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1.
Microvilli isolated from the MAT-C1 ascites subline of the 13762 rat mammary adenocarcinoma contain a major calcium-sensitive microfilament-binding protein, AMV-p35 (ascites microvillar p35). Association of AMV-p35 with microfilament cores during Triton X-100 extraction of the microvilli is half-maximal at 0.1-0.2 mM calcium. The protein, which comprises 6% of the total microvillar protein, can be isolated from microfilament cores prepared in the presence of calcium by extraction with EGTA and purification by ion-exchange chromatography. Alternatively, the protein can be isolated from Triton extracts of microvilli prepared in the absence of calcium by precipitation with calcium, solubilization of the precipitate with EGTA, and chromatography on an ion-exchange column. AMV-p35 binds to phosphatidylserine liposomes and F-actin with half-maximal calcium concentrations of about 10 microM and 0.2 mM, respectively. Treatment of AMV-p35 with chymotrypsin yields a 33,000-dalton fragment, behavior similar to the tyrosine kinase substrates calpactins I and II and lipocortins I and II. Immunoblot analyses using antibodies directed against calpactin I, lipocortin I, and lipocortin II showed strong reactivity of AMV-p35 with anti-calpactin I and anti-lipocortin II, but little reactivity toward anti-lipocortin I. The close relationship between AMV-p35 and calpactin I was verified by amino acid sequence analyses of peptides isolated from cyanogen bromide digests of AMV-p35. By gel filtration and velocity sedimentation analyses purified AMV-p35 is a 35,000-dalton monomer. Moreover, AMV-p35 extracted directly from microvilli in Triton/EGTA also behaves as a 35,000-dalton menomer. These findings indicate that AMV-p35 is closely related to the pp60src kinase substrate calpactin I (p36). However, AMV-p35 occurs in the microvilli as a monomer rather than as the heterotetrameric calpactin found in several other cell types.  相似文献   

2.
Fimbrin, previously recognized as a major structural protein of the microfilament core bundles of intestinal epithelial cell microvilli, has been purified to homogeneity and characterized. It is a nearly globular monomeric protein of apparent molecular weight 68,000 and has a single calcium binding site (Kd = 9 microM), for which magnesium ions compete. Fimbrin binds to F-actin and this interaction is characterized in detail. Under our optimal binding of conditions, fimbrin induces tightly packed F-actin bundles, similar to the bundles induced by villin, another microvillus structural protein. The formation of mixed fimbrin-villin-actin bundles provides a further step toward the full in vitro reconstitution of microvillus core filaments from its purified individual components. The reconstituted fimbrin-villin-actin bundles do not display the side arms characteristic of isolated microvillus cores. These results are discussed in terms of our current understanding of the organization of the microvillus core filaments and indicate that this structure contains two bundling proteins, villin and fimbrin. The results complement previous studies and now provide a minimal biochemical characterization of all four major actin-associated structural proteins so far identified in core filaments. Three of these (villin, fimbrin, and calmodulin) are calcium-binding proteins, emphasizing the concept of calcium control over submembranous microfilament organization.  相似文献   

3.
Brain spectrin, through its beta subunit, binds with high affinity to protein-binding sites on brain membranes quantitatively depleted of ankyrin (Steiner, J., and Bennett, V. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14417-14425). In this study, calmodulin is demonstrated to inhibit binding of brain spectrin to synaptosomal membranes. Submicromolar concentrations of calcium are required for inhibition of binding, with half-maximal effects at pCa = 6.5. Calmodulin competitively inhibits binding of spectrin to protein(s) in stripped synaptosomal membranes, with Ki = 1.3 microM in the presence of 10 microM calcium. A reversible receptor-mediated process, and not proteolysis, is responsible for inhibition since the effect of calcium/calmodulin is reversed by the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine and by chelation of calcium with sodium [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid. The target of calmodulin is most likely the spectrin attachment protein(s) rather than spectrin itself since: (a) membrane binding of the brain spectrin beta subunit, which does not associate with calmodulin, is inhibited by calcium/calmodulin, and (b) red cell spectrin which binds calmodulin very weakly, is inhibited from interacting with membrane receptors in the presence of calcium/calmodulin. Ca2+/calmodulin inhibited association of erythrocyte spectrin with synaptosomal membranes but had no effect on binding of erythrocyte or brain spectrin to ankyrin in erythrocyte membranes. These experiments demonstrate the potential for differential regulation of spectrin-membrane protein interactions, with the consequence that Ca2+/calmodulin can dissociate direct spectrin-membrane interactions locally or regionally without disassembly of the areas of the membrane skeleton stabilized by linkage of spectrin to ankyrin. A membrane protein of Mr = 88,000 has been identified that is dissociated from spectrin affinity columns by calcium/calmodulin and is a candidate for the calmodulin-sensitive spectrin-binding site in brain.  相似文献   

