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1.
We have studied the calcium-binding properties of two high affinity calcium-binding proteins from squid optic lobes: one, squid calmodulin (SCaM), similar to bovine brain calmodulin (BCaM), the other, squid calcium-binding protein (SCaBP), distinct (Head, J.F., Spielberg, S., and Kaminer, B. (1983) Biochem J. 209, 797-802). Equilibrium dialysis measurements on the squid proteins (and BCaM) were made at 100 mM KCl in the presence and absence of 3 mM Mg2+, and at 400 mM KCl in the presence of 3 mM Mg2+, which more closely resembles the conditions in the squid. SCaM, SCaBP, and BCaM each bind a maximum of 4 Ca2+ ions/molecule of protein under the ionic conditions tested. SCaBP has a higher affinity than SCaM or BCaM for Ca2+ at 100 mM KCl in the absence of Mg2+. However, in the presence of Mg2+, half-maximal binding to SCaBP occurs at a similar pCa value to that observed with calmodulin. Increasing the KCl concentration reduces the affinity of all three proteins for Ca2+. UV absorption measurements showed that the binding of 4 Ca2+ ions/molecule is necessary to complete spectral changes in SCaBP, compared to two for the calmodulins. While Ca2+ causes perturbations in aromatic chromophores in SCaM and SCaBP, Mg2+ causes a significant perturbation only in SCaBP. These Mg2+-induced changes differ qualitatively from those induced by Ca2+.  相似文献   

2.
Previous reports on the interaction between calmodulin (CaM) and Mg2+ range from no binding to a binding constant of 10(4) M-1 [for a summary, see Cox, J. A., Comte, M., Malnoe, A., Berger, D., & Stein, E. A. (1984) Met. Ions Biol. Syst. 17, 215-273]. In order to resolve the controversy, we used 25Mg NMR to study the binding of Mg2+ to apo-CaM, CaM.Ca2(2)+ (in which sites III and IV are occupied by Ca2+), CaM.La2(3)+ (in which sites I and II are occupied by La3+), and the two tryptic fragments of calmodulin, TR1C (containing sites I and II of CaM) and TR2C (containing sites III and IV of CaM). In each system, a "titration set" and a "temperature set" were obtained, and the spectral data were analyzed by total band-shape analysis to calculate the association constant (Ka) and off-rate (koff). As in the case of Ca2+ binding, sites I and II and sites III and IV were treated as two sets of equivalent sites, and a Ca2+/Mg2+ competition experiment suggested that Mg2+ competes with Ca2+ for the same sites. For both CaM.Ca2(2)+ and TR1C, moderately large Ka (2000 and 3500 M-1, respectively) and moderate off-rates (koff = 2300 and 3000 s-1, respectively, at 25 degrees C) were observed. For both CaM.La2(3)+ and TR2C, binding of Mg2+ was weaker by a factor of ca. 10 (Ka = 300 and 200 M-1, respectively) while the off-rates were also moderate (koff = 3500 and 2200 s-1, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
J A Cox 《Federation proceedings》1984,43(15):3000-3004
khe conformational and functional events in calmodulin (CaM) are disproportionate to the mean saturation by Ca2+. The enhancement of intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence closely follows the appearance of species CaM X Can greater than or equal to 1; the exposure of the hydrophobic patch at the surface of CaM coincides with the appearance of CaM X Can greater than or equal to 2. For the activation of four different target enzymes, i.e., brain phosphodiesterase and adenylate cyclase, red blood cell Ca,Mg-ATPase, and skeletal muscle phosphorylase b kinase, CaM X Can greater than or equal to 3 is required. The different enzymes have the same affinity for the active species. The direct interaction of CaM with Ca2+ and phosphorylase b kinase has been analyzed according to the theory of energy coupling: whereas the first two stoichiometric calcium-binding constants in the complex are not significantly different from those of free CaM, the third Ca2+ binds with an affinity at least 10(6)-fold higher to enzyme-bound CaM than to free CaM, which corresponds to a free energy coupling of -7 kcal/mol CaM. The similarities in the activation mechanism of different enzymes suggest the existence of one unique CaM-binding domain. The characteristics of the interaction between CaM and melittin, a small amphiphatic cytotoxin, led us to propose melittin as a model for such a CaM-binding domain.  相似文献   

4.
