E1Ca2 state without any nucleotides. For its formation, Mg2+ binding at the catalytic site was required and Ca2+ substitution for Mg2+ was absolutely unfavorable, revealing a likely structural reason for its preference as the physiological cofactor. In E1Ca2·BeF3, two Ca2+ ions bound at the high affinity transport sites are occluded. It was also produced from E2·BeF3 by lumenal Ca2+ binding at the lumenally oriented low affinity transport sites, mimicking E2P·Mg + 2Ca2+E1PCa2·Mg. All properties of the newly developed E1Ca2·BeF3 fulfilled the requirements as the E1PCa2·Mg analog, and hence we were able to uncover the hitherto unknown nature of E1PCa2·Mg as well as structural events occurring in the phosphorylation and isomerization processes. Also, we successfully found the conditions that perfectly stabilize the E1Ca2·BeF3 complex.  相似文献   

4.
The molecular mechanism underlying the characteristic high apparent Ca2+ affinity of SERCA2b relative to SERCA1a and SERCA2a isoforms was studied. The C-terminal tail of SERCA2b consists of an 11th transmembrane helix (TM11) with an associated 11-amino acid luminal extension (LE). The effects of each of these parts and their interactions with the SERCA environment were examined by transient kinetic analysis of the partial reaction steps in the Ca2+ transport cycle in mutant and chimeric Ca2+-ATPase constructs. Manipulations to the LE of SERCA2b markedly increased the rate of Ca2+ dissociation from Ca2E1. Addition of the SERCA2b tail to SERCA1a slowed Ca2+ dissociation, but only when the luminal L7/8 loop of SERCA1 was simultaneously replaced with that of SERCA2, thus suggesting that the LE interacts with L7/8 in Ca2E1. The interaction of LE with L7/8 is also important for the low rate of the Ca2E1P → E2P conformational transition. These findings can be rationalized in terms of stabilization of the Ca2E1 and Ca2E1P forms by docking of the LE near L7/8. By contrast, low rates of E2P dephosphorylation and E2 → E1 transition in SERCA2b depend critically on TM11, particularly in a SERCA2 environment, but do not at all depend on the LE or L7/8. This indicates that interaction of TM11 with SERCA2-specific sequence element(s) elsewhere in the structure is critical in the Ca2+-free E2/E2P states. Collectively these properties ensure a higher Ca2+ affinity of SERCA2b relative to other SERCA isoforms, not only on the cytosolic side, but also on the luminal side.  相似文献   

5.
The roles of Ser72, Glu90, and Lys297 at the luminal ends of transmembrane helices M1, M2, and M4 of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase were examined by transient and steady-state kinetic analysis of mutants. The dependence on the luminal Ca2+ concentration of phosphorylation by Pi (“Ca2+ gradient-dependent E2P formation”) showed a reduction of the apparent affinity for luminal Ca2+ in mutants with alanine or leucine replacement of Glu90, whereas arginine replacement of Glu90 or Ser72 allowed E2P formation from Pi even at luminal Ca2+ concentrations much too small to support phosphorylation in wild type. The latter mutants further displayed a blocked dephosphorylation of E2P and an increased rate of conversion of the ADP-sensitive E1P phosphoenzyme intermediate to ADP-insensitive E2P as well as insensitivity of the E2·BeF3 complex to luminal Ca2+. Altogether, these findings, supported by structural modeling, indicate that the E2P intermediate is stabilized in the mutants with arginine replacement of Glu90 or Ser72, because the positive charge of the arginine side chain mimics Ca2+ occupying a luminally exposed low affinity Ca2+ site of E2P, thus identifying an essential locus (a “leaving site”) on the luminal Ca2+ exit pathway. Mutants with alanine or leucine replacement of Glu90 further displayed a marked slowing of the Ca2+ binding transition as well as slowing of the dissociation of Ca2+ from Ca2E1 back toward the cytoplasm, thus demonstrating that Glu90 is also critical for the function of the cytoplasmically exposed Ca2+ sites on the opposite side of the membrane relative to where Glu90 is located.  相似文献   

6.
Europium luminescence from europium bound to sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+ Mg2+)-ATPase indicates that there are two high affinity calcium binding sites. Furthermore, the two calcium ions at the binding sites are highly coordinated by the protein as the number of H2O molecules surrounding the Ca2+ ions are 3 and 0.5. In the presence of ATP, calcium ions are occluded even further down to 2 and zero H2O molecules, respectively. The Ca2+ - Ca2+ intersite distance is estimated to be 8–9 Å and the average distance from the Ca2+ sites to CrATP is about 18 Å.Digestion of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase at the T2 site (Arg 198) causes uncoupling of Ca2+-transport from ATPase activity while calcium occlusion due to E1-P formation remains unchanged. Further tryptic digestion beyond T2 and in the presence of ATP diminishes Ca2+ occlusion to zero while 50% of the ATPase hydrolytic activity remains. Tryptic digestion beyond T2 and in the absence of ATP diminishes ATPase hydrolytic activity to 50% of normal while Ca2+ occlusion remains intact. These data are consistent with a mechanism in which the functional enzyme must be in the dimeric form for occlusion and calcium uptake to occur, but each monomer can hydrolyze ATP.  相似文献   