4.
The cores of the microvilli present on intestinal epithelial cells are currently the only microfilament arrangement which can be isolated ultrastructurally intact and in sufficient quantities for biochemical analysis. We have isolated and characterized villin, a major protein of the microvillus core. Using villin's ability to bind very tightly to immobilized monomeric actin in a calcium-dependent manner, we have developed a method for its rapid purification by affinity chromatography on G actin, which itself was bound to immobilized pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (DNAase I). The villin-G actin complex on DNAase I is resistant to high ionic strength, and villin, but not actin, is released when the calcium concentration is less than 106 M. Purified villin behaves as a globular monomeric protein of molecular weight 95,000, and is free of carbohydrate. Villin also interacts with F actin. In the absence of calcium, villin cross-links F actin having the properties of an F actin bundling or gelation factor. In the presence of calcium (>10?7 M), villin apparently restricts the polymerization of actin to short filaments which cannot be readily sedimented. The properties of villin are not compatible with its previously suggested role as the cross-filament between the microvillus microfilament core and the plasma membrane, but rather indicate a function as a calcium-dependent F actin-bundling protein. The role of villin is discussed in terms of the other protein components of the microvillus core and in relation to recently described calcium-dependent gelation factors.  相似文献   

5.
Calmodulin is present in brush borders isolated from intestinal epithelial cells and is one of the major components of the microvillar filament bundle. Calmodulin was purified from either demembranated brush borders or microvilli by a simple boiling procedure. The boiled supernate derived from the microvillus cores contained one major polypeptide of 20,000 daltons.The supernate from the brush-border preparation contained the 20,000-dalton subunit and a second protein of 30,000 daltons. The 20,000-dalton subunit has been identified as calmodulin by several criteria: (a) heat resistance, (b) comigration with brain calmodulin on alkaline urea gels and SDS gels, both cases in which the 20,000-dalton protein, like calmodulin, exhibits a shift in electrophoretic mobility in the presence of Ca++, and (c) 4--5-fold activation of 3',5'-cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in the presence but not the absence of Ca++. With a cosedimentation assay it was determined that brush-border calmodulin does not bind directly to actin. In the presence of Ca++ (greater than 5 x 10(-7) M) there was a partial release of calmodulin from the microvillus core, along with a substantial conversion of microvillus actin into a nonpelletable from. The dissociation of calmodulin was reversed by removal of Ca++. If microvillus cores were pretreated with phalloidin, the Ca++-induced solubilization of actin was prevented, but the partial dissociation of calmodulin still occurred. The molar ratio of calmodulin:actin is 1:10 in the demembranated brush border and 1:2-3 in the microvillus core. No calmodulin was detected in the detergent-solubilized brush-border membrane fraction.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Trypsin digestion of chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase at limiting trypsin concentrations proceeds in stages. In the first stage, catalytic activity in the presence or absence of calcium and calmodulin decreases. In the second stage, activity in the absence of calcium increases, and the calcium-calmodulin complex no longer stimulates activity. The initial loss of activity is associated with the appearance of a 59,000-Da peptide that has been isolated and shown to have low catalytic activity. This peptide was further digested to a 55,000-Da peptide that has calcium-independent catalytic activity. This peptide has been isolated, and its affinities for the peptide substrate Kemptamide (Lys-Lys-Arg-Pro-Gln-Arg-Ala-Thr-Ser-Asn-Val-Phe-Ser-NH2) and ATP have been shown to be the same as those of the intact enzyme. Neither the 59,000-Da nor the 55,000-Da fragment binds calmodulin.  相似文献   

8.
M C Marden  L Leclerc  C Poyart 《FEBS letters》1990,273(1-2):188-190
The interaction of heme-CO with calmodulin, in the presence of calcium, leads to a complex of four heme-CO molecules per protein. No interaction was observed in the absence of calcium. The binding of heme-CO to calmodulin was monitored by the shift in the Soret absorption band from 407 to 420 nm (bound form); the four sites are not spectrally identical. The ligand CO can be photodissociated from the calmodulin-heme-CO complex and the biomolecular recombination kinetics also indicate a heterogeneous mixture. The complex does not bind oxygen reversibly. As calmodulin has only one histidine, the hemes are apparently not bound by the iron atom as in hemoglobin, but are probably loosely associated (Kd = 0.5 microM) in hydrophobic pockets which apparently open when the protein is activated by calcium.  相似文献   

