首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Calcineurin (CaN) binds Ca(2+)-saturated calmodulin (CaM) with relatively high affinity; however, an accurate steady-state K(d) value has not been determined. In this report, we describe, using steady-state and stopped-flow fluorescence techniques, the rates of association and dissociation of Ca(2+)-saturated CaM from CaN heterodimer (CaNA/CaNB) and CaNA only. The rate of Ca(2+)/CaM association was determined to be 4.6 x 10(7) M(-1)s(-1). The rate of Ca(2+)/CaM dissociation from CaN was slower than previously reported and was approximately 0.0012 s(-1). In preparations of CaNA alone (no regulatory CaNB subunit), the dissociation rate was slowed further to 0.00026 s(-1). From these data we calculate a K(d) for binding of Ca(2+)-saturated CaM to CaN of 28 pM. This K(d) is significantly lower than previously reported estimates of approximately 1 nM and indicates that CaN is one of the highest affinity CaM-binding proteins identified to date.  相似文献   

2.
The highly conserved phosphatase calcineurin (CaN) plays vital roles in numerous processes including T-cell activation, development and function of the central nervous system, and cardiac growth. It is activated by the calcium sensor calmodulin (CaM). CaM binds to a regulatory domain (RD) within CaN, causing a conformational change that displaces an autoinhibitory domain (AID) from the active site, resulting in activation of the phosphatase. This is the same general mechanism by which CaM activates CaM-dependent protein kinases. Previously published data have hinted that the RD of CaN is intrinsically disordered. In this work, we demonstrate that the RD is unstructured and that it folds upon binding CaM, ousting the AID from the catalytic site. The RD is 95 residues long, with the AID attached to its C-terminal end and the 24-residue CaM binding region toward the N-terminal end. This is unlike the CaM-dependent protein kinases that have CaM binding sites and AIDs immediately adjacent in sequence. Our data demonstrate that not only does the CaM binding region folds but also an ~25- to 30-residue region between it and the AID folds, resulting in over half of the RD adopting α-helical structure. This appears to be the first observation of CaM inducing folding of this scale outside of its binding site on a target protein.  相似文献   

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

4.
Tse JK  Giannetti AM  Bradshaw JM 《Biochemistry》2007,46(13):4017-4027
Calmodulin (CaM) trapping by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is a phenomenon whereby the affinity of CaM for CaMKII increases >1000-fold following CaMKII autophosphorylation. The molecular basis of this effect is not entirely understood. Binding of CaM to the phosphorylated and the unphosphorylated states of CaMKII is well mimicked by the interaction of CaM with two different length peptides taken from the CaM-binding region of CaMKII, peptides we refer to as the long and intermediate peptides. To better understand the conformational change accompanying CaM trapping, we have used isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) to compare the binding thermodynamics of CaM to these peptides as well as to a shorter CaMKII-based peptide. Calorimetric analysis revealed that the enthalpy, rather than the entropy, distinguished binding of these three peptides. Furthermore, the heat capacity change was found to be similar for the long and intermediate peptides but smaller in magnitude for the short peptide. Direct titration of CaM with peptide provided the Kd value for the short peptide (Kd = 5.9 +/- 2.4 microM), but a novel, two-phased competitive binding strategy was necessary to ascertain the affinities of the intermediate (Kd = 0.17 +/- 0.06 nM) and long (Kd = 0.07 +/- 0.04 pM) peptides. To our knowledge, the Kd for the long peptide is the most potent measured to date using ITC. Together, the findings reported here support a model whereby the final conformational change accompanying CaM trapping buries little additional surface area but does involve formation of new hydrogen bonds and van der Waals contacts that contribute to formation of the high-affinity, CaM-trapped state.  相似文献   