7.
Roles of hydrogen bonding interaction between Ser186 of the actuator (A) domain and Glu439 of nucleotide binding (N) domain seen in the structures of ADP-insensitive phosphorylated intermediate (E2P) of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase were explored by their double alanine substitution S186A/E439A, swap substitution S186E/E439S, and each of these single substitutions. All the mutants except the swap mutant S186E/E439S showed markedly reduced Ca2+-ATPase activity, and S186E/E439S restored completely the wild-type activity. In all the mutants except S186E/E439S, the isomerization of ADP-sensitive phosphorylated intermediate (E1P) to E2P was markedly retarded, and the E2P hydrolysis was largely accelerated, whereas S186E/E439S restored almost the wild-type rates. Results showed that the Ser186-Glu439 hydrogen bond stabilizes the E2P ground state structure. The modulatory ATP binding at sub-mm∼mm range largely accelerated the EP isomerization in all the alanine mutants and E439S. In S186E, this acceleration as well as the acceleration of the ATPase activity was almost completely abolished, whereas the swap mutation S186E/E439S restored the modulatory ATP acceleration with a much higher ATP affinity than the wild type. Results indicated that Ser186 and Glu439 are closely located to the modulatory ATP binding site for the EP isomerization, and that their hydrogen bond fixes their side chain configurations thereby adjusts properly the modulatory ATP affinity to respond to the cellular ATP level.Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA1a)2 is a representative member of P-type ion-transporting ATPases and catalyzes Ca2+ transport coupled with ATP hydrolysis (Fig. 1) (19). In the catalytic cycle, the enzyme is activated by binding of two Ca2+ ions at the transport sites (E2 to E1Ca2, steps 1–2) and then autophosphorylated at Asp351 with MgATP to form ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme (E1P, step 3), which can react with ADP to regenerate ATP. Upon formation of this EP, the bound Ca2+ ions are occluded in the transport sites (E1PCa2). The subsequent isomeric transition to ADP-insensitive form (E2P) results in a change in the orientation of the Ca2+ binding sites and reduction of their affinity, and thus Ca2+ release into lumen (steps 4 and 5). Finally, the hydrolysis takes place and returns the enzyme into an unphosphorylated and Ca2+-unbound form (E2, step 6). E2P can also be formed from Pi in the presence of Mg2+ and the absence of Ca2+ by reversal of its hydrolysis.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Reaction cycle of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase.The cytoplasmic three domains N, A, and P largely move and change their organization states during the Ca2+ transport cycle (1022). These changes are linked with the rearrangements in the transmembrane helices. In the EP isomerization (loss of ADP sensitivity) and Ca2+ release, the A domain largely rotates (by ∼110° parallel to membrane plane), intrudes into the space between the N and P domains, and the P domain largely inclines toward the A domain. Thus in E2P, these domains produce the most compactly organized state (see Fig. 2 for the change E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP →E2·MgF42− as the model for the overall process E1PCa2·ADPE2·Pi).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 2.Structure of SERCA1a and formation of Ser186-Glu439 hydrogen bond between the A and N domains. The coordinates for the structures E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP, (the analog for the transition state of the phosphoryl transfer E1PCa2·ADP, left panel) and E2·MgF42− (E2·Pi analog (21), right panel) of Ca2+-ATPase were obtained from the Protein Data Bank (PDB accession code 1T5T and 1WPG, respectively (12, 14)). The arrows indicate approximate movements of the A and P domains in the change from E1Ca2·AlF4 ·ADP to E2·MgF42−. Ser186 and Glu439 are depicted as van der Waals spheres. These two residues form a hydrogen bond in E2·MgF42− (see inset). The phosphorylation site Asp351, two Ca2+ at the transport sites and ADP with AlF4 at the catalytic site in E1Ca2·AlF4·ADP, MgF42− bound at the catalytic site in E2·MgF42− are depicted. The TGES184 loop and Val200 loop of the A domain and Tyr122 on the top part of M2 are shown. These elements produce three interaction networks between A and P domains and M2 (Tyr122) in E2·MgF42− (2326). M1′ and M1-M10 are also indicated.We have found that the interactions between the A and P domains at the Val200-loop (Asp196-Asp203) with the residues of the P domain (Arg678/Glu680/Arg656/Asp660) (23) and at the Tyr122 hydrophobic cluster (2426) (see Fig. 2) play critical roles for Ca2+ deocclusion/release in E2PCa2E2P + 2Ca2+ after the loss of ADP sensitivity (E1PCa2 to E2PCa2 isomerization). The proper length of the A/M1′ linker is critical for inducing the inclining motion of the A and P domains for the Ca2+ deocclusion and release from E2PCa2 (27, 28). The importance of the interdomain interaction between Arg678 (P) and Asp203 (A) in stabilizing the E2P and E2 intermediates and its influence on modulatory ATP activation were pointed out by the mutation R678A (29). Regarding the N domain, the importance of Glu439 in the EP isomerization and E2P hydrolysis was previously noted by its alanine substitution, and possible importance of its interaction with Ser186 on the A domain has been suggested since Glu439 forms a hydrogen bond with Ser186 in the E2P analog structures (29) (see Fig. 2). The Darier disease-causing mutations of Ser186 of SERCA2b, S186P and S186F also alter the kinetics of the EP processing and its importance as the residue in the immediate vicinity of TGES184 has been pointed out (30, 31). Notably also, Glu439 is situated near the adenine binding pocket and its importance in the ATP binding and ATP-induced structural change have been shown (32, 33). In the structure E2(TG)AMPPCP (E2·ATP), Glu439 interacts with the modulatory ATP binding via Mg2+, and is involved in the acceleration of the Ca2+-ATPase cycle (16).Considering these critical findings on each of Glu439 and Ser186, it is crucial to reveal the role of the Ser186-Glu439 hydrogen-bonding interaction between the A and N domains in the EP processing and its ATP modulation (i.e. regulatory ATP-induced acceleration). We therefore made a series of mutants on both Ser186 and Glu439 including the swap substitution mutant, S186A, E439A, S186A/E439A, S186E, E439S, S186E/E439S, and explored their kinetic properties. Results showed that the Ser186-Glu439 hydrogen bond is critical for the stabilization of the E2P ground state structure, and possibly functioning as to make the E2P resident time long enough for Ca2+ release (E2PCa2E2P + 2Ca2+) thus to avoid its hydrolysis without Ca2+ release. Results also revealed that the side-chain configurations of Ser186 and Glu439 are fixed by their hydrogen bond, thereby conferring the proper modulatory ATP binding to occur at the cellular ATP level to accelerate the rate-limiting EP isomerization.  相似文献   

