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1.
Small-angle X-ray scattering data have been measured for rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C and its complexes with the venom peptides melittin and mastoparan as well as synthetic peptides based on regions of the troponin I sequence implicated in troponin C binding. At the neutral pH used in this study (pH 6.8), troponin C shows a tendency to form dimers in the presence of 4 mol equiv of Ca2+, but is monomeric in solution when 2 or less mol equiv of Ca2+ is present. The 4Ca2+.troponin C dimers dissociate upon binding melittin, mastoparan, and peptides based on residues 96-115, 1-30, and 1-40 in the troponin I sequence. This result suggests that the peptide-binding sites overlap with the regions of contact between troponin C molecules forming a dimer. Like the structurally homologous calcium-binding protein calmodulin, troponin C shows conformational flexibility upon binding different peptides. Upon binding melittin, troponin C contracts in a similar manner to calmodulin when it binds peptides known to form amphiphilic helices (e.g., melittin, mastoparan, or MLCK-I). In contrast, mastoparan binding to troponin C does not result in a contracted structure. The scattering data indicate troponin C also remains in an extended structure upon binding the inhibitory peptides having the same sequence as residues 96-115 in troponin I.  相似文献   

2.
N C Strynadka  M N James 《Proteins》1990,7(3):234-248
Crystals of troponin C are stabilized by an intermolecular interaction that involves the packing of helix A from the N-terminal domain of one molecule onto the exposed hydrophobic cleft of the C-terminal domain of a symmetry related molecule. Analysis of this molecular recognition interaction in troponin C suggests a possible mode for the binding of amphiphilic helical molecules to troponin C and to calmodulin. From the template provided by this troponin C packing, it has been possible to build a model of the contact region of mastoporan as it might be bound to the two Ca2+ binding proteins. A possible binding mode of melittin to calmodulin is also proposed. Although some of the characteristics of binding are similar for the two amphiphilic peptides, the increased length of melittin requires a significant bend in the calmodulin central helix similar to that suggested recently for the myosin light chain kinase calmodulin binding peptide (Persechini and Kretsinger: Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology 12:501-512, 1988). Not only are the hydrophobic interactions important in this model, but there are several favorable electrostatic interactions that are predicted as a result of the molecular modeling. The regions of troponin-C and calmodulin to which amphiphilic helices bind are similar to the regions to which the neuroleptic drugs such as trifluoperazine have been predicted to bind (Strynadka and James: Proteins 3:1-17, 1988).  相似文献   