5.
Calcineurin (CaN) is a serine/threonine phosphatase that regulates a variety of physiological and pathophysiological processes in mammalian tissue. The calcineurin (CaN) regulatory domain (RD) is responsible for regulating the enzyme's phosphatase activity, and is believed to be highly-disordered when inhibiting CaN, but undergoes a disorder-to-order transition upon diffusion-limited binding with the regulatory protein calmodulin (CaM). The prevalence of polar and charged amino acids in the regulatory domain (RD) suggests electrostatic interactions are involved in mediating calmodulin (CaM) binding, yet the lack of atomistic-resolution data for the bound complex has stymied efforts to probe how the RD sequence controls its conformational ensemble and long-range attractions contribute to target protein binding. In the present study, we investigated via computational modeling the extent to which electrostatics and structural disorder facilitate CaM/CaN association kinetics. Specifically, we examined several RD constructs that contain the CaM binding region (CAMBR) to characterize the roles of electrostatics versus conformational diversity in controlling diffusion-limited association rates, via microsecond-scale molecular dynamics (MD) and Brownian dynamic (BD) simulations. Our results indicate that the RD amino acid composition and sequence length influence both the dynamic availability of conformations amenable to CaM binding, as well as long-range electrostatic interactions to steer association. These findings provide intriguing insight into the interplay between conformational diversity and electrostatically-driven protein-protein association involving CaN, which are likely to extend to wide-ranging diffusion-limited processes regulated by intrinsically-disordered proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+ binding to calmodulin in the pCa range 5.5-7.0 exposes hydrophobic sites that bind hydrophobic inhibitory ligands, including calmodulin antagonists, some Ca2+-antagonists and calmodulin-binding proteins. The binding of these hydrophobic ligands to calmodulin can be followed by the approx. 80% fluorescence increase they produce in dansylated (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulphonylated) calmodulin (CDRDANS). In the presence of Ca2+, calmodulin binds the calmodulin inhibitor, R24571, with an affinity of approx. 2-3 nM and hydrophobic ligands, including trifluoperazine (TFP), W-7 [N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloronaphthalene-1-sulphonamide], fendiline, felodipine and prenylamine, with affinities in the micromolar range. This binding is strongly Ca2+-dependent and Mg2+-independent. Calmodulin shows a reasonably high degree of specificity in its binding of these ligands over other ligands tested. CDRDANS, therefore, provides a convenient and simple means of monitoring the interaction of a variety of hydrophobic ligands with the Ca2+-dependent regulatory protein, calmodulin. CDRDANS binds to phospholipid vesicles made of (dimyristoyl)phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) or (dipalmitoyl)phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and produces fluorescence increases only in the presence of Ca2+ and at temperatures above their gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition. Although the fluorescence changes in CDRDANS accurately report phase transitions in these liposomes, its binding to these vesicles is weak. Calmodulin probably requires a high-affinity lipid-bound receptor protein for its high-affinity binding to natural membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Murase T  Iio T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(5):1618-1629
Ca(2+)-induced complex formation between calmodulin (CaM) and mastoparanX (MasX) was studied by a fluorescence spectroscopy and by a stopped-flow method. The measurements of the fluorescence anisotropy in the presence of calcium and the fluorescence titration with Ca(2+) revealed that the N- and C-domains of CaM bound cooperatively MasX, while the tryptic fragments of CaM (TR(1)C, 1-77 and TR(2)C, 78-148) bound independently MasX. The Trp-fluorescence stopped-flow experiments revealed that the Ca(2+)-induced binding of CaM and MasX was composed of two processes: one was a rapid binding of the N-domain of CaM to MasX, which was induced by the rapid Ca(2+) binding to the N-sites of CaM. The other was a slow biphasic process. Its fast phase was the binding of the C-domain of CaM to MasX, which was induced by the slow Ca(2+) binding to the C-sites. Interestingly, the kinetics of the slow process varied with the Ca(2+) concentrations. At the low Ca(2+) concentrations, its rate constant increased to around 20 s(-1) as the Ca(2+) concentration increased. At the high Ca(2+) concentrations, the Ca(2+)-induced binding of the C-domain of CaM to MasX proceeded at a constant rate around 20 s(-1). This suggested an existence of a rate-limiting step for the Ca(2+)-induced binding of the C-domain of CaM to MasX at the high Ca(2+) concentrations. The slow phase of the slow process may be a rearrangement of the CaM-MasX complex. These results led to our model of a molecular kinetic mechanism of the Ca(2+)-induced complex formation between CaM and MasX.  相似文献   