8.
Oscillations in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration are a universal mode of signaling following physiological levels of stimulation with agonists that engage the phospholipase C pathway. Sustained cytoplasmic Ca2+ oscillations require replenishment of the membrane phospholipid phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), the source of the Ca2+-releasing second messenger inositol trisphosphate. Here we show that cytoplasmic Ca2+ oscillations induced by cysteinyl leukotriene type I receptor activation run down when cells are pretreated with Li+, an inhibitor of inositol monophosphatases that prevents PIP2 resynthesis. In Li+-treated cells, cytoplasmic Ca2+ signals evoked by an agonist were rescued by addition of exogenous inositol or phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P). Knockdown of the phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate 5 (PIP5) kinases α and γ resulted in rapid loss of the intracellular Ca2+ oscillations and also prevented rescue by PI4P. Knockdown of talin1, a protein that helps regulate PIP5 kinases, accelerated rundown of cytoplasmic Ca2+ oscillations, and these could not be rescued by inositol or PI4P. In Li+-treated cells, recovery of the cytoplasmic Ca2+ oscillations in the presence of inositol or PI4P was suppressed when Ca2+ influx through store-operated Ca2+ channels was inhibited. After rundown of the Ca2+ signals following leukotriene receptor activation, stimulation of P2Y receptors evoked prominent inositol trisphosphate-dependent Ca2+ release. Therefore, leukotriene and P2Y receptors utilize distinct membrane PIP2 pools. Our findings show that store-operated Ca2+ entry is needed to sustain cytoplasmic Ca2+ signaling following leukotriene receptor activation both by refilling the Ca2+ stores and by helping to replenish the PIP2 pool accessible to leukotriene receptors, ostensibly through control of PIP5 kinase activity.  相似文献   