L Massom  H Lee  H W Jarrett 《Biochemistry》1990,29(3):671-681
Binding of trifluoperazine (TFP), a phenothiazine tranquilizer, to porcine brain calmodulin (CaM) and rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C (Tn C) was measured by an automated high-performance liquid chromatography binding assay using a molecular sieving column; 10 micrograms of either protein per injection is sufficient for determining TFP binding, and results are comparable to those obtained by equilibrium dialysis. Very little binding was observed to either protein in the absence of Ca2+ while in the presence of Ca2+ both proteins bind 4 equiv of TFP. Other characteristics of TFP binding however are different for each protein. For CaM, half-maximal binding occurs at 5.8 microM TFP, the Hill coefficient is 0.82, and the fit of the data to the Scatchard equation is consistent with four independent TFP-binding sites. Binding of one melittin displaces two TFP from CaM. Thus, there are two recognizable classes of TFP-binding sites: those that are displaced by melittin and those that are not. TFP causes an increase in the Ca2+ affinity of CaM, and three Ca2+ must be bound to CaM for TFP binding to occur. The studies also yielded a measure of the intrinsic affinity of three of CaM's Ca2(+)-binding sites that is in agreement with previous reports. For troponin C, half-maximal binding occurs at 16 microM TFP, the Hill coefficient is 1.7, and the data best fit the Adair equation for four binding sites. The measured constants K1, K2, K3, and K4 were 2.5 X 10(4), 6.6 X 10(3), 5.8 X 10(5), and 2.0 X 10(5) M-1, respectively, in 1 mM Ca2+ and were similar when Mg2+ was additionally included. TFP also increases troponin C's Ca2+ affinity, and it is the low-affinity, Ca2(+)-specific binding sites that are affected. These studies yielded a measure of the intrinsic affinity of these Ca2(+)-binding sites that is in agreement with previous measurements.  相似文献   

5.
A rabbit lung cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) prepared by successive chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and G-200 Sephadex columns in the presence of EGTA was activated by Ca2+ and contained calmodulin (CaM), suggesting that the enzyme exists as a stable CaM X PDE complex (Sharma, R. K., and Wirch, E. (1979) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 91, 338-344). An enzyme with similar properties was demonstrated to exist in bovine lung extract. C1, a monoclonal antibody previously shown to react with the 60-kDa subunit of bovine brain PDE isozymes (Sharma, R. K., Adachi, A.-M., Adachi, K., and Wang, J. H.) (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 9248-9254), cross-reacted with the lung enzyme. Purification of the lung enzyme by C1 antibody immunoaffinity chromatography rendered the enzyme dependent on exogenous CaM for Ca2+ stimulation. Further purification was achieved by CaM affinity chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the purified enzyme showed a predominant polypeptide of Mr 58,000 and a minor band of about 50,000. The purified enzyme could be reconstituted into a PDE X CaM complex upon incubation with CaM in the presence of either Ca2+ or EGTA. The reconstituted protein complex did not dissociate in buffers containing 0.1 mM EGTA. Analysis of the purified and reconstituted lung phosphodiesterase by Sephacryl S-300 gel filtration indicated that the lung enzyme is a dimeric protein and that the reconstituted enzyme contained two molecules of calmodulin. Analysis of the reconstituted phosphodiesterase by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis also showed it to contain equimolar calmodulin and the enzyme subunit. The CaM antagonists, fluphenazine, compound 48/80, and calcineurin at concentrations abolishing CaM stimulation of bovine brain PDE had little effect on the activity of reconstituted bovine lung phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

6.
