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1.
We used single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy to probe the conformation of calmodulin (CaM) bound to oxidatively modified plasma-membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCAox). We found that oxidative modification altered the coupling between the ATP binding domain and the autoinhibitory domain. Oxidative modification of PMCA is known to result in a loss of activity for the enzyme. Conformations of PMCAox-CaM complexes were probed by single-molecule polarization modulation spectroscopy, which measured the orientational mobility of fluorescently labeled CaM bound to PMCAox. We detected an enhanced population of PMCAox-CaM complexes with a low orientational mobility in the presence of ATP, whereas nonoxidized PMCA-CaM complexes existed almost exclusively in a high-mobility state in the presence of ATP. We have previously attributed such high-mobility states to PMCA-CaM complexes with a dissociated autoinhibitory/CaM binding domain, whereas the lower-mobility state was attributed to autoinhibited PMCA-CaM complexes with a nondissociated autoinhibitory domain [Osborn, K. D., et al. (2004) Biophys. J. 87, 1892-1899]. In the absence of ATP, the orientational mobility distributions are similar for CaM complexed with oxidized PMCA or nonoxidized PMCA. These results suggest that oxidative modification of PMCA reduced the propensity of the autoinhibitory domain to dissociate from binding sites near the catalytic core of the enzyme with bound nucleotide upon CaM stimulation in the presence of Ca(2+). This interpretation was further supported by chymotrypsin proteolysis, which probes the tightness of binding of the autoinhibitory domain to sites near the catalytic core of the enzyme. Enhanced proteolysis was observed for PMCA upon binding CaM or ATP. In contrast, proteolysis was partially blocked for oxidatively modified PMCA, even in the presence of ATP.  相似文献   

2.
Wang H  Du Y  Xiang B  Lin W  Li X  Wei Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(15):4461-4468
Calcineurin is composed of a catalytic subunit (CNA) and a regulatory subunit (CNB). CNA contains the catalytic domain and three regulatory domains: a CNB-binding domain (BBH), a C-terminal calmodulin-binding domain (CBD), and an autoinhibitory domain (AID). We constructed a series of mutants of CNA to explore the regulatory role of its C-terminal regulatory domain and CaM. We demonstrated a more precise mechanism of CNA regulation by C-terminal residues 389-511 in the presence of CNB. First, we showed that residues 389-413, which were identified in previous work as constituting a CaM binding domain (CBD), also have an autoinhibiting function. We also found that residues 389-413 were not sufficient for CaM binding and that the CBD comprises at least residues 389-456. In conclusion, two distinct segments of the C-terminal regulatory region (389-511) of CNA inhibit enzyme activity: residues 389-413 interact with the CNB binding helix (BBH), and residues 457-482 with the active center of CNA.  相似文献   

3.
In plant Ca(2+) pumps belonging to the P(2B) subfamily of P-type ATPases, the N-terminal cytoplasmic domain is responsible for pump autoinhibition. Binding of calmodulin (CaM) to this region results in pump activation but the structural basis for CaM activation is still not clear. All residues in a putative CaM-binding domain (Arg(43) to Lys(68)) were mutagenized and the resulting recombinant proteins were studied with respect to CaM binding and the activation state. The results demonstrate that (i) the binding site for CaM is overlapping with the autoinhibitory region and (ii) the autoinhibitory region comprises significantly fewer residues than the CaM-binding region. In a helical wheel projection of the CaM-binding domain, residues involved in autoinhibition cluster on one side of the helix, which is proposed to interact with an intramolecular receptor site in the pump. Residues influencing CaM negatively are situated on the other face of the helix, likely to face the cytosol, whereas residues controlling CaM binding positively are scattered throughout. We propose that early CaM recognition is mediated by the cytosolic face and that CaM subsequently competes with the intramolecular autoinhibitor in binding to the other face of the helix.  相似文献   