3.
D A Malencik  S R Anderson 《Biochemistry》1984,23(11):2420-2428
Calmodulin and troponin C exhibit calcium-dependent binding of 1 mol/mol of dynorphin. The dissociation constants of the complexes, determined in 0.20 N KC1-1.0 mM CaCI2, pH 7.3, are 0.6 microM for calmodulin, 2.4 microM for rabbit fast skeletal muscle troponin C, and 9 microM for bovine heart troponin C. Experiments with deletion peptides of dynorphin show that peptide chain length and especially charge affect the binding of the peptides by calmodulin. Dynorphin, but not mastoparan or melittin, inhibits adenosinetriphosphatase activity in a reconstituted rabbit skeletal muscle actomyosin assay. The inhibition is partially reversed by the addition of calmodulin or troponin C in the presence of calcium. Calmodulin also exhibits calcium-dependent binding of a synthetic peptide corresponding to positions 104-115 of rabbit fast skeletal muscle troponin I. Mastoparan is a tetradecapeptide from the vespid wasp having exceptional affinity for calmodulin, with Kd approximately 0.3 nM [Malencik, D.A., & Anderson, S.R. (1983) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 114, 50]. The addition of 1 mol/mol of mastoparan to the complex of calmodulin with dynorphin results in complete dissociation of dynorphin. Similar titrations of the skeletal muscle troponin C-dynorphin complex produce a gradual dissociation consistent with a dissociation constant of 0.2 microM for the troponin C-mastoparan complex. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements using the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of mastoparan X show strongly calcium-dependent binding by proteolytic fragments of calmodulin. binding by proteolytic fragments of calmodulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
We used frequency-domain measurements of fluorescence resonance energy transfer to measure the distribution of distances between Trp-19 of melittin and a 1-dimethylamino-5-sulfonylnaphthalene (dansyl) residue on the N-terminal-alpha-amino group. Distance distributions were obtained for melittin free in solution and when complexed with calmodulin (CaM), troponin C (TnC), or palmitoyloleoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles. A wide range of donor (Trp-19)-to-acceptor (dansyl) distances was found for free melittin, which is consistent with that expected for the random coil state, characterized by a Gaussian width (full width at half maxima) of 28.2 A. In contrast, narrow distance distributions were found for melittin complexed with CaM, 8.2 A, or with POPC vesicles, 4.9 A. A somewhat wider distribution was found for the melittin complex with TnC, 12.8 A, suggesting the presence of heterogeneity in the mode of binding between melittin and TnC. For all the complexes the mean Trp-19 to dansyl distance was near 20 A. This value is somewhat smaller than expected for the free alpha-helical state of melittin, suggesting that binding with CaM or TnC results in a modest decrease in the length of the melittin molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Melittin has been found to interact with troponin C with high affinity in the presence of Ca2+. The association constant approaches in magnitude that for melittin and calmodulin. The interaction results in a shift to lower wavelengths of the emission band of Trp-19 of melittin and in an increased shielding of Trp-19 from quenching. A major increase occurs in the α-helical content of combined melittin. Formation of the complex inhibits tryptic hydrolysis of the connecting strand. The properties of fluorescent labels attached to Met-25 and to AEDANS-98 are altered as a result of the interaction. It is concluded that the combined melittin makes extensive contact with the connecting strand and adjacent portions of the N- and C-terminal lobes.  相似文献   

6.
Ca2+ binding to calmodulin triggers conformational change of the protein which induces exposure of hydrophobic surfaces. Melittin has been believed to bind to Ca(2+)-bound calmodulin through the exposed hydrophobic surfaces. However, tryptophan fluorescence measurements and gel chromatography experiments with the melittin-calmodulin system revealed that melittin bound to calmodulin at zero salt concentration even in the absence of Ca2+; addition of salt removed melittin from Ca(2+)-free calmodulin. This means not only the hydrophobic interaction but also the electrostatic interaction contributes to the melittin-calmodulin binding. The fluorescence stopped-flow studies of the dissociation reaction of melittin-calmodulin complex revealed that Ca2+ removal from the complex induced a conformational change of calmodulin, resulting in reduction of the hydrophobic interaction between melittin and calmodulin, but the electrostatic interaction kept melittin still bound to calmodulin for a subsecond lag period, after which melittin dissociated from calmodulin. The fluorescence stopped-flow experiments on the dissociation reaction of complex of melittin and tryptic fragment(s) of calmodulin revealed that the lag period of the melittin dissociation reaction was attributable to the interaction between the C-terminal half of calmodulin and the C-terminal region of melittin.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of calmodulin with melittin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Studies utilizing the interaction of melittin with the 1-106 fragment of calmodulin, the protection of calmodulin from tryptic digestion by melittin, and the interaction of the carbocyanine dye Stains-all with the calmodulin-melittin complex have indicated that complex formation of calmodulin with melittin involves the alpha-helical connecting bridge joining the N- and C-terminal lobes of calmodulin.  相似文献   