8.
Calmodulin (CaM) fragments 1-77 (CaM 1-77) and 78-148 (CaM 78-148) were prepared by tryptic cleavage of CaM. CaM 78-148 exhibited Ca2+-dependent binding to mastoparan X, Polistes mastoparan, and melittin with apparent dissociation constants less than 0.2 microM as judged from changes in the fluorescence spectrum and anisotropy of the single tryptophan residue of each of these cationic, amphiphilic peptides. This interaction was accompanied by a large spectral blue shift of the peptide fluorescence spectrum. These findings are consistent with earlier results [Malencik, D.A., & Anderson, S.R. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 2420-2428] on the binding of mastoparan X to CaM fragment 72-148. The binding of the peptide to CaM 78-148 also caused a significant loss of the accessibility of the peptide tryptophan to the fluorescence quencher acrylamide. The CaM 78-148 induced effects on the fluorescence spectra and tryptophan accessibility of the peptides were most pronounced for mastoparan X, a peptide with tryptophan on the apolar face of the putative amphiphilic helix. The data were comparable with results from parallel experiments on the Ca2+-dependent interaction of these peptides with intact CaM. Difference circular dichroic spectra suggested that binding to CaM 78-148 was associated with the induction of considerable degrees of helicity in the amphiphilic peptides, which by themselves have predominantly random coil structures in aqueous solution. This finding is also reminiscent of the interaction of these peptides with intact CaM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous second messenger protein that regulates a variety of structurally and functionally diverse targets in response to changes in Ca2+ concentration. CaM-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) and calcineurin (CaN) are the prominent CaM targets that play an opposing role in many cellular functions including synaptic regulation. Since CaMKII and CaN compete for the available Ca2+/CaM, the differential affinity of these enzymes for CaM is crucial for achieving a balance in Ca2+ signaling. We used the computational protein design approach to modify CaM binding specificity for these two targets. Starting from the X-ray structure of CaM in complex with the CaM-binding domain of CaMKII, we optimized CaM interactions with CaMKII by introducing mutations into the CaM sequence. CaM optimization was performed with a protein design program, ORBIT, using a modified energy function that emphasized intermolecular interactions in the sequence selection procedure. Several CaM variants were experimentally constructed and tested for binding to the CaMKII and CaN peptides using the surface plasmon resonance technique. Most of our CaM mutants demonstrated small increase in affinity for the CaMKII peptide and substantial decrease in affinity for the CaN peptide compared to that of wild-type CaM. Our best CaM design exhibited an about 900-fold increase in binding specificity towards the CaMKII peptide, becoming the highest specificity switch achieved in any protein-protein interface through the computational protein design approach. Our results show that computational redesign of protein-protein interfaces becomes a reliable method for altering protein binding affinity and specificity.  相似文献   

10.
The fluorescent spinach calmodulin derivative 2-(4-maleimidoanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid-calmodulin (MIANS-CaM) was used to investigate calmodulin interaction with the purified, detergent-solubilized erythrocyte Ca2(+)-ATPase. Previous studies have shown that the Ca2(+)-ATPase exists in equilibria between monomeric and oligomeric forms. We report here that MIANS-CaM binds to both enzyme forms in a Ca2(+)-dependent manner, with a approximately 50% fluorescence enhancement. These findings confirm our previous observation that enzyme oligomers retain their ability to bind calmodulin, even though they are fully activated in the absence of calmodulin. The Ca2+ dependence of MIANS-CaM binding to monomeric Ca2(+)-ATPase is of higher affinity (K 1/2 = 0.09 microM Ca2+) and less cooperative (nH = 1.1) than the Ca2+ dependence of enzyme activation by MIANS-CaM (K 1/2 = 0.26 microM Ca2+, nH = 2.8). These Ca2+ dependences and the order of events, in which calmodulin binding precedes enzyme activation, demonstrate that calmodulin indeed could be a physiological activator of the monomeric enzyme. The calcium dependence of calmodulin binding to oligomeric Ca2(+)-ATPase occurs at even lower levels of Ca2+ (K 1/2 = 0.04 microM Ca2+), in a highly cooperative fashion (nH = 2.3), and essentially in parallel with enzyme activation (K 1/2 = 0.05 microM Ca2+, nH = 2.9). The observed differences between monomers and oligomers suggest that the oligomerized Ca2(+)-ATPase is in a conformation necessary for efficient, cooperative calcium binding at nanomolar Ca2+, which the monomeric enzyme acquires only upon interaction with calmodulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous Ca (2+)-sensor protein that binds and activates the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes. We have used fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to examine the conformational transitions of CaM induced by its binding to synthetic nitric oxide synthase (NOS) CaM-binding domain peptides and full length heme-free constitutive NOS (cNOS) enzymes over a range of physiologically relevant free Ca (2+) concentrations. We demonstrate for the first time that the domains of CaM collapse when associated with Ca (2+)-independent inducible NOS CaM-binding domain, similar to the previously solved crystal structures of CaM bound to the Ca (2+)-dependent cNOS peptides. We show that the association of CaM is not detectable with the cNOS peptides at low free Ca (2+) concentrations (<40 nM). In contrast, we demonstrate that CaM associates with the cNOS holo-enzymes in the absence of Ca (2+) and that the Ca (2+)-dependent transition occurs at a lower free Ca (2+) concentration with the cNOS holo-enzymes. Our results suggest that other regions outside of the CaM-binding domain in the cNOS enzymes are involved in the recruitment and binding of CaM. We also demonstrate that CaM binds to the cNOS enzymes in a sequential manner with the Ca (2+)-replete C-lobe binding first followed by the Ca (2+)-replete N-lobe. This novel FRET study helps to clarify some of the observed similarities and differences between the Ca (2+)-dependent/independent interaction between CaM and the NOS isozymes.  相似文献   

