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.
We have used four mutant calmodulins to study the regulation of human erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase by the calmodulin-dependent pathway; the conserved Glu at position 12 in each of the four Ca(2+)-binding domains of calmodulin (Glu31, Glu67, Glu104, or Glu140) was replaced by Ala. At pCa 7, where unmodified calmodulin maximally activates the erythrocyte Ca(2+)-ATPase, all four mutants stimulated Ca(2+)-ATPase activity to the same maximal velocity. However, the concentrations of mutant calmodulins required for half-maximal activation (KCaM) were significantly higher than that for unmodified calmodulin and were strongly dependent on the domain in which the mutated Glu was located; substitution in either the first or second Ca(2+)-binding domain had little effect (2-3-fold increase in KCaM), whereas substitution in either the third or fourth domain resulted in a dramatic, 25-71-fold increase in KCaM. The same order of sensitivity was observed when the Ca2+ dependence of enzyme activation was measured at a constant 100 nM concentration of mutant calmodulin. These data point to dramatic differences in the functional significance of the replacement of the Glu at position 12 in each of the four Ca(2+)-binding domains for activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. The 2 Glu residues located in the carboxyl-terminal half of calmodulin (particularly Glu140) are crucial for activation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase at physiologically significant Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

2.
Chemical modification of the gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residues of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 using the formaldehyde-morpholine method in the presence of 100 Kappm Tb3+ ions at pH 5.0 provided a modified protein containing 3 gamma-methyleneglutamyl residues (gamma-MGlu) and 7 Gla residues (bovine 3-gamma-MGlu-fragment 1). The modified protein bound the same number of Ca2+ ions as the native protein (six to seven), exhibited 28Mg2+-binding properties identical to native fragment 1 (five Mg2+ ions bound), exhibited the metal ion-promoted quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence in a manner similar to the native protein, but did not bind to phosphatidylserine (PS)/phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles in the presence of Ca2+ ions. Modification of the bovine protein using [14C]formaldehyde-morpholine provided a 14C-labeled 3-gamma-MGlu-fragment 1 suitable for sequence analysis. Edman sequencing of the peptides released by a tryptic digest of the reduced and carboxymethylated bovine [14C]3-gamma-MGlu-fragment 1 indicated that Gla residues at positions 7, 8, and 33 had been converted to [14C]gamma-methyleneglutamyl residues. In addition Lys97 was found to contain a 14C label. Similar analysis of the human [14C]3-gamma-MGlu-fragment 1 indicated that Gla residues at positions 7 and 32 were major modification sites and that Gla residues at positions 6 and 14 were partially modified. Lysine 96 was also modified in the human protein. The incorporation of a 14C label at Lys97 in bovine 3-gamma-MGlu-fragment 1 protein is not responsible for the loss of Ca2+-promoted binding to PS/PC vesicles. We suggest that Gla residues 7, 8, and 33 are elements of the first Ca2+-binding site; occupancy of this site establishes the Ca2+-specific conformation which is essential for the Ca2+-promoted interaction of the bovine protein with PS/PC vesicles. These studies also suggest that the loss of Gla residues at positions 7 and 32 prevents the formation of the initial Ca2+-binding site in the human protein.  相似文献   

3.
Interactions between phospholipid membranes and the acyl chain and specific amino acid residues of myristoylated proteins are necessary for membrane association. In the present study we tested the effects of mutations of calcineurin B subunit amino acid residues K(20)K(21), K(24)R(25), K(27)K(28) to Glu on the interactions between calcineurin and phosphatidylserine vesicles. Calcineurin-phosphatidylserine interactions were measured using binding assays and assays of phosphatidylserine-stimulated calcineurin phosphatase activity. The reverse-charge calcineurin B subunit mutant had a slower mobility in SDS-PAGE relative to wild-type calcineurin B. In addition, the myristoylated calcineurin B reverse-charge mutant had a slower mobility in SDS-PAGE compared to the non-myristoylated form, in contrast to the faster mobility of myristoylated wild-type calcineurin B relative to non-myristoylated calcineurin B. The reverse-charge mutations had no apparent effect on N-terminal myristoylation, Ca(2+)-binding, or calcineurin heterodimer formation and stimulation of Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase activity. However, in contrast to the results obtained using native calcineurin, phosphatidylserine vesicles did not bind to or activate the phosphatase activity of calcineurin containing the calcineurin B reverse-charge mutant. These results indicate that calcineurin B contains an amino terminal basic residue cluster that is involved in the binding of calcineurin to acidic phospholipids.  相似文献   

