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1.
Calmodulin is an EF-hand calcium-binding protein (148 a.a.) essential in intracellular signal transduction. Its homologous N- and C-terminal domains are separated by a linker that appears disordered in NMR studies. In a study of an N-domain fragment of Paramecium CaM (PCaM1-75), the addition of linker residues 76 to 80 (MKEQD) raised the Tm by 9 degrees C and lowered calcium binding by 0.54 kcal/mol (Sorensen et al., [Biochemistry 2002;41:15-20]), showing that these tether residues affect energetics as well as being a barrier to diffusion. To determine the individual contributions of residues 74 through 80 (RKMKEQD) to stability and calcium affinity, we compared a nested series of 7 fragments (PCaM1-74 to PCaM1-80). For the first 4, PCaM1-74 through PCaM1-77, single amino acid additions at the C-terminus corresponded to stepwise increases in thermostability and decreases in calcium affinity with a net change of 13.5 degrees C in Tm and 0.55 kcal/mol in free energy. The thermodynamic properties of fragments PCaM1-77 through PCaM1-80 were nearly identical. We concluded that the 3 basic residues in the sequence from 74 to 77 (RKMK) are critical to the increased stability and decreased calcium affinity of the longer N-domain fragments. Comparisons of NMR (HSQC) spectra of 15N-PCaM1-74 and 15N-PCaM1-80 and analysis of high-resolution structural models suggest these residues are latched to amino acids in helix A of CaM. The addition of residues E78, Q79, and D80 had a minimal effect on sites I and II, but they may contribute to the mechanism of energetic communication between the domains.  相似文献   

2.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous, essential calcium-binding protein that regulates diverse protein targets in response to physiological calcium fluctuations. Most high-resolution structures of CaM-target complexes indicate that the two homologous domains of CaM are equivalent partners in target recognition. However, mutations between calcium-binding sites I and II in the N-domain of Paramecium calmodulin (PCaM) selectively affect calcium-dependent sodium currents. To understand these domain-specific effects, N-domain fragments (PCaM(1-75)) of six of these mutants were examined to determine whether energetics of calcium binding to sites I and II or conformational properties had been perturbed. These PCaM((1-75)) sequences naturally contain 5 Phe residues but no Tyr or Trp; calcium binding was monitored by observing the reduction in intrinsic phenylalanine fluorescence at 280 nm. To assess mutation-induced conformational changes, thermal denaturation of the apo PCaM((1-75)) sequences, and calcium-dependent changes in Stokes radii were determined. The free energy of calcium binding to each mutant was within 1 kcal/mole of the value for wild type and calcium reduced the R(s) of all of them. A striking trend was observed whereby mutants showing an increase in calcium affinity and R(s) had a concomitant decrease in thermal stability (by as much as 18 degrees C). Thus, mutations between the binding sites that increased disorder and reduced tertiary constraints in the apo state promoted calcium coordination. This finding underscores the complexity of the linkage between calcium binding and conformational change and the difficulty in predicting mutational effects.  相似文献   

3.
Jaren OR  Kranz JK  Sorensen BR  Wand AJ  Shea MA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(48):14158-14166
Calmodulin (CaM) is an intracellular calcium-binding protein essential for many pathways in eukaryotic signal transduction. Although a structure of Ca(2+)-saturated Paramecium CaM at 1.0 A resolution (1EXR.pdb) provides the highest level of detail about side-chain orientations in CaM, information about an end state alone cannot explain driving forces for the transitions that occur during Ca(2+)-induced conformational switching and why the two domains of CaM are saturated sequentially rather than simultaneously. Recent studies focus attention on the contributions of interdomain linker residues. Electron paramagnetic resonance showed that Ca(2+)-induced structural stabilization of residues 76-81 modulates domain coupling [Qin and Squier (2001) Biophys. J. 81, 2908-2918]. Studies of N-domain fragments of Paramecium CaM showed that residues 76-80 increased thermostability of the N-domain but lowered the Ca(2+) affinity of sites I and II [Sorensen et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 15-20]. To probe domain coupling during Ca(2+) binding, we have used (1)H-(15)N HSQC NMR to monitor more than 40 residues in Paramecium CaM. The titrations demonstrated that residues Glu78 to Glu84 (in the linker and cap of helix E) underwent sequential phases of conformational change. Initially, they changed in volume (slow exchange) as sites III and IV titrated, and subsequently, they changed in frequency (fast exchange) as sites I and II titrated. These studies provide evidence for Ca(2+)-dependent communication between the domains, demonstrating that spatially distant residues respond to Ca(2+) binding at sites I and II in the N-domain of CaM.  相似文献   

