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1.
The binding of calmodulin (CaM) to four synthetic peptide analogues of the skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (sk-MLCK) target sequence has been studied using 1H-NMR. The 18-residue peptide WFF is anchored to CaM via the interaction of the Trp 4 side chain with the C-domain and the Phe 17 side chain with the N-domain of the protein. A peptide corresponding to the first 10 residues (WF10) does not provide the second anchoring residue and is not long enough to span both domains of CaM. 1H-NMR spectroscopy indicates that the WF10 peptide interacts specifically with the C-domain of CaM, and the chemical shifts of the bound Trp side chain are very similar in the CaM:WF10 and CaM:WFF complexes. Binding of the C-domain of CaM to the strongly basic region around Trp 4 of this MLCK sequence may be an important step in target recognition. Comparison of 1H-NMR spectra of CaM bound to WFF, a Trp 4-->Phe analogue (FFF), or a Trp 4-->Phe/Phe 17-->Trp analogue (FFW) suggests that all three peptides bind to CaM in the same orientation, i.e., with the peptide side chain in position 4 interacting with the C-domain and the side chain in position 17 interacting with the N-domain. This indicates that a Trp residue in position 4 is not an absolute requirement for binding this target sequence and that interchanging the Trp 4 and Phe 17 residues does not reverse the orientation of the bound peptide, in confirmation of the deduction from previous indirect studies using circular dichroism (Findlay WA, Martin SR, Beckingham K, Bayley PM, 1995, Biochemistry 34:2087-2094). Molecular modeling/energy minimization studies indicate that only minor local changes in the protein structure are required to accommodate binding of the bulkier Trp 17 side chain of the FFW peptide to the N-domain of CaM.  相似文献   

2.
Calmodulin (CaM) is the primary calcium sensor in eukaryotes. Calcium binds cooperatively to pairs of EF-hand motifs in each domain (N and C). This allows CaM to regulate cellular processes via calcium-dependent interactions with a variety of proteins, including ion channels. One neuronal target is NaV1.2, voltage-dependent sodium channel type II, to which CaM binds via an IQ motif within the NaV1.2 C-terminal tail (residues 1901-1938) [Mori, M., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 1316-1323]. Here we report on the use of circular dichroism, fluorescein emission, and fluorescence anisotropy to study the interaction between CaM and NaV1.2 at varying calcium concentrations. At 1 mM MgCl2, both full-length CaM (CaM1-148) and a C-domain fragment (CaM76-148) exhibit tight (nanomolar) calcium-independent binding to the NaV1.2 IQ motif, whereas an N-domain fragment of CaM (CaM1-80) binds weakly, regardless of calcium concentration. Equilibrium calcium titrations of CaM at several concentrations of the NaV1.2 IQ peptide showed that the peptide reduced the calcium affinity of the CaM C-domain sites (III and IV) without affecting the N-domain sites (I and II) significantly. This leads us to propose that the CaM C-domain mediates constitutive binding to the NaV1.2 peptide, but that interaction then distorts calcium-binding sites III and IV, thereby reducing their affinity for calcium. This contrasts with the CaM-binding domains of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, kinases, and phosphatases, which increase the calcium binding affinity of the C-domain of CaM.  相似文献   