4.
The differential reactivities of individual lysines on porcine testicular calmodulin were determined by trace labeling with high specific activity [3H]acetic anhydride as a function of the molar ratio of Ca2+ to calmodulin. In progressing from the Ca2+-depleted form of the protein to a Ca2+:calmodulin molar ratio of 5:1, six of the seven lysyl residues exhibited a modest 1.5- to 3.0-fold increase in reactivity. Lys 75, in contrast, was enhanced in reactivity greater than 20-fold. When the change in reactivity of each lysine was normalized as a percentage of the maximum change, most of the residues were found to fall into two distinct classes. One class, comprising lysines 94 and 148 from the two carboxy terminal Ca2+-binding domains 3 and 4, respectively, exhibited about 90% of their reactivity change when the Ca2+:calmodulin molar ratio was 2:1, and these residues were perturbed very little upon further addition of Ca2+. The other class, encompassing lysines 13, 21, and 30 from the amino terminal domain 1 and Lys 75 from the extended helix connecting the two globular lobes of calmodulin, underwent most of their overall reactivity change (55-70%) between 2 and 5 equivalents of Ca2+ per mol of calmodulin. Lys 77 was distinct in its pattern of change, undergoing approximately equal changes with each Ca2+ increment. These results are consistent with a model where Ca2+ first binds to the two carboxy terminal sites of calmodulin with no apparent preference, concomitant with minor alterations in the microenvironments of lysines in the unoccupied amino terminal domains. The third and fourth Ca2+ ions then bind to these latter two domains, again with no evidence of preference, with little change in the lysine reactivities at the carboxy terminus of the molecule. The environments of groups in the central helix appear to undergo changes in a manner that reflects their proximity to the amino and carboxy terminal domains. In the course of this work, it was found that Lys 94 in apocalmodulin is specifically perturbed by the addition of EGTA, suggesting that the chelating agent may interact with calmodulin at or near the third Ca2+-binding domain.  相似文献   

5.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a multifunctional Ca2+-binding protein that regulates the activity of many enzymes in response to changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration. There are two globular domains in CaM, each containing a pair of helix-loop-helix Ca2+-binding motifs called EF-hands. Ca2+-binding induces the opening of both domains thereby exposing hydrophobic pockets that provide binding sites for the target enzymes. Here, I present a 2.4 A resolution structure of a calmodulin mutant (CaM41/75) in which the N-terminal domain is locked in the closed conformation by a disulfide bond. CaM41/75 crystallized in a tetragonal lattice with the Ca2+ bound in all four EF-hands. In the closed N-terminal domain Ca ions are coordinated by the four protein ligands in positions 1, 3, 5 and 7 of the loop, and by two solvent ligands. The glutamate side-chain in the 12th position of the loop (Glu31 in site I and Glu67 in site II), which in the wild-type protein provides a bidentate Ca2+ ligand, remains in a distal position. Based on a comparison of CaM41/75 with other CaM and troponin C structures a detailed two-step mechanism of the Ca2+-binding process is proposed. Initially, the Ca2+ binds to the N-terminal part of the loop, thus generating a rigid link between the incoming helix (helix A, or helix C) and the central beta structure involving the residues in the sixth, seventh and eighth position of the loop. Then, the exiting helix (helix B or helix D) rotates causing the glutamate ligand in the 12th position to move into the vicinity of the immobilized Ca2+. An adjustment of the phi, psi backbone dihedral angles of the Ile residue in the eighth position is necessary and sufficient for the helix rotation and functions as a hinge. The model allows for a significant independence of the Ca2+-binding sites in a two-EF-hand domain.  相似文献   