4.
VanScyoc WS  Newman RA  Sorensen BR  Shea MA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(48):14311-14324
Calmodulin (CaM) is an essential, eukaryotic protein comprised of two highly homologous domains (N and C). CaM binds four calcium ions cooperatively, regulating a wide array of target proteins. A genetic screen of Paramecia by Kung [Kung, C. et al. (1992) Cell Calcium 13, 413-425] demonstrated that the domains of CaM have separable physiological roles: "under-reactive" mutations affecting calcium-dependent sodium currents mapped to the N-domain, while "over-reactive" mutations affecting calcium-dependent potassium currents localized to the C-domain of CaM. To determine whether and how these mutations affected intrinsic calcium-binding properties of CaM domains, phenylalanine fluorescence was used to monitor calcium binding to sites I and II (N-domain) and tyrosine fluorescence was used to monitor sites III and IV (C-domain). To explore interdomain interactions, binding properties of each full-length mutant were compared to those of its corresponding domain fragments. The calcium-binding properties of six under-reactive mutants (V35I/D50N, G40E, G40E/D50N, D50G, E54K, and G59S) and one over-reactive mutant (M145V) were indistinguishable from those of wild-type CaM, despite their deleterious physiological effects on ion-channel regulation. Four over-reactive mutants (D95G, S101F, E104K, and H135R) significantly decreased the calcium affinity of the C-domain. Of these, one (E104K) also increased the calcium affinity of the N-domain, demonstrating that the magnitude and direction of wild-type interdomain coupling had been perturbed. This suggests that, while some of these mutations alter calcium-binding directly, others probably alter CaM-channel association or calcium-triggered conformational change in the context of a ternary complex with the affected ion channel.  相似文献   

5.
Jas GS  Kuczera K 《Proteins》2002,48(2):257-268
In the course of aging or under conditions of oxidative stress, methionine residues of calmodulin undergo oxidation, leading to loss of biological activity of the protein. We have performed free-energy simulations of the effects of C-terminal methionine side-chain oxidation on the properties of calmodulin. The simulation results indicate that oxidation should have a destabilizing effect on all three protein functional states: calcium free, calcium loaded, and with both calcium and target peptide bound. Because the different states are destabilized by different amounts, this leads to a more complex pattern in the observable effects on protein thermal stability, calcium affinity, and binding of a target peptide. The influence of oxidation on the free energy of CaM unfolding is estimated by comparing the free-energy cost of oxidizing a Met residue in a Gly-Met-Gly peptide and in the protein. The protein thermal stability of the oxidized forms is lowered by a moderate amount 1-3 kcal/mol, in qualitative agreement with experimental results of 0.3 kcal/mol. The calculated changes in affinity for calcium and for the target peptide show opposing trends. Oxidation at position 144 is predicted to enhance peptide binding and weaken calcium binding, whereas oxidation at 145 weakens peptide binding and enhances affinity for calcium. The lower affinity of Met 145-oxidized calmodulin toward the target peptide correlates with experimentally observed lowering of calmodulin-activated Ca-ATPase activity when oxidized calmodulin from aged rat brains is used. Thus, our simulations suggest that Met 145 is the oxidation site in the C-terminal fragment of calmodulin. The microscopic mechanism behind the calculated free energy changes appears to be a greater affinity for water of the oxidized Met side-chain relative to normal Met. Structures with Met exposed to solvent had consistently lower free energies than those with buried Met sidechains.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The binding of Ca2+(4).calmodulin (CaM) to rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is required for expression of the enzyme's activity. While both MLCK and CaM were stable at 30 degrees C, their complex was not. The binding of CaM to MLCK resulted in a time- and temperature-dependent inactivation that reflected an intrinsic instability of the complex. Separation of the components of the inactive complex yielded functional CaM, but catalytically inert MLCK, indicating that the site of the inactivating event was confined to MLCK. The behavior of proteolytic fragments further localized this event to the C-terminal 60% of the 603-residue protein. Changes in the tryptophan fluorescence and proteolytic susceptibility of MLCK-CaM indicated that a conformational change accompanied, and thus may have caused, inactivation. Substrates protected against inactivation, as did millimolar concentrations of Mg2+, Mn2+, and Ca2+. These metals appeared to bind to a site on MLCK distinct from that which recognized Mg2+.ATP. A proteolytic fragment of MLCK lacking the ability to bind CaM, C beta 35 (residues 255-584; Edelman, A. M., Takio, K., Blumenthal, D. K., Hansen, R. S., Walsh, K. A., Titani, K., and Krebs, E. G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11275-11285), was unstable at 30 degrees C, whereas a similar fragment which does bind CaM, T beta 40 (residues 236-595; Edelman, A. M., Takio, K., Blumenthal, D. K., Hansen, R. S., Walsh, K. A., Titani, K., and Krebs, E. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11275-11285), was unstable only when CaM was bound.  相似文献   