It has recently been suggested that activation of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) can be modulated by formation of supramolecular structures (Sobieszek, A. 1991. Regulation of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase. Allosteric effects and co-operative activation by CaM. J. Mol. Biol. 220:947-957). The present light scattering data demonstrate that the inactive (calmodulin-free) MLCK apoenzyme exists in solution as a mixture of oligomeric (2% by weight), dimeric (53%), and monomeric (45%) species at physiological ionic strength (160 mM salt). These long-living assemblies, the lifetime of which was measured by minutes, were in equilibrium with each other. The most likely form of the oligomer was a spiral-like hexamer, the dimensions of which fit very well the helical structure of self-assembled myosin filaments (Sobieszek, A. 1972. Cross-bridges on self-assembled smooth muscle myosin filaments. J. Mol. Biol. 70:741-744). After activation of the kinase by calmodulin (CaM) we could not detect any appreciable changes in the distribution of the kinase species either when the kinase was saturated with CaM or when its molar concentration exceeded that of CaM. Our fluorescent measurements suggest that the earlier observed inhibition of kinase at substoichiometric amounts of CaM (Sobieszek, A., A. Strobl, B. Ortner, and E. Babiychuk. 1993. Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent modification of smooth-muscle myosin light chain kinase leading to its co-operative activation by calmodulin. Biochem. J. 295:405-411) is associated with slow conformational change(s) of the activated (CaM-bound) kinase molecules. Such conformational rearrangements also took place with equimolar kinase to CaM; however, in this case there was no decrease in MLCK activity. The nature of these conformational changes, which are accompanied by reduction of the kinase for CaM affinity, is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Calcium-, calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum increases the rate of calcium transport. The complex dependence of calmodulin-dependent phosphoester formation on free calcium and total calmodulin concentrations can be satisfactorily explained by assuming that CaM X (Ca2+)4 is the sole calmodulin-calcium species which activates the calcium-, calmodulin-dependent, membrane-bound protein kinase. The apparent dissociation constant of the E X CaM X (Ca2+)4 complex determined from the calcium dependence of calmodulin-dependent phosphoester formation over a 100-fold range of total calmodulin concentrations (0.01-1 microM) was 0.9 nM; the respective apparent dissociation constant at 0.8 mM free calcium, 1 mM free magnesium with low calmodulin concentrations (0.1-50 nM) was 2.60 nM. These results are in good agreement with the apparent dissociation constant of 2.54 nM of high affinity calmodulin binding determined by 125I-labelled calmodulin binding to sarcoplasmic reticulum fractions at 1 mM free calcium, 1 mM free magnesium and total calmodulin concentration ranging from 0.1 to 150 nM, i.e. conditions where approximately 98% of the total calmodulin is present as CaM X (Ca2+)4. The apparent dissociation constant of the calcium-free calmodulin-enzyme complex (E X CaM) is at least 100-fold greater than the apparent dissociation constant of the E X CaM X (Ca2+)4 complex, as judged from non-saturation 125I-labelled calmodulin binding at total calmodulin concentrations of up to 150 nM, in the absence of calcium.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Calmodulin and calmodulin binding proteins in amphibian rod outer segments   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The calmodulin (CaM) content of fully intact frog rod outer segments (ROS) has been measured. The molar ratio between rhodopsin and total CaM in ROS is 800:1. This is in good agreement with the data reported for bovine ROS CaM [Kohnken, R. E., Chafouleas, J. G., Eadie, D. M., Means, A. R., & McConnell, D.G. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 12517-12522]. In the absence of Ca2+, the ROS membrane fraction contains only 4% of total ROS CaM. In contrast, in the presence of Ca2+, 15% of total ROS CaM is found in the membrane fraction. For half-maximal binding of CaM to CaM-depleted ROS membranes, 3 X 10(-7) M Ca2+ is required. This CaM binding is inhibited by trifluoperazine. CaM binding proteins in the ROS membrane fraction are identified by using two different methods: the overlay method and the use of 3,3'-dithiobis(sulfosuccinimidyl propionate) (DTSSP), a bifunctional cross-linking reagent. Ca2+-dependent CaM binding proteins with apparent molecular weights of 240,000, 140,000, 53,000, and 47,000 are detected in the ROS membrane fraction by the overlay method. Anomalous, Ca2+-independent CaM binding to rhodopsin is also detected with this method, and this CaM binding is inhibited by the presence of Ca2+. With the bifunctional cross-linking reagent, DTSSP, three discrete proteins with molecular weights of 240,000, 53,000, and 47,000 are detected in the native ROS membrane fraction. CaM binding to rhodopsin is not detected with this method. Moreover, while the Mr 140,000 band is not detected with DTSSP, a smeared band with a molecular weight between 78,000 and 93,000 is identified (with DTSSP) in the ROS membrane fraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The inhibition by the regulatory domain and the interaction with calmodulin (CaM) vary among plasma membrane calcium pump (PMCA) isoforms. To explore these differences, the kinetics of CaM effects on PMCA4a were investigated and compared with those of PMCA4b. The maximal apparent rate constant for CaM activation of PMCA4a was almost twice that for PMCA4b, whereas the rates of activation for both isoforms showed similar dependence on Ca2+. The inactivation of PMCA4a by CaM removal was also faster than for PMCA4b, and Ca2+ showed a much smaller effect (2- versus 30-fold modification). The rate constants of the individual steps that determine the overall rates were obtained from stopped-flow experiments in which binding of TA-CaM was observed by changes in its fluorescence. TA-CaM binds to two conformations of PMCA4a, an "open" conformation with high activity, and a "closed" one with lower activity. Compared with PMCA4b (Penheiter, A. R., Bajzer, Z., Filoteo, A. G., Thorogate, R., T?r?k, K., and Caride, A. J. (2003) Biochemistry 41, 12115-12124), the model for PMCA4a predicts less inhibition in the closed form and a much faster equilibrium between the open and closed forms. Based on the available kinetic parameters, we determined the constants to fit the shape of a Ca2+ signal in PMCA4b-overexpressing Chinese hamster ovary cells. Using the constants for PMCA4a, and allowing small variations in parameters of other systems contributing to a Ca2+ signal, we then simulated the effect of PMCA4a on the shape of a Ca2+ signal in Chinese hamster ovary cells. The results reproduce the published data (Brini, M., Coletto, L., Pierobon, N., Kraev, N., Guerini, D., and Carafoli, E. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 24500-24508), and thereby demonstrate the importance of altered regulatory kinetics for the different functional properties of PMCA isoforms.  相似文献   

11.
In vitro protein binding assays identified two distinct calmodulin (CaM) binding sites within the NH(2)-terminal 30-kDa domain of erythrocyte protein 4.1 (4.1R): a Ca(2+)-independent binding site (A(264)KKLWKVCVEHHTFFRL) and a Ca(2+)-dependent binding site (A(181)KKLSMYGVDLHKAKDL). Synthetic peptides corresponding to these sequences bound CaM in vitro; conversely, deletion of these peptides from a 30-kDa construct reduced binding to CaM. Thus, 4.1R is a unique CaM-binding protein in that it has distinct Ca(2+)-dependent and Ca(2+)-independent high affinity CaM binding sites. CaM bound to 4.1R at a stoichiometry of 1:1 both in the presence and absence of Ca(2+), implying that one CaM molecule binds to two distinct sites in the same molecule of 4.1R. Interactions of 4.1R with membrane proteins such as band 3 is regulated by Ca(2+) and CaM. While the intrinsic affinity of the 30-kDa domain for the cytoplasmic tail of erythrocyte membrane band 3 was not altered by elimination of one or both CaM binding sites, the ability of Ca(2+)/CaM to down-regulate 4. 1R-band 3 interaction was abrogated by such deletions. Thus, regulation of protein 4.1 binding to membrane proteins by Ca(2+) and CaM requires binding of CaM to both Ca(2+)-independent and Ca(2+)-dependent sites in protein 4.1.  相似文献   

12.
