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1.
Absorption and fluorescence properties of VU-9 calmodulin, an engineered calmodulin in which a tryptophan residue has been introduced in position 99, have been investigated. Tryptophan 99 fluoresces with a maximum around 348 nm and is easily quenched by fluorescence quenchers such as acrylamide, indicating that the chromophore is in a polar environment and well exposed to the solvent, a location which has been reported previously for tyrosine 99 in mammalian calmodulin [Kilhoffer, M. C., Demaille, J. G., & Gérard, D. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4407-4414]. The quantum yields of tryptophan 99 were found to be 0.19 in the absence of calcium and 0.15 in its presence. These values indicate that the chromophore is in a particular microenvironment where it is protected from the quenching mechanisms normally occurring in proteins. Steady-state fluorescence polarization measurements indicate that the protein exhibits segmental mobility both in the absence and in the presence of calcium. Binding of calcium decreases the mobility of the chromophore, a good indication for a rigidification of the protein structure. A quite rigid structure of at least the carboxy-terminal part of VU-9 calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ is also suggested by F?rster energy-transfer measurements.  相似文献   

2.
Alteration of residues 82-84 in the alpha-helix that links the two halves of calmodulin results in a differential effect on activator activity. Previous studies (Lukas, T. J., Burgess, W. H., Prendergast, F. G., Lau, W., and Watterson, D. M. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 1458-1464) indicated the importance of positive charge clusters in the calmodulin-binding protein, myosin light chain kinase. This suggested the possible importance of complementary negative charge clusters in calmodulin. By using an efficient cassette mutagenesis approach and a synthetic calmodulin gene (Roberts, D. M., Crea, R., Malecha, M., Alvarado-Urbina, G., Chiarello, R. H., and Watterson, D. M. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 5090-5098), this possibility was directly addressed by engineering a new calmodulin, VU-8 calmodulin, in which the glutamate cluster at residues 82-84 in the synthetic gene product (VU-1 calmodulin) was replaced by three lysines. VU-8 calmodulin activated phosphodiesterase to the same maximal extent as VU-1 calmodulin, although there was an alteration in the concentration of calmodulin required for half-maximal stimulation. In contrast, myosin light chain kinase was activated to only 30% of maximal activity and NAD kinase was not activated. These results provide insight into the functional role of the unusual central helix structure found in the calmodulin family of proteins and indicate that different, although possibly overlapping, chemical complementarities are employed in the interaction between calmodulin and its various physiological targets.  相似文献   

3.
Peptide-induced conformational changes in five isofunctional mutants of calmodulin (CaM), each bearing a single tryptophan residue either at the seventh position of each of the four calcium-binding loops (i.e., amino acids 26, 62, 99, and 135) or in the central helix (amino acid 81) were studied by using fluorescence spectroscopy. The peptides RS20F and RS20CK correspond to CaM-binding amino acid sequence segments of either nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) or calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMPK-II), respectively. Both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence data were collected from the various peptide-CaM complexes. Steady-state fluorescence intensity measurements indicated that, in the presence of an excess of calcium, both peptides bind to the calmodulin mutants with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The tryptophans located in loops I and IV exhibited red-shifted emission maxima (356 nm), high quantum yields (0.3), and long average lifetimes (6 ns). They responded in a similar manner to peptide binding, by only slight changes in their fluorescence features. In contrast, the fluorescence intensity of the tryptophans in loops II and III decreased markedly, and their fluorescence spectrum was blue-shifted upon peptide binding. Analysis of the tryptophan fluorescence decay of the last mentioned calmodulins supports a model in which the equilibrium between two (Trp-99) or three (Trp-62) states of these tryptophan residues, each characterized by a different lifetime, was altered toward the blue-shifted short lifetime component upon peptide binding. Taken together, these data provide new evidence that both lobes of calmodulin are involved in peptide binding. Both peptides induced similar changes in the fluorescence properties of the tryptophan residues located in the calcium-binding loops, with the exception of calmodulin with Trp-135. For this last mentioned calmodulin, slight differences were observed. Tryptophan in the central helix responded differently to RS20F and RS20CK binding. RS20F binding induced a red-shift in the emission maximum of Trp-81 while RS20CK induced a blue-shift. The quenching rate of Trp-81 by iodide was slightly reduced upon RS20CK binding, while RS20F induced a 2-fold increase. These results provide evidence that the environment of Trp-81 is different in each case and are, therefore, consistent with the hypothesis that the central helix can play a differential role in the recognition of, or response to, CaM-binding structures.  相似文献   

4.