8.
In Xenopus oocytes, the water permeability of AQP0 (P(f)) increases with removal of external calcium, an effect that is mediated by cytoplasmic calmodulin (CaM) bound to the C terminus of AQP0. To investigate the effects of serine phosphorylation on CaM-mediated Ca(2+) regulation of P(f), we tested the effects of kinase activation, CaM inhibition, and a series of mutations in the C terminus CaM binding site. Calcium regulation of AQP0 P(f) manifests four distinct phenotypes: Group 1, with high P(f) upon removal of external Ca(2+) (wild-type, S229N, R233A, S235A, S235K, K238A, and R241E); Group 2, with high P(f) in elevated (5 mm) external Ca(2+) (S235D and R241A); Group 3, with high P(f) and no Ca(2+) regulation (S229D, S231N, S231D, S235N, and S235N/I236S); and Group 4, with low P(f) and no Ca(2+) regulation (protein kinase A and protein kinase C activators, S229D/S235D and S235N/I236S). Within each group, we tested whether CaM binding mediates the phenotype, as shown previously for wild-type AQP0. In the presence of calmidazolium, a CaM inhibitor, S235D showed high P(f) and no Ca(2+) regulation, suggesting that S235D still binds CaM. Contrarily, S229D showed a decrease in recruitment of CaM, suggesting that S229D is unable to bind CaM. Taken together, our results suggest a model in which CaM acts as an inhibitor of AQP0 P(f). CaM binding is associated with a low P(f) state, and a lack of CaM binding is associated with a high P(f) state. Pathological conditions of inappropriate phosphorylation or calcium/CaM regulation could induce P(f) changes contributing to the development of a cataract.  相似文献   

9.
A novel protein kinase (BjCCaBPk) from etiolated Brassica juncea seedlings has been purified and partially characterized. The purified enzyme migrated on SDS/PAGE as a single band with an apparent molecular mass of 43 kDa. The optimum pH for the kinase activity was 8.0. It was stimulated more than sixfold by the protozoa Entamoeba histolytica calcium binding protein EhCaBP (10.5 nM) but not by calmodulin (CaM) when used at equimolar concentration. Moreover the kinase also did not bind CaM-Sepharose. There was neither inhibition of the kinase activity in the presence of W-7 (a CaM antagonist), KN-62 (a specific calcium/CaM kinase inhibitor) and anti-CaM Ig, nor any effect on BjCCaBPk activity of staurosporine (a protein kinase C inhibitor). Furthermore a CaM-kinase specific substrate, syntide-2, proved to be a poor substrate for the BjCCaBPk compared with histone III-S. The phosphorylation of histone III-S involved serine residues. Southern and Northern blot analysis showed the presence of EhCaBP homologues in Brassica. The data suggest that BjCCaBPk may be a novel protein kinase with an affinity towards a calcium binding protein like EhCaBP.  相似文献   

