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1.
The EF-hand calcium-binding loop III from calmodulin was inserted with glycine linkers into the scaffold protein CD2.D1 at three locations to study site-specific calcium binding properties of EF-hand motifs. After insertion, the host protein retains its native structure and forms a 1:1 metal-protein complex for calcium and its analog, lanthanum. Tyrosine-sensitized Tb3+ energy transfer exhibits metal binding and La3+ and Ca2+ compete for the metal binding site. The grafted EF-loop III in different environments has similar La3+ binding affinities, suggesting that it is largely solvated and functions independently from the host protein.  相似文献   

2.
To establish an approach to obtain the site-specific calcium binding affinity of EF-hand proteins, we have successfully designed a series of model proteins, each containing the EF-hand calcium-binding loop 3 of calmodulin, but with increasing numbers of Gly residues linking the loop to domain 1 of CD2. Structural analyses, using different spectroscopic methods, have shown that the host protein is able to retain its native structure after insertion of the 12-residue calcium-binding loop and retains a native thermal stability and thermal unfolding behavior. In addition, calcium binding to the engineered CD2 variants does not result in a significant change from native CD2 conformation. The CD2 variant with two Gly linkers has been shown to have the strongest metal binding affinity to Ca(II) and La(III). These experimental results are consistent with our molecular modeling studies, which suggest that this protein with the engineered EF-loop has a calmodulin-like calcium binding geometry and backbone conformation. The addition of two Gly linkers increases the flexibility of the inserted EF-loop 3 from calmodulin, which is essential for the proper binding of metal ions.  相似文献   

3.
Neuronal calcium sensor-1, a protein of calcium sensor family, is known to have four structural EF-hands. We have synthesised peptides corresponding to all the four EF-hands and studied their conformation and calcium-binding. Our data confirm that the first putative site, a non-canonical one (EF1), does not bind calcium. We have investigated if this lack of binding is due to the presence of non-favoured residues (particularly at +x and -z co-ordinating positions) of the loop. We have mutated these residues and found that after modification the peptides bound calcium. However, these mutated peptides (EF1 and its functional mutants) do not show any Ca(2+) induced changes in far-UV CD. EF2, EF3, and EF4 peptides bind Ca(2+), EF3 being the strongest binder, followed by EF4. Our data of Ca(2+)-binding to individual EF peptides show that there are three active Ca(2+)-binding sites in NCS-1. We have also studied the binding of a neuroleptic drug, chlorpromazine, with the protein as well as with its EF-hands. CPZ binds myristoylated as well as non-myristoylated NCS-1 in Ca(2+)-dependent manner, with dynamic interaction to myristoylated protein. CPZ does not bind to EF1, but binds to functional EF-hand peptides and induces changes in far-UV CD. Our results suggest that NCS-1 could be a target of such antipsychotic and neuroleptic drugs.  相似文献   

4.
To understand the key determinants in calcium-binding affinity, a calcium-binding site with pentagonal bipyramid geometry was designed into a non-calcium-binding protein, domain 1 of CD2. This metal-binding protein has five mutations with a net charge in the coordination sphere of -5 and is termed DEEEE. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer was used to determine the metal-binding affinity of DEEEE to the calcium analog terbium. The addition of protein concentration to Tb(III) solution results in a large enhancement of Tb(III) fluorescence due to energy transfer between terbium ions and aromatic residues in CD2-D1. In addition, both calcium and lanthanum compete with terbium for the same desired metal binding pocket. Our designed protein exhibits a stronger affinity for Tb(III), with a K(d) of 21 microM, than natural calcium-binding proteins with a similar Greek key scaffold.  相似文献   