Flow microcalorimetric titrations of calmodulin with seminalplasmin at 25 degrees C revealed that the high affinity one-to-one complex in the presence of Ca2+ (Comte, M., Malnoe, A., and Cox, J. A. (1986) Biochem. J. 240, 567-573) is entirely enthalpy-driven (delta H0 = -50 kJ.mol-1; delta S0 = O J.K-1.mol-1; delta Cp0 = O J.K-1.mol-1) and is not influenced by the proton or Mg2+ concentration. The Sr2+- and Cd2+-promoted high affinity complexes are also exothermic for -49 and -45 kJ.mol-1, respectively. The observed low affinity interaction in the absence of divalent ions displays no enthalpy change. No enthalpy changes are observed when calmodulin and seminalplasmin are mixed in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Mg2+, Zn2+, or Mn2+. Enthalpy titrations of the 1:1 calmodulin-seminalplasmin complex with Ca2+ and of partly Ca2+-saturated calmodulin with seminalplasmin revealed that only the species calmodulin.Can greater than or equal to 2 is fully competent for high affinity interaction with seminalplasmin. Binding of the second Ca2+ is strongly enhanced (K2 greater than or equal to 5 X 10(7) M-1) as compared to that in free calmodulin (K2 = 2.6 X 10(5) M-1). This is essentially due to the concomitant strongly exothermic step of isomerization of the calmodulin-seminalplasmin complex from its low to its high affinity form. Binding of the remaining two Ca2+ to the high affinity seminalplasmin-calmodulin complex displays the same affinity constants and endothermic enthalpy change as in free calmodulin. A microcalorimetric study on the complex formation between Ca2+-saturated calmodulin and turkey gizzard myosin light chain kinase revealed that the interaction is strongly exothermic with an important overall gain of order (delta H0 = -85 kJ.mol-1; delta S0 = -122 J.K-1.mol-1) and occurs with significant proton uptake (0.44 H+ per mol at pH 7.5). The observed low affinity interaction (K = 2.2 X 10(5) M-1) in the absence of Ca2+ (Mamar-Bachi, A., and Cox, J. A. (1987) Cell Calcium 8, 473-482) displays neither a change in enthalpy nor in protonation.  相似文献   

13.
Yamaguchi N  Xu L  Pasek DA  Evans KE  Chen SR  Meissner G 《Biochemistry》2005,44(45):15074-15081
Ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are a family of intracellular Ca(2+) channels that are regulated by calmodulin (CaM). At low Ca(2+) concentrations (<1 microM), CaM activates RyR1 and RyR3 and inhibits RyR2. At elevated Ca(2+) concentrations (>1 microM), CaM inhibits all three RyR isoforms. Here we report that the regulation of recombinant RyR3 by CaM is sensitive to redox regulation. RyR3 in the presence of reduced glutathione binds CaM with 10-15-fold higher affinity, at low and high Ca(2+) concentrations, compared to in the presence of oxidized glutathione. However, compared to RyR1 assayed at low Ca(2+) concentrations under both reducing and oxidizing conditions, CaM binds RyR3 with reduced affinity but activates RyR3 to a greater extent. Under reducing conditions, RyR1 and RyR3 activities are inhibited with a similar affinity at [Ca(2+)] > 1 microM. Mutagenesis studies demonstrate that RyR3 contains a single conserved CaM binding site. Corresponding amino acid substitutions in the CaM binding site differentially affect CaM binding and CaM regulation of RyR3 and those of the two other isoforms. The results support the suggestion that other isoform dependent regions have a major role in the regulation of RyRs by CaM [Yamaguchi et al. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 36433-36439].  相似文献   

14.
The cardiac L-type voltage-dependent calcium channel is responsible for initiating excitation-contraction coupling. Three sequences (amino acids 1609-1628, 1627-1652, and 1665-1685, designated A, C, and IQ, respectively) of its alpha(1) subunit contribute to calmodulin (CaM) binding and Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation. Peptides matching the A, C, and IQ sequences all bind Ca(2+)CaM. Longer peptides representing A plus C (A-C) or C plus IQ (C-IQ) bind only a single molecule of Ca(2+)CaM. Apocalmodulin (ApoCaM) binds with low affinity to the IQ peptide and with higher affinity to the C-IQ peptide. Binding to the IQ and C peptides increases the Ca(2+) affinity of the C-lobe of CaM, but only the IQ peptide alters the Ca(2+) affinity of the N-lobe. Conversion of the isoleucine and glutamine residues of the IQ motif to alanines in the channel destroys inactivation (Zühlke et al., 2000). The double mutation in the peptide reduces the interaction with apoCaM. A mutant CaM unable to bind Ca(2+) at sites 3 and 4 (which abolishes the ability of CaM to inactivate the channel) binds to the IQ, but not to the C or A peptide. Our data are consistent with a model in which apoCaM binding to the region around the IQ motif is necessary for the rapid binding of Ca(2+) to the C-lobe of CaM. Upon Ca(2+) binding, this lobe is likely to engage the A-C region.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Ca2+ stimulation of adenylyl cyclase type 8 (AC8) is mediated by calmodulin (CaM). An earlier study identified two CaM binding sites in AC8; one that was apparently not essential for AC8 activity, located at the N terminus, and a second site that was critical for Ca2+ stimulation, found at the C terminus (Gu, C., and Cooper, D. M. F. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 8012-8021). This study explores the role of these two CaM binding domains and their interaction in regulating AC8 activity, employing binding and functional studies with mutant CaM and modified AC8 species. We report that the N-terminal CaM binding domain of AC8 has a role in recruiting CaM and that this recruitment is essential to permit stimulation by Ca2+ in vivo. Using Ca2+-insensitive mutants of CaM, we found that partially liganded CaM can bind to AC8, but only fully liganded Ca2+/CaM can stimulate AC8 activity. Moreover, partially liganded CaM inhibited AC8 activity in vivo. The results indicate that CaM pre-associates with the N terminus of AC8, and we suggest that this recruited CaM is used by the C terminus of AC8 to mediate Ca2+ stimulation.  相似文献   

17.