9.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase, a calmodulin-dependent enzyme, binds 1 mol of calmodulin/mol of kinase in the presence of calcium (Adelstein, R. S., and Klee, C. B. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, in press. This enzyme is a substrate for cAMP-dependent protein kinase whether or not calmodulin is bound. When calmodulin is not bound to myosin kinase, protein kinase incorporates phosphate into two sites in myosin kinase. Under these circumstances, phosphorylation markedly lowers the rate of myosin kinase activity. The decrease in myosin kinase activity is due to a 10-20-fold increase in the amount of calmodulin necessary for 50% activation of kinase activity. The effect of phosphorylation on the activity of myosin kinase can be reversed by dephosphorylation using a purified phosphatase (Pato, M. D., and Adelstein, R. S. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 6535-6538) isolated from smooth muscle. When calmodulin is bound to myosin kinase, phosphate is incorporated into a single site with no effect on myosin kinase activity. The presence of at least two sites that can be phosphorylated in myosin kinase was confirmed by tryptic digestion of denatured myosin kinase.  相似文献   

10.
Manceva S  Lin T  Pham H  Lewis JH  Goldman YE  Ostap EM 《Biochemistry》2007,46(42):11718-11726
Myo1c is an unconventional myosin involved in cell signaling and membrane dynamics. Calcium binding to the regulatory-domain-associated calmodulin affects myo1c motor properties, but the kinetic details of this regulation are not fully understood. We performed actin gliding assays, ATPase measurements, fluorescence spectroscopy, and stopped-flow kinetics to determine the biochemical parameters that define the calmodulin-regulatory-domain interaction. We found calcium moderately increases the actin-activated ATPase activity and completely inhibits actin gliding. Addition of exogenous calmodulin in the presence of calcium fully restores the actin gliding rate. A fluorescently labeled calmodulin mutant (N111C) binds to recombinant peptides containing the myo1c IQ motifs at a diffusion-limited rate in the presence and absence of calcium. Measurements of calmodulin dissociation from the IQ motifs in the absence of calcium show that the calmodulin bound to the IQ motif adjacent to the motor domain (IQ1) has the slowest dissociation rate (0.0007 s-1), and the IQ motif adjacent to the tail domain (IQ3) has the fastest dissociation rate (0.5 s-1). When the complex is equilibrated with calcium, calmodulin dissociates most rapidly from IQ1 (60 s-1). However, this increased rate of dissociation is limited by a slow calcium-induced conformational change (3 s-1). Fluorescence anisotropy decay of fluorescently labeled N111C bound to myo1c did not depend appreciably on Ca2+. Our data suggest that the calmodulin bound to the IQ motif adjacent to the motor domain is rapidly exchangeable in the presence of calcium and is responsible for regulation of myo1c ATPase and motile activity.  相似文献   

11.
The intestinal epithelial cell brush border exhibits distinct localizations of the actin-binding protein components of its cytoskeleton. The protein interactions that dictate this subcellular organization are as yet unknown. We report here that tropomyosin, which is found in the rootlet but not in the microvillus core, can bind to and saturate the actin of isolated cores, and can cause the dissociation of up to 30% of the villin and fimbrin from the cores but does not affect actin binding by 110-kD calmodulin. Low speed sedimentation assays and ultrastructural analysis show that the tropomyosin-containing cores remain bundled, and that 110-kD calmodulin remains attached to the core filaments. The effects of tropomyosin on the binding and bundling activities of villin were subsequently determined by sedimentation assays. Villin binds to F-actin with an apparent Ka of 7 X 10(5) M-1 at approximate physiological ionic strength, which is an order of magnitude lower than that of intestinal epithelial cell tropomyosin. Binding of villin to F-actin presaturated with tropomyosin is inhibited relative to that to pure F-actin, although full saturation can be obtained by increasing the villin concentration. Villin also inhibits the binding of tropomyosin to F-actin, although not to the same extent. However, tropomyosin strongly inhibits bundling of F-actin by villin, and bundling is not recovered even at a saturating villin concentration. Since villin has two actin-binding sites, both of which are required for bundling, the fact that tropomyosin inhibits bundling of F-actin under conditions where actin is fully saturated with villin strongly suggests that tropomyosin's and one of villin's F-actin-binding sites overlap. These results indicate that villin and tropomyosin could compete for actin filaments in the intestinal epithelial cell, and that tropomyosin may play a major role in the regulation of microfilament structure in these and other cells.  相似文献   

