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 31 毫秒
1.
Calcium release from high and low-affinity calcium-binding sites of intact bovine brain calmodulin (CaM) and from the tryptic fragment 78-148, purified by high-pressure liquid chromatography, containing only the high-affinity calcium-binding sites, was determined by fluorescence stopped-flow with 2-p-toluidinylnaphthalene sulfonate (TNS). The tryptic fragments 1-77 and 78-148 each contain a calcium-dependent TNS-binding site, as shown by the calcium-dependent increase in TNS fluorescence. The rate of the monophasic fluorescence decrease in endogenous tyrosine on calcium dissociation from intact calcium-saturated calmodulin (kobs 10.8 s-1 and 3.2 s-1 at 25 degrees C and 10 degrees C respectively) as well as the rate of equivalent slow phase of the biphasic decrease in TNS fluorescence (kobsslow 10.6 s-1 and 3.0 s-1 at 25 degrees C and 10 degrees C respectively) and the rate of the solely monophasic decrease in TNS fluorescence, obtained with fragment 78-148 (kobs 10.7 s-1 and 3.5 s-1 at 25 degrees C and 10 degrees C respectively), were identical, indicating that the rate of the conformational change associated with calcium release from the high-affinity calcium-binding sites on the C-terminal half of calmodulin is not influenced by the N-terminal half of the molecule. The fast phase of the biphasic decrease of TNS fluorescence, observed by the N-terminal half of the molecule. The fast phase of the biphasic decrease of TNS fluorescence, observed with intact calmodulin only (kobsfast 280 s-1 at 10 degrees C) but not with fragment 78-148, is most probably due to the conformational change associated with calcium release from low-affinity sites on the N-terminal half. The calmodulin fragments 1-77 and 78-148 neither activated calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum nor inhibited calmodulin-dependent activation at a concentration approximately 1000-fold greater (5 microM) than that of the calmodulin required for half-maximum activation (5.9 nM at 0.8 mM Ca2+ and 5 mM Mg2+) of calmodulin-dependent phosphoester formation.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetics of calcium dissociation from bovine testis calmodulin and its tryptic fragments have been studied by fluorescence stopped-flow methods, using the calcium indicator Quin 2. Two distinct rate processes, each corresponding to the release of two calcium ions are resolved for calmodulin at both low and high ionic strength. The effect of 0.1 M KCl is to accelerate the slow process from 9.1 +/- 1.5 s-1 to 24 +/- 6.0 s-1 and to reduce the rate of the fast process from 650 s-1 to 240 +/- 50 s-1 at 25 degrees C. In the presence of 0.1 M KCl it was possible to determine activation parameters for the fast process: delta H# = 41 +/- 5 kJ mol-1 and delta S# = -63 +/- 17 J K-1 mol-1. These values are in good agreement with those obtained by 43Ca NMR. Studies of the tryptic fragments TR1C and TR2C, comprising the N-terminal or C-terminal half of calmodulin, clearly identified Ca2+-binding sites I and II as the low-affinity (rapidly dissociating) sites and sites III and IV as the high-affinity (slowly dissociating) sites. The kinetic properties of the two proteolytic fragments are closely similar to the fast and slowly dissociating sites of native calmodulin, supporting the idea that calmodulin is constructed from two largely independent domains. The presence of the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine markedly decreased the Ca2+ dissociation rates from calmodulin. One of the two high-affinity trifluoperazine-binding sites was found to be located on the N-terminal half and the other on the C-terminal half of calmodulin. The affinity of the C-terminal site is at least one order of magnitude greater.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of cadmium and terbium dissociation from bovine testis calmodulin and its tryptic fragments have been studied by stopped-flow fluorescence methods, using the calcium indicator Quin 2. Studies of the tryptic fragments TR1C and TR2C, comprising the N-terminal or C-terminal half of calmodulin, have clearly identified cadmium binding sites I and II as the low-affinity (rapidly dissociating) sites and sites III and IV as the high-affinity (slowly dissociating) sites. Thus the site preference of cadmium is the same as that of calcium. For terbium, however, sites I and II are the high-affinity sites and sites III and IV are the low-affinity sites. Thus, the site preference or terbium is not the same as that of calcium and cadmium. In contrast to previous studies with calcium, we observe two kinetic processes for dissociation from sites III and IV for experiments with both cadmium and terbium. Possible models for the binding of metal ions are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We have generated mutants of Drosophila calmodulin in which pairs of calcium-binding sites are mutated so as to prevent calcium binding. In all sites, the mutation involves replacement of the -Z position glutamate residue with glutamine. Mutants inactivated in both N-terminal sites (B12Q) or both C-terminal sites (B34Q), and two mutants with one N- and one C-terminal site inactivated (B13Q and B24Q) were generated. The quadruple mutant with all four sites mutated was also studied. UV-difference spectroscopy and near-UV CD were used to examine the influence of these mutations upon the single tyrosine (Tyr-138) of the protein. These studies uncovered four situations in which Tyr-138 in the C-terminal lobe responds to a change to the calcium-binding properties of the N-terminal lobe. Further, they suggest that N-terminal calcium-binding events contribute strongly to the aberrant behavior of Tyr-138 seen in mutants with a single functional C-terminal calcium-binding site. The data also indicate that loss of calcium binding at site 1 adjusts the aberrant conformation of Tyr-138 produced by mutation of site 3 toward the wild-type structure. However, activation studies for skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (SK-MLCK) established that all of the multiple binding site mutants are poor activators of SK-MLCK. Thus, globally, the calcium-induced conformation of B13Q is not closer to wild type than that of either the site 1 or the site 3 mutant. The positioning of Tyr-138 within the crystal structure of calmodulin suggests that effects of the N-terminal lobe on this residue may be mediated via changes to the central linker region of the protein.  相似文献   

5.
M Yazawa  T Vorherr  P James  E Carafoli  K Yagi 《Biochemistry》1992,31(12):3171-3176
The interaction between calmodulin and synthetic peptides corresponding to the calmodulin binding domain of the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump has been studied by measuring Ca2+ binding to calmodulin. The largest peptide (C28W) corresponding to the complete 28 amino acid calmodulin binding domain enhanced the Ca2+ affinity of calmodulin by more than 100 times, implying that the binding of Ca2+ increased the affinity of calmodulin for the peptide by more than 10(8) times. Deletion of the 8 C-terminal residues from peptide C28W did not decrease the affinity of Ca2+ for the high-affinity sites of calmodulin, but it decreased that for the low-affinity sites. A larger deletion (13 residues) decreased the affinity of Ca2+ for the high-affinity sites as well. The data suggest that the middle portion of peptide C28W interacts with the C-terminal half of calmodulin. Addition of the peptides to a mixture of tryptic fragments corresponding to the N- and C-terminal halves of calmodulin produced a biphasic Ca2+ binding curve, and the effect of peptides was different from that on calmodulin. The result shows that one molecule of peptide C28W binds both calmodulin fragments. Interaction of the two domains of calmodulin through the central helix is necessary for the high-affinity binding of four Ca2+ molecules.  相似文献   

6.
Manceva S  Lin T  Pham H  Lewis JH  Goldman YE  Ostap EM 《