5.
Sorcin is a 22 kD calcium-binding protein that is found in a wide variety of cell types, such as heart, muscle, brain and adrenal medulla. It belongs to the penta-EF-hand (PEF) protein family, which contains five EF-hand motifs that associate with membranes in a calcium-dependent manner. Prototypic members of this family are the calcium-binding domains of calpain, such as calpain dVI. Full-length human sorcin has been crystallized in the absence of calcium and the structure determined at 2.2 A resolution. Apart from an extended N-terminal portion, the sorcin molecule has a globular shape. The C-terminal domain is predominantly alpha-helical, containing eight alpha-helices and connecting loops incorporating five EF hands. Sorcin forms dimers through the association of the unpaired EF5, confirming this as the mode of association in the dimerization of PEF proteins. Comparison with calpain dVI reveals that the general folds of the individual EF-hand motifs are conserved, especially that of EF1, the novel EF-hand motif characteristic of the family. Detailed structural comparisons of sorcin with other members of PEF indicate that the EF-hand pair EF1-EF2 is likely to correspond to the two physiologically relevant calcium-binding sites and that the calcium-induced conformational change may be modest and localized within this pair of EF-hands. Overall, the results derived from the structural observations support the view that, in sorcin, calcium signaling takes place through the first pair of EF-hands.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Calcium plays a key role in cellular signal transduction. Calmodulin, a protein binding four calcium ions, is found in all eukaryotic cells and is believed to activate such processes. The calcium binding loop found in this protein, the canonical EF-hand, is also found in a large number of other proteins such as troponins, parvalbumins, calbindins etc. Earlier analysis of the amino acid sequences of these proteins with a view of understanding evolution of protein families and signaling mechanisms have provided extensive evidence for a characteristic double gene duplication event in this family of proteins. These analyses have been extended here to the three dimensional structures and the biophysical properties of the sequence segments of calmodulin EF-hands. The clear evolutionary history that shows up in sequences is not reflected as clearly in the conformation of individual EF-hands, which may be a consequence of the much higher conservation pressure on the structure. Some evidence for the proposed gene duplication is implicit in the apo-holo structural transitions of the EF-hands. The profile of amino acid properties that might be significant for calcium binding, however, clearly reflects the gene duplication. These profiles might also provide insightful information on the calcium affinity of the EF-hand motifs and the nature of amino acid residues that constitute them.  相似文献   

8.
The important and diverse regulatory roles of Ca2+ in eukaryotes are conveyed by the EF-hand containing calmodulin superfamily. However, the calcium-regulatory proteins in prokaryotes are still poorly understood. In this study, we report the three-dimensional structure of the calcium-binding protein from Streptomyces coelicolor, named CabD, which shares low sequence homology with other known helix-loop-helix EF-hand proteins. The CabD structure should provide insights into the biological role of the prokaryotic calcium-binding proteins. The unusual structural features of CabD compared with prokaryotic EF-hand proteins and eukaryotic sarcoplasmic calcium-binding proteins, including the bending conformation of the first C-terminal α-helix, unpaired ligand-binding EF-hands and the lack of the extreme C-terminal loop region, suggest it may have a distinct and significant function in calcium-mediated bacterial physiological processes, and provide a structural basis for potential calcium-mediated regulatory roles in prokaryotes.  相似文献   

9.
Calcium vector protein (CaVP) from amphioxus is a two-domain, calcium-binding protein (18.3 kDa) of the calmodulin superfamily. Only two of the four EF-hand motifs (sites III and IV) have a significant binding affinity for calcium ions. We determined the solution structure of the domain containing these active sites (C-CaVP: W81-S161), in the Ca(2+)-saturated state, using NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics. The tertiary structure is similar to other Ca(2+)-binding domains containing a pair of EF-hand motifs. The apo state has spectroscopic and thermodynamic characteristics of a molten globule, with conserved secondary structure but highly fluctuating tertiary organization. Titration of C-CaVP with Ca(2+) revealed a stepwise ion binding, with a stable equilibrium intermediate in which only site III binds a calcium ion. Despite a highly fluctuating structure of the free site IV, the calcium-bound site III has a persistent structure, with similar secondary elements but different interhelix angle and hydrophobic packing relative to the fully calcium-saturated state.  相似文献   

10.
The ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule 1 (Iba1) with 147 amino acid residues has been identified as a calcium-binding protein, expressed specifically in microglia/macrophages, and is expected to be a key factor in membrane ruffling, which is a typical feature of activated microglia. We have determined the crystal structure of human Iba1 in a Ca(2+)-free form and mouse Iba1 in a Ca(2+)-bound form, to a resolution of 1.9 A and 2.1 A, respectively. X-ray structures of Iba1 revealed a compact, single-domain protein with two EF-hand motifs, showing similarity in overall topology to partial structures of the classical EF-hand proteins troponin C and calmodulin. In mouse Iba1, the second EF-hand contains a bound Ca(2+), but the first EF-hand does not, which is often the case in S100 proteins, suggesting that Iba1 has S100 protein-like EF-hands. The molecular conformational change induced by Ca(2+)-binding of Iba1 is different from that found in the classical EF-hand proteins and/or S100 proteins, which demonstrates that Iba1 has an unique molecular switching mechanism dependent on Ca(2+)-binding, to interact with target molecules.  相似文献   