3.
S H Yoo 《Biochemistry》1992,31(26):6134-6140
Chromogranin A (CGA), the most abundant protein in bovine adrenal chromaffin granules, is a high-capacity, low-affinity Ca(2+)-binding protein found in most neuroendocrine cells, and binds calmodulin (CaM) in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. The binding of chromogranin A to calmodulin was determined by measuring the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of chromogranin A in the presence and absence of Ca2+. Binding was specifically Ca(2+)-dependent; neither Mg2+ nor Mn2+ could substitute for Ca2+. Chelation of Ca2+ by EGTA completely eliminated the chromogranin A-calmodulin interaction. CaM binding was demonstrated by a synthetic CGA peptide representing residues 40-65. When the CGA peptide and CaM were mixed in the presence of 15 mM CaCl2, the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence emission underwent a substantial blue-shift, shifting from 350 to 330 nm. Like the intact CGA, the peptide-CaM binding was specifically Ca(2+)-dependent, and neither Mg2+ nor Mn2+ could induce the binding. Calmodulin bound both to CGA and to the synthetic CGA peptide with a stoichiometry of one to one. The dissociation constants (Kd) determined by fluorometric titration were 13 nM for the peptide-CaM binding and 17 nM for intact CGA-CaM binding. The Kd values are comparable to those (approximately 10(-9) M) of other CaM-binding proteins and peptides, demonstrating a tight binding of CaM by CGA. The CaM-binding CGA residues 40-65 are 100% conserved among all the sequenced CGAs in contrast to 50-60% conservation found in the entire sequence, implying essential roles of this region.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium-saturated calmodulin (CaM) directly activates CaM-dependent protein kinase I (CaMKI) by binding to a region in the C-terminal regulatory sequence of the enzyme to relieve autoinhibition. The structure of CaM in a high-affinity complex with a 25-residue peptide of CaMKI (residues 294-318) has been determined by X-ray crystallography at 1.7 A resolution. Upon complex formation, the CaMKI peptide adopts an alpha-helical conformation, while changes in the CaM domain linker enable both its N- and C-domains to wrap around the peptide helix. Target peptide residues Trp-303 (interacting with the CaM C-domain) and Met-316 (with the CaM N-domain) define the mode of binding as 1-14. In addition, two basic patches on the peptide form complementary charge interactions with CaM. The CaM-peptide affinity is approximately 1 pM, compared with 30 nM for the CaM-kinase complex, indicating that activation of autoinhibited CaMKI by CaM requires a costly energetic disruption of the interactions between the CaM-binding sequence and the rest of the enzyme. We present biochemical and structural evidence indicating the involvement of both CaM domains in the activation process: while the C-domain exhibits tight binding toward the regulatory sequence, the N-domain is necessary for activation. Our crystal structure also enables us to identify the full CaM-binding sequence. Residues Lys-296 and Phe-298 from the target peptide interact directly with CaM, demonstrating overlap between the autoinhibitory and CaM-binding sequences. Thus, the kinase activation mechanism involves the binding of CaM to residues associated with the inhibitory pseudosubstrate sequence.  相似文献   

5.
The small IQ motif proteins PEP-19 (62 amino acids) and RC3 (78 amino acids) greatly accelerate the rates of Ca(2+) binding to sites III and IV in the C-domain of calmodulin (CaM). We show here that PEP-19 decreases the degree of cooperativity of Ca(2+) binding to sites III and IV, and we present a model showing that this could increase Ca(2+) binding rate constants. Comparative sequence analysis showed that residues 28 to 58 from PEP-19 are conserved in other proteins. This region includes the IQ motif (amino acids 39-62), and an adjacent acidic cluster of amino acids (amino acids 28-40). A synthetic peptide spanning residues 28-62 faithfully mimics intact PEP-19 with respect to increasing the rates of Ca(2+) association and dissociation, as well as binding preferentially to the C-domain of CaM. In contrast, a peptide encoding only the core IQ motif does not modulate Ca(2+) binding, and binds to multiple sites on CaM. A peptide that includes only the acidic region does not bind to CaM. These results show that PEP-19 has a novel acidic/IQ CaM regulatory motif in which the IQ sequence provides a targeting function that allows binding of PEP-19 to CaM, whereas the acidic residues modify the nature of this interaction, and are essential for modulating Ca(2+) binding to the C-domain of CaM.  相似文献   