8.
In an effort to elucidate the mechanism of calmodulin regulation of muscle contraction, we investigated the interaction between calmodulin and troponin components in the presence of Ca2+ or Sr2+ by the use of ultracentrifugation methods and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Skeletal-muscle troponin C bound to troponin I and dissociated it from the tropomyosin-actin complex in the presence of Ca2+ or Sr2+. When troponin T was absent, calmodulin bound to troponin I and dissociated it from the tropomyosin-actin complex in the presence of Ca2+ or Sr2+. When troponin T was present, calmodulin hardly bound to troponin I even in the presence of bivalent cations. Trifluoperazine, a calmodulin antagonist, inhibited the bivalent-cation-dependent interaction between calmodulin and troponin I. Calmodulin migrated more slowly in the presence of Sr2+ than it did in the presence of EGTA but faster than it did in the presence of Ca2+ on polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions. It is concluded that troponin T is not required in the calmodulin regulation of muscle contraction because troponin T inhibits the bivalent-cation-dependent interaction between calmodulin and troponin I and because calmodulin binds to troponin I and dissociates it from the tropomyosin-actin complex in a bivalent-cation-dependent manner. Sr2+-induced exposure of the hydrophobic region enables calmodulin to bind to troponin I, as is the case with Ca2+.  相似文献   

9.
Melittin is a 26-residue peptide which undergoes high-affinity calcium-dependent binding by calmodulin [Barnette, M.S., Daly, R., & Weiss, B. (1983) Biochem. Pharmacol. 32, 2929; Comte, M., Maulet, Y., & Cox, J.A. (1983) Biochem. J. 209, 269; Anderson, S.R., & Malencik, D.A. (1986) Calcium Cell Funct. 6, 1]. The results in this paper show that three different types of myosin light chain--the smooth muscle regulatory light chain, the smooth muscle essential light chain, and the skeletal muscle regulatory 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) light chain--also associate with melittin. The resulting complexes have dissociation constants ranging from 1.1 to 2.5 microM in the presence of 0.10 M NaCl and from approximately 50 to approximately 130 nM in solutions of 20 mM 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid alone. The regulatory smooth muscle myosin light chain exhibits two equivalent melittin binding sites while each of the others displays only one. The myosin light chains evidently contain elements of structure related to the macromolecular interaction sites present in calmodulin and troponin C but not in parvalbumin. The association of melittin and other peptides with the light chains requires consideration whenever assays of the calmodulin-dependent activity of myosin light chain kinase are used to determine peptide binding by calmodulin. The binding measurements performed on the DTNB light chain and melittin necessitated derivation of the equation relating complex formation to the observed fluorescence anisotropy of a solution containing three fluorescent components. This analysis is generally applicable to equilibria involving the association of two fluorescent molecules emitting in the same wavelength range.  相似文献   