9.
Ion translocation by the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase depends on large movements of the A-domain, but the driving forces have yet to be defined. The A-domain is connected to the ion-binding membranous part of the protein through linker regions. We have determined the functional consequences of changing the length of the linker between the A-domain and transmembrane helix M3 (“A-M3 linker”) by insertion and deletion mutagenesis at two sites. It was feasible to insert as many as 41 residues (polyglycine and glycine-proline loops) in the flexible region of the linker without loss of the ability to react with Ca2+ and ATP and to form the phosphorylated Ca2E1P intermediate, but the rate of the energy-transducing conformational transition to E2P was reduced by >80%. Insertion of a smaller number of residues gave effects gradually increasing with the length of the insertion. Deletion of two residues at the same site, but not replacement with glycine, gave a similar reduction as the longest insertion. Insertion of one or three residues in another part of the A-M3 linker that forms an α-helix (“A3 helix”) in E2/E2P conformations had even more profound effects on the ability of the enzyme to form E2P. These results demonstrate the importance of the length of the A-M3 linker and of the position and integrity of the A3 helix for stabilization of E2P and suggest that, during the normal enzyme cycle, strain of the A-M3 linker could contribute to destabilize the Ca2E1P state and thereby to drive the transition to E2P.The sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA)2 is a membrane-bound ion pump that transports Ca2+ against a steep concentration gradient, utilizing the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis (13). It belongs to the family of P-type ATPases, in which the γ-phosphoryl group of ATP is transferred to a conserved aspartic acid residue during the reaction cycle. Both phospho and dephospho forms of the enzyme undergo transitions between so-called E1 and E2 conformations (Scheme 1). The E1 and E1P states display specificity for reaction with ATP and ADP, respectively (“kinase activity”), whereas E2P and E2 react with water and Pi instead of nucleotide (“phosphatase activity”). The E1 dephosphoenzyme of the Ca2+-ATPase binds two Ca2+ ions with high affinity from the cytoplasmic side, thereby triggering the phosphorylation from ATP. In E1P, the Ca2+ ions are occluded with no access to either side of the membrane, and Ca2+ is released to the luminal side after the conformational transition to E2P, likely in exchange for protons being countertransported. The structural organization and domain movements leading to Ca2+ translocation have recently been elucidated by crystallization of SERCA in various conformational states thought to represent intermediates in the pump cycle (47). SERCA is made up of 10 membrane-spanning mostly helical segments, M1–M10 (numbered from the N terminus), of which M4–M6 and M8 contribute liganding groups for Ca2+ binding, and a cytoplasmic headpiece separated into three distinct domains, named A (“actuator”), P (“phosphorylation”), and N (“nucleotide binding”). The A-domain appears to undergo considerable movement during the functional cycle. In the E1/E1P states, the highly conserved TGE183S loop of the A-domain is at great distance from the catalytic center containing nucleotide-binding residues and the phosphorylated Asp351 of the P-domain, but during the Ca2E1P → E2P transition, the A-domain rotates ∼90° around an axis perpendicular to the membrane, thereby moving the TGE183S loop into close contact with the catalytic site such that Glu183 can catalyze dephosphorylation of E2P (8, 9). During the dephosphorylation, Glu183 likely coordinates the water molecule attacking the aspartyl phosphoryl bond and withdraws a hydrogen. Hence, the movement of the A-domain during the Ca2E1P → E2P transition is the event that changes the catalytic specificity from kinase activity to phosphatase activity. During the dephosphorylation of E2P → E2, there is only a slight change of the position of the A-domain, and a large back-rotation is needed to reach the E1 form from E2; thus, the A-domain rotation defines the difference between the E1/E1P class of conformations and the E2/E2P class. Because the A-domain is physically connected to transmembrane helices M1–M3 through the linker segments A-M1, A-M2, and A-M3, the A-domain movement occurring during the Ca2E1P → E2P transition may be a key event in the opening of the Ca2+ sites toward the lumen, thus explaining the coupling of ATP hydrolysis to Ca2+ translocation. An important unanswered question is, however, how the movement of the A-domain is brought about. Which are the driving forces that destabilize Ca2E1P and/or stabilize E2P such that the energy-transducing Ca2E1P → E2P transition takes place? To answer this, it seems important to elucidate the exact roles of the linkers. Intriguing results have been obtained by Suzuki and co-workers, who demonstrated the importance of the A-M1 linker in connection with luminal release of Ca2+ from E2P (10). In this study, we have addressed the role of the A-M3 linker. An alignment of two crystal structures thought to resemble the Ca2E1P and E2·Pi forms (5), respectively, is shown in Fig. 1. The A-domain rotation is associated with formation of a helix (“A3 helix”) in the N-terminal part of the A-M3 linker, and this helix seems to interact with a helix bundle consisting of the P5–P7 helices of the P-domain, a feature exhibited by all published crystal structures of the E2 type (cf. supplemental Fig. S1 and Ref. 11). Moreover, when structures of similar crystallographic resolution are compared (as in Fig. 1), the non-helical part of the A-M3 linker in E2-type structures has a higher relative temperature factor (“B-factor”) than the corresponding segment in Ca2E1P (Fig. 1C, thick part colored orange-red for high temperature factor), thus suggesting a higher degree of freedom of movement relative to Ca2E1P. Hence, the A-M3 linker appears more strained in Ca2E1P compared with E2 forms, and the greater flexibility of the linker in E2 forms may promote the formation of the A3 helix.Open in a separate windowSCHEME 1.Ca2+-ATPase reaction cycle.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.A-M3 linker configuration in E1- and E2-type crystal structures. Crystal structures with Protein Data Bank codes 2zbd (Ca2E1P analog) and 1wpg (E2·Pi analog) are shown aligned. A, overview of structure 2zbd in bluish colors with green A-M3 linker and structure 1wpg in reddish colors with wheat A-M3 linker. B, magnification of the A-M3 linker (corresponding to the red box in A) with arrows indicating site 1, between Glu243 and Gln244, and site 2, between Gly233 and Lys234, in both conformations. The green A-M3 linker to the right is structure 2zbd. The wheat A-M3 linker to the left is structure 1wpg. Note the kinked A3 helix forming part of the latter structure. C, same A-M3 linker structures as in B but with the magnitude of the temperature factor (B-factor) indicated in colors (red > orange > yellow > green > blue) and by tube diameter. Because the two crystal structures selected here as E1- and E2-type representatives have similar crystallographic resolution (2.40 and 2.30 Å, respectively), the differences in temperature factor in specific regions provide direct information about chain flexibility.Here, we have determined the functional consequences of changing the length (and thereby likely the strain) of the A-M3 linker. Polyglycine and glycine-proline loops of varying lengths were inserted at two different sites in the linker (Fig. 1), and deletions were also studied. Rather unexpectedly, we were able to insert as many as 41 residues in one of the sites without loss of expression or ability to react with Ca2+ and ATP, forming Ca2E1P, but the Ca2E1P → E2P transition was greatly affected.  相似文献   