12.
A plant kinesin heavy chain-like protein is a calmodulin-binding protein   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Calmodulin, a calcium modulated protein, regulates the activity of several proteins that control cellular functions. A cDNA encoding a unique calmodulin-binding protein, PKCBP, was isolated from a potato expression library using protein-protein interaction based screening. The cDNA encoded protein bound to biotinylated calmodulin and 35S-labeled calmodulin in the presence of calcium and failed to bind in the presence of EGTA, a calcium chelator. The deduced amino acid sequence of the PKCBP has a domain of about 340 amino acids in the C-terminus that showed significant sequence similarity with the kinesin heavy chain motor domain and contained conserved ATP- and microtubule-binding sites present in the motor domain of all known kinesin heavy chains. Outside the motor domain, the PKCBP showed no sequence similarity with any of the known kinesins, but contained a globular domain in the N-terminus and a putative coiled-coil region in the middle. The calmodulin-binding region was mapped to a stretch of 64 amino acid residues in the C-terminus region of the protein. The gene is differentially expressed with the highest expression in apical buds. A homolog of PKCBP from Arabidopsis (AKCBP) showed identical structural organization indicating that kinesin heavy chains that bind to calmodulin are likely to exist in other plants. This paper presents evidence that the motor domain has microtubule stimulated ATPase activity and binds to microtubules in a nucleotide-dependent manner. The kinesin heavy chain-like calmodulin-binding protein is a new member of the kinesin superfamily as none of the known kinesin heavy chains contain a calmodulin-binding domain. The presence of a calmodulin-binding motif and a motor domain in a single polypeptide suggests regulation of kinesin heavy chain driven motor function(s) by calcium and calmodulin.  相似文献   

13.
Microvilli isolated from intestinal epithelial cells contain a cytoskeletal Mr 110,000 polypeptide complexed with calmodulin (110K-CM) that is believed to link the microfilament core bundle laterally to the plasma membrane. Previous work has shown that physiological levels of ATP can partially solubilize the 110K-CM complex from isolated microvillus cytoskeletons or isolated microvilli. However, once extracted, the 110K-CM complex has been found to be difficult to maintain stably soluble in aqueous buffers. This is due to the presence of an endogenous ATPase (approximately 100 nmol Pi/min per mg at 37 degrees C) in microvillus cytoskeletal preparations that depletes the ATP with subsequent precipitation of 110K-CM. Addition of ATP to such precipitates resolubilizes 110K-CM. Inclusion of an ATP regenerating system in the solubilization of 110K-CM from cytoskeletons, or membrane-bound brush borders, increases the amount of 110K-CM solubilized. Solubilization of 110K-CM from microvillus cytoskeletons was found to require a divalent cation (Mg2+, Mn2+, or Co2+, but not Zn2+) and a nucleoside triphosphate (ATP, GTP, CTP, or ITP). ADP did not solubilize 110K-CM, but could partially inhibit ATP-dependent solubilization. Solubilized 110K was phosphorylated during extraction of microvillus cores with [gamma-32P]ATP, but this was unrelated to the solubilization of 110K-CM as the endogenous kinase was specific for ATP, whereas the solubilization was not. The 110K-CM was purified using ATP extraction of brush border cytoskeletons in the presence of an ATP regenerating system, gel filtration of the solubilized extract, an ATP depletion step to specifically precipitate 110K-CM with F-actin, and resolubilization followed by phosphocellulose chromatography. The purified complex was stably soluble in aqueous buffers both in the presence and absence of ATP. It bound almost quantitatively to F-actin in the absence of ATP, and showed nucleotide solubilization characteristics from F-actin similar to that found for solubilization of 110K-CM from microvillus cores. At low ATP levels, the binding to F-actin was increased in the presence of ADP. These results suggest that the purified complex has been isolated in a native form. The data confirm and extend the studies of Howe and Mooseker (1983, J. Cell Biol., 97:974-985) using a partially purified preparation of 110K-CM and further emphasize that 110K-CM is a stably water soluble complex and not an integral membrane protein.  相似文献   