10.
Structure of Paramecium tetraurelia calmodulin at 1.8 A resolution.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The crystal structure of calmodulin (CaM; M(r) 16,700, 148 residues) from the ciliated protozoan Paramecium tetraurelia (PCaM) has been determined and refined using 1.8 A resolution area detector data. The crystals are triclinic, space group P1, a = 29.66, b = 53.79, c = 25.49 A, alpha = 92.84, beta = 97.02, and gamma = 88.54 degrees with one molecule in the unit cell. Crystals of the mammalian CaM (MCaM; Babu et al., 1988) and Drosophila CaM (DCaM; Taylor et al., 1991) also belong to the same space group with very similar cell dimensions. All three CaMs have 148 residues, but there are 17 sequence changes between PCaM and MCaM and 16 changes between PCaM and DCaM. The initial difference in the molecular orientation between the PCaM and MCaM crystals was approximately 7 degrees as determined by the rotation function. The reoriented Paramecium model was extensively refitted using omit maps and refined using XPLOR. The R-value for 11,458 reflections with F > 3 sigma is 0.21, and the model consists of protein atoms for residues 4-147, 4 calcium ions, and 71 solvent molecules. The root mean square (rms) deviations in the bond lengths and bond angles in the model from ideal values are 0.016 A and 3 degrees, respectively. The molecular orientation of the final PCaM model differs from MCaM by only 1.7 degrees. The overall Paramecium CaM structure is very similar to the other calmodulin structures with a seven-turn long central helix connecting the two terminal domains, each containing two Ca-binding EF-hand motifs. The rms deviation in the backbone N, Ca, C, and O atoms between PCaM and MCaM is 0.52 A and between PCaM and DCaM is 0.85 A. The long central helix regions differ, where the B-factors are also high, particularly in PCaM and MCaM. Unlike the MCaM structure, with one kink at D80 in the middle of the linker region, and the DCaM structure, with two kinks at K75 and I85, in our PCaM structure there are no kinks in the helix; the distortion appears to be more gradually distributed over the entire helical region, which is bent with an apparent radius of curvature of 74.5(2) A. The different distortions in the central helical region probably arise from its inherent mobility.  相似文献   

11.
A novel translocation step is inferred from structural studies of the interactions between the intracellular calcium receptor protein calmodulin (CaM) and one of its regulatory targets. A mutant of CaM missing residues 2-8 (DeltaNCaM) binds skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase with high affinity but fails to activate catalysis. Small angle x-ray scattering data reveal that DeltaNCaM occupies a position near the catalytic cleft in its complex with the kinase, whereas the native protein translocates to a position near the C-terminal end of the catalytic core. Thus, CaM residues 2-8 appear to facilitate movement of bound CaM away from the vicinity of the catalytic cleft.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Localization of a felodipine (dihydropyridine) binding site on calmodulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The fluorescent dihydropyridine calcium antagonist drug felodipine binds to calmodulin (CaM) in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Its binding can be regulated by the interaction of CaM antagonist drugs through allosteric mechanisms [Mills, J.S., & Johnson, J.D. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 4897]. Here, we have examined the binding of a nonspecific hydrophobic fluorescent probe molecule TNS (toluidinylnaphthalenesulfonate) and of felodipine to CAM and several of its proteolytic fragments. While TNS interacts with sites on both the amino-terminal half of the protein [proteolytic fragment TR1C (1-77)] and carboxy-terminal half [proteolytic fragment TR2C (78-148)], felodipine binding shows more selectivity. It binds in a Ca2+-dependent manner to the proteolytic fragments TM1 (1-106) and TR2E (1-90) but exhibits only weak affinity for TR1C (1-77) and TR2C (78-148). Furthermore, felodipine exhibits selectivity over TNS and trifluoperazine (TFP) in blocking the tryptic cleavage between residues 77 and 78. These studies indicate a selective binding of felodipine to a hydrophobic site existing in residues 1-90 and suggest that productive binding requires amino acids in the region 78-90. Although the felodipine binding site is preserved in fragment 1-106, the allosteric interactions between the prenylamine and the felodipine binding sites that are observed with intact CaM are not observed in this fragment. Rather, prenylamine simply displaces felodipine from its binding site on this fragment. Our results are consistent with calmodulin containing not less than two allosterically related hydrophobic drug binding sites. One of these sites (felodipine) appears to be localized in region 1-90 and the other one in region 78-148.  相似文献   