6.
Chemical modification of calcineurin by phenylglyoxal was used to probe for the presence of arginine at, or in close proximity to, the catalytic site of this phosphatase. Phenylglyoxal inactivated calcineurin with a second-order rate constant of 1.5 M-1 min-1 at pH 7.5 and 30 degrees C. The inactivation reaction was extremely sensitive to Ca2+-induced conformational changes on calcineurin; removal of this metal ion from the reaction medium increased the rate of inactivation by almost 1 order of magnitude. Furthermore, significant protection of calcineurin by ADP was observed only in the presence of Ca2+, which suggests either that distinct sites are modified by phenylglyoxal in the absence and presence of Ca2+ or that the metal ion promotes binding of ADP to calcineurin. Inactivation of calcineurin by phenyl[2-14C]glyoxal resulted in the incorporation of more than 12 eq of the reagent. However, a kinetic analysis of the order of the inactivation reaction and complete protection of calcineurin by p-nitrophenyl phosphate suggest that only one of the modified residues is responsible for the loss of enzymatic activity. Protection of calcineurin by ADP was enhanced severalfold by calmodulin, which correlated well with a calmodulin-stimulated decrease in the Ki for this ligand. Protection of calcineurin from inactivation by phenylglyoxal was also observed in the presence of various other nucleotides; half-maximal protection by these poor substrates and competitive inhibitors was observed at concentrations near their respective inhibition constants. Thus, the results of this modification study indicate that at least 1 arginine residue is essential for the expression of catalytic activity of the calmodulin-regulated phosphatase.  相似文献   

7.
The Ca2+-dependent association of beta-endorphin and trifluoperazine with porcine testis calmodulin, as well as the effects of removing Ca2+ by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) treatment, were investigated by the procedure of differential kinetic labeling. This technique permitted determination of the relative rates of acylation of each of the epsilon-amino groups of the seven lysyl residues on calmodulin by [3H]acetic anhydride under the different conditions. In all cases, less than 0.52 mol of lysyl residue/mol of calmodulin was modified, thus ensuring that the labeling pattern reflects the microenvironments of these groups in the native protein. Lysines 75 and 94 were found to be the most reactive amino groups in Ca2+-saturated calmodulin. In the presence of Ca2+ and under conditions where beta-endorphin and calmodulin were present at a molar ratio of 2.5:1, the amino groups of lysines 75 and 148 were significantly reduced in reactivity compared to calmodulin alone. At equimolar concentrations of peptide and protein, essentially the same result was obtained except that the magnitudes of the perturbation of these two lysines were less pronounced. With trifluoperazine, at a molar ratio to calmodulin of 2.5:1, significant perturbations of lysines 75 and 148, as well as Lys 77, were also found. These results further substantiate previous observations of a commonality between phenothiazine and peptide binding sites on calmodulin. Lastly, an intriguing difference in Ca2+-mediated reactivities between lysines 75 and 77 of calmodulin is demonstrated. In the Ca2+-saturated form of the protein, both lysines are part of the long connecting helix between the two homologous halves of the protein (Babu, Y. S., Sack, J. S., Greenhough, T. G., Bugg, C. E., Means, A. R., and Cook, W. J. (1985) Nature 315, 37-40). Yet, Lys 75 increases in reactivity some 25-fold, compared to only a 2-fold change for Lys 77, in going from EGTA-treated to Ca2+-saturated calmodulin. Thus, the microenvironment of Lys 75 is markedly altered upon Ca2+ binding, and this linker region between the two globular lobes of the protein appears to be quite important in the interaction of calmodulin with inhibitory molecules and perhaps activatable enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
The importance of two putative Zn2+-binding (Asp347, Glu429) and two catalytic (Arg431, Lys354) residues in the tomato leucine aminopeptidase (LAP-A) function was tested. The impact of substitutions at these positions, corresponding to the bovine LAP residues Asp255, Glu334, Arg336, and Lys262, was evaluated in His6-LAP-A fusion proteins expressed in Escherichia coli. Sixty-five percent of the mutant His6-LAP-A proteins were unstable or had complete or partial defects in hexamer assembly or stability. The activity of hexameric His6-LAP-As on Xaa-Leu and Leu-Xaa dipeptides was tested. Most substitutions of Lys354 (a catalytic residue) resulted in His6-LAP-As that cleaved dipeptides at slower rates. The Glu429 mutants (a Zn2+-binding residue) had more diverse phenotypes. Some mutations abolished activity and others retained partial or complete activity. The E429D His6-LAP-A enzyme had Km and kcat values similar to the wild-type His6-LAP-A. One catalytic (Arg431) and one Zn-binding (Asp347) residue were essential for His6-LAP-A activity, as most R431 and D347 mutant His6-LAP-As did not hydrolyze dipeptides. The R431K His6-LAP-A that retained the positive charge had partial activity as reflected in the 4.8-fold decrease in kcat. Surprisingly, while the D347E mutant (that retained a negative charge at position 347) was inactive, the D347R mutant that introduced a positive charge retained partial activity. A model to explain these data is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
S100B(beta beta) is a dimeric Ca2+-binding protein that interacts with p53, inhibits its phosphorylation by protein kinase C (PKC) and promotes disassembly of the p53 tetramer. Likewise, a 22 residue peptide derived from the C-terminal regulatory domain of p53 has been shown to interact with S100B(beta beta) in a Ca2+-dependent manner and inhibits its phosphorylation by PKC. Hence, structural studies of Ca2+-loaded S100B(beta beta) bound to the p53 peptide were initiated to characterize this interaction. Analysis of nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) correlations, amide proton exchange rates, 3J(NH-H alpha) coupling constants, and chemical shift index data show that, like apo- and Ca2+-bound S100B(beta beta), S100B remains a dimer in the p53 peptide complex, and each subunit has four helices (helix 1, Glu2-Arg20; helix 2, Lys29-Asn38; helix 3, Gln50-Asp61; helix 4, Phe70-Phe87), four loops (loop 1, Glu21-His25; loop 2, Glu39-Glu49; loop 3, Glu62-Gly66; loop 4, Phe88-Glu91), and two beta-strands (beta-strand 1, Lys26-Lys28; beta-strand 2, Glu67-Asp69), which forms a short antiparallel beta-sheet. However, in the presence of the p53 peptide helix 4 is longer by five residues than in apo- or Ca2+-bound S100B(beta beta). Furthermore, the amide proton exchange rates in helix 3 (K55, V56, E58, T59, L60, D61) are significantly slower than those of Ca2+-bound S100B(beta beta). Together, these observations plus intermolecular NOE correlations between the p53 peptide and S100B(beta beta) support the notion that the p53 peptide binds in a region of S100B(beta beta), which includes residues in helix 2, helix 3, loop 2, and the C-terminal loop, and that binding of the p53 peptide interacts with and induces the extension of helix 4.  相似文献   