14.
We demonstrate in this report that the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor from rat liver can be isolated by calmodulin affinity chromatography by binding in the presence of Ca2+ and elution with a Ca(2+)-chelating agent. The bulk of the EGF receptor is not eluted by a NaCl gradient in the presence of Ca2+. We ascertained the identity of the isolated receptor by immunoblot and immunoprecipitation using a polyclonal antibody against an EGF receptor from human origin. The purified receptor is autophosphorylated in tyrosine residues in an EGF-stimulated manner, and EGF-dependent phosphorylation of serine residues was also detected. Both the EGF and the transforming growth factor-alpha stimulate the tyrosine-directed protein kinase activity of the isolated receptor with similar affinities. Furthermore, we demonstrate that calmodulin inhibits the EGF-dependent tyrosine-directed protein kinase activity associated to the receptor in a concentration-dependent manner. This inhibition is partially Ca2+ dependent and is not displaced by increasing the concentration of EGF up to an EGF/calmodulin ratio of 10 (mol/mol). In addition, calmodulin was phosphorylated in an EGF-stimulated manner in the presence of a basic protein (histone) as cofactor and in the absence, but not in the presence, of Ca2+.  相似文献   

15.
We report here that a precipitating antibody prepared against Tetrahymena pyriformis calmodulin recognizes calcium-dependent determinants in the native protein. The ability of the antibody to precipitate 35S-labeled Tetrahymena calmodulin in direct radioimmunoassays was enhanced at least 3-fold in the presence of calcium. Competitive radioimmunoassay using homogeneous preparation of endogenously 35S-labeled Tetrahymena calmodulin and protein A-Sepharose-purified immunoglobulin G demonstrated that this antibody preparation is specific for protozoan calmodulin. Homogeneous vertebrate, invertebrate, and plant calmodulins, as well as rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C, did not show significant competition with the 35S-labeled Tetrahymena protein at concentrations 100-fold greater than that at which the homologous unlabeled Tetrahymena calmodulin produced 50% competition. A cyanogen bromide digest of Tetrahymena calmodulin also showed partial competition with the intact 35S-labeled protein, but only in the presence of calcium. The major antigenic determinants were localized to the carboxyl-terminal half of the molecule by immunoassay of limited trypsin fragments of Tetrahymena calmodulin. The antibody bound native calmodulin complexed to bovine brain phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) but failed to recognize the Tetrahymena calmodulin carboxyl-terminal fragment (76-147) when complexed to the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Calmodulin binding proteins (CBPs) have been identified using a gel overlay technique for fractions isolated from Torpedo electromotor nerve endings. Different fractions possessed characteristic patterns of CBPs. Synaptosomes showed five major CBPs--Mr 220,000, 160,000, 125,000, 55,000, and 51,000. Polypeptides of Mr 55,000 and 51,000 were found in the cytoplasm and the others are membrane-associated. The Triton X-100-insoluble cytoskeleton of synaptosomes was isolated in the presence or absence of calcium. The major CBPs had Mr of 19,000, 18,000, and 16,000. In the presence of calcium, no other CBPs were seen. In the absence of calcium, an Mr 160,000 polypeptide was present in the Triton cytoskeleton. Synaptic vesicles showed CBPs of Mr 160,000, 25,000, and 20,000. Membrane fragments enriched in acetylcholine receptors contained two major CBPs, Mr 160,000 and 125,000, together with a less prominent protein at Mr 26,000. A protein of Mr similar to that of fodrin was present in synaptosomes and acetylcholine receptor membrane fragments, but only in small amounts relative to the other polypeptides observed. The heavy and light chains of clathrin-coated vesicles from pig brain did not bind calmodulin, although strong labelling of an Mr 47,000 polypeptide was found. Results showed that calelectrin does not bind calmodulin. The possible identity of the calmodulin binding proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Several methods have been described previously for the purification of the nervous-tissue specific protein kinase C substrate B-50 (GAP-43). In this paper we present a new purification method for B-50 from rat brain which employs 2-mercaptoethanol to release the protein from isolated synaptosomal plasma membranes. Most likely, 2-mercaptoethanol reduces disulfide bonds involved in the linkage of B-50 to the membrane. After washing the membranes with 100 mM NaCl to detach loosely bound proteins, B-50 is the major protein (and the only protein kinase C substrate) released by 0.5% 2-mercaptoethanol treatment. Further purification to apparent homogeneity is achieved by affinity chromatography on calmodulin sepharose. B-50 binds to calmodulin in the absence of calcium and specifically elutes from the column with 3 mM calcium. The procedures described is simple, rapid and highly suitable for large scale purification of B-50 from rat brain.  相似文献   