6.
Cooperative calcium binding to the two homologous domains of calmodulin (CaM) induces conformational changes that regulate its association with and activation of numerous cellular target proteins. Calcium binding to the pair of high-affinity sites (III and IV in the C-domain) can be monitored by observing calcium-dependent changes in intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence intensity (lambda(ex)/lambda(em) of 277/320 nm). However, calcium binding to the low-affinity sites (I and II in the N-domain) is more difficult to measure with optical spectroscopy because that domain of CaM does not contain tryptophan or tyrosine. We recently demonstrated that calcium-dependent changes in intrinsic phenylalanine fluorescence (lambda(ex)/lambda(em) of 250/280 nm) of an N-domain fragment of CaM reflect occupancy of sites I and II (VanScyoc, W. S., and M. A. Shea, 2001, Protein Sci. 10:1758-1768). Using steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence methods, we now show that these excitation and emission wavelength pairs for phenylalanine and tyrosine fluorescence can be used to monitor equilibrium calcium titrations of the individual domains in full-length CaM. Calcium-dependent changes in phenylalanine fluorescence specifically indicate ion occupancy of sites I and II in the N-domain because phenylalanine residues in the C-domain are nonemissive. Tyrosine emission from the C-domain does not interfere with phenylalanine fluorescence signals from the N-domain. This is the first demonstration that intrinsic fluorescence may be used to monitor calcium binding to each domain of CaM. In this way, we also evaluated how mutations of two residues (Arg74 and Arg90) located between sites II and III can alter the calcium-binding properties of each of the domains. The mutation R74A caused an increase in the calcium affinity of sites I and II in the N-domain. The mutation R90A caused an increase in calcium affinity of sites III and IV in the C-domain whereas R90G caused an increase in calcium affinity of sites in both domains. This approach holds promise for exploring the linked energetics of calcium binding and target recognition.  相似文献   

7.
The calcium-regulatory protein calmodulin (CaM) can bind with high affinity to a region in the cytoplasmic C-terminal tail of glycoprotein 41 of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). The amino acid sequence of this region is (1)DLWETLRRGGRW(13)ILAIPRRIRQGLELT(28)L. In this work, we have used near- and far-uv CD, and fluorescence spectroscopy, to study the orientation of this peptide with respect to CaM. We have also studied biosynthetically carbon-13 methyl-Met calmodulin by (1)H, (13)C heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence NMR spectroscopy. Two Trp-substituted peptides, SIV-W3F and SIV-W12F, were utilized in addition to the intact SIV peptide. Two half-peptides, SIV-N (residues 1-13) and SIV-C (residues 13-28) were also synthesized and studied. The spectroscopic results obtained with the SIV-W3F and SIV-W12F peptides were generally consistent with those obtained for the native SIV peptide. Like the native peptide, these two analogues bind with an alpha-helical structure as shown by CD spectroscopy. Fluorescence intermolecular quenching studies suggested binding of Trp3 to the C-lobe of CaM. Our NMR results show that SIV-N can bind to both lobes of calcium-CaM, and that it strongly favors binding to the C-terminal hydrophobic region of CaM. The SIV-C peptide binds with relatively low affinity to both halves of the protein. These data reveal that the intact SIV peptide binds with its N-terminal region to the carboxy-terminal region of CaM, and this interaction initiates the binding of the peptide. This orientation is similar to that of most other CaM-binding domains.  相似文献   

8.
We present a comprehensive profile of amino acid side-chain constraints in a calmodulin (CaM) peptide complex. These data were obtained from the analysis of calmodulin binding to an array of all single substitution analogues as well as N- and C-terminal truncations of the skMLCK derived M13 peptide ligand. The experimentally derived binding data were evaluated with respect to the known 3D-structure of the CaM/M13 complex. Besides an almost perfect agreement between the measured affinities and the structural data, the unexpected high-affine Asn5Ala variant of the M13(*) peptide described by Montigiani et al. could be verified. In contrast to other reports our data clearly support the postulate of the minor and major hydrophobic anchors of this calcium dependent interaction.  相似文献   