11.
Proteins with EF-hand calcium-binding motifs are essential for many cellular processes, but are also associated with cancer, autism, cardiac arrhythmias, and Alzheimer''s, skeletal muscle and neuronal diseases. Functionally, all EF-hand proteins are divided into two groups: (1) calcium sensors, which function to translate the signal to various responses; and (2) calcium buffers, which control the level of free Ca2+ ions in the cytoplasm. The borderline between the two groups is not clear, and many proteins cannot be described as definitive buffers or sensors. Here, we describe two highly-conserved structural motifs found in all known different families of the EF-hand proteins. The two motifs provide a supporting scaffold for the DxDxDG calcium binding loop and contribute to the hydrophobic core of the EF hand domain. The motifs allow more precise identification of calcium buffers and calcium sensors. Based on the characteristics of the two motifs, we could classify individual EF-hand domains into five groups: (1) Open static; (2) Closed static; (3) Local dynamic; (4) Dynamic; and (5) Local static EF-hand domains.  相似文献   

12.
The genes for four mutant proteins from calbindin D9k, all with mutations in the N-terminal Ca2+-binding domain (pseudo EF-hand) have been synthesized and expressed in Escherichia coli. The purification scheme has been modified to minimize the formation of deamidated proteins. The set of modifications in the pseudo EF-hand is an attempt to turn this site into a structure resembling an archetypal EF-hand, with its characteristic 113Cd-NMR shift (-80 to -110 ppm) and high calcium-binding constants, whereas the C-terminal Ca2(+)-binding site (EF-hand) is kept intact in all mutant proteins. The mutant proteins studied here all have pseudo EF-hands with a lower calcium-binding constant and a higher calcium off-rate to the pseudo EF-hand than the wild-type protein. From the results obtained it is obvious that proline 20 in the pseudo EF-hand, which has been deleted or replaced by glycine in three of the mutants, has a stabilizing effect on calcium binding to that site. Furthermore, the modifications in the pseudo EF-hand seem to have only a local effect, leaving the tertiary structure of the protein and the calcium-binding properties of the unmodified site virtually unchanged.  相似文献   

13.
Mollusk shell formation is a complicated and highly controlled calcium metabolism process. Previous studies revealed that several EF-hand calcium-binding proteins actively participate in the regulation of shell mineralization. In this study, we cloned a full-length cDNA encoding a novel extracellular EF-hand calcium-binding protein (named EFCBP) from the pearl oyster, Pinctada fucata, according to the EF-hand motifs of calmodulin. Although it shares high similarity with the calmodulin family in its EF-hand signatures, EFCBP just has two EF-hand motifs and belongs to a new separate group from the other EF-hand proteins according to a phylogenetic analysis. EFCBP is specifically expressed in shell mineralization-related tissues, viz. the mantle, the gill, and the hemocytes. Moreover, its expression responds quickly only to the shell damage, but not to the damage of other tissues and the infection of the lipopolysaccharides from Escherichia coli. These results suggest that EFCBP might be an important regulator of shell formation. This finding may help better understand the functions of EF-hand proteins on the regulation of mollusk shell formation.  相似文献   

14.
To obtain site-specific information about individual EF-hand motifs, the EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding loops from site III and site IV of calmodulin (CaM) were inserted separately into a non-Ca(2+)-binding cell adhesion protein, domain 1 of CD2 (denoted as CaM-CD2-III-5G-52 and CaM-CD2-IV-5G-52). Structural analyses using various spectroscopic methods have shown that the host protein CD2 retains its native structure after the insertion of the 12-residue loops. The Tb(3+) fluorescence enhancement upon formation of a Tb(3+)-protein complex and the direct competition by La(3+) and Ca(2+) suggest that native Ca(2+)-binding pockets are formed in both engineered proteins. Moreover, as revealed by NMR, both Ca(2+) and La(3+) specifically interact with the residues at the grafted EF-loop. The CaM-CD2-III-5G-52 has stronger affinities to Ca(2+), Tb(3+) and La(3+) than CaM-CD2-IV-5G-52, indicating differential intrinsic metal-binding affinities of the EF-loops.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
We report on the molecular characterisation of two novel granule proteins of the protozoon and human pathogen Entamoeba histolytica. The proteins, which were named grainin 1 and 2, show a considerable structural similarity to calcium-binding proteins, particularly within EF-hand motifs. Each grainin possesses three of these putative calcium-binding sites. Based on careful inspection of known structures of protein families containing EF-hands, a domain of grainin 1 covering two EF-hand motifs was modeled by homology. Calcium-binding activity of grainins was demonstrated by two independent methods. These granule proteins may be implicated in functions vital for the primitive phagocyte and destructive parasite such as control of endocytotic pathways and granule discharge.  相似文献   