4.
The Ca2+ signaling protein calmodulin (CaM) stimulates Ca2+ pumping in the plasma-membrane Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA) by binding to an autoinhibitory domain, which then dissociates from the catalytic domain of PMCA to allow full activation of the enzyme. We measured single-molecule fluorescence trajectories with polarization modulation to track the conformation of the autoinhibitory domain of PMCA pump bound to fluorescently labeled CaM. Interchange of the autoinhibitory domain between associated and dissociated conformations was detected at a physiological Ca2+ concentration of 0.15 microM, where the enzyme is only partially active, but not at 25 microM, where the enzyme is fully activated. In previous work we showed that the conformation of the autoinhibitory domain in PMCA-CaM complexes could be monitored by the extent of modulation of single-molecule fluorescence generated with rotating excitation polarization. In the present work, we determined the timescale of association and dissociation of the autoinhibitory domain with the catalytic regions of the PMCA. Association of the autoinhibitory domain was rare at a high Ca2+ concentration (25 microM). At a lower Ca2+ concentration (0.15 microM), conformations of the autoinhibitory domain interchanged with a dissociation rate of 0.042 +/- 0.011 sec(-1) and an association rate of 0.023 +/- 0.006 sec-1. The results indicate that the response time of PMCA upon a reduction in Ca2+ is limited to tens of seconds by autoinhibitory dynamics. This property may reduce the sensitivity of PMCA to transient reductions in intracellular Ca2+. We suggest that the dynamics of the autoinhibitory domain may play a novel role in regulating PMCA activity.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
H Tokumitsu  M Iwabu  Y Ishikawa  R Kobayashi 《Biochemistry》2001,40(46):13925-13932
We have previously demonstrated that the alpha isoform of Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase (CaM-KKalpha) is strictly regulated by an autoinhibitory mechanism and activated by the binding of Ca(2+)/CaM [Tokumitsu, H., Muramatsu, M., Ikura, M., and Kobayashi, R. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 20090-20095]. In this study, we find that rat brain extract contains Ca(2+)/CaM-independent CaM-KK activity. This result is consistent with an enhanced Ca(2+)/CaM-independent activity (60-70% of total activity) observed with the recombinant CaM-KKbeta isoform. By using various truncation mutants of CaM-KKbeta, we have identified a region of 23 amino acids (residues 129-151) located at the N-terminus of the catalytic domain as an important regulatory element of the autonomous activity. A CaM-KKbeta deletion mutant of this domain shows a significant increase of Ca(2+)/CaM dependency for the CaM-KK activity as well as for the autophosphorylation activity. The activities of CaM-KKalpha and CaM-KKbeta chimera, in which autoinhibitory sequences were replaced by each other, were completely dependent on Ca(2+)/CaM, suggesting that the autoinhibitory regions of CaM-KKalpha and CaM-KKbeta are functional. These results establish for the first time that residues 129-151 of CaM-KKbeta participate in the release of the autoinhibitory domain from its catalytic core, resulting in generation of autonomous activity.  相似文献   

7.
We used single-molecule polarization modulation methods to investigate the activation of the plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA) by oxidized calmodulin (CaM). Oxidative modification of methionine residues of CaM to their corresponding sulfoxides is known to inhibit the ability of CaM to activate PMCA. Single-molecule polarization methods were used to measure the orientational mobility of fluorescently labeled oxidized CaM bound to PMCA. We previously identified two distinct populations of PMCA-CaM complexes characterized by high and low orientational mobilities, with the low-mobility population appearing at a subsaturating Ca(2+) concentration [Osborn, K. D., et al. (2004) Biophys. J. 87, 1892-1899]. We proposed that the high-mobility population corresponds to PMCA-CaM complexes with a dissociated (and mobile) autoinhibitory domain, whereas the low-mobility population corresponds to PMCA-CaM complexes where the autoinhibitory domain is not dissociated and therefore the enzyme is not active. In the present experiments, performed with PMCA complexed with oxidatively modified CaM at a saturating Ca(2+) concentration, we found a large population of molecules with an orientationally immobile autoinhibitory domain. In contrast, native CaM bound to PMCA was characterized almost entirely by the more orientationally mobile population at a similar Ca(2+) concentration. The addition of 1 mM ATP to complexes of oxidized CaM with PMCA reduced but did not abolish the low-mobility population. These results indicate that the decline in the ability of oxidized CaM to activate PMCA results at least in part from its reduced ability to induce conformational changes in PMCA that result in dissociation of the autoinhibitory domain after CaM binding.  相似文献   

8.
Calcium-saturated calmodulin (CaM) directly activates CaM-dependent protein kinase I (CaMKI) by binding to a region in the C-terminal regulatory sequence of the enzyme to relieve autoinhibition. The structure of CaM in a high-affinity complex with a 25-residue peptide of CaMKI (residues 294-318) has been determined by X-ray crystallography at 1.7 A resolution. Upon complex formation, the CaMKI peptide adopts an alpha-helical conformation, while changes in the CaM domain linker enable both its N- and C-domains to wrap around the peptide helix. Target peptide residues Trp-303 (interacting with the CaM C-domain) and Met-316 (with the CaM N-domain) define the mode of binding as 1-14. In addition, two basic patches on the peptide form complementary charge interactions with CaM. The CaM-peptide affinity is approximately 1 pM, compared with 30 nM for the CaM-kinase complex, indicating that activation of autoinhibited CaMKI by CaM requires a costly energetic disruption of the interactions between the CaM-binding sequence and the rest of the enzyme. We present biochemical and structural evidence indicating the involvement of both CaM domains in the activation process: while the C-domain exhibits tight binding toward the regulatory sequence, the N-domain is necessary for activation. Our crystal structure also enables us to identify the full CaM-binding sequence. Residues Lys-296 and Phe-298 from the target peptide interact directly with CaM, demonstrating overlap between the autoinhibitory and CaM-binding sequences. Thus, the kinase activation mechanism involves the binding of CaM to residues associated with the inhibitory pseudosubstrate sequence.  相似文献   