A gene coding for a calmodulin was synthesized and expressed in Escherichia coli. The gene was produced by the enzymatic ligation of 61 chemically synthesized DNA fragments. The gene possesses 27 unique, regularly spaced, restriction endonuclease cleavage sites to facilitate gene mutagenesis by the replacement of specific gene segments with synthetic double-stranded DNA. An expression vector containing the calmodulin gene was used to transform E. coli. Purification and characterization of calmodulin (VU-1 calmodulin) expressed by these transformants showed that it lacks two posttranslational modifications: an amino-terminal blocking group and N epsilon, N epsilon, N epsilon-trimethyllysine at position 115. The cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activator properties of VU-1, higher plant, and vertebrate calmodulins were not statistically different. However, VU-1 calmodulin was found to activate nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) kinase to a maximal level that was at least 3-fold higher than that found with higher plant and vertebrate calmodulins. This higher level of activation is also characteristic of calmodulins from Dictyostelium discoideum and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii [Roberts, D. M., Burgess, W. H., & Watterson, D. M. (1984) Plant Physiol. 75, 796-798; Marshak, D. R., Clarke, M., Roberts, D. M., & Watterson, D. M. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2891-2899]. The only common feature among Dictyostelium, Chlamydomonas, and VU-1 calmodulins not found in higher plant and vertebrate calmodulins is an unmethylated lysine at position 115. The results indicate that the lack of methylation of lysine-115 may contribute to the maximal level of NAD kinase activation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
A mutant calmodulin, in which phenylalanine 99 of calcium binding site III was changed to a tryptophan by using cassette-based, site-directed mutagenesis, has been used to analyze the mechanism of calcium binding. The combined study of direct calcium binding, modification of tryptophan fluorescence properties upon calcium binding, and terbium titration allows some discrimination among proposed mechanisms of cation binding to calmodulin. Calmodulin appears to have six cation binding sites, four of which are selective for calcium, that seem to be coupled. Under a given set of conditions, these calcium-selective sites are not identical. In addition to providing insight into the mechanisms of calcium modulation of calmodulin, these studies demonstrate the feasibility of using isofunctional, tryptophan-containing mutants of proteins to gain insight into protein-ligand interaction.  相似文献   

6.