10.
Domain II of calmodulin is involved in activation of calcineurin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A family of mutant proteins related to calmodulin (CaM) has been produced using cDNA constructs in bacterial expression vectors. The new proteins contain amino acid substitutions in Ca2+-binding domains I, II, both I and II, or both II and IV. The calmodulin-like proteins have been characterized with respect to mobility on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, Ca2+-dependent enhancement of tyrosine fluorescence, and abilities to activate the CaM-dependent phosphatase calcineurin. These studies suggest that an intact Ca2+-binding domain II is minimally required for full activation of calcineurin.  相似文献   

11.
Structure of calmodulin refined at 2.2 A resolution   总被引:43,自引:0,他引:43  
The crystal structure of mammalian calmodulin has been refined at 2.2 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) resolution using a restrained least-squares method. The final crystallographic R-factor, based on 6685 reflections in the range 2.2 A less than or equal to d less than or equal to 5.0 A with intensities exceeding 2.5 sigma, is 0.175. Bond lengths and bond angles in the molecule have root-mean-square deviations from ideal values of 0.016 A and 1.7 degrees, respectively. The refined model includes residues 5 to 147, four Ca2+ and 69 water molecules per molecule of calmodulin. The electron density for residues 1 to 4 and 148 is poorly defined, and they are not included in the model. The molecule is shaped somewhat like a dumbbell, with an overall length of 65 A; the two lobes are connected by a seven-turn alpha-helix. Prominent secondary structural features include seven alpha-helices, four Ca2+-binding loops, and two short, double-stranded antiparallel beta-sheets between pairs of adjacent Ca2+-binding loops. The four Ca2+-binding domains in calmodulin have a typical EF hand conformation (helix-loop-helix) and are similar to those described in other Ca2+-binding proteins. The X-ray structure determination of calmodulin shows a large hydrophobic cleft in each half of the molecule. These hydrophobic regions probably represent the sites of interaction with many of the pharmacological agents known to bind to calmodulin.  相似文献   