10.
Previously it demonstrated that in the absence of Ca2+ entry, evoked secretion occurs neither by membrane depolarization, induction of [Ca2+] i rise, nor by both combined (Ashery, U., Weiss, C., Sela, D., Spira, M. E., and Atlas, D. (1993). Receptors Channels 1:217–220.). These studies designate Ca2+ entry as opposed to [Ca2+] i rise, essential for exocytosis. It led us to propose that the channel acts as the Ca2+ sensor and modulates secretion through a physical and functional contact with the synaptic proteins. This view was supported by protein–protein interactions reconstituted in the Xenopus oocytes expression system and release experiments in pancreatic cells (Barg, S., Ma, X., Elliasson, L., Galvanovskis, J., Gopel, S. O., Obermuller, S., Platzer, J., Renstrom, E., Trus, M., Atlas, D., Streissnig, G., and Rorsman, P. (2001). Biophys. J.; Wiser, O., Bennett, M. K., and Atlas, D. (1996). EMBO J. 15:4100–4110; Wiser, O., Trus, M., Hernandez, A., Renström, E., Barg, S., Rorsman, P., and Atlas, D. (1999). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96:248–253). The kinetics of Cav1.2 (Lc-type) and Cav2.2 (N-type) Ca2+ channels were modified in oocytes injected with cRNA encoding syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25. Conserved cysteines (Cys271, Cys272) within the syntaxin 1A transmembrane domain are essential. Synaptotagmin I, a vesicle-associated protein, accelerated the activation kinetics indicating Cav2.2 coupling to the vesicle. The unique modifications of Cav1.2 and Cav2.2 kinetics by syntaxin 1A, SNAP-25, and synaptotagmin combined implied excitosome formation, a primed fusion complex of the channel with synaptic proteins. The Cav1.2 cytosolic domain Lc753–893, acted as a dominant negative modulator, competitively inhibiting insulin release of channel-associated vesicles (CAV), the readily releasable pool of vesicles (RRP) in islet cells. A molecular mechanism is offered to explain fast secretion of vesicles tethered to SNAREs-associated Ca2+ channel. The tight arrangement facilitates the propagation of conformational changes induced during depolarization and Ca2+-binding at the channel, to the SNAREs to trigger secretion. The results imply a rapid Ca2+-dependent CAV (RRP) release, initiated by the binding of Ca2+ to the channel, upstream to intracellular Ca2+ sensor thus establishing the Ca2+ channel as the Ca2+ sensor of neurotransmitter release.  相似文献   