D A Malencik  S R Anderson 《Biochemistry》1984,23(11):2420-2428
Calmodulin and troponin C exhibit calcium-dependent binding of 1 mol/mol of dynorphin. The dissociation constants of the complexes, determined in 0.20 N KC1-1.0 mM CaCI2, pH 7.3, are 0.6 microM for calmodulin, 2.4 microM for rabbit fast skeletal muscle troponin C, and 9 microM for bovine heart troponin C. Experiments with deletion peptides of dynorphin show that peptide chain length and especially charge affect the binding of the peptides by calmodulin. Dynorphin, but not mastoparan or melittin, inhibits adenosinetriphosphatase activity in a reconstituted rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin assay. The inhibition is partially reversed by the addition of calmodulin or troponin C in the presence of calcium. Calmodulin also exhibits calcium-dependent binding of a synthetic peptide corresponding to positions 104-115 of rabbit fast skeletal muscle troponin I. Mastoparan is a tetradecapeptide from the vespid wasp having exceptional affinity for calmodulin, with Kd approximately 0.3 nM [Malencik, D.A., & Anderson, S.R. (1983) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 114, 50]. The addition of 1 mol/mol of mastoparan to the complex of calmodulin with dynorphin results in complete dissociation of dynorphin. Similar titrations of the skeletal muscle troponin C-dynorphin complex produce a gradual dissociation consistent with a dissociation constant of 0.2 microM for the troponin C-mastoparan complex. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements using the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of mastoparan X show strongly calcium-dependent binding by proteolytic fragments of calmodulin. binding by proteolytic fragments of calmodulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
There is a necessary energetic linkage between ligand binding and stability in biological molecules. The critical glutamate in Site 4 was mutated to create two mutants of the C-domain of calmodulin yielding E140D and E140Q. These proteins were stably folded in the absence of calcium, but had dramatically impaired binding of calcium. We determined the stability of the mutant proteins in the absence and presence of calcium using urea-induced unfolding monitored by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. These calcium-dependent unfolding curves were fit to models that allowed for linkage of stability to binding of a single calcium ion to the native and unfolded states. Simultaneous analysis of the unfolding profiles for each mutant yielded estimates for calcium-binding constants that were consistent with results from direct titrations monitored by fluorescence. Binding to the unfolded state was not an important energetic contributor to the ligand-linked stability of these mutants.  相似文献   

9.
P-57 is a neural-specific calmodulin binding protein with novel calmodulin binding properties. P-57 exhibits higher affinity for calmodulin-Sepharose in the absence of free Ca2+ than in the presence of Ca2+ (Andreasen, T.J., Luetje, C.W., Heideman, W. & Storm, D.R. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4615-4618; Cimler, B. M., Andreasen, T.J., Andreasen, K.I. & Storm, D.R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10784-10788). In this study, the dissociation constants for P-57 and immunopurified 5-[[(iodoacetylamino)ethyl]-amino]-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid-labeled calmodulin (AEDANS-CaM) were determined under low and high ionic strength conditions. In the absence of added KCl, the dissociation constants for the P-57 X AEDANS-CaM complex were 2.3 X 10(-7) +/- 6 X 10(-8) M and 1.0 X 10(-6) +/- 3 X 10(-7) M in the presence and absence of excess Ca2+ chelator. The addition of KCl to 150 mM increased the Ca2+-independent and -dependent dissociation constants to 3.4 X 10(-6) +/- 9 X 10(-7) M and 3.0 X 10(-6) +/- 9 X 10(-7) M, respectively. The association of P-57 with AEDANS-CaM under low Ca2+ conditions was determined as a function of KCl concentrations. By taking into account the amount of P-57 found in brain and its affinity for calmodulin, it is concluded that most or all of the CaM would be complexed to P-57 in unstimulated cells. P-57 was phosphorylated by the Ca2+-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) with a phosphate:protein molar ratio of 1.3. Phosphoamino acid analysis demonstrated phosphorylation at a serine residue. CaM decreased the rate of phosphorylation of P-57 by protein kinase C, and phosphorylation prevented P-57 binding to calmodulin-Sepharose. P-57 was not phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. It is proposed that P-57 binds and localizes calmodulin at specific sites within the cell and that free calmodulin is released locally in response to phosphorylation of P-57 by protein kinase C and/or to increases in intracellular free Ca2+. This regulatory mechanism, which appears to be specific to brain, would serve to decrease the response time for Ca2+-calmodulin-regulated processes.  相似文献   

10.