12.
Four mutant calmodulins with site-specific charge alterations have been used to activate the human erythrocyte Ca2(+)-ATPase. These charge alterations were accomplished either by insertion of new Lys residues or by substitution of Lys residues for Glu in two of the seven calmodulin alpha-helices. Two enzyme preparations, purified monomeric Ca2(+)-ATPase and erythrocyte ghost membranes, were used with comparable results. At 100 nM Ca2+, the Ca2(+)-ATPase activity was lowered significantly by charge reversal from negative to positive in both the central alpha-helix and the carboxy-terminal domain. While all mutant calmodulins with charge reversal ultimately stimulated the Ca2(+)-ATPase activity to the same extent, the concentration of mutant calmodulin required for half-maximal activation was from 36-fold (central alpha-helix) to 126-fold higher (alpha-helix in the carboxy-terminal domain) than that of the control calmodulin. There was also a significant difference in the stimulation of Ca2(+)-ATPase activity by the different mutant calmodulins as a function of Ca2+ concentration, being most pronounced at submicromolar Ca2+ concentrations where enzyme activation by calmodulin appears to be a physiologically relevant mechanism. In contrast to the mutant calmodulins with charge reversal, mutant calmodulins in which two positive charges were added in the central alpha-helix activated the Ca2(+)-ATPase in a way undistinguishable from the control calmodulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Ca2+ ATPases deplete the cytosol of Ca2+ ions and are crucial to cellular Ca2+ homeostasis. The PMC1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a vacuole membrane protein that is 40% identical to the plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPases (PMCAs) of mammalian cells. Mutants lacking PMC1 grow well in standard media, but sequester Ca2+ into the vacuole at 20% of the wild-type levels. pmc1 null mutants fail to grow in media containing high levels of Ca2+, suggesting a role of PMC1 in Ca2+ tolerance. The growth inhibitory effect of added Ca2+ requires activation of calcineurin, a Ca2+ and calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase. Mutations in calcineurin A or B subunits or the inhibitory compounds FK506 and cyclosporin A restore growth of pmc1 mutants in high Ca2+ media. Also, growth is restored by recessive mutations that inactivate the high-affinity Ca(2+)-binding sites in calmodulin. This mutant calmodulin has apparently lost the ability to activate calcineurin in vivo. These results suggest that activation of calcineurin by Ca2+ and calmodulin can negatively affect yeast growth. A second Ca2+ ATPase homolog encoded by the PMR1 gene acts together with PMC1 to prevent lethal activation of calcineurin even in standard (low Ca2+) conditions. We propose that these Ca2+ ATPase homologs are essential in yeast to deplete the cytosol of Ca2+ ions which, at elevated concentrations, inhibits yeast growth through inappropriate activation of calcineurin.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The intrinsic activity of coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa) is dependent on Ca(2+) binding to a loop (residues 210-220) in the protease domain. Structural analysis revealed that Ca(2+) may enhance the activity by attenuating electrostatic repulsion of Glu(296) and/or by facilitating interactions between the loop and Lys(161) in the N-terminal tail. In support of the first mechanism, the mutations E296V and D212N resulted in similar, about 2-fold, enhancements of the amidolytic activity. Moreover, mutation of the Lys(161)-interactive residue Asp(217) or Asp(219) to Ala reduced the amidolytic activity by 40-50%, whereas the K161A mutation resulted in 80% reduction. Hence one of these Asp residues in the Ca(2+)-binding loop appears to suffice for some residual interaction with Lys(161), whereas the more severe effect upon replacement of Lys(161) is due to abrogation of the interaction with the N-terminal tail. However, Ca(2+) attenuation of the repulsion between Asp(212) and Glu(296) keeps the activity above that of apoFVIIa. Altogether, our data suggest that repulsion involving Asp(212) in the Ca(2+)-binding loop suppresses FVIIa activity and that optimal activity requires a favorable interaction between the Ca(2+)-binding loop and the N-terminal tail. Crystal structures of tissue factor-bound FVIIa(D212N) and FVIIa(V158D/E296V/M298Q) revealed altered hydrogen bond networks, resembling those in factor Xa and thrombin, after introduction of the D212N and E296V mutations plausibly responsible for tethering the N-terminal tail to the activation domain. The charge repulsion between the Ca(2+)-binding loop and the activation domain appeared to be either relieved by charge removal and new hydrogen bonds (D212N) or abolished (E296V). We propose that Ca(2+) stimulates the intrinsic FVIIa activity by a combination of charge neutralization and loop stabilization.  相似文献   