11.
ATP has dual roles in the reaction cycle of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase. Upon binding to the Ca2E1 state, ATP phosphorylates the enzyme, and by binding to other conformational states in a non-phosphorylating modulatory mode ATP stimulates the dephosphorylation and other partial reaction steps of the cycle, thereby ensuring a high rate of Ca2+ transport under physiological conditions. The present study elucidates the mechanism underlying the modulatory effect on dephosphorylation. In the intermediate states of dephosphorylation the A-domain residues Ser186 and Asp203 interact with Glu439 (N-domain) and Arg678 (P-domain), respectively. Single mutations to these residues abolish the stimulation of dephosphorylation by ATP. The double mutation swapping Asp203 and Arg678 rescues ATP stimulation, whereas this is not the case for the double mutation swapping Ser186 and Glu439. By taking advantage of the ability of wild type and mutant Ca2+-ATPases to form stable complexes with aluminum fluoride (E2·AlF) and beryllium fluoride (E2·BeF) as analogs of the E2·P phosphoryl transition state and E2P ground state, respectively, of the dephosphorylation reaction, the mutational effects on ATP binding to these intermediates are demonstrated. In the wild type Ca2+-ATPase, the ATP affinity of the E2·P phosphoryl transition state is higher than that of the E2P ground state, thus explaining the stimulation of dephosphorylation by nucleotide-induced transition state stabilization. We find that the Asp203-Arg678 and Ser186-Glu439 interdomain bonds are critical, because they tighten the interaction with ATP in the E2·P phosphoryl transition state. Moreover, ATP binding and the Ser186-Glu439 bond are mutually exclusive in the E2P ground state.  相似文献   

12.
The results of site-directed mutagenesis studies of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase are reviewed. More than 250 different point mutants have been expressed in cell culture and analysed by a panel of functional assays. Thereby, 40–50 important amino acid residues have been pinpointed, and the mutants have been assigned to functional classes: the Ca2+-affinity mutants, the phosphorylation-negative mutants, the ATP-affinity mutants, the E1P mutants, the E2P mutants, and the uncoupled mutants. Moreover, regions important to the specific inhibition by thapsigargin have been identified by analysis of Ca2+-ATPase/Na+, K+-ATPase chimeric constructs.  相似文献   

13.
Phospholamban (PLB) inhibits the activity of SERCA2a, the Ca2+-ATPase in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, by decreasing the apparent affinity of the enzyme for Ca2+. Recent cross-linking studies have suggested that PLB binding and Ca2+ binding to SERCA2a are mutually exclusive. PLB binds to the E2 conformation of the Ca2+-ATPase, preventing formation of E1, the conformation that binds two Ca2+ (at sites I and II) with high affinity and is required for ATP hydrolysis. Here we determined whether Ca2+ binding to site I, site II, or both sites is sufficient to dissociate PLB from the Ca2+ pump. Seven SERCA2a mutants with amino acid substitutions at Ca2+-binding site I (E770Q, T798A, and E907Q), site II (E309Q and N795A), or both sites (D799N and E309Q/E770Q) were made, and the effects of Ca2+ on N30C-PLB cross-linking to Lys328 of SERCA2a were measured. In agreement with earlier reports with the skeletal muscle Ca2+-ATPase, none of the SERCA2a mutants (except E907Q) hydrolyzed ATP in the presence of Ca2+; however, all were phosphorylatable by Pi to form E2P. Ca2+ inhibition of E2P formation was observed only in SERCA2a mutants retaining site I. In cross-linking assays, strong cross-linking between N30C-PLB and each Ca2+-ATPase mutant was observed in the absence of Ca2+. Importantly, however, micromolar Ca2+ inhibited PLB cross-linking only to mutants retaining a functional Ca2+-binding site I. The dynamic equilibrium between Ca2+ pumps and N30C-PLB was retained by all mutants, demonstrating normal regulation of cross-linking by ATP, thapsigargin, and anti-PLB antibody. From these results we conclude that site I is the key Ca2+-binding site regulating the physical association between PLB and SERCA2a.  相似文献   

14.
Transient receptor potential (TRP) cation channels, which are conserved across mammals, flies, fish, sea squirts, worms, and fungi, essentially contribute to cellular Ca2+ signaling. The activity of the unique TRP channel in yeast, TRP yeast channel 1 (TRPY1), relies on the vacuolar and cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration. However, the mechanism(s) of Ca2+-dependent regulation of TRPY1 and possible contribution(s) of Ca2+-binding proteins are yet not well understood. Our results demonstrate a Ca2+-dependent binding of yeast calmodulin (CaM) to TRPY1. TRPY1 activity was increased in the cmd1–6 yeast strain, carrying a non–Ca2+-binding CaM mutant, compared with the parent strain expressing wt CaM (Cmd1). Expression of Cmd1 in cmd1–6 yeast rescued the wt phenotype. In addition, in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, hypertonic shock-induced TRPY1-dependent Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ release were increased by the CaM antagonist ophiobolin A. We found that coexpression of mammalian CaM impeded the activity of TRPY1 by reinforcing effects of endogenous CaM. Finally, inhibition of TRPY1 by Ca2+–CaM required the cytoplasmic amino acid stretch E33–Y92. In summary, our results show that TRPY1 is under inhibitory control of Ca2+–CaM and that mammalian CaM can replace yeast CaM for this inhibition. These findings add TRPY1 to the innumerable cellular proteins, which include a variety of ion channels, that use CaM as a constitutive or dissociable Ca2+-sensing subunit, and contribute to a better understanding of the modulatory mechanisms of Ca2+–CaM.  相似文献   