9.
Androcam is a testis-specific protein of Drosophila melanogaster, with 67% sequence identity to calmodulin and four potential EF-hand calcium-binding sites. Spectroscopic monitoring of the thermal unfolding of recombinant calcium-free androcam shows a biphasic process characteristic of a two-domain protein, with the apo-N-domain less stable than the apo-C-domain. The two EF hands of the C-domain of androcam bind calcium cooperatively with 40-fold higher average affinity than the corresponding calmodulin sites. Magnesium competes with calcium binding [Ka(Mg) approximately 3 x 10(3) M(-1)]. Weak calcium binding is also detected at one or more N-domain sites. Compared to apo-calmodulin, apo-androcam has a smaller conformational response to calcium and a lower alpha-helical content over a range of experimental conditions. Unlike calmodulin, a tryptic cleavage site in the N-domain of apo-androcam remains trypsin sensitive in the presence of calcium, suggesting an altered calcium-dependent conformational change in this domain. The affinity of model target peptides for androcam is 10(3)-10(5) times lower than for calmodulin, and interaction of the N-domain of androcam with these peptides is significantly reduced. Thus, androcam shows calcium-induced conformational responses typical of a calcium sensor, but its properties indicate calcium sensitivity and target interactions significantly different from those of calmodulin. From the sequence differences and the altered calcium-binding properties it is likely that androcam differs from calmodulin in the conformation of residues in the second calcium-binding loop. Molecular modeling supports the deduction that there are significant conformational differences in the N-domain of androcam compared to calmodulin, and that these could affect the surface, conferring a different specificity on androcam in target interactions related to testis-specific calcium signaling functions.  相似文献   

10.
Mg2+ binds to calmodulin without inducing the changes in secondary structure that are characteristic of Ca2+ binding, or the exposure of hydrophobic surfaces that are involved in typical Ca2+-dependent target interactions. The binding of Mg2+ does, however, produce significant spectroscopic changes in residues located in the Ca2+-binding loops, and the Mg-calmodulin complex is significantly different from apo-calmodulin in loop conformation. Direct measurement of Mg2+ binding constants, and the effects of Mg2+ on Ca2+ binding to calmodulin, are consistent with specific binding of Mg2+, in competition with Ca2+. Mg2+ increases the thermodynamic stability of calmodulin, and we conclude that under resting, nonstimulated conditions, cellular Mg2+ has a direct role in conferring stability on both domains of apo-calmodulin. Apo-calmodulin binds typical target sequences from skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase and neuromodulin with Kd approximately 70-90 nM (at low ionic strength). These affinities are virtually unchanged by 5 mM Mg2+, in marked contrast to the strong enhancement of peptide affinity induced by Ca2+. Under conditions of stimulation and increased [Ca2+], Mg2+ has a role in directing the mode of initial target binding preferentially to the C-domain of calmodulin, due to the opposite relative affinities for binding of Ca2+ and Mg2+ to the two domains. Mg2+ thus amplifies the intrinsic differences of the domains, in a target specific manner. It also contributes to setting the Ca2+ threshold for enzyme activation and increases the importance of a partially Ca2+-saturated calmodulin-target complex that can act as a regulatory kinetic and equilibrium intermediate in Ca2+-dependent target interactions.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of calcium-bound calmodulin (CaM) to recognize most of its target peptides is caused by its binding to two hydrophobic residues ('anchors'). In most of the CaM complexes, the anchors pack against the hydrophobic pockets of the CaM domains and are surrounded by fully conserved Met side chains. Here, by using metadynamics simulations, we investigate quantitatively the energetics of the final step of this process using the M13 peptide, which has a high affinity and spans the sequence of the skeletal myosin light chain kinase, an important natural CaM target. We established the accuracy of our calculations by a comparison between calculated and NMR-derived structural and dynamical properties. Our calculations provide novel insights into the mechanism of protein/peptide recognition: we show that the process is associated with a free energy gain similar to that experimentally measured for the CaM complex with the homologous smooth muscle MLCK peptide (Ehrhardt et al., 1995, Biochemistry 34, 2731). We suggest that binding is dominated by the entropic effect, in agreement with previous proposals. Furthermore, we explain the role of conserved methionines by showing that the large flexibility of these side chains is a key feature of the binding mechanism. Finally, we provide a rationale for the experimental observation that in all CaM complexes the C-terminal domain seems to be hierarchically more important in establishing the interaction.  相似文献   