16.
Interactions between Ca2+, calmodulin and turkey gizzard myosin light chain kinase have been studied by equilibrium gel filtration and analyzed in terms of the theory of free energy coupling as formulated by Huang and King for calmodulin-regulated systems (Current Topics in Cellular Regulation 27, 1966-1971, 1985). Direct binding studies revealed that upon interaction with the enzyme, calmodulin acquires strong positive cooperativity in Ca2+-binding. The determination of the Ca2+-binding constants is inherently approximative due to the apparent homotropic cooperativity; therefore a statistical chi 2 analysis was carried out to delimit the formation-, and subsequently the stoichiometric Ca2+-binding constants. Whereas the first two stoichiometric Ca2+-binding constants of enzyme-bound CaM do not differ or are at the upmost 10-fold higher than those in free calmodulin, the third Ca2+ ion binds with an at least 70-fold and more likely 3000-fold higher affinity constant. The binding constant for the fourth Ca2+ is only 5-fold higher than the corresponding one in free calmodulin, thus creating a plateau at 3 bound Ca2+ in the isotherm. Direct binding of Ca2+-free calmodulin to myosin light chain kinase at 10(-7) M free Ca2+ yielded a l/l stoichiometry and an affinity constant of 2.2 x 10(5) M-1. It is thus anticipated that in resting smooth muscle ([Ca2+] less than or equal to 10(-7) M) more than half of the enzyme is bound to metal-free calmodulin. Analysis of the enzymatic activation of myosin light chain kinase at different concentrations of calmodulin and Ca2+ revealed that this Ca2+-free complex is inactive and that activation is concomitant with the formation of the enzyme.calmodulin.Ca3 complex.  相似文献   

17.
Calreticulin is a Ca2+ -binding chaperone that resides in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and is involved in the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis and in the folding of newly synthesized glycoproteins. In this study, we have used site-specific mutagenesis to map amino acid residues that are critical in calreticulin function. We have focused on two cysteine residues (Cys(88) and Cys(120)), which form a disulfide bridge in the N-terminal domain of calreticulin, on a tryptophan residue located in the carbohydrate binding site (Trp(302)), and on certain residues located at the tip of the "hairpin-like" P-domain of the protein (Glu(238), Glu(239), Asp(241), Glu(243), and Trp(244)). Calreticulin mutants were expressed in crt(-/-) fibroblasts, and bradykinin-dependent Ca2+ release was measured as a marker of calreticulin function. Bradykinin-dependent Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum was rescued by wild-type calreticulin and by the Glu(238), Glu(239), Asp(241), and Glu(243) mutants. The Cys(88) and Cys(120) mutants rescued the calreticulin-deficient phenotype only partially ( approximately 40%), and the Trp(244) and Trp(302) mutants did not rescue it at all. We identified four amino acid residues (Glu(239), Asp(241), Glu(243), and Trp(244)) at the hairpin tip of the P-domain that are critical in the formation of a complex between ERp57 and calreticulin. Although the Glu(239), Asp(241), and Glu(243) mutants did not bind ERp57 efficiently, they fully restored bradykinin-dependent Ca2+ release in crt(-/-) cells. This indicates that binding of ERp57 to calreticulin may not be critical for the chaperone function of calreticulin with respect to the bradykinin receptor.  相似文献   

18.
Amino acid sequences of the two major isoforms of troponin C from crayfish   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The primary structure of the two major isoforms (alpha and gamma) of troponin C (TnC) from crayfish tail muscle has been determined by the application of manual and automated Edman degradation procedures to fragments generated by suitable chemical and proteolytic cleavages. Both amino acid sequences commence with an acetylated methionyl residue and contain 150 amino acid residues, including a single proline residue at position 29 and 2 residues of tyrosine at positions 95 and 102. No cysteine or tryptophan are present. The molecular weights calculated for alpha- and gamma-TnC are 17,157 and 16,974, respectively. The two crayfish proteins are invariable at 129 positions and conserved at 11 others. Pairwise comparisons show that the two sequences are 33-39% identical with those of seven TnCs reported so far and 39% identical with that of bovine brain calmodulin. The N-terminal end of about 10 residues, found in vertebrate TnCs, is absent in crayfish TnCs. In the latter proteins, domains I and III appear as abortive Ca2+-binding sites due to nonconservative amino acid replacements at the key Ca2+-coordinating positions in their loops. The remaining two Ca2+-binding loops (II and IV) show a remarkable similarity with the Ca2+-specific loops (I and II) found in vertebrate TnCs. These findings are consistent with the Ca2+-binding data (Wnuk, W. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 18240-18246) which indicate the presence of two Ca2+-specific sites in crayfish TnCs. These two sites display the same affinity for Ca2+ (log KCa = 4.3) on gamma-TnC but differ in their affinity (log KCa = 6.0 and 4.1) on alpha-TnC. The only structural difference between the dodecapeptide loops II and IV in both alpha- and gamma-TnC, which correlates with the existence of the high affinity (log KCa = 6.0) Ca2+-specific site on alpha-TnC, is position 11 occupied by a methionyl residue in the loop IV of alpha-TnC as opposed to negatively charged residues found in the other three loops. This suggests that the high affinity Ca2+-specific site on alpha-TnC is located in domain IV. Since the Ca2+-binding studies show that the formation of the complex of crayfish troponin I (TnI) with alpha- and gamma-TnC increases significantly the affinity of only one of their two Ca2+-specific sites and this TnI-sensitive site is not the high affinity Ca2+-specific site on alpha-TnC, we conclude that the binding of Ca2+ to site II controls the Ca2+-dependent interaction between crayfish TnCs and TnI.  相似文献   