15.
Ca2+-dependent neurotransmitter release requires synaptotagmins as Ca2+ sensors to trigger synaptic vesicle (SV) exocytosis via binding of their tandem C2 domains—C2A and C2B—to Ca2+. We have previously demonstrated that SNT-1, a mouse synaptotagmin-1 (Syt1) homologue, functions as the fast Ca2+ sensor in Caenorhabditis elegans. Here, we report a new Ca2+ sensor, SNT-3, which triggers delayed Ca2+-dependent neurotransmitter release. snt-1;snt-3 double mutants abolish evoked synaptic transmission, demonstrating that C. elegans NMJs use a dual Ca2+ sensor system. SNT-3 possesses canonical aspartate residues in both C2 domains, but lacks an N-terminal transmembrane (TM) domain. Biochemical evidence demonstrates that SNT-3 binds both Ca2+ and the plasma membrane. Functional analysis shows that SNT-3 is activated when SNT-1 function is impaired, triggering SV release that is loosely coupled to Ca2+ entry. Compared with SNT-1, which is tethered to SVs, SNT-3 is not associated with SV. Eliminating the SV tethering of SNT-1 by removing the TM domain or the whole N terminus rescues fast release kinetics, demonstrating that cytoplasmic SNT-1 is still functional and triggers fast neurotransmitter release, but also exhibits decreased evoked amplitude and release probability. These results suggest that the fast and slow properties of SV release are determined by the intrinsically different C2 domains in SNT-1 and SNT-3, rather than their N-termini–mediated membrane tethering. Our findings therefore reveal a novel dual Ca2+ sensor system in C. elegans and provide significant insights into Ca2+-regulated exocytosis.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of chemical modification on the morphology of crystalline ATPase aggregates was analyzed in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles. The Ca2+-ATPase forms monomer-type (P1) type crystals in the E1 and dimer-type (P2) crystals in the E2 conformation. The P1 type crystals are induced by Ca2+ or lanthanides; P2 type crystals are observed in Ca2+-free media in the presence of vanadate or inorganic phosphate. P1- and P2-type Ca2+-ATPase crystals do not coexist in significant amounts in native sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane. The crystallization of Ca2+-ATPase in the E2 conformation is inhibited by guanidino-group reagents (2,3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal), SH-group reagents, phospholipases C or A2, and detergents, together with inhibition of ATPase activity. Amino-group reagents (fluorescein 5′-isothiocyanate, pyridoxal phosphate and fluorescamine) inhibit ATPase activity but do not interfere with the crystallization of Ca2+-ATPase induced by vanadate. In fluorescamine-treated sarcoplasmic reticulum the vanadate-induced crystals contain significant P1-type regions in addition to the dominant P2 form.  相似文献   

17.
Cannell and Allen (1984. Biophys. J. 45:913–925) introduced the use of a multi-compartment model to estimate the time course of spread of calcium ions (Ca2+) within a half sarcomere of a frog skeletal muscle fiber activated by an action potential. Under the assumption that the sites of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release are located radially around each myofibril at the Z line, their model calculated the spread of released Ca2+ both along and into the half sarcomere. During diffusion, Ca2+ was assumed to react with metal-binding sites on parvalbumin (a diffusible Ca2+- and Mg2+-binding protein) as well as with fixed sites on troponin. We have developed a similar model, but with several modifications that reflect current knowledge of the myoplasmic environment and SR Ca2+ release. We use a myoplasmic diffusion constant for free Ca2+ that is twofold smaller and an SR Ca2+ release function in response to an action potential that is threefold briefer than used previously. Additionally, our model includes the effects of Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding by adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) and the diffusion of Ca2+-bound ATP (CaATP). Under the assumption that the total myoplasmic concentration of ATP is 8 mM and that the amplitude of SR Ca2+ release is sufficient to drive the peak change in free [Ca2+] (Δ[Ca2+]) to 18 μM (the approximate spatially averaged value that is observed experimentally), our model calculates that (a) the spatially averaged peak increase in [CaATP] is 64 μM; (b) the peak saturation of troponin with Ca2+ is high along the entire thin filament; and (c) the half-width of Δ[Ca2+] is consistent with that observed experimentally. Without ATP, the calculated half-width of spatially averaged Δ[Ca2+] is abnormally brief, and troponin saturation away from the release sites is markedly reduced. We conclude that Ca2+ binding by ATP and diffusion of CaATP make important contributions to the determination of the amplitude and the time course of Δ[Ca2+].  相似文献   