12.
The different conformations induced by the binding of Mg2+ or Ca2+ to troponin C (TnC) and calmodulin (CaM) results in the exposure of various interfaces with potential to bind target compounds. The interaction of TnC or CaM with three affinity columns with ligands of either the synthetic peptide of troponin I (TnI) inhibitory region (residues 104-115), mastoparan (a wasp venom peptide), or fluphenazine (a phenothiazine drug) were investigated in the presence of Mg2+ or Ca2+. TnC and CaM in the presence of either Ca2+ or Mg2+ bound to the TnI peptide 104-115. The cation specificity for this interaction firmly establishes that the TnI inhibitory region binds to the high affinity sites of TnC (most likely the N-terminal helix of site III) and presumably the homologous region of CaM. Mastoparan interacted strongly with both proteins in the presence of Ca2+ but, in the presence of Mg2+, did not bind to TnC and only bound weakly to CaM. Fluphenazine bound to TnC and CaM only in the presence of Ca2+. When the ligands interacted with either proteins there was an increase in cation affinity, such that TnC and CaM were eluted from the TnI peptide or mastoparan affinity column with 0.1 M EDTA compared with the 0.01 M EDTA required to elute the proteins from the fluphenazine column. The interaction of these ligands with their receptor sites on TnC and CaM require a specific and spatially correct alignment of hydrophobic and negatively charged residues on these proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
pp60v-src tyrosine protein kinase was suggested to interact with Ca2+-bound calmodulin (Ca2+/CaM) through the N-terminal region based on its structural similarities to CAP-23/NAP-22, a myristoylated neuron-specific protein, whose myristoyl group is essential for interaction with Ca2+/CaM; (1) the N terminus of pp60v-src is myristoylated like CAP-23/NAP-22; (2) both lysine residues are required for the myristoylation-dependent interaction and serine residues that are thought to regulate the interaction through the phosphorylations located in the N-terminal region of pp60v-src. To verify this possibility, we investigated the direct interaction between pp60v-src and Ca2+/CaM using a myristoylated peptide corresponding to the N-terminal region of pp60v-src. The binding assay indicated that only the myristoylated peptide binds to Ca2+/CaM, and the non-myristoylated peptide is not able to bind to Ca2+/CaM. Analyses of the binding kinetics revealed two independent reactions with the dissociation constants (KD) of 2.07 x 10(-9)M (KD1) and 3.93 x 10(-6)M (KD2), respectively. Two serine residues near the myristoyl moiety of the peptide (Ser2, Ser11) were phosphorylated by protein kinase C in vitro, and the phosphorylation drastically reduced the interaction. NMR experiments indicated that two molecules of the myristoylated peptide were bound around the hydrophobic clefts of a Ca2+/CaM molecule. The small-angle X-ray scattering analyses showed that the size of the peptide-Ca2+/CaM complex is 2-3A smaller than that of the known Ca2+/CaM-target molecule complexes. These results demonstrate clearly the direct interaction between pp60v-src and Ca2+/CaM in a novel manner different from that of known Ca2+/CaM, the target molecules, interactions.  相似文献   

14.
The conformational and ion binding properties of the sequences 93-104, 96-104, and 93-98 of domain III of bovine brain calmodulin (CaM) have been studied by CD and Tb3+-mediated fluorescence. In aqueous solution the interaction of all fragments with Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions is very weak and without any effect on the peptide conformation, which remains always random. In trifluoroethanol the interaction is very strong and the different fragments exhibit very distinct binding properties. In particular, the dodecapeptide fragment 93-104, and its N-terminal hexapeptide 98-104, bind calcium and magnesium with a very high binding constant (Kb greater than 10(5) M-1), undergoing a substantial conformational change. The structural rearrangement is particularly evident in the hexapeptide fragment, which tend to form a beta-bend. The C-terminal nonapeptide fragment 96-104 interacts with calcium and magnesium more weakly, and the binding process causes a decrease of ordered structure. These results suggest that, even in the entire dodecapeptide sequence corresponding to the loop of domain III of CaM, the calcium binding site is shifted toward the N-terminal hexapeptide segment. This interpretation is consistent with the results of crystallographic studies of CaM, which show that the calcium ions are located toward the amino terminal portion of the loop.  相似文献   