12.
Wheat germ calmodulin (CaM) was derivatized at its single cysteine (Cys27) with either the fluorescent reagent, N-(iodoacetylaminoethyl)-5-naphthylamine-1-sulfonic acid (I-EDANS) or the photoactivable cross-linker benzophenone-4-maleimide. Comparison of the native and derivatized wheat germ CaMs with native bovine testis CaM indicates that the concentrations of these proteins required for half-maximal stimulation of either erythrocyte membrane Ca2+-ATPase activity or cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum phosphorylation are very similar. Affinity labeling of troponin subunits with 125I- and benzophenone-4-maleimide-labeled CaM demonstrates CaM binding to troponin I (TnI) and troponin T (TnT) in binary complexes, as well as to both subunits in the CaM.TnI.TnT ternary complex. This suggests that both subunits are within 10 A of Cys27 of calmodulin. Affinity labeling of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles with 125I- and benzophenone-4-maleimide-labeled CaM exhibits a Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent labeling of phospholamban, as shown previously with bovine calmodulin (Louis, C.F., and Jarvis, B. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 15187-15191). Thus, it appears that Ca2+-binding site I of calmodulin is at or near binding sites of calmodulin for TnI, TnT, and phospholamban. Analysis of the time-resolved fluorescence decay curves of I-EDANS-labeled calmodulin indicates a major component with a lifetime of 11.9 ns (+Ca2+), which accounts for 81% of the total fluorescence. The lifetime decreases slightly to 11.3 ns in the absence of Ca2+. Fluorescence anisotropy experiments indicate that I-EDANS-labeled CaM binds TnI with Kd = 6 x 10(-8) M in the presence of Ca2+. This study suggests that these single-site derivatives will be useful for characterizing a variety of calmodulin-receptor interactions because they lack ambiguities inherent in less specific labeling methods.  相似文献   

13.
Calmodulin (CaM) binding by turkey gizzard myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) causes subtle changes in the fluorescence emission and polarization excitation spectra of the enzyme. Fluorescence experiments using 9-anthroyl-choline (9AC), which competes with ATP in binding, demonstrate mutually stabilizing interactions between the CaM and ATP binding sites corresponding to delta G = -0.6 to -0.7 kcal/mol. Fluorescence titrations in the presence of 9AC or 5,5'-bis[8-(phenylamino)-1-naphthalenesulfonate] confirm the stoichiometry of 1 mol of CaM/MLCK. Phosphorylation of MLCK has no effect on either the protein fluorescence or the binding of ATP and 9AC. The dissociation constant for the MLCL-CaM complex is increased approximately 500-fold on phosphorylation. Values of Kd for the phosphorylated enzyme range from 0.5 to 1.1 microM in 0.2 N KCl, pH 7.3, 25 degrees C. We showed competition between MLCK and other CaM binding proteins and peptides by using both fluorescence and catalytic activity measurements. Competition for CaM occurs with ACTH, beta-endorphin, substance P, glucagon, poly(L-arginine), myelin basic protein, troponin I, and histone H2A. Phosphorylation of the last three proteins by the adenosine cyclic 3',5'-phosphate dependent protein kinase diminishes their ability to compete. Phosphorylation of MLCK by the protein kinase gives 0.95 +/- 0.04 and 2.2 +/- 0.4 mol of incorporated 32P in the presence and absence of CaM, respectively. These stoichiometries agree with those recently reported [Conti, M. A. & Adelstein, R. S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 3178].  相似文献   