10.
To gauge similarities between S100b protein and calmodulin, interactions were observed between S100b and melittin and between S100b and tau, the microtubule-associated proteins. The interaction of melittin with S100b protein in the presence and absence of calcium was studied by fluorescence polarization, UV difference spectroscopy, and sulfhydryl derivatization. Whether calcium was present or not in the solution, melittin and S100b form a complex of molar ratios up to 2:1. Further binding of melittin occurred, but it resulted in precipitation of S100b, as is true of the corresponding case of melittin binding to calmodulin. In the absence of calcium, the interaction of melittin and S100b shielded the tryptophan (Trp) of the former protein and exposed cysteine-84 beta (Cys-84 beta) of the latter protein, leaving the tyrosine-16 beta (Tyr-16 beta) of S100b unaffected. Calcium addition to the complex partially restored the exposure of Trp of melittin and caused changes in the environment of Tyr-16 beta (unlike the environmental changes induced for Tyr-16 beta by calcium in the absence of melittin). The conformational changes induced in S100b by interaction with melittin increased its affinity for calcium and offset the inhibition of calcium binding otherwise observed in the presence of potassium ions. This corroborated the previous finding that S100b affinity for calcium greatly depends on the protein conformation. The phenomena described above are similar to the interactions of melittin with calmodulin and thus suggest that S100b and calmodulin have a common structural domain not only that binds melittin but also that may interact with common target proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
J Lan  S Albaugh  R F Steiner 《Biochemistry》1989,28(18):7380-7385
Fluorescent probes have been used to study the interaction of troponin I and its inhibitory peptide TnIp with troponin C, calmodulin, and the proteolytic fragments of calmodulin. The probes used included the noncovalently bound ligand TNS and the covalently attached labels dansyl and AEDANS. The fluorescence intensity of TNS bound to troponin C, calmodulin, or the calmodulin fragments was greatly enhanced by the presence of TnIp. This effect was used to estimate the corresponding binding constants. It was found that TnIp is bound by the C-terminal half-molecule of calmodulin, TR2C, with an affinity comparable to that of intact calmodulin or troponin C, while the binding affinity of the N-terminal half-molecule, TR1C, was an order of magnitude less, suggesting that the TnIp-containing portion of troponin I combines with the C-terminal half of calmodulin or troponin C. The fluorescence properties of an AEDANS group linked to Cys-98 of troponin C were modified by interaction with troponin I or TnIp. The fluorescence properties of the same group linked to Cys-27 of wheat germ calmodulin were affected by TnI, but not TnIp. TnI had a small effect upon the fluorescence of a dansyl group linked to Met-25 of troponin C. TnIp also inhibited the tryptic hydrolysis of the midpoint of the central connecting strand of calmodulin and troponin C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Melittin is a 26-amino acid amphipathic peptide which binds to calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner. The utility of melittin as a peptide replica of the calmodulin-binding region of calmodulin acceptor proteins (CaMBPs) was investigated. Antibody against melittin was raised and purified by antigen affinity chromatography. Interaction of the antibody with CaMBPs was initially suggested by the ability of anti-melittin-Sepharose, but not nonimmune IgG-Sepharose, to bind calmodulin-dependent cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. Direct interaction of melittin antibody with the calmodulin-binding domain of acceptor proteins was demonstrated by quantitative inhibition of calmodulin binding to the purified CaMBPs, myosin light chain kinase, and eel electric organ CaMBP55. These results indicate that melittin antibody identifies regions of structural similarity between calmodulin acceptor proteins, and this region includes a common calmodulin-binding domain.  相似文献   

13.
1. Hybrid or reconstituted troponins were prepared from troponin components of rabbit skeletal muscle and porcine cardiac muscle and their effect on the actomyosin ATPase activity was measured at various concentrations of Ca2+ or Sr2+. The Ca2+ concentration required for half-maximum activation of actomyosin ATPase with troponin containing cardiac troponin I was slightly higher than that with troponin containing skeletal troponin I. The Sr2+ concentration required for half-maximum activation of actomyosin ATPase with troponin containing skeletal troponin C was higher than that with troponin containing cardiac troponin C. 2. Reconstituted cardiac troponin was phosphorylated by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. The Ca2+ sensitivity of actomyosin ATPase with cardiac troponin decreased upon phosphorylation of troponin I; maximum ATPase activity was depressed and the Ca2+ concentration at half-maximum activation increased. On the other hand, phosphorylation of troponin I did not change Sr2+ sensitivity. 3. The inhibitory effect of cardiac troponin I on the actomyosin ATPase activity was neutralized by increasing the amount of brain calmodulin at high Ca2+ and Sr2+ concentrations but not at low concentrations. 4. ATPase activity of actomyosin with a mixture of troponin I and calmodulin was assayed at various concentrations of Ca2+ or Sr2+. The Ca2+ or Sr2+ sensitivity of actomyosin ATPase containing skeletal troponin I was approximately the same as that of actomyosin ATPase containing cardiac troponin I. Phosphorylation of cardiac troponin I did not change the Ca2+ sensitivity of the ATPase. 5. The Ca2+ or Sr2+ concentration required for half-maximum activation of actomyosin ATPase with troponin I-T-calmodulin was higher than that of actomyosin ATPase with the mixture of troponin I and calmodulin. Maximum ATPase activity was lower than that with the mixture of troponin I and calmodulin.  相似文献   