15.
The small bilobal calcium regulatory protein calmodulin (CaM) activates numerous target enzymes in response to transient changes in intracellular calcium concentrations. Binding of calcium to the two helix-loop-helix calcium-binding motifs in each of the globular domains induces conformational changes that expose a methionine-rich hydrophobic patch on the surface of each domain of the protein, which it uses to bind to peptide sequences in its target enzymes. Although these CaM-binding domains typically have little sequence identity, the positions of several bulky hydrophobic residues are often conserved, allowing for classification of CaM-binding domains into recognition motifs, such as the 1–14 and 1–10 motifs. For calcium-independent binding of CaM, a third motif known as the IQ motif is also common. Many CaM-peptide complexes have globular conformations, where CaM’s central linker connecting the two domains unwinds, allowing the protein to wrap around a single predominantly α-helical target peptide sequence. However, novel structures have recently been reported where the conformation of CaM is highly dissimilar to these globular complexes, in some instances with less than a full compliment of bound calcium ions, as well as novel stoichiometries. Furthermore, many divergent CaM isoforms from yeast and plant species have been discovered with unique calcium-binding and enzymatic activation characteristics compared to the single CaM isoform found in mammals.  相似文献   

16.
The interactions between the abundant methionine residues of the calcium regulatory protein calmodulin (CaM) and several of its binding targets were probed using fluorescence spectroscopy. Tryptophan steady-state fluorescence from peptides encompassing the CaM-binding domains of the target proteins myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) and caldesmon site A and B (CaD A, CaD B), and the model peptide melittin showed Ca(2+)-dependent blue-shifts in their maximum emission wavelength when complexed with wild-type CaM. Blue-shifts were also observed for complexes in which the CaM methionine residues were replaced by selenomethionine, norleucine and ethionine, and when a quadruple methionine to leucine C-terminal mutant of CaM was studied. Quenching of the tryptophan fluorescence intensity was observed with selenomethionine, but not with norleucine or ethionine substituted protein. Fluorescence quenching studies with added potassium iodide (KI) demonstrate that the non-native proteins limit the solvent accessibility of the Trp in the MLCK peptide to levels close to that of the wild-type CaM-MLCK interaction. Our results show that the methionine residues from CaM are highly sensitive to the target peptide in question, confirming the importance of their role in binding interactions. In addition, we provide evidence that the nature of binding in the CaM-CaD B complex is unique compared with the other complexes studied, as the Trp residue of this peptide remains partially solvent exposed upon binding to CaM.  相似文献   

17.
We have determined the solution structure of calmodulin (CaM) from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) (yCaM) in the apo state by using NMR spectroscopy. yCaM is 60% identical in its amino acid sequence with other CaMs, and exhibits its unique biological features. yCaM consists of two similar globular domains (N- and C-domain) containing three Ca(2+)-binding motifs, EF-hands, in accordance with the observed 3 mol of Ca(2+) binding. In the solution structure of yCaM, the conformation of the N-domain conforms well to the one of the expressed N-terminal half-domains of yCaM [Ishida, H., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 13660-13668]. The conformation of the C-domain basically consists of a pair of helix-loop-helix motifs, though a segment corresponding to the forth Ca(2+)-binding site of CaM deviates in its primary structure from a typical EF-hand motif and loses the ability to bind Ca(2+). Thus, the resulting conformation of each domain is essentially identical to the corresponding domain of CaM in the apo state. A flexible linker connects the two domains as observed for CaM. Any evidence for the previously reported interdomain interaction in yCaM was not observed in the solution structure of the apo state. Hence, the interdomain interaction possibly occurs in the course of Ca(2+) binding and generates a cooperative Ca(2+) binding among all three sites. Preliminary studies on a mutant protein of yCaM, E104Q, revealed that the Ca(2+)-bound N-domain interacts with the apo C-domain and induces a large conformational change in the C-domain.  相似文献   