9.
Ye Q  Wang H  Zheng J  Wei Q  Jia Z 《Proteins》2008,73(1):19-27
The activity of the protein phosphatase calcineurin (CN) is regulated by an autoinhibition mechanism wherein several domains from its catalytic A subunit, including the calmodulin binding domain (CaMBD), block access to its active site. Upon binding of Ca2+ and calmodulin (Ca2+/CaM) to CaMBD, the autoinhibitory domains dissociate from the catalytic groove, thus activating the enzyme. To date, the structure of the CN/CaM/Ca2+ complex has not been determined in its entirety. Previously, we determined the structure of a fusion protein consisting of CaM and a 25-residue peptide taken from the CaMBD, joined by a 5-glycine linker. This structure revealed a novel CaM binding motif. However, the presence of the extraneous glycine linker cast doubt on the authenticity of this structure as an accurate representation of CN/CaM binding in vivo. Thus, here, we have determined the crystal structure of CaM complexed with the 25-residue CaMBD peptide without the glycine linker at a resolution of 2.1 A. The structure is essentially identical to the fusion construction which displays CaM bound to the CaMBD peptide as a dimer with an open, elongated conformation. The N-lobe from one molecule and C-lobe from another encompass and bind the CaMBD peptide. Thus, it validates the existence of this novel CaM binding motif. Our experiments suggest that the dimeric CaM/CaMBD complex exists in solution, which is unambiguously validated using a carefully-designed CaM-sepharose pull-down experiment. We discuss structural features that produce this novel binding motif, including the role of the CaMBD peptide residues Arg-408, Val-409, and Phe-410, which work to provide rigidity to the otherwise flexible central CaM helix joining the N- and C-lobes, ultimately keeping these lobes apart and forcing "head-to-tail" dimerization to attain the requisite N- and C-lobe pairing for CaMBD binding.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The plasma membrane calcium-ATPase (PMCA) helps to control cytosolic calcium levels by pumping out excess Ca2+. PMCA is regulated by the Ca2+ signaling protein calmodulin (CaM), which stimulates PMCA activity by binding to an autoinhibitory domain of PMCA. We used single-molecule polarization methods to investigate the mechanism of regulation of the PMCA by CaM fluorescently labeled with tetramethylrhodamine. The orientational mobility of PMCA-CaM complexes was determined from the extent of modulation of single-molecule fluorescence upon excitation with a rotating polarization. At a high Ca2+ concentration, the distribution of modulation depths reveals that CaM bound to PMCA is orientationally mobile, as expected for a dissociated autoinhibitory domain of PMCA. In contrast, at a reduced Ca2+ concentration a population of PMCA-CaM complexes appears with significantly reduced orientational mobility. This population can be attributed to PMCA-CaM complexes in which the autoinhibitory domain is not dissociated, and thus the PMCA is inactive. The presence of these complexes demonstrates the inadequacy of a two-state model of Ca2+ pump activation and suggests a regulatory role for the low-mobility state of the complex. When ATP is present, only the high-mobility state is detected, revealing an altered interaction between the autoinhibitory and nucleotide-binding domains.  相似文献   

12.
Structural studies of the calmodulin-dependent protein kinase I have shown how the calmodulin-binding domain and autoinhibitory domain interact with the active sites of the enzyme. In this work, we have studied the interaction in solution of two synthetic short and long (22- and 37-residue) peptides representing the binding and autoinhibitory domains of CaMKI with Ca2+-CaM using CD, NMR, and EPR spectroscopy. Both peptides adopt alpha-helical structure when bound to Ca2+-CaM, as detected by CD spectroscopy. Cadmium-113 NMR showed that both peptides induced cooperativity in metal ion binding between the two lobes of the protein. To directly observe the effect of the peptides upon CaM in solution, biosynthetically isotope labeled [methyl-13C-Met]CaM was prepared and studied by 1H, 13C NMR. The relaxation effects of two nitroxide spin-labeled derivatives of the short peptide showed the N-terminal portion of the CaM-binding domain interacting with the C-lobe of CaM, while the C-lobe of the peptide binds to the N-lobe of CaM. Our results are consistent with Trp303 and Met316 acting as the anchoring residues for the C- and N-lobes of CaM, respectively. The NMR spectra of the long peptide showed further differences, suggesting that additional interactions may exist between the autoinhibitory domain and CaM.  相似文献   