18.
Summary Conformational states in sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase have been examined by tryptic and chymotryptic cleavage. High affinity Ca2+ binding (E1 state) exposes a peptide bond in the A fragment of the polypeptide chain to trypsin. Absence of Ca2+ (E2 state) exposes bonds in the B fragment, which are protected by binding of Mg2+ or ATP. After phosphorylation from ATP the tryptic cleavage pattern depends on the predominant phosphoenzyme species present. ADP-sensitive E1P and ADP-insensitive E2P have cleavage patterns identical to those of unphosphorylated E1 and E2, respectively, indicating that two major conformational states are involved in Ca2+ translocation. The transition from E1P to E2P is inhibited by secondary tryptic splits in the A fragment, suggesting that parts of this fragment are of particular importance for the energy transduction process.The tryptic cleavage patterns of phosphorylated forms of detergent solubilized monomeric Ca2+-ATPase were similar to those of the membrane-bound enzyme, indicating that Ca2+ translocation depends mainly on structural changes within a single peptide chain. On the other hand, the protection of the second cleavage site as observed after vanadate binding to membranous Ca2+-ATPase could not be achieved in the soluble monomeric enzyme. Shielding of this peptide bond may therefore be due to protein-protein interactions in the semicrystalline state of the vanadate-bound Ca2+-ATPase in membranous form.  相似文献   

19.
Many bacteria export intracellular calcium using active transporters homologous to the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA). Here we present three crystal structures of Ca2+-ATPase 1 from Listeria monocytogenes (LMCA1). Structures with BeF3- mimicking a phosphoenzyme state reveal a closed state, which is intermediate between the outward-open E2P and the proton-occluded E2-P* conformations known for SERCA. It suggests that LMCA1 in the E2P state is pre-organized for dephosphorylation upon Ca2+ release, consistent with the rapid dephosphorylation observed in single-molecule studies. An arginine side-chain occupies the position equivalent to calcium binding site I in SERCA, leaving a single Ca2+ binding site in LMCA1, corresponding to SERCA site II. Observing no putative transport pathways dedicated to protons, we infer a direct proton counter transport through the Ca2+ exchange pathways. The LMCA1 structures provide insight into the evolutionary divergence and conserved features of this important class of ion transporters.  相似文献   

20.
Three cross-linkable phospholamban (PLB) mutants of increasing inhibitory strength (N30C-PLB < N27A,N30C,L37A-PLB (PLB3) < N27A,N30C,L37A,V49G-PLB (PLB4)) were used to determine whether PLB decreases the Ca2+ affinity of SERCA2a by competing for Ca2+ binding. The functional effects of N30C-PLB, PLB3, and PLB4 on Ca2+-ATPase activity and E1∼P formation were correlated with their binding interactions with SERCA2a measured by chemical cross-linking. Successively higher Ca2+ concentrations were required to both activate the enzyme co-expressed with N30C-PLB, PLB3, and PLB4 and to dissociate N30C-PLB, PLB3, and PLB4 from SERCA2a, suggesting competition between PLB and Ca2+ for binding to SERCA2a. This was confirmed with the Ca2+ pump mutant, D351A, which is catalytically inactive but retains strong Ca2+ binding. Increasingly higher Ca2+ concentrations were also required to dissociate N30C-PLB, PLB3, and PLB4 from D351A, demonstrating directly that PLB antagonizes Ca2+ binding. Finally, the specific conformation of E2 (Ca2+-free state of SERCA2a) that binds PLB was investigated using the Ca2+-pump inhibitors thapsigargin and vanadate. Cross-linking assays conducted in the absence of Ca2+ showed that PLB bound preferentially to E2 with bound nucleotide, forming a remarkably stable complex that is highly resistant to both thapsigargin and vanadate. In the presence of ATP, N30C-PLB had an affinity for SERCA2a approaching that of vanadate (micromolar), whereas PLB3 and PLB4 had much higher affinities, severalfold greater than even thapsigargin (nanomolar or higher). We conclude that PLB decreases Ca2+ binding to SERCA2a by stabilizing a unique E2·ATP state that is unable to bind thapsigargin or vanadate.  相似文献   

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