Structure-activity studies of tetramethinemerocyanine fluorophores enabled the synthesis of novel dyes which showed spectral changes during reversible, calcium-dependent association with calmodulin. These spectral changes were greatly enhanced in dyes with a quaternary nitrogen and specifically placed hydrophobic chains. One such dye was covalently attached to calmodulin, producing a calmodulin analog with calcium-sensitive fluorescence. The analog, MeroCaM, showed a calcium-induced 3.4-fold increase in excitation ratio (608/532 nm excitation, 623 nm emission), which was fully reversed by lowering free calcium levels. MeroCaM's excitation ratio showed a half-maximal change at 300-400 nM calcium, below calcium concentrations reported to produce half-maximal saturation of calcium-calmodulin binding. However, the calcium dependence of MeroCaM's phosphodiesterase activation paralleled that of calmodulin. MeroCaM's fluorescence changes therefore appear to reflect primarily calcium binding to high affinity sites. MeroCaM's maximal phosphodiesterase activation was 30-40% that of calmodulin. In myosin light chain kinase activation, MeroCaM and calmodulin displayed indistinguishable maximal activation levels and concentration dependence of activation. Changes in MeroCaM's calcium affinity induced by magnesium, phosphodiesterase, and melittin were similar to those reported for calmodulin. Experiments with melittin revealed that target protein interaction could alter the fluorescence changes produced by calcium binding. MeroCaM showed promising brightness and photostability when imaged in individual living fibroblasts. The long excitation and emission wavelengths of MeroCaM, and the strong dependence of its excitation ratio on calcium concentrations, suit it well for use as a probe of calmodulin-dependent calcium signaling in living cells, as well as for experiments in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
Ultraviolet irradiation of calmodulin in the presence of calcium results in either the intramolecular cross-linking of Tyr99 and Tyr138 [Malencik, D.A., & Anderson, S.R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 709] or, when [Tyr8]substance P is bound, the generation of peptide-calmodulin adducts. The latter consist of two chromatographically distinct fractions, one of which was purified to homogeneity with phenylagarose, DEAE-Sepharose, and reverse-phase chromatography. Chemical characterization shows that the purified conjugate contains 1 mol/mol of peptide covalently attached to Tyr138 of calmodulin. The fluorescence intensity and anisotropy of the dityrosine moiety demonstrate that this novel derivative undergoes interactions with calcium, smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase, and phenylagarose which are similar to those of unmodified calmodulin.  相似文献   

12.
S A Harding  S H Oh    D M Roberts 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(6):1137-1144
A strategy for elucidating specific molecular targets of calcium and calmodulin in plant defense responses has been developed. We have used a dominant-acting calmodulin mutant (VU-3, Lys to Arg115) to investigate the oxidative burst and nicotinamide co-enzyme fluxes after various stimuli (cellulase, harpin, incompatible bacteria, osmotic and mechanical) that elicit plant defense responses in transgenic tobacco cell cultures. VU-3 calmodulin differs from endogenous plant calmodulin in that it cannot be methylated post-translationally, and as a result it hyperactivates calmodulin-dependent NAD kinase. Cells expressing VU-3 calmodulin exhibited a stronger active oxygen burst that occurred more rapidly than in normal control cells challenged with the same stimuli. Increases in NADPH level were also greater in VU-3 cells and coincided both in timing and magnitude with development of the active oxygen species (AOS) burst. These data show that calmodulin is a target of calcium fluxes in response to elicitor or environmental stress, and provide the first evidence that plant NAD kinase may be a downstream target which potentiates AOS production by altering NAD(H)/NADP(H) homeostasis.  相似文献   

13.