18.
A variety of viral and signal transduction proteins are known to be myristoylated. Although the role of myristoylation in protein-lipid interaction is well established, the involvement of myristoylation in protein-protein interactions is less well understood. CAP-23/NAP-22 is a brain-specific protein kinase C substrate protein that is involved in axon regeneration. Although the protein lacks any canonical calmodulin (CaM)-binding domain, it binds CaM with high affinity. The binding of CAP-23/NAP-22 to CaM is myristoylation dependent and the N-terminal myristoyl group is directly involved in the protein-protein interaction. Here we show the crystal structure of Ca2+-CaM bound to a myristoylated peptide corresponding to the N-terminal domain of CAP-23/NAP-22. The myristoyl moiety of the peptide goes through a hydrophobic tunnel created by the hydrophobic pockets in the N- and C-terminal domains of CaM. In addition to the myristoyl group, several amino-acid residues in the peptide are important for CaM binding. This is a novel mode of binding and is very different from the mechanism of binding in other CaM-target complexes.  相似文献   

19.
The three-dimensional structure of the complex between calmodulin (CaM) and a peptide corresponding to the N-terminal portion of the CaM-binding domain of the plasma membrane calcium pump, the peptide C20W, has been solved by heteronuclear three-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The structure calculation is based on a total of 1808 intramolecular NOEs and 49 intermolecular NOEs between the peptide C20W and calmodulin from heteronuclear-filtered NOESY spectra and a half-filtered experiment, respectively. Chemical shift differences between free Ca(2+)-saturated CaM and its complex with C20W as well as the structure calculation reveal that C20W binds solely to the C-terminal half of CaM. In addition, comparison of the methyl resonances of the nine assigned methionine residues of free Ca(2+)-saturated CaM with those of the CaM/C20W complex revealed a significant difference between the N-terminal and the C-terminal domain; i.e., resonances in the N-terminal domain of the complex were much more similar to those reported for free CaM in contrast to those in the C-terminal half which were significantly different not only from the resonances of free CaM but also from those reported for the CaM/M13 complex. As a consequence, the global structure of the CaM/C20W complex is unusual, i.e., different from other peptide calmodulin complexes, since we find no indication for a collapsed structure. The fine modulation in the peptide protein interface shows a number of differences to the CaM/M13 complex studied by Ikura et al. [Ikura, M., Clore, G. M., Gronenborn, A. M., Zhu, G., Klee, C. B., and Bax, A. (1992) Science 256, 632-638]. The unusual binding mode to only the C-terminal half of CaM is in agreement with the biochemical observation that the calcium pump can be activated by the C-terminal half of CaM alone [Guerini, D., Krebs, J., and Carafoli, E. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 15172-15177].  相似文献   

20.
Plants express numerous calmodulin (CaM) isoforms that exhibit differential activation or inhibition of CaM-dependent enzymes in vitro; however, their specificities toward target enzyme/protein binding are uncertain. A random peptide library displaying a 22-mer peptide on a bacteriophage surface was constructed to screen peptides that specifically bind to plant CaM isoforms (soybean calmodulin (ScaM)-1 and SCaM-4 were used in this study) in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The deduced amino acid sequence analyses of the respective 80 phage clones that were independently isolated via affinity panning revealed that SCaM isoforms require distinct amino acid sequences for optimal binding. SCaM-1-binding peptides conform to a 1-5-10 ((FILVW)XXX(FILV) XXXX(FILVW)) motif (where X denotes any amino acid), whereas SCaM-4-binding peptide sequences conform to a 1-8-14 ((FILVW)XXXXXX(FAILVW)XXXXX(FILVW)) motif. These motifs are classified based on the positions of conserved hydrophobic residues. To examine their binding properties further, two representative peptides from each of the SCaM isoform-binding sequences were synthesized and analyzed via gel mobility shift assays, Trp fluorescent spectra analyses, and phosphodiesterase competitive inhibition experiments. The results of these studies suggest that SCaM isoforms possess different binding sequences for optimal target interaction, which therefore may provide a molecular basis for CaM isoform-specific function in plants. Furthermore, the isolated peptide sequences may serve not only as useful CaM-binding sequence references but also as potential reagents for studying CaM isoform-specific function in vivo.  相似文献   

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