14.
The edema factor exotoxin produced by Bacillus anthracis is an adenylyl cyclase that is activated by calmodulin (CaM) at resting state calcium concentrations in infected cells. A C-terminal 60-kDa fragment corresponding to the catalytic domain of edema factor (EF3) was cloned, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and purified. The N-terminal 43-kDa domain (EF3-N) of EF3, the sole domain of edema factor homologous to adenylyl cyclases from Bordetella pertussis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is highly resistant to protease digestion. The C-terminal 160-amino acid domain (EF3-C) of EF3 is sensitive to proteolysis in the absence of CaM. The addition of CaM protects EF3-C from being digested by proteases. EF3-N and EF3-C were expressed separately, and both fragments were required to reconstitute full CaM-sensitive enzyme activity. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments using a double-labeled CaM molecule were performed and indicated that CaM adopts an extended conformation upon binding to EF3. This contrasts sharply with the compact conformation adopted by CaM upon binding myosin light chain kinase and CaM-dependent protein kinase type II. Mutations in each of the four calcium binding sites of CaM were examined for their effect on EF3 activation. Sites 3 and 4 were found critical for the activation, and neither the N- nor the C-terminal domain of CaM alone was capable of activating EF3. A genetic screen probing loss-of-function mutations of EF3 and site-directed mutations based on the homology of the edema factor family revealed a conserved pair of aspartate residues and an arginine that are important for catalysis. Similar residues are essential for di-metal-mediated catalysis in mammalian adenylyl cyclases and a family of DNA polymerases and nucleotidyltransferases. This suggests that edema factor may utilize a similar catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
Densitometric analysis of single-dimension gels consistently demonstrated that, in addition to rat renal calcium binding protein (CaBP) (Mr 28,000), two other kidney proteins of Mr 16,500 and Mr 18,000 were significantly enriched in their contents in the vitamin D-replete rat. Partial characterization of the Mr 18,000 and 16,500 proteins revealed that these proteins were heat-stable and distinct from calmodulin, as determined by their inability to undergo the calcium-dependent mobility shift in sodium dodecyl sulfate gels which is characteristic of calmodulin. The Mr 16,500 and Mr 18,000 kidney proteins did not cross-react with rat renal or rat intestinal CaBP antisera, as assessed by radioimmunoassay and Western blot analysis. A comparison of peptide maps of tryptic digests of these proteins and purified rat renal CaBP, as analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography, revealed no apparent homology. Protein synthesis studies using [35S]methionine and short-term tissue culture of kidney cortex fragments indicated that the most pronounced effect of vitamin D or 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 was increased synthesis of the Mr 28,000 protein (3.2- to 4.6-fold increase compared to -D rats, P less than 0.001). Synthesis of a Mr 54,500 protein increased by 1.3- to 1.5-fold (P less than 0.05) and [35S]methionine incorporation into a Mr 66,000 protein decreased by 1.2- to 1.3-fold (P less than 0.05) in +D rats. This study represents the first detailed characterization of the effects of vitamin D on the composition and synthesis of rat kidney proteins. The data indicate that the most significant effect of vitamin D on kidney proteins is increased synthesis of the Mr 28,000 CaBP, suggesting that a major role of vitamin D in renal function is regulation of calcium transport at the distal tubule. However, dietary vitamin D or 1,25(OH)2D3 can influence the expression as well as the suppression of other specific kidney proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Shen X  Li H  Ou Y  Tao W  Dong A  Kong J  Ji C  Yu S 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(17):11407-11413
The protein serine/threonine phosphatase calcineurin (CN) is activated by calmodulin (CaM) in response to intracellular calcium mobilization. A widely accepted model for CN activation involves displacement of the CN autoinhibitory peptide (CN(467-486)) from the active site upon binding of CaM. However, CN activation requires calcium binding both to the low affinity sites of CNB and to CaM, and previous studies did not dissect the individual contributions of CNB and CaM to displacement of the autoinhibitory peptide from the active site. In this work we have produced separate CN fragments corresponding to the CNA regulatory region (CNRR(381-521), residues 381-521), the CNA catalytic domain truncated at residue 341, and the CNA-CNB heterodimer with CNA truncated at residue 380 immediately after the CNB binding helix. We show that the separately expressed regulatory region retains its ability to inhibit CN phosphatase activity of the truncated CN341 and CN380 and that the inhibition can be reversed by calcium/CaM binding. Tryptophan fluorescence quenching measurements further indicate that the isolated regulatory region inhibits CN activity by occluding the catalytic site and that CaM binding exposes the catalytic site. The results provide new support for a model in which calcium binding to CNB enables CaM binding to the CNA regulatory region, and CaM binding then instructs an activating conformational change of the regulatory region that does not depend further on CNB. Moreover, the secondary structural content of the CNRR(381-521) was tentatively addressed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The results indicate that the secondary structure of CNRR(381-521) fragment is predominantly random coil, but with significant amount of beta-strand and alpha-helix structures.  相似文献   