P-57 is a neurospecific calmodulin binding protein that was discovered by virtue of its unusual interactions with calmodulin-Sepharose [Andreasen, T. J., Luetje, C. W., Heideman, W., & Storm, D. R. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4615-4618; Cimler, B. M., Andreasen, T. J., Andreasen, K. I., & Storm, D. R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10784-10788]. In contrast to other calmodulin binding proteins, P-57 has higher affinity for calmodulin-Sepharose in the absence of calcium compared to that in the presence of calcium. In this study, we report the chemical and physical properties of P-57 purified from detergent-solubilized bovine brain membranes. The amino acid composition of P-57 is distinctive in that it contains a single phenylalanine residue with no other aromatic amino acids and a relatively high percentage of proline and alanine. In the presence of 0.05% Lubrol PX, its predicted secondary structure from circular dichroism spectroscopy is 1% alpha-helix, 21% beta-sheet, and 78% random coil. The hydrodynamic characteristics of the protein-detergent complex and the molecular weight of the protein were determined by gel filtration and sucrose density gradient sedimentation in the presence and absence of calmodulin. The P-57-detergent complex has an apparent Stokes radius (Rs) of 4.58 nm and a sedimentation coefficient (S20,w) of 1.44 S while the Stokes radius and S20,w for the P-57-calmodulin-detergent complex are 5.33 nm and 2.32 S, respectively. Perrin analysis of a 5-[[[(iodoacetyl)amino]ethyl]amino]-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid (AEDANS) derivative of P-57 confirmed the Stokes radius determined by gel filtration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Delta-Hemolysin forms a 1:1 complex with Ca2+ -liganded calmodulin. Probably because of the pronounced tendency of delta-hemolysin to self-associate, the apparent binding affinity is much less than that for melittin. Complex formation is reflected by an increase in quantum yield of Trp-15 of delta-hemolysin and by increased shielding from acrylamide quenching. There is, however, no indication of a change in peptide molecular ellipticity. The binding of 2-toluidinyl-naphthalene-6-sulfonate is reduced by complex formation, suggesting the involvement of a hydrophobic region. Complex formation also blocks the proteolysis by trypsin of the bond between residues 77 and 78. The time decays of fluorescence intensity and anisotropy for tryptophan are multiexponential for both free and complexed delta-hemolysin; the average decay time for intensity is substantially increased for the complex. The localized mobility of tryptophan is greatly reduced in the complex. Complex formation appears to involve both the C-terminal lobe and the connecting strand of calmodulin.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction between calmodulin (CaM) and peptide M13, its target binding sequence from skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase, involves predominantly two sets of interactions, between the N-terminal target residues and the C-domain of calmodulin, and between the C-terminal target residues and the N-domain of calmodulin (Ikura M et al., 1992, Science 256:632-638). Using short synthetic peptides based on the two halves of the target sequence, the interactions with calmodulin and its separate C-domain have been studied by fluorescence and CD spectroscopy, calcium binding, and kinetic techniques. Peptide WF10 (residues 1-10 of M13) binds to CaM with Kd approximately 1 microM; peptide FW10 (residues 9-18 of M13, with Phe-17-->Trp substitution) binds to CaM with Kd approximately 100 microM. The effect of peptide WF10 on calcium binding to calmodulin produces a biphasic saturation curve, with marked enhancement of affinity for the binding of two calcium ions to the C-domain, forming a stable half-saturated complex, Ca2-CaM-peptide, and confirming the functional importance of the interaction of this sequence with the C-domain. Stopped-flow studies show that the EGTA-induced dissociation of WF10 from Ca4-CaM proceeds by a reversible relaxation mechanism from a kinetic intermediate state, also involving half-saturation of CaM, and the same mechanism is evident for the full target peptide. Interaction of the N-terminal target residues with the C-domain is energetically the most important component, but interaction of calmodulin with the whole target sequence is necessary to induce the full cooperative interaction of the two contiguous elements of the target sequence with both N- and C-domains of calmodulin. Thus, the interaction of calmodulin with the M13 sequence can be dissected on both a structural and kinetic basis into partial reactions involving intermediates comprising distinct regions of the target sequence. We propose a general mechanism for the calcium regulation of calmodulin-dependent enzyme activation, involving an intermediate complex formed by interaction of the calmodulin C-domain and the corresponding part of the target sequence. This intermediate species can function to regulate the overall calcium sensitivity of activation and to determine the affinity of the calmodulin target interaction.  相似文献   

16.