14.
Studies were undertaken to examine the impact of aluminum-induced structural changes in bovine brain calmodulin on the protein's interface region with melittin, a model for calmodulin's target enzymes. Both steady-state and time-dependent fluorescence characteristics of the single tryptophanyl residue of melittin were employed to derive information on aluminum-related changes in the fluorophore's microenvironment. In the presence of stoichiometric amounts of aluminum ions, calmodulin's target region with melittin appears to be more polar than that with aluminum absent. As a result, upon association of melittin with aluminum-calmodulin, the enhancement of helical arrays is less pronounced. The fluorophore's average microenvironment also is modified such that its apparent lifetime is shortened when aluminum is present. In the presence of aluminum ions, the solvation structure of calmodulin is possibly changed, which may be unfavorable for a proper fit between calmodulin and target proteins.  相似文献   

15.
R Busse  A Mülsch 《FEBS letters》1990,265(1-2):133-136
We investigated whether calmodulin mediates the stimulating effect of Ca2+ on nitric oxide synthase in the cytosol of porcine aortic endothelial cells. Nitric oxide was quantified by activation of a purified soluble guanylate cyclase. The Ca2(+)-sensitivity of nitric oxide synthase was lost after anion exchange chromatography of the endothelial cytosol and could only be reconstituted by addition of calmodulin or heat-denatured endothelial cytosol. The Ca2(+)-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase in the cytosol was inhibited by the calmodulin-binding peptides/proteins melittin, mastoparan, and calcineurin (IC50 450, 350 and 60 nM, respectively), but not by the calmodulin antagonist, calmidazolium. In contrast, Ca2(+)-calmodulin-reconstituted nitric oxide synthase was inhibited with similar potency by melittin and calmidazolium. The results suggest that the Ca2(+)-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase in endothelial cells is mediated by calmodulin.  相似文献   

16.
Chemical cross-linking in combination with mass spectrometry has largely been used to study protein structures and protein-protein interactions. Typically, it is used in a qualitative manner to identify cross-linked sites and provide a low-resolution topological map of the interacting regions of proteins. Here, we investigate the capability of chemical cross-linking to quantify protein-protein interactions using a model system of calmodulin and substrates melittin and mastoparan. Calmodulin is a well-characterized protein which has many substrates. Melittin and mastoparan are two such substrates which bind to calmodulin in 1:1 ratios in the presence of calcium. Both the calmodulin-melittin and calmodulin-mastoparan complexes have had chemical cross-linking strategies successfully applied in the past to investigate topological properties. We utilized an excess of immobilized calmodulin on agarose beads and formed complexes with varying quantities of mastoparan and melittin. Then, we applied disuccinimidyl suberate (DSS) chemical cross-linker, digested and detected cross-links through an LC-MS analytical method. We identified five interpeptide cross-links for calmodulin-melittin and three interpeptide cross-links for calmodulin-mastoparan. Using cross-linking sites of calmodulin-mastoparan, we demonstrated that mastoparan also binds in two orientations to calmodulin. We quantitatively demonstrated that both melittin and mastoparan preferentially bind to calmodulin in a parallel fashion, which is opposite to the preferred binding mode of the majority of known calmodulin binding peptides. We also demonstrated that the relative abundances of cross-linked peptide products quantitatively reflected the abundances of the calmodulin peptide complexes formed.  相似文献   