17.
G Travé  P J Lacombe  M Pfuhl  M Saraste    A Pastore 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(20):4922-4931
Calcium is a universally employed cytosolic messenger in eukaryotic cells. Most of the proteins that bind signalling calcium are members of the calmodulin superfamily and share two or more helix-loop-helix motifs known as EF-hands. A model, based on structure comparison of different domains and supported by preliminary NMR data, has suggested that EF-hands involved in signal transduction undergo a major conformational change upon calcium binding from a 'closed' to an 'open' state allowing protein-protein interaction. We have determined the solution structures of the EF-hand pair from alpha-spectrin in the absence and in the presence of calcium. The structures are in the closed and open conformation respectively, providing a definite experimental proof for the closed-to-open model. Our results allow formulation of the rules which govern the movement induced by calcium. These rules may be generalized to other EF-hands since the key residues involved are conserved within the calmodulin family.  相似文献   

18.
Aralar1 and citrin were identified as calcium binding aspartate/glutamate carriers (AGC) in mitochondria. The presence of calcium binding motifs facing the extramitochondrial space allows the regulation of the transport activity of these carriers by cytosolic calcium and provides a new mechanism to transduce calcium signals in mitochondria without the requirement of calcium entry in the organelle. We now report the complete characterization of a second subfamily of human calcium binding mitochondrial carriers named SCaMC (short calcium-binding mitochondrial carriers). We have identified three SCaMC genes in the human genome. All code for highly conserved proteins (about 70-80% identity), of about 500 amino acids with a characteristic mitochondrial carrier domain at the C terminus, and an N-terminal extension harboring four EF-hand binding motifs with high similarity to calmodulin. All SCaMC proteins were found to be located exclusively in mitochondria, and their N-terminal extensions were dispensable for the correct mitochondrial targeting of the polypeptides. SCaMC-1 is the human orthologue of the rabbit Efinal protein, which was reported to be located in peroxisomes, and SCaMC-2 is the human orthologue of the rat MCSC protein, described as up-regulated by dexamethasone in AR42J cells. One of the SCaMC genes, SCaMC-2, has four variants generated by alternative splicing, resulting in proteins with a common C terminus but with variations in their N-terminal halves, including the loss of one to three EF-hand motifs. These results make SCaMC one of most complex subfamilies of mitochondrial carriers and suggest that the large number of isoforms and splice variants may confer different calcium sensitivity to the transport activity of these carriers.  相似文献   

19.
Calcineurin B homologous protein 1 (CHP1), also known as p22, is a calcium-binding EF-hand protein that plays a role in membrane trafficking. It binds to multiple effector proteins, including Na(+)/H(+) exchangers, a serine/threonine kinase, and calcineurin, potentially modulating their function. The crystal structure of calcium-bound CHP1 from rat has been determined at 2.2 Angstroms of resolution. The molecule has a compact alpha-helical structure containing four EF-hands. The overall folding topology of the protein is similar to that of the regulatory B subunit of calcineurin and to that of calcium- and integrin-binding protein. The calcium ion is coordinated in typical fashion in the third and fourth EF-hands, but the first and second EF-hands contain no calcium ion. The first EF-hand is maintained by internal interactions, and the second EF-hand is stabilized by hydrophobic interactions. CHP1 contains a hydrophobic pocket on the opposite side of the protein to the EF-hands that has been implicated in ligand binding.  相似文献   

20.
A calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CCaMK) is essential in the interpretation of calcium oscillations in plant root cells for the establishment of symbiotic relationships with rhizobia and mycorrhizal fungi. Some of its properties have been studied in detail, but its calcium ion binding properties and subsequent conformational change have not. A biophysical approach was taken with constructs comprising either the visinin-like domain of Medicago truncatula CCaMK, which contains EF-hand motifs, or this domain together with the autoinhibitory domain. The visinin-like domain binds three calcium ions, leading to a conformational change involving the exposure of hydrophobic surfaces and a change in tertiary but not net secondary or quaternary structure. The affinity for calcium ions of visinin-like domain EF-hands 1 and 2 (K(d) = 200 ± 50 nM) was appropriate for the interpretation of calcium oscillations (~125-850 nM), while that of EF-hand 3 (K(d) ≤ 20 nM) implied occupancy at basal calcium ion levels. Calcium dissociation rate constants were determined for the visinin-like domain of CCaMK, M. truncatula calmodulin 1, and the complex between these two proteins (the slowest of which was 0.123 ± 0.002 s(-1)), suggesting the corresponding calcium association rate constants were at or near the diffusion-limited rate. In addition, the dissociation of calmodulin from the protein complex was shown to be on the same time scale as the dissociation of calcium ions. These observations suggest that the formation and dissociation of the complex between calmodulin and CCaMK would substantially mirror calcium oscillations, which typically have a 90 s periodicity.  相似文献   

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