Stopped-flow kinetic and fluorescence spectroscopic analyses, including solvent and temperature perturbations, of five isofunctional structural mutants of calmodulin indicate that calcium binding to calmodulin follows the order site III, site IV, site I, site II, with dissociation occurring in the reverse order. Each of the isofunctional structural mutants contains a single tryptophan residue, introduced by site-specific mutagenesis, as an internal spectroscopic reporter group that was used as a probe of local conformational change. Calcium binding was studied by using flow dialysis or by using fluorescence spectroscopy and monitoring the change in the single tryptophan residue in each calcium-binding site. Calcium removal was examined by using EDTA and monitoring tryptophan fluorescence or by using Quin 2 and monitoring the change in the chromophoric chelator. Computational analysis of the data suggests a rate-limiting step for dissociation between calcium removal from sites I/II and sites III/IV. Unexpected results with the site IV isofunctional mutant (Q135W-CaM) indicated cross-talk between the amino and carboxyl terminal halves of CaM during the calcium-binding mechanism. Studies with ethylene glycol provided empirical data that suggest the functional importance of the electrostatic potential of CaM, or the molarity of water, in the calcium-binding process. Altogether, the data allowed a kinetic extension of the sequential, cooperative model for calcium binding to calmodulin and provided values for additional parameters in the model of calcium binding to CaM, a prototypical member of the family of proteins required for calcium signal transduction in eukaryotic cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
To gauge similarities between S100b protein and calmodulin, interactions were observed between S100b and melittin and between S100b and tau, the microtubule-associated proteins. The interaction of melittin with S100b protein in the presence and absence of calcium was studied by fluorescence polarization, UV difference spectroscopy, and sulfhydryl derivatization. Whether calcium was present or not in the solution, melittin and S100b form a complex of molar ratios up to 2:1. Further binding of melittin occurred, but it resulted in precipitation of S100b, as is true of the corresponding case of melittin binding to calmodulin. In the absence of calcium, the interaction of melittin and S100b shielded the tryptophan (Trp) of the former protein and exposed cysteine-84 beta (Cys-84 beta) of the latter protein, leaving the tyrosine-16 beta (Tyr-16 beta) of S100b unaffected. Calcium addition to the complex partially restored the exposure of Trp of melittin and caused changes in the environment of Tyr-16 beta (unlike the environmental changes induced for Tyr-16 beta by calcium in the absence of melittin). The conformational changes induced in S100b by interaction with melittin increased its affinity for calcium and offset the inhibition of calcium binding otherwise observed in the presence of potassium ions. This corroborated the previous finding that S100b affinity for calcium greatly depends on the protein conformation. The phenomena described above are similar to the interactions of melittin with calmodulin and thus suggest that S100b and calmodulin have a common structural domain not only that binds melittin but also that may interact with common target proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Calmodulin has been isolated and characterized from the gill of the bay scallop aequipecten irradians. Quantitative electrophoretic analysis of epithelial cell fractions show most of the calmodulin to be localized in the cilia, specifically in the detergent- solubilized membrane-matrix fraction. Calmodulin represents 2.2 +/- 0.3 percent of the membrane-matrix protein or 0.41 +/- 0.5 percent of the total ciliary protein. Its concentration is at least 10(-4) M if distributed uniformly within the matrix. Extraction in the presence of calcium suggests that the calmodulin is not bound to the axoneme proper. The ciliary protein is identified as a calmodulin on the basis of its calcium- dependent binding to a fluphenazine-sepharose affinity column and its comigration with bovine brain calmodulin on alkaline-urea and SDS polyacrylamide gels in both the presence and absence of calcium. Scallop ciliary calmodulin activates bovine brain phosphodiesterase to the same extent as bovine brain and chicken gizzard calmodulins. Containing trimethyllysine and lacking cysteine and tryptophan, the amino acid composition of gill calmodulin is typical of known calmodulins, except that it is relatively high in serine and low in methionine. Its composition is less acidic than other calmodulins, in agreement with an observed isoelectric point approximately 0.2 units higher than that of bovine brain. Comparative tryptic peptide mapping of scallop gill ciliary and bovine brain calmodulins indicates coincidence of over 75 percent of the major peptides, but at least two major peptides in each show no near-equivalency. Preliminary results using ATP-reactivated gill cell models show no effect of calcium at micromolar levels on ciliary beat or directionality of the lateral cilia, the cilia which constitute the vast majority of those isolated. However, ciliary arrest will occur at calcium levels more than 150 muM. Because calmodulin usually functions in the micromolar range, its role in this system is unclear. Scallop gill ciliary calmodulin may be involved in the direct regulation of dyneintubule sliding, or it may serve some coupled calcium transport function. At the concentration in which it is found, it must also at least act as a calcium buffer.  相似文献   

19.