18.
We have isolated two Ca2+-binding proteins from squid optic lobes, each of which is also able to bind phenothiazines in a Ca2+-dependent manner. These proteins have each been purified and partly characterized. One of the proteins corresponds to calmodulin, in that it has a similar amino acid content to bovine brain calmodulin, including a single residue of trimethyl-lysine, it co-migrates with bovine calmodulin both on alkaline-urea- and on sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, and will activate calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase. The second protein has the same subunit molecular weight as calmodulin, as determined by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, Mr 17 000, but migrates more slowly than this protein on alkaline-urea-gel electrophoresis. It has an amino acid composition distinct from calmodulin, containing no trimethyl-lysine, its CNBr fragments migrate on alkaline gels in a pattern distinct from those of calmodulin and it shows little ability to activate phosphodiesterase. The u.v.-absorption spectra of the proteins indicate the absence of tryptophan and the presence of a high phenylalanine/tyrosine ratio in each. Both proteins also bind 3-4 calcium ions/mol at 0.1 mM-free Ca2+ and each binds chlorpromazine in a Ca2+-dependent manner.  相似文献   

19.
Calmodulin labeled with125I or34S has been used to screen expression libraries to isolate cDNAs encoding calmodulin-binding proteins (CBPs) from several eukaryotic systems. The use of radiolabeled calmodulin has, however, several disadvantages. We have developed a nonradiactive method to isolate cDNAs for CBPs using biotinylated calmodulin. Screening of a cDNA library in an expression vector with biotinylated calmodulin resulted in the isolation of cDNAs encoding CBPs. Avidin and biotin blocking steps, prior to incubation of the filters with biotinylated calmodulin, are found to be essential to eliminate the cDNAs that code for biotin-containing polypeptides. The cDNA clones isolated using this nonradioactive method bound calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner. The binding of biotinylated calmodulin to these clones was completely abolished by ethylene glycolbis(\-aminoethylether)-N,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), a calcium chelator. Furthermore, the isolated cDNAs were confirmed by probing the clones with35S-labeled calmodulin. All the isolated clones bound to radiolabeled calmodulin in the presence of calcium but not in the presence of EGTA. The method described here is simple, fast, and does not involve preparation and handing of radiolabeled calmodulin. All the materials used in this method are commercially available; hence, this procedure should be widely applicable to isolate cDNAs encoding CBPs from any eukaryotic organism.  相似文献   

20.
The basic mechanism by which calmodulin activates bovine-cardiac muscle myosin light-chain kinase was investigated using highly purified preparations of mixed bovine-cardiac myosin light chains or isolated myosin light chain 2. The apparent contamination of these substrate proteins by calmodulin, as detected by activation of calmodulin-sensitive phosphodiesterase, was less than 4 parts/million and was undetectable by antibodies against calmodulin. The apparent KA for calmodulin was 2 nM and 20 nM in the presence of isolated myosin light-chain 2 and mixed myosin light chains, respectively. Purified bovine cardiac troponin C activated myosin light-chain kinase by about 10% at a concentration of 2 microM. Mixed myosin light chains were phosphorylated in the absence and presence of calmodulin and in the presence of calcium with a V of 11.1 and 11.0 mumol phosphate transferred min-1 (mg enzyme)-1, respectively. The apparent Km values for mixed myosin light chains were 8.0 and 0.35 mg/ml in the absence and presence of calmodulin, respectively. Similarly calmodulin lowered the Km value for isolated myosin light-chain 2 over 20-fold and increased the V value only about 1.5-fold. Activity observed in the absence of calmodulin was dependent on the presence of calcium and was suppressed by chelating free calcium either before or during a phosphorylation reaction. The apparent KA for calcium was 1.2 microM and 0.4 microM in the absence and presence of calmodulin. Activity in the absence of calmodulin was inhibited at very high concentrations of the 'specific' calmodulin antagonists W-7, trifluoperazine and R24571 with apparent IC50 values of 0.3 mM, 0.2 mM and 0.02 mM. Antibiotics raised against calmodulin suppressed completely the kinase activity in the presence of calmodulin but had no effect on the activity measured in its absence. These results suggest that calmodulin stimulates the activity of bovine-cardiac myosin light-chain kinase by increasing over 20-fold the affinity for its substrate myosin light-chain 2.  相似文献   

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