13.
The complete structure of the assembled domains of nitric oxide-sensitive guanylate cyclase (NOsGC) remains to be determined. It is also unknown how binding of NO to heme in guanylate cyclase is communicated to the catalytic domain. In the current study the conformational change of guanylate cyclase on activation by NO was studied using FRET. Endogenous tryptophan residues were used as donors, the substrate analog 2′-Mant-3′-dGTP as acceptor. The enzyme contains five tryptophan residues distributed evenly over all four functional domains. This provides a unique opportunity to detect the movement of the functional domains relative to the substrate-binding catalytic region. FRET measurements indicate that NO brings tryptophan 22 in the αB helix of the β1 heme NO binding domain and tryptophan 466 in the second short helix of the α1 coiled-coil domain closer to the catalytic domain. We propose that the respective domains act as a pair of tongs forcing the catalytic domain into the nitric oxide-activated conformation.  相似文献   

14.
RABEX-5 and other exchange factors with VPS9 domains regulate endocytic trafficking through activation of the Rab family GTPases RAB5, RAB21 and RAB22. Here we report the crystal structure of the RABEX-5 catalytic core in complex with nucleotide-free RAB21, a key intermediate in the exchange reaction pathway. The structure reveals how VPS9 domain exchange factors recognize Rab GTPase substrates, accelerate GDP release and stabilize the nucleotide-free conformation. We further identify an autoinhibitory element in a predicted amphipathic helix located near the C terminus of the VPS9 domain. The autoinhibitory element overlaps with the binding site for the multivalent effector RABAPTIN-5 and potently suppresses the exchange activity of RABEX-5. Autoinhibition can be partially reversed by mutation of conserved residues on the nonpolar face of the predicted amphipathic helix or by assembly of the complex with RABAPTIN-5.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Diaphanous-related formins (DRFs) regulate the nucleation and polymerization of unbranched actin filaments. The activity of DRFs is inhibited by an intramolecular interaction between their N-terminal regulatory region and a conserved C-terminal segment termed the Diaphanous autoinhibitory domain (DAD). Binding of GTP bound Rho to the mDia1 N terminus releases this autoinhibitory restraint. Here, we describe the crystal structure of the DAD segment of mDia1 in complex with the relevant N-terminal fragment, termed the DID domain. The structure reveals that the DAD segment forms an amphipathic helix that binds a conserved, concave surface on the DID domain. Comparison with the structure of the mDia1 N terminus bound to RhoC suggests that release of the autoinhibitory DAD interaction is accomplished largely by Rho-induced restructuring of the adjacent GTPase binding subdomain (GBD), but also by electrostatic repulsion and a small, direct steric occlusion of the DAD binding cleft by Rho itself.  相似文献   

17.
A 592-amino acid segment of the regulatory domain of the neuronal type-I inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP(3)R) isoform (type-I long, amino acids1314-1905) and the corresponding 552-amino acid alternatively spliced form present in peripheral tissues (type-I short, amino acids 1693-1733 deleted) were expressed as glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins. These domains encompass a putative calmodulin (CaM) binding domain and two protein kinase A phosphorylation sites. Both long and short fusion proteins retained the ability to bind CaM in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner as measured by CaM-Sepharose chromatography or a dansyl-CaM fluorescence assay. Both assays indicated that the short fusion protein bound twice the amount of CaM than the long form at saturating concentrations of CaM. In addition, the binding of the short form to CaM-Sepharose was inhibited by phosphorylation with protein kinase A, whereas the binding of the long form was unaffected. Full-length cDNAs encoding type-I long, type-I short, and type-III IP(3)R isoforms were expressed in COS cells, and the Ca(2+) sensitivity of [(3)H]IP(3) binding to permeabilized cells was measured. The type-I long isoform was more sensitive to Ca(2+) inhibition (IC(50) = 0.55 microM) than the type-I short (IC(50) = 5.7 microM) or the type-III isoform (IC(50) = 3 microM). In agreement with studies on the fusion proteins, the full-length type-I short bound more CaM-Sepharose, and this binding was inhibited to a greater extent by protein kinase A phosphorylation than the type-I long IP(3)R. Although type-III IP(3)Rs did not bind directly to CaM-Sepharose, hetero-oligomers of type-I/III IP(3)Rs retained the ability to interact with CaM. We conclude that the deletion of the SII splice site in the type-I IP(3)R results in the differential regulation of the alternatively spliced isoforms by Ca(2+), CaM, and protein kinase A.  相似文献   