17.
The flip-flop model is a mechanistic model proposed to describe how calmodulin activates enzymes. One prediction based upon this model is that calmodulin-activated enzymes would contain a calmodulin-like binding site which, among other attributes, would bind the peptide melittin. Five purified calmodulin-activated enzymes, namely calcineurin, myosin light chain kinase, phosphorylase b kinase, phosphodiesterase, and NAD kinase, were all found to bind biotinylated melittin and to also bind an antimelittin antibody and biotinylated calmodulins. Using gel blots of crude tissue extracts (rat brain and Arabidopsis), most proteins did not bind any of the probes and thus do not have these characteristics. However, among those which bind any of these probes, a strong correlation was found between those proteins which bind biotinylated calmodulins and those which bind melittin and antimelittin. Gel blots of phosphorylase b kinase demonstrate that the alpha, beta, and gamma subunits all bind calmodulin and melittin. A putative calmodulin-like binding site sequence was identified in eight enzymes or subunits which may play an important role in both melittin binding and calmodulin-dependent regulation of these enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
We report dynamic fluorescence anisotropy measurements on the purified dityrosine derivative of calmodulin which was generated during UV irradiation of Ca2+-containing solutions of bovine brain calmodulin [Malencik, D. A., & Anderson, S. R. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 695]. Measurements were made by using a high repetition rate picosecond laser source combined with a microchannel plate photomultiplier. This permits the collection of very low noise anisotropy curves with essentially no convolution artifact. Measured anisotropies at high calcium concentrations are monoexponential, and at 20 degrees C, we recover a correlation time of 9.9 ns. When the temperature is varied from 4.8 to 31.8 degrees C, the recovered correlation time is proportional to the viscosity and inversely proportional to the absolute temperature, behavior expected for the rotational diffusion of a macromolecule whose conformation is independent of the temperature. The correlation time is compared to the theory describing the rotational diffusion of a dumbell. At high calcium concentrations, the cross-linked calmodulin is elongated and has a length equal or nearly equal to that predicted by X-ray crystallographic results. In the absence of calcium, the molecule becomes highly compact and exhibits significant segmental motion. Intermediate calcium ion concentrations result in an intermediate degree of elongation and segmental motion. A small increase in the measured rotational correlation time of calmodulin upon the binding of melittin and mastoparan indicates that these peptides cause no major changes in the elongation of the molecule. When the cross-linked calmodulin is bound to troponin I, the complex rotates as a unit with a single rotational correlation time of 22 ns.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of neurotropic compounds on Ca-binding proteins (calmodulin, troponin C) were investigated. It was shown that the majority of neuroleptics of the phenothiazine group effectively interact with the both proteins and inhibit calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and Ca2+-activated actomyosin. ATPase. Neuroleptics of the butyrophenone group as well as imipramine and diphenehydramine having a low efficiency interact only with calmodulin. Methophenazine, a phenothiazine neuroleptic, being an effective inhibitor of calmodulin and of calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase, does not influence troponin C or Ca-dependent actomyosin ATPase. Therefore, this compound may be used as a convenient tool in the study of processes controlled by these Ca-binding proteins. It is concluded that troponin C possesses Ca-dependent sites which bind pharmacological agents structurally similar to that of calmodulin. However, these sites bind pharmacological agents with a low efficiency and exhibit selectivity towards certain drugs. Despite the obvious homology of the both Ca-binding proteins, i.e., calmodulin, troponin C, their effects on the processes under their control appear to be selective.  相似文献   

20.
A sigmoid-type dependence on the inhibitor concentration was observed in the cytochrome c reductase activity for peptide inhibitors (mastoparan and melittin), calmodulin antagonists (W-7 and tamoxifen) and monobutyltin in a reconstituted system comprised of recombinant rat neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) and calmodulin (CaM). The increase in the concentration of CaM in the system induced a decrease in the inhibitory effect, indicating that the inhibitors might interfere with the interaction between nNOS and CaM. The changes in the fluorescence spectra of dansylated CaM caused by the addition of mastoparan, melittin and monobutyltin indicated complex formation between CaM and those compounds, which led to the decrease in the effective concentration of CaM available to nNOS. The sigmoid-type inhibition of mastoparan and melittin fit the theoretical equations quite well, assuming that two CaM molecules bind cooperatively to one nNOS homodimer. Monobutyltin, tamoxifen and W-7 were found to inhibit nNOS activity by binding to the CaM binding site of the nNOS homodimer, in addition to the binding of the inhibitors to calmodulin. These compounds inhibited the L-citrulline formation of nNOS from L-arginine, and the inhibitory effects were abrogated by raising the concentration of calmodulin. It became clear that the binding of calmodulin to nNOS can be interfered with in two ways: (1) via a decrease in the effective concentration of calmodulin caused by complex formation between the inhibitor and calmodulin, and (2) via the inhibition of the binding of calmodulin to nNOS caused by the occupation of the binding site by the inhibitor.  相似文献   

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