14.
 苄基异喹啉类化合物拮抗钙调素(CaM)并抑制依赖CaM的环核苷酸磷酸二酯酶(CaM-PDE)的活力;用荧光测定法可检测它们与钙调素的相互作用。 Ca~(2+)存在下蝙蝙葛碱(D_1)及其衍生物(D_(14))在激发波长340nm处最大发射波长分别为463和455nm,结合CaM后荧光量子产率增加两倍多。它们同CaM的结合均依赖于Ca~(2+)。 本文制备的丹磺酰基CaM(D-CaM)结合Ca~(2+)后荧光最大发射峰值兰移(518→508nm),荧光强度增加22%。在Ca~(2+)存在下小檗胺衍生物E_6能与CaM结合并淬灭Ca~(2+)-D-CaM荧光。 单苄基异喹啉类化合物86040、86045能淬灭CaM的酪氨酸残基的特征荧光。 实验表明,CaM结合D_(14)、E_6、86040和86045的kd值分别为1.3、1.8、9.5和15.7μmol/L,所观察的化合物与CaM的亲和力的大小与它们拮抗CaM,抑制CaM-PDE的酶活力相对应。  相似文献   

15.
Wu X  Bers DM 《Cell calcium》2007,41(4):353-364
Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous Ca2+ binding protein and Ca2+-CaM activates many cellular targets and functions. While much of CaM is thought to be protein bound, quantitative data in cardiac myocytes is lacking regarding CaM location, [CaM]free and CaM redistribution during changes in [Ca2+]i. Here, we demonstrated that in adult rabbit cardiac myocytes, CaM is highly concentrated at Z-lines (confirmed by Di-8-ANEPPS staining of transverse tubules) using three different approaches: immunocytochemistry (endogenous CaM), Alexa Fluor 488 conjugate CaM (F-CaM) in both permeabilized cells (exogenous CaM) and in patch clamped intact cells (via pipette dialysis). Using 100 nM [CaM]free we washed F-CaM into permeabilized myocytes and saw a two-phase (fast and slow) CaM binding curve with a plateau after 40 min of F-CaM wash-in. We also measured myocyte [CaM]free using two modified null-point titration methods, finding [CaM]free to be 50-75 nM (which is only 1% of total [CaM]). Higher [Ca2+]i increased CaM binding especially in the nucleus and at Z-lines and significantly slowed F-CaM dissociation rate when F-CaM was washed out of permeabilized myocytes. Additionally, in both permeabilized and intact myocytes, CaM moved into the nucleus when [Ca2+]i was elevated, and this was reversible. We conclude that [CaM]free is very low in myocytes even at resting [Ca2+]i, indicating intense competition of CaM targets for free CaM. Bound CaM is relatively concentrated at Z-lines at rest but translocates significantly to the nucleus upon elevation of [Ca2+]i, which may influence activation of different targets and cellular functions.  相似文献   

16.
A family of plant ligand gated nonselective cation channels (cngcs) can be activated by direct, and reversible binding of cyclic nucleotide. These proteins have a cytoplasm-localized cyclic nucleotide binding domain (CNBD) at the carboxy-terminus of the polypeptide. A portion of the cngc CNBD also acts as a calmodulin (CaM) binding domain (CaMBD). The objective of this work is to further characterize interaction of cyclic nucleotide and CaM in gating plant cngc currents. The three-dimensional structure of an Arabidopsis thaliana cngc (Atcngc2) CNBD was modeled, indicating cAMP binding to the Atcngc2 CNBD in a pocket formed by a β barrel structure appressing a shortened (relative to animal cngc CNBDs) αC helix. The Atcngc2 CaMBD was expressed as a fusion peptide linking blue and green fluorescent proteins, and used to quantify CaM (A. thaliana CaM isoform 4) binding. CaM bound the fusion protein in a Ca2+–dependent manner with a Kd of 7.6 nM and a Ca2+ binding Kd of 200 nM. Functional characterization (voltage clamp analysis) of Atcngc2 was undertaken by expression in human embryonic kidney cells. CaM reversed cAMP activation of Atcngc2 currents. This functional interaction was dependent on free cytosolic Ca2+. Increasing cytosolic Ca2+ was found to inhibit cAMP activation of the channel in the absence of added CaM. We conclude that the physical interaction of Ca2+/CaM with plant cngcs blocks cyclic nucleotide activation of these channels. Thus, the cytosolic secondary messengers CaM, cAMP, and Ca2+ can act in an integrated fashion to gate currents through these plant ion channels.  相似文献   