Edema factor (EF), a toxin from Bacillus anthracis (anthrax), possesses adenylyl cyclase activity and requires the ubiquitous Ca2+-sensor calmodulin (CaM) for activity. CaM can exist in three major structural states: an apo state with no Ca2+ bound, a two Ca2+ state with its C-terminal domain Ca2+-loaded, and a four Ca2+ state in which the lower Ca2+ affinity N-terminal domain is also ligated. Here, the interaction of EF with the three Ca2+ states of CaM has been examined by NMR spectroscopy and changes in the Ca2+ affinity of CaM in the presence of EF have been determined by flow dialysis. Backbone chemical shift perturbations of CaM show that EF interacts weakly with the N-terminal domain of apoCaM. The C-terminal CaM domain only engages in the interaction upon Ca2+ ligation, rendering the overall interaction much tighter. In the presence of EF, the C-terminal domain binds Ca2+ with higher affinity, but loses binding cooperativity, whereas the N-terminal domain exhibits strongly reduced Ca2+ affinity. As judged by chemical shift differences, the N-terminal CaM domain remains bound to EF upon subsequent Ca2+ ligation. This Ca2+ dependence of the EF-CaM interaction differs from that observed for most other CaM targets, which normally interact only with the Ca2+-bound CaM domains and become active following the transition to the four Ca2+ state.  相似文献   

18.
Zhu MM  Rempel DL  Zhao J  Giblin DE  Gross ML 《Biochemistry》2003,42(51):15388-15397
We applied a new method, "protein-ligand interaction using mass spectrometry, titration, and H/D exchange" (PLIMSTEX) [Zhu, M. M. (2003) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125, 5252-5253], to determine the conformational changes, binding stoichiometry, and binding constants for Ca(2+) interactions with calmodulin (CaM) under varying conditions of electrolyte identity and ionic strength. The outcome shows that CaM becomes less solvent-accessible and more compact upon Ca(2+)-binding, as revealed by the PLIMSTEX curve. The formation of CaM-4Ca species is the biggest contributor to the shape of the titration curve, indicating that the formation of this species accounts for the largest conformational change in the stepwise Ca(2+) binding. The Ca(2+)-binding constants, when comparisons permit, agree with those in the literature within a factor of 3. The binding is influenced by ionic strength and the presence of other cations, although many of these cations do not cause conformational change in apo-CaM. Furthermore, Ca(2+)-saturated CaM exhibits larger protection and higher Ca(2+) affinity in media of low rather than high ionic strength. Both Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) bind to CaM with different affinities, causing different conformational changes. K(+), if it does bind, causes no detectable conformational change, and interactions of Ca(2+) with CaM in the presence of Li(+), Na(+), and K(+) occur with similar affinities and associated changes in solvent accessibility. These metal ion effects point to nonspecific rather than competitive binding of alkali-metal ions. The rates of deuterium uptake by the various CaM-xCa species follow a three-group (fast, intermediate, slow), pseudo-first-order kinetics model. Calcium binding causes the number of amide hydrogens to shift from the fast to the slow group. The results taken together not only provide new insight into CaM but also indicate that both PLIMSTEX and kinetic modeling of H/D exchange data may become general methods for probing protein conformations and quantifying protein-ligand interactions.