18.
Human ether à go-go potassium channels (hEAG1) open in response to membrane depolarization and they are inhibited by Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM), presumably binding to the C-terminal domain of the channel subunits. Deletion of the cytosolic N-terminal domain resulted in complete abolition of Ca2+/CaM sensitivity suggesting the existence of further CaM binding sites. A peptide array-based screen of the entire cytosolic protein of hEAG1 identified three putative CaM-binding domains, two in the C-terminus (BD-C1: 674-683, BD-C2: 711-721) and one in the N-terminus (BD-N: 151-165). Binding of GST-fusion proteins to Ca2+/CaM was assayed with fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and precipitation assays. In the presence of Ca2+, BD-N and BD-C2 provided dissociation constants in the nanomolar range, BD-C1 bound with lower affinity. Mutations in the binding domains reduced inhibition of the functional channels by Ca2+/CaM. Employment of CaM-EF-hand mutants showed that CaM binding to the N- and C-terminus are primarily dependent on EF-hand motifs 3 and 4. Hence, closure of EAG channels presumably requires the binding of multiple CaM molecules in a manner more complex than previously assumed.  相似文献   

19.
The neuronal and endothelial nitric-oxide synthases (nNOS and eNOS) differ from inducible NOS in their dependence on the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. Both nNOS and eNOS are activated by the reversible binding of calmodulin (CaM) in the presence of Ca(2+), whereas inducible NOS binds CaM irreversibly. One major divergence in the close sequence similarity between the NOS isoforms is a 40-50-amino acid insert in the middle of the FMN-binding domains of nNOS and eNOS. It has previously been proposed that this insert forms an autoinhibitory domain designed to destabilize CaM binding and increase its Ca(2+) dependence. To examine the importance of the insert we constructed two deletion mutants designed to remove the bulk of it from nNOS. Both mutants (Delta40 and Delta42) retained maximal NO synthesis activity at lower concentrations of free Ca(2+) than the wild type enzyme. They were also found to retain 30% of their activity in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM, indicating that the insert plays an important role in disabling the enzyme when the physiological Ca(2+) concentration is low. Reduction of nNOS heme by NADPH under rigorous anaerobic conditions was found to occur in the wild type enzyme only in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. However, reduction of heme in the Delta40 mutant occurred spontaneously on addition of NADPH in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM. This suggests that the insert regulates activity by inhibiting electron transfer from FMN to heme in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM and by destabilizing CaM binding at low Ca(2+) concentrations, consistent with its role as an autoinhibitory domain.  相似文献   

20.
Calcium-dependent changes in the internal dynamics and average structures of the opposing globular domains of calmodulin (CaM), as well as their relative spatial arrangement, contribute to the productive association between CaM and a range of different target proteins, affecting their functional activation. To identify dynamic structural changes involving individual alpha-helical elements and their modulation by calcium activation, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to engineer a tetracysteine binding motif within helix A near the amino terminus of calmodulin (CaM), permitting the selective and rigid attachment of the fluorescent probe 4',5'-bis(1,3,2-dithioarsolan-2-yl)fluorescein (FlAsH) with full retention of function. The rigid tetracoordinate linkage of FlAsH to CaM, in conjunction with frequency domain fluorescence anisotropy measurements, allows assessment of dynamic changes associated with calcium activation without interference from independent probe motion. Taking advantage of the large fluorescence enhancement associated with binding of FlAsH to CaM, we determined rates of binding of FlAsH to apo-CaM and calcium-activated CaM to be 2800 +/- 80 and 310 +/- 10 M(-)(1) s(-)(1), respectively. There is no difference in the solvent accessibility of the bound FlAsH irrespective of calcium binding to CaM. Thus, given that FlAsH selectively labels disordered structures, the large difference in rates of FlAsH binding indicates that calcium binding stabilizes helix A. Frequency domain anisotropy measurements of bound FlAsH indicate that prior to calcium activation, helix A undergoes large amplitude nanosecond motions. Following calcium activation, helix A becomes immobile, and structurally coupled to the overall rotation of CaM. We discuss these results in the context of a model that suggests stabilization of helix A relative to other domain elements in the CaM structure is critical to defining high-affinity binding clefts, and in promoting specific and ordered binding of the opposing lobes of CaM to target proteins.  相似文献   

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