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1.
Isotope labeling of recombinant normal cardiac troponin C (cTnC3) with 15N-enriched amino acids and multidimensional NMR were used to assign the downfield-shifted amide protons of Gly residues at position 6 in Ca(2+)-binding loops II, III, and IV, as well as tightly hydrogen-bonded amides within the short antiparallel beta-sheets between pairs of Ca(2+)-binding loops. The amide protons of Gly70, Gly110, and Gly146 were found to be shifted significantly downfield from the remaining amide proton resonances in Ca(2+)-saturated cTnC3. No downfield-shifted Gly resonance was observed from the naturally inactive site I. Comparison of downfield-shifted amide protons in the Ca(2+)-saturated forms of cTnC3 and CBM-IIA, a mutant having Asp65 replaced by Ala, demonstrated that Gly70 is hydrogen bonded to the carboxylate side chain of Asp65. Thus, the hydrogen bond between Gly and Asp in positions 6 and 1, respectively, of the Ca(2+)-binding loop appears crucial for maintaining the integrity of the helix-loop-helix Ca(2+)-binding sites. In the apo- form of cTnC3, only Gly70 was found to be shifted significantly downfield with respect to the remaining amide proton resonances. Thus, even in the absence of Ca2+ at binding site II, the amide proton of Gly70 is strongly hydrogen bonded to the side-chain carboxylate of Asp65. The amide protons of Ile112 and Ile148 in the C-terminal domain and Ile36 in the N-terminal domain data-sheets exhibit chemical shifts consistent with hydrogen-bond formation between the pair of Ca(2+)-binding loops in each domain of Ca(2+)-saturated cTnC3.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
In human metallothionein-2, the exchange rate constants of ten amide protons were found to range from 1.7 x 10(-4) to 1 x 10(-1) min-1 at pH 6.3 and 8 degrees C. Most of these slowly exchanging protons could be associated with hydrogen bonds in secondary structure elements of the alpha-domain. Amide proton exchange rates thus present an additional criterion for the structural characterization of different metallothioneins, which could be particularly valuable for comparisons of different homologous protein preparations containing nuclear magnetic resonance-inactive metal ions, where the metal-polypeptide co-ordinative bonds cannot be identified directly.  相似文献   

3.
S Linse  O Teleman  T Drakenberg 《Biochemistry》1990,29(25):5925-5934
One- and two-dimensional 1H NMR have been used to study the backbone dynamics in Ca2(+)-free (apo) and Ca2(+)-loaded (Ca2) calbindin D9k at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. Hydrogen exchange rates of all 71 backbone amide protons (NH's) have been measured for the Ca2 form by both a direct exchange-out experiment and another experiment that measures the transfer of saturation from water protons to amide protons. A large number of NH's are found to be highly protected against exchange with solvent protons. The results for the Ca2 form are related to solvent accessibility and hydrogen bonding obtained in molecular dynamics simulations of calcium-loaded calbindin. The correlation with these parameters is strong within the N-terminal half of calbindin, which is found to be more stable than the C-terminal half. The amide proton exchange in the apo form is much faster than in the Ca2 form and was studied in a series of experiments in which the exchange was quenched after different times by Ca2+ addition. This experiment is applicable to all amide hydrogens that exchange slowly in the Ca2 form. For these NH's the effects of Ca2+ removal span from a 10(2)-fold decrease to a 10(5)-fold increase of the exchange rate, and the average is a 220-fold increase. The effects on individual NH exchange rates show that the four alpha-helices are almost intact after calcium removal and that the changes in dynamics involve not only the Ca2(+)-binding region. Hydrogen bonds involving backbone NH's in the Ca2+ loops appear to be broken or weakened when calbindin releases Ca2+, whereas the beta-sheet between the Ca2+ loops is found to be present in both the Ca2 and apo forms. Large Ca2(+)-induced effects on NH exchange rates were measured for a few residues at alpha-helix ends far from the two Ca2(+)-binding sites. This may be the result of a change in interhelix angles (or the rate of interhelix angle fluctuations) on calcium binding.  相似文献   