Dityrosine formation in calmodulin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Ultraviolet (280-nm) irradiation of bovine brain calmodulin results in calcium-dependent changes in its fluorescence emission spectrum. These consist of a decline in the intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence of the protein and the appearance of a new emission maximum at 400 nm. Chromatography of irradiated calmodulin, using Ultrogel AcA 54 and phenyl-agarose columns, yields several distinctive fractions. One of these, representing 2.8% of the total recovered protein and 53% of the total fluorescence emission at 400 nm, was selected for detailed characterization. Analyses performed on acid hydrolysates reveal the presence of dityrosine, a derivative of tyrosine known for its fluorescence near 400 nm, at the level of 0.59-0.89 mol per 16,700 g of protein. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis experiments demonstrate two components of apparent molecular weights 14,000 (80%) and 16,000 (20%). Observations on the effects of UV irradiation on the thrombic fragments of calmodulin and on related calcium binding proteins (rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C, bovine cardiac troponin C, and parvalbumin) support the interpretation that dityrosine formation in calmodulin results from the intramolecular cross-linking of Tyr-99 and Tyr-138. The dityrosine-containing photoproduct of calmodulin is unable to stimulate the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of calcineurin under standard assay conditions. Fluorescence titrations show a generally weakened interaction with calcium ion occurring in two stages. The pKa of the derivative is considerably higher than that of free dityrosine and is calcium dependent, decreasing from 7.88 to 7.59 on the addition of 3 mM CaCl2. Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase binds the derivative about 280-fold less effectively than it binds native calmodulin. Of several metal ions tested, only Cd2+ approaches Ca2+ in its ability to promote the appearance of the 400-nm emission band during UV irradiation of calmodulin. Mn2+ and Cu2+ appear to inhibit dityrosine formation. Ascorbic acid, dithiothreitol, and glutathione are also inhibitory.  相似文献   

20.
H Sun  D Yin  T C Squier 《Biochemistry》1999,38(38):12266-12279
We have used fluorescence spectroscopy to investigate the average structure and extent of conformational heterogeneity associated with the central helix in calmodulin (CaM), a sequence that contributes to calcium binding sites 2 and 3 and connects the amino- and carboxyl-terminal globular domains. Using site-directed mutagenesis, a double mutant was constructed involving conservative substitution of Tyr(99) --> Trp(99) and Leu(69) --> Cys(69) with no significant effect on the secondary structure of CaM. These mutation sites are at opposite ends of the central helix. Trp(99) acts as a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) donor in distance measurements of the conformation of the central helix. Cys(69) provides a reactive group for the covalent attachment of the FRET acceptor 5-((((2-iodoacetyl)amino)ethyl)amino)naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (IAEDANS). AEDANS-modified CaM fully activates the plasma membrane (PM) Ca-ATPase, indicating that the native structure is retained following site-directed mutagenesis and chemical modification. We find that the average spatial separation between Trp(99) and AEDANS covalently bound to Cys(69) decreases by approximately 7 +/- 2 A upon calcium binding. However, irrespective of calcium binding, there is little change in the conformational heterogeneity associated with the central helix under physiologically relevant conditions (i.e., pH 7.5, 0.1 M KCl). These results indicate that calcium activation alters the spatial arrangement of the opposing globular domains between two defined conformations. In contrast, under conditions of low ionic strength or pH the structure of CaM is altered and the conformational heterogeneity of the central helix is decreased upon calcium activation. These results suggest the presence of important ionizable groups that affect the structure of the central helix, which may play an important role in mediating the ability of CaM to rapidly bind and activate target proteins.  相似文献   

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