17.
Both normal chicken calmodulin (CaM) and a CaM-like mutant protein have been expressed in bacteria, isolated and evaluated with respect to several physical and biological properties. The mutant CaM is derived from a CaM-like gene that lacks intervening sequences and probably evolved from a CaM-processed gene (Stein, J. P., Munjaal, R. P., Lagacé, L., Lai, E. C., O'Malley, B. W., and Means, A. R. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 80, 6485-6489). The mutant CaM protein contains 16 of the 19 amino acids encoded by the CaM-like gene. Normal chicken CaM produced in bacteria is identical to rat CaM by all criteria tested except that it is not trimethylated. The protein product of the CaM-like gene has been termed CaML and exhibits properties which are very similar to CaM despite the presence of 16 amino acid substitutions. CaML binds Ca2+ as evidenced by Ca2+-dependent binding to phenothiazine- and phenyl-Sepharose affinity resins and a Ca2+-dependent electrophoretic mobility shift which is similar to but distinct from CaM. CaML cross-reacts with a monospecific CaM antibody and has an immunodilution curve which is identical to bacterially synthesized CaM. Finally, CaML can maximally activate rat brain phosphodiesterase but with altered kinetic parameters as compared to CaM. These data suggest that the nucleotide substitutions in the putative CaM processed gene are not random but are selected to retain CaM-like functions in the encoded protein. Such a mechanism may exist for other processed genes.  相似文献   

18.
TRPM3 has been reported to play an important role in Ca2+ homeostasis, but its gating mechanisms and regulation via Ca2+ are unknown. Ca2+ binding proteins such as calmodulin (CaM) could be probable modulators of this ion channel. We have shown that this protein binds to two independent domains, A35-K124 and H291-G382 on the TRPM3 N-terminus, which contain conserved hydrophobic as well as positively charged residues in specific positions, and that these residues have a crucial impact on its binding. We also showed that another Ca2+ binding protein, S100A1, is able to bind to these regions and that CaM and S100A1 compete for these binding sites on the TRPM3 N-terminus. Moreover, our results suggest that another very important TRP channel activity modulator, PtdIns(4,5)P2, interacts with the CaM/S100A1 binding sites on the TRPM3 N-terminus with high affinity.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Trifluoperazine (TFP; Stelazine?) is an antagonist of calmodulin (CaM), an essential regulator of calcium‐dependent signal transduction. Reports differ regarding whether, or where, TFP binds to apo CaM. Three crystallographic structures (1CTR, 1A29, and 1LIN) show TFP bound to (Ca2+)4‐CaM in ratios of 1, 2, or 4 TFP per CaM. In all of these, CaM domains adopt the “open” conformation seen in CaM‐kinase complexes having increased calcium affinity. Most reports suggest TFP also increases calcium affinity of CaM. To compare TFP binding to apo CaM and (Ca2+)4‐CaM and explore differential effects on the N‐ and C‐domains of CaM, stoichiometric TFP titrations of CaM were monitored by 15N‐HSQC NMR. Two TFP bound to apo CaM, whereas four bound to (Ca2+)4‐CaM. In both cases, the preferred site was in the C‐domain. During the titrations, biphasic responses for some resonances suggested intersite interactions. TFP‐binding sites in apo CaM appeared distinct from those in (Ca2+)4‐CaM. In equilibrium calcium titrations at defined ratios of TFP:CaM, TFP reduced calcium affinity at most levels tested; this is similar to the effect of many IQ‐motifs on CaM. However, at the highest level tested, TFP raised the calcium affinity of the N‐domain of CaM. A model of conformational switching is proposed to explain how TFP can exert opposing allosteric effects on calcium affinity by binding to different sites in the “closed,” “semi‐open,” and “open” domains of CaM. In physiological processes, apo CaM, as well as (Ca2+)4‐CaM, needs to be considered a potential target of drug action. Proteins 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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