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of external calcium concentrations on biosynthesis of ginsenoside Rb1 and several calcium signal sensors were quantitatively investigated in suspension cultures of Panax notoginseng cells. It was observed that the synthesis of intracellular ginsenoside Rb1 in 3-day incubation was dependent on the medium Ca2+ concentration (0-13 mM). At an optimal Ca2+ concentration of 8 mM, a maximal ginsenoside Rb1 content of 1.88 +/- 0.03 mg g(-1) dry weight was reached, which was about 60% and 25% higher than that at Ca2+ concentrations of 0 and 3 mM, respectively. Ca2+ feeding experiments confirmed the Ca2+ concentration-dependent Rb1 biosynthesis. In order to understand the mechanism of the signal transduction from external Ca2+ to ginsenoside biosynthesis, the intracellular content of calcium and calmodulin (CaM), activities of calcium/calmodulin-dependent NAD kinase (CCDNK) and calcium-dependent protein kinase (CDPK), and activity of a new biosynthetic enzyme of ginsenoside Rb1, i.e., UDPG:ginsenoside Rd glucosyltransferase (UGRdGT), in the cultured cells were all analyzed. The intracellular calcium content and CCDNK activity were increased with an increase of external Ca2+ concentration within 0-13 mM. In contrast, the CaM content and activities of CDPK and UGRdGT reached their highest levels at 8 mM of initial Ca2+ concentration, which was also optimal to the ginsenoside Rb1 synthesis. A similar Ca2+ concentration-dependency of the intracellular contents of calcium and CaM and activities of CCDNK, CDPK, and UGRdGT was confirmed in Ca2+ feeding experiments. Finally, a possible model on the effect of external calcium on ginsenoside Rb1 biosynthesis via the signal transduction pathway of CaM, CDPK, and UGRdGT is proposed. Regulation of external Ca2+ concentration is considered a useful strategy for manipulating ginsenoside Rb1 biosynthesis by P. notoginseng cells.  相似文献   

20.
P-57 is a neural-specific calmodulin binding protein with novel calmodulin binding properties. P-57 exhibits higher affinity for calmodulin-Sepharose in the absence of free Ca2+ than in the presence of Ca2+ (Andreasen, T.J., Luetje, C.W., Heideman, W. & Storm, D.R. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4615-4618; Cimler, B. M., Andreasen, T.J., Andreasen, K.I. & Storm, D.R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10784-10788). In this study, the dissociation constants for P-57 and immunopurified 5-[[(iodoacetylamino)ethyl]-amino]-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid-labeled calmodulin (AEDANS-CaM) were determined under low and high ionic strength conditions. In the absence of added KCl, the dissociation constants for the P-57 X AEDANS-CaM complex were 2.3 X 10(-7) +/- 6 X 10(-8) M and 1.0 X 10(-6) +/- 3 X 10(-7) M in the presence and absence of excess Ca2+ chelator. The addition of KCl to 150 mM increased the Ca2+-independent and -dependent dissociation constants to 3.4 X 10(-6) +/- 9 X 10(-7) M and 3.0 X 10(-6) +/- 9 X 10(-7) M, respectively. The association of P-57 with AEDANS-CaM under low Ca2+ conditions was determined as a function of KCl concentrations. By taking into account the amount of P-57 found in brain and its affinity for calmodulin, it is concluded that most or all of the CaM would be complexed to P-57 in unstimulated cells. P-57 was phosphorylated by the Ca2+-phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) with a phosphate:protein molar ratio of 1.3. Phosphoamino acid analysis demonstrated phosphorylation at a serine residue. CaM decreased the rate of phosphorylation of P-57 by protein kinase C, and phosphorylation prevented P-57 binding to calmodulin-Sepharose. P-57 was not phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. It is proposed that P-57 binds and localizes calmodulin at specific sites within the cell and that free calmodulin is released locally in response to phosphorylation of P-57 by protein kinase C and/or to increases in intracellular free Ca2+. This regulatory mechanism, which appears to be specific to brain, would serve to decrease the response time for Ca2+-calmodulin-regulated processes.  相似文献   

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