19.
Human serum paraoxonase (PON1) is a calcium-dependent organophosphatase. To identify residues essential for PON1 activity, we adopted complementary approaches based on chemical modification and site-directed mutagenesis. To detect 45Ca2+ binding to native and chemically modified PON1, we performed nondenaturating gel electrophoresis. The environment of calcium-binding sites was probed using the Ca2+ analogue, terbium. Tb3+ binds to calcium-binding sites as shown by displacement of 45Ca2+ by Tb3+. Binding of Tb3+ is accompanied by a complete loss of enzyme activity. PON1 chemical modification with the Trp-selective reagent, N-bromosuccinimide, and the Asp/Glu-selective, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, established that Trp and Asp/Glu residues are components of the PON1 active center and calcium-binding sites. Additional evidence for the presence of a Trp residue in the PON1 calcium-binding sites was a characteristic fluorescence emission at 545 nm from the PON1-Tb3+ complex and abolishment of that fluorescence upon modification by N-bromosuccinimide. The importance of aromatic/hydrophobic character of the residue 280 was demonstrated by site-directed mutagenesis: the W280F mutant was fully active while the W280A and W280L mutants had markedly reduced activity. Twelve amino acids among conserved His and Asp/Glu residues were found essential for PON1 arylesterase and organophosphatase activities: H114, H133, H154, H242, H284, D53, D168, D182, D268, D278, E52, and E194. Finally, the cysteines constituting the PON1 disulfide bond (C41 and C352) were essential, but the glycan chains linked to Asn 252 and 323 were not essential for PON1 secretion and activity.  相似文献   

20.
A A Ismail  H H Mantsch 《Biopolymers》1992,32(9):1181-1186
The carboxylate-containing homopolypeptides poly(L-glutamate) [poly(Glu)] and poly(L-aspartate) [poly(Asp)] were found to form different types of ordered structures in the presence of poly(L-lysine) [poly(Lys)]. Mixing poly(Glu) with poly(Lys) in aqueous solution at neutral pH results in the instantaneous formation of a gel-like precipitate. The secondary structure of the gel precipitate can be best described as intermolecular antiparallel beta-strands, involving the backbone amide groups, as evidenced by the presence of characteristic amide I bands in the ir spectrum at 1684 and 1612 cm-1. Mixing poly(Asp) with poly(Lys) under identical conditions results in the formation of a fine precipitate with a different morphology. Examination of the ir spectrum of the precipitate revealed that unlike poly(Glu), poly(Asp) did not yield any discrete secondary structure upon precipitation with poly(Lys). Addition of solutions containing Ca2+ or Mg2+ to the poly(Glu)/poly(Lys) aggregates resulted in complete dissolution of the gel, with the disappearance of the ir bands characteristic of the intermolecular hydrogen-bonded network. The results demonstrate the importance of salt bridges in establishing strong hydrogen bonds between the backbone amide groups. Reaggregation occurred upon heating the poly(Glu)/poly(Lys) mixture in the presence of Ca2+, but not in the presence of Mg2+ ions. In the presence of Ca2+ ions, aggregation and formation of an extended hydrogen-bonded network occurred upon heating. The aggregates formed upon heating poly(Glu)/poly(Lys) in the presence of Ca2+ were attributed solely to complexation of Ca2+ to the carboxylate groups of poly(Glu) with poly(Lys) remaining free in solution. Dissolution of the aggregate could be accomplished through addition of Mg2+ at room temperature.  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