4.
The sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA1a) pumps Ca(2+) and countertransport protons. Proton pathways in the Ca(2+) bound and Ca(2+)-free states are suggested based on an analysis of crystal structures to which water molecules were added. The pathways are indicated by chains of water molecules that interact favorably with the protein. In the Ca(2+) bound state Ca(2)E1, one of the proposed Ca(2+) entry paths is suggested to operate additionally or alternatively as proton pathway. In analogs of the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme E2P and in the Ca(2+)-free state E2, the proton path leads between transmembrane helices M5 to M8 from the lumenal side of the protein to the Ca(2+) binding residues Glu-771, Asp-800 and Glu-908. The proton path is different from suggested Ca(2+) dissociation pathways. We suggest that separate proton and Ca(2+) pathways enable rapid (partial) neutralization of the empty cation binding sites. For this reason, transient protonation of empty cation binding sites and separate pathways for different ions are advantageous for P-type ATPases in general.  相似文献   

5.
In a native protein, the exchange of a peptide amide proton with solvent occurs by one of two pathways, either directly from the folded protein, or via unfolding, exchange taking place from the unfolded protein. From the thermal unfolding rate constants, the contribution of unfolding to the over-all kinetics as a function of solvent and temperature has been determined. Exchange involving unfolding of the protein is characterized by a high activation energy, in the range of 50 to 60 Cal per mol. The activiation energy (Eapp) of the rates of exchange directly from the folded protein is approximately 20 to 25 Cal per mol. Because for the proton transfer step, Eapp approximately equal to 20 Cal per mol, the activation energy for any contributing protein conformational process(es) is approximately equal to 0 to 5 Cal per mol. Most, if not all, of the peptide amide protons in a folded protein can exchange directly with solvent without the protein unfolding. The number of "slowly" exchanging protons at a given condition of pH and temperature is not related to a discrete structural unit, but rather to the distribution of observed rates within the broader distribution of actual rates. The large attenuation of hydrogen exchange rates in folded proteins, resulting in a distribution of first order rates over 6 orders of magnitude, is primarily due to the effects of restricted solvent accessibility of labile protons in the three-dimensional structure. Any protein conformational process, such as protein fluctuations, invoked to explain the solvent accessibility must be of low activation energy and attenuated by ethanol and other co-solvents (Woodward, C. K., Ellis, L. M., and Rosenberg, A. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 440-444).  相似文献   