17.
K Chiba  S Kurashima  T Mohri 《Life sciences》1990,47(11):953-960
We have monitored the interaction of several lipids with the bovine brain calmodulin(CaM) and analyzed the effect of lysophosphatidylcholine(lyso-PC, 2-50 micrograms/ml) on conformation of CaM and the interaction between CaM and CaM-binding protein(CaMBP), using a fluorescence signal of 1-(dimethylamino)naphthalene-5-sulfonate-labeled CaM(DNS-CaM). Lyso-PC(egg, 20 micrograms/ml), among various natural lipids including phosphatidylserine(PS), phosphatidylinositol(PI), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and their lyso forms, greatly and dose-dependently enhanced the intensity of DNS fluorescence of DNS-CaM in the presence (100 microM CaCl2) and absence (1 mM EGTA) of Ca2+. Apparent dissociation constants calculated from the fluorometric titrations of binding of lyso-PC to DNS-CaM were 0.6 and 3.7 micrograms/ml in the presence and absence of Ca2+, respectively. Lyso-PC remarkably prevented both trypsin-induced quenching of the fluorescence of DNS-CaM and tryptic digestion of native CaM in the absence of Ca2+. Enhancement of DNS fluorescence of DNS-CaM by CaMBP was observed only in the presence of Ca2+ and lyso-PC could further increase the fluorescence intensity of the complex. These all results suggest that lyso-PC can modulate the interaction between CaM and CaMBP as a result of its direct effect on conformation of CaM.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
This report describes Ca2+-dependent binding of 125I-labeled calmodulin (125I-CaM) to erythrocyte membranes and identification of two new CaM-binding proteins. Erythrocyte CaM labeled with 125I-Bolton Hunter reagent fully activated erythrocyte (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase. 125I-CaM bound to CaM depleted membranes in a Ca2+-dependent manner with a Ka of 6 x 10(-8) M Ca2+ and maximum binding at 4 x 10(-7) M Ca2+. Only the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane bound 125I-CaM. Binding was inhibited by unlabeled CaM and by trifluoperazine. Reduction of the free Ca2+ concentration or addition of trifluoperazine caused a slow reversal of binding. Nanomolar 125I-CaM required several hours to reach binding equilibrium, but the rate was much faster at higher concentrations. Scatchard plots of binding were curvilinear, and a class of high affinity sites was identified with a KD of 0.5 nM and estimated capacity of 400 sites per cell equivalent for inside-out vesicles (IOVs). The high affinity sites of IOVs most likely correspond to Ca2+ transporter since: (a) Ka of activation of (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase and KD for binding were nearly identical, and (b) partial digestion of IOVs with alpha-chymotrypsin produced activation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase with loss of the high affinity sites. 125I-CaM bound in solution to a class of binding proteins (KD approximately 55 nM, 7.3 pmol per mg of ghost protein) which were extracted from ghosts by low ionic strength incubation. Soluble binding proteins were covalently cross-linked to 125I-CaM with Lomant's reagent, and 2 bands of 8,000 and 40,000 Mr (Mr of CaM subtracted) and spectrin dimer were observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis autoradiography. The 8,000 and 40,000 Mr proteins represent a previously unrecognized class of CaM-binding sites which may mediate unexplained Ca2+-induced effects in the erythrocyte.  相似文献   

20.
根据顺磁离子Mn~(2+)的取代特性,用EPR方法研究了钙调神经磷酸酶B亚基与其4个Ca~(2+)的结合位点,以及它们亲和力的细微差别。并同时进行了钙调素的对比研究。实验和Scatchard作图表明,B亚基有4个Ca~(2+)结合位点,2个高亲和力结合位点,其解离常数为4×10~(-6)mol/L;2个低亲和力结合位点,解离常数为9×10~(-5)mol/L。钙调素也有2个Ca~(2+)高亲和力结合位点,其解离常数为8×10~(-6)mol/L,2个低亲和力结合位点,解离常数为7×10~(-5)mol/L。钙调神经磷酸酶B亚基和钙调素Mn~(2+)结合位点的EPR研究对B亚基和钙调素在共同调节钙调神经磷酸酶中的作用提供了有用的信息。  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号