6.
Many heavy metals inhibit electron transfer reactions in Photosystem II (PSII). Cd(2+) is known to exchange, with high affinity in a slow reaction, for the Ca(2+) cofactor in the Ca/Mn cluster that constitutes the oxygen-evolving center. This results in inhibition of photosynthetic oxygen evolution. There are also indications that Cd(2+) binds to other sites in PSII, potentially to proton channels in analogy to heavy metal binding in photosynthetic reaction centers from purple bacteria. In search for the effects of Cd(2+)-binding to those sites, we have studied how Cd(2+) affects electron transfer reactions in PSII after short incubation times and in sites, which interact with Cd(2+) with low affinity. Overall electron transfer and partial electron transfer were studied by a combination of EPR spectroscopy of individual redox components, flash-induced variable fluorescence and steady state oxygen evolution measurements. Several effects of Cd(2+) were observed: (i) the amplitude of the flash-induced variable fluorescence was lost indicating that electron transfer from Y(Z) to P(680)(+) was inhibited; (ii) Q(A)(-) to Q(B) electron transfer was slowed down; (iii) the S(2) state multiline EPR signal was not observable; (iv) steady state oxygen evolution was inhibited in both a high-affinity and a low-affinity site; (v) the spectral shape of the EPR signal from Q(A)(-)Fe(2+) was modified but its amplitude was not sensitive to the presence of Cd(2+). In addition, the presence of both Ca(2+) and DCMU abolished Cd(2+)-induced effects partially and in different sites. The number of sites for Cd(2+) binding and the possible nature of these sites are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Ca2+ binding to rabbit skeletal calsequestrin was studied at physiological ionic strength by equilibrium flow dialysis, Hummel-Dryer gel filtration and microcalorimetry. 31 Ca(2+)-binding sites with a mean dissociation constant (KD) of 0.79 mM were titrated in the absence, and 23 sites with a KD of 0.88 mM in the presence of 3 mM Mg2+. No cooperativity was observed. For Mg2+ binding, the combination of gel filtration and microcalorimetry yielded a stoichiometry of 26 Mg2+/protein with a KD of 2mM. 1 mM Ca2+ decreased the stoichiometry to 20 Mg2+/protein. Binding of Ca2+ in the absence and presence of 3 mM Mg2+ was accompanied by a release of 2.0 and 2.7 H+/protein, respectively. Mg2+ binding did not lead to a significant proton release suggesting a qualitative difference in the Ca(2+)- and Mg(2+)-binding sites. After correction for proton release, the enthalpy change for Ca2+ binding was very low (-1.5 kJ/protein in the absence, and -15 kJ/protein in the presence of 3 mM Mg2+). The entropy change (+59 J/K.site in the absence and +56 J/K.site in the presence of Mg2+) was therefore virtually the sole driving force for Ca2+ binding. Mg2+ binding is slightly more exothermic (-12.6 kJ/protein), but as for Ca2+, the entropy change (+50 J/K.site) constituted the major driving force of the reaction. A fluorimetric study indicates that the conformation of tryptophan in Mg(2+)-saturated calsequestrin was clearly different from that in the Ca(2+)-saturated protein, but that the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-saturated protein was not distinct from the Ca(2+)-saturated protein. Thus, in addition to the thermodynamic characterization of the Ca2+/calsequestrin interaction, our data indicate that Ca2+ and Mg2+ do not bind to the same sites on calsequestrin. The data also predict considerable proton fluxes upon Ca(2+)-Mg2+ exchange in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Protein kinase C phosphorylation of cardiac troponin, the Ca(2+)-sensing switch in muscle contraction, is capable of modulating the response of cardiac muscle to a Ca(2+) ion concentration. The N-domain of cardiac troponin I contains two protein kinase C phosphorylation sites. Although the physiological consequences of phosphorylation at Ser(43)/Ser(45) are known, the molecular mechanisms responsible for these functional changes have yet to be established. In this work, NMR was used to identify conformational and dynamic changes in cardiac troponin C upon binding a phosphomimetic troponin I, having Ser(43)/Ser(45) mutated to Asp. Chemical shift perturbation mapping indicated that residues in helix G were most affected. Smaller chemical shift changes were observed in residues located in the Ca(2+)/Mg(2+)-binding loops. Amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange rates in the C-lobe of troponin C were compared in complexes containing either the wild-type or phosphomimetic N-domain of troponin I. In the presence of a phosphomimetic domain, exchange rates in helix G increased, whereas a decrease in exchange rates for residues mapping to Ca(2+)/Mg(2+)-binding loops III and IV was observed. Increased exchange rates are consistent with destabilization of the Thr(129)-Asp(132) helix capping box previously characterized in helix G. The perturbation of helix G and metal binding loops III and IV suggests that phosphorylation alters metal ion affinity and inter-subunit interactions. Our studies support a novel mechanism for protein kinase C signal transduction, emphasizing the importance of C-lobe Ca(2+)/Mg(2+)-dependent troponin interactions.  相似文献   

9.
The exchange reaction of the peptide NH protons of a microbial protease inhibitor (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) with deuterium atoms in 2H2O (p2H 6.8) has been studied by proton magnetic resonance in the temperature range 56-71 degrees C. Both slowly and rapidly exchanging processes have been observed. The number of slowly exchanging protons is estimated to be 25 +/- 2 per subunit of the protein molecule. The decay of the slowly exchanging proton signals follows a single time-exponential function at each temperature. The observed first-order rate constants have been analyzed to give the denaturated fraction of the protein as a function of temperature with a consequent enthalpy (56 kcal/mol) and an entropy (137 cal/degree per mol) of denaturation. The results indicate the high conformational stability of this protein against heat denaturation.  相似文献   

10.
H Roder  G Wagner  K Wüthrich 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7396-7407
With the use of one-dimensional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance, two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy, and two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy, the exchange mechanisms for numerous individual amide protons in the basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) were investigated over a wide range of p2H and temperature. Correlated exchange under an EX1 regime was observed only for the most slowly exchanging protons in the central hydrogen bonds of the antiparallel beta-sheet and only over a narrow range of temperature and p2H, i.e., above ca. 55 degrees C and between p2H 7 and 9, where the opening rates of the structure fluctuations which promote the exchange of these protons are of the order 0.1 min-1. At p2H below 7, the exchange of this most stable group of protons is uncorrelated and is governed by an EX2 mechanism. At p2H above 9, the exchange is also uncorrelated and occurs via either EX2 or EX1 processes promoted by strictly local structure fluctuations. For all other backbone amide protons in BPTI, the exchange was found to be uncorrelated and by an EX2 mechanism under all conditions of p2H and temperature where quantitative measurements could be obtained with the methods used, i.e., for kex approximately less than 5 min-1. From these observations with BPTI it can be concluded that the amide proton exchange in globular proteins is quite generally via EX2 processes, with rare exceptions for measurements with extremely stable protons at high temperature and basic p2H. This emphasizes the need for further development of suitable concepts for the structural interpretation of EX2 amide proton exchange [Wagner, G. (1983) Q. Rev. Biophys. 16, 1-57; Wagner, G., Stassinopoulou, C. I., & Wüthrich, K. (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 145, 431-436] and for more detailed investigations of the intrinsic exchange rates for solvent-exposed amide protons in the "open" states of a protein [Roder, H., Wagner, G., & Wüthrich, K. (1985) Biochemistry (following paper in this issue)].  相似文献   

11.
Baxter SM  Fetrow JS 《Biochemistry》1999,38(14):4493-4503
Heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy was used to measure the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of backbone amide hydrogens in both oxidized and reduced [U-15N]iso-1-cytochrome c from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The exchange data confirm previously reported data [Marmorino et al. (1993) Protein Sci. 2, 1966-1974], resolve several inconsistencies, and provide more thorough coverage of exchange rates throughout the cytochrome c protein in both oxidation states. Combining the data previously collected on unlabeled C102T with the current data collected on [U-15N]C102T, exchange rates for 53 protons in the oxidized state and 52 protons in the reduced state can now be reported. Most significantly, hydrogen exchange measurements on [U-15N]iso-1-cytochrome c allowed the observation of exchange behavior of the secondary structures, such as large loops, that are not extensively hydrogen-bonded. For the helices, the most slowly exchanging protons are found in the middle of the helix, with more rapidly exchanging protons at the helix ends. The observation for the Omega-loops in cytochrome c is just the opposite. In the loops, the ends contain the most slowly exchanging protons and the loop middles allow more rapid exchange. This is found to be true in cytochrome c loops, even though the loop ends are not attached to any regular secondary structures. Some of the exchange data are strikingly inconsistent with data collected on the C102S variant at a different pH, which suggests pH-dependent dynamic differences in the protein structure. This new hydrogen exchange data for loop residues could have implications for the substructure model of eukaryotic cytochrome c folding. Isotopic labeling of variant forms of cytochrome c can now be used to answer many questions about the structure and folding of this model protein.  相似文献   

12.
G D Henry  J H Weiner  B D Sykes 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3626-3634
Hydrogen-exchange rates have been measured for individual assigned amide protons in M13 coat protein, a 50-residue integral membrane protein, using a 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) equilibrium isotope shift technique. The locations of the more rapidly exchanging amides have been determined. In D2O solutions, a peptide carbonyl resonance undergoes a small upfield isotope shift (0.08-0.09 ppm) from its position in H2O solutions; in 1:1 H2O/D2O mixtures, the carbonyl line shape is determined by the exchange rate at the adjacent nitrogen atom. M13 coat protein was labeled biosynthetically with 13C at the peptide carbonyls of alanine, glycine, phenylalanine, proline, and lysine, and the exchange rates of 12 assigned amide protons in the hydrophilic regions were measured as a function of pH by using the isotope shift method. This equilibrium technique is sensitive to the more rapidly exchanging protons which are difficult to measure by classical exchange-out experiments. In proteins, structural factors, notably H bonding, can decrease the exchange rate of an amide proton by many orders of magnitude from that observed in the freely exposed amides of model peptides such as poly(DL-alanine). With corrections for sequence-related inductive effects [Molday, R. S., Englander, S. W., & Kallen, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 150-158], the retardation of amide exchange in sodium dodecyl sulfate solubilized coat protein has been calculated with respect to poly(DL-alanine). The most rapidly exchanging protons, which are retarded very little or not at all, are shown to occur at the N- and C-termini of the molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the displacement of Ca(2+)by the trivalent lanthanide ions (Yb(3+)) in a protozoan (Entamoeba histolytica) Ca(2+)-binding protein (EhCaBP), by NMR and thermodynamics. We have demonstrated, for the first time, how one can use in a combined fashion the utility of NMR and thermodynamics to have an insight to the relative binding specificities/affinity between Ca(2+) and Yb(3+). As revealed by the titration experiments, Yb(3+) displaces Ca(2+) from the four metal binding sites present in EhCaBP in a sequential manner. The study provides a structural origin for such a sequential Ca(2+) displacement by Yb(3+) in EhCaBP.  相似文献   

14.
The molecular basis for the co-operativity in binding of calcium ions by bovine calbindin D9k has been addressed by carrying out a comparative analysis of the solution conformation and dynamics of the apo, half saturated and fully saturated species using two-dimensional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Since the half saturated calcium form of the protein is not significantly populated under equilibrium conditions due to the co-operativity in binding of calcium ions, the half saturated cadmium form of the protein has been substituted for the calcium form. To verify that cadmium forms of calbindin D9k represent viable models for the calcium-bound species, the fully saturated cadmium form has been prepared and compared to the calcium-saturated protein. Virtually complete 1H resonance assignments have been obtained for both the (Cd2+)1 and the (Cd2+)2 states. Secondary structure elements and the global folding pattern were determined from nuclear Overhauser effects, backbone spin-spin coupling constants and slowly exchanging amide protons. Comparisons of the half saturated protein with the apo and calcium-saturated forms of calbindin D9k show that all three structures are highly similar. However, a change in the structural and dynamic properties of the protein does occur upon binding of the first ion; the half saturated form is found to be more similar to the calcium-saturated form than to the apo form. These results have important implications concerning the molecular basis for the co-operativity, and suggest that entropic effects associated with the protein dynamics play an important role.  相似文献   

15.
Sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA) transports two Ca(2+) ions across the membrane of the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum against the concentration gradient, harvesting the required energy by hydrolyzing one ATP molecule during each transport cycle. Although SERCA is one of the best structurally characterized membrane transporters, it is still largely unknown how the transported Ca(2+) ions reach their transmembrane binding sites in SERCA from the cytoplasmic side. Here, we performed extended all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of SERCA. The calculated electrostatic potential of the protein reveals a putative mechanism by which cations may be attracted to and bind to the Ca(2+)-free state of the transporter. Additional molecular dynamics simulations performed on a Ca(2+)-bound state of SERCA reveal a water-filled pathway that may be used by the Ca(2+) ions to reach their buried binding sites from the cytoplasm. Finally, several residues that are involved in attracting and guiding the cations toward the possible entry channel are identified. The results point to a single Ca(2+) entry site close to the kinked part of the first transmembrane helix, in a region loaded with negatively charged residues. From this point, a water pathway outlines a putative Ca(2+) translocation pathway toward the transmembrane ion-binding sites.  相似文献   

16.
C Baldellon  A Padilla  A Cavé 《Biochimie》1992,74(9-10):837-844
The amide proton exchange rates have been measured for the pike parvalbumin loaded either with calcium (PaCa2) or with magnesium (PaMg2) by using 2-D total correlation spectroscopy experiments. The differences in the exchange rates observed between these two species were unexpected when compared with the small conformational changes induced in parvalbumin by the Ca/Mg exchange. With the calcium-loaded protein (PaCa2), a significant difference was observed for the amide proton exchange rates of residues located in the N-terminal domain AB in contrast to the slower exchange rates that were observed in the CD and EF domains. Such a difference does not exist for PaMg2, where faster exchange rates are observed over all the sequence. Since amide proton exchange rates are the signature of the solvent's accessibility in proteins, we interpreted our results in terms of difference of the equilibria between 'closed-states' and 'opened-states' for individual amide protons of the protein when calcium was replaced by magnesium. The CD and EF domains, and to a lesser extent the AB domain, would be more rigid when the protein was loaded with calcium ions. For the magnesium-loaded parvalbumin (PaMg2) the faster exchange rates we observed could be rationalized by a more flexible structure than in the case of the PaCa2.  相似文献   

17.
Treatment of erythrocyte ghosts with micromolar concentrations of Cd2+ results in a noncompetitive inhibition of the calmodulin-dependent (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity. Higher concentrations of Cd2+ are required for inhibition of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity of calmodulin-depleted ghosts. The interaction of Cd2+ is time-dependent with an apparent rate constant around 0.12/min. The inhibition is relieved by addition of EGTA with a rate constant around 0.15/min. If Cd2+ is allowed to interact with calmodulin prior to the association of the protein with the ghosts, the inhibition is mainly competitive. The results suggest that the inhibitory effect caused by Cd2+ is due to an interaction with calmodulin. The slow interaction of Cd2+ suggests that calmodulin bound to the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase is inaccessible to Cd2+.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of the carcinogen Cd(2+) on Xenopus oocyte were evaluated by Inositol (1,4,5)-trisphosphate (InsP(3)) assays and electrophysiological experiments. The stimulation of the Ca(2+)-dependent Cl(-) current by Cd(2+) is clearly linked to InsP(3) formation since the effects of the metal are antagonized by neomycin, heparin and caffeine. A similar inhibition of the Cd(2+) effects is observed when the oocytes are pretreated with thapsigargin. Moreover, the use of sulfhydryl groups reductors such as 2-mercaptoethanol or N-ethylmaleimide strongly suggests that the Cd(2+) response is mediated by an extracellular receptor. Finally, measurements of InsP(3) production demonstrate that Cd(2+) superfusion actually leads to a PIP(2) breakdown. We conclude that extracellular Cd(2+) evokes an increase in [Ca(2+)](i) by stimulating the emptying of the InsP(3)-sensitive Ca(2+) stores, and that it may do so by interacting with a specific cell-surface ion receptor. This putative ion receptor may be important in allowing oocytes to respond to heavy metals.  相似文献   

19.
Solvent exchange rates and temperature coefficients for Asn/Gln side-chain amide protons have been measured in Escherichia coli HPr. The protons of the eight side-chain amide groups (two Asn and six Gln) exhibit varying exchange rates which are slower than some of the fast exchanging backbone amide protons. Differences in exchange rates of the E and Z protons of the same side-chain amide group are obtained by measuring exchange rates at pH values > 8. An NOE between a side-chain amide proton and a bound water molecule was also observed.  相似文献   

20.
The G protein-coupled Ca(2+) receptor (CaR) possesses an approximately 600-residue extracellular domain involved in ligand binding and receptor activation. Based on an alignment of the amino acid sequence of the CaR with that of bacterial periplasmic-binding proteins, the first approximately 530 residues of the extracellular domain are believed to form a domain resembling a bilobed Venus's flytrap (VFT). Four insertions in the CaR sequence that do not align with those of bacterial periplasmic-binding proteins correspond to four loops within lobe I of the VFT. We constructed a series of deletion mutants of these four loops and tested their ability to form fully processed CaR as well as their ability to be activated by Ca(2+). As many as 21 residues (365) of loop III could be deleted without impairing receptor expression or activation. Deletion of portions of either loops I (50) or IV (438) did not impair receptor expression but significantly reduced Ca(2+) activation. Deletion of the entire loop II (117) abolished receptor expression and function, but the replacement of even a single residue within this deletion mutant led to expression of a monomeric form of the receptor showing increased Ca(2+) sensitivity but reduced maximal activation. Our results reveal that certain residues within loops I and IV are dispensable in formation of the VFT domain but are critical for Ca(2+) activation of the receptor. In contrast, the residues in loop II are critical for maintaining the inactive state of the CaR. We discuss these results in light of the recently defined crystal structure of the homologous domain of the type 1 metabotropic glutamate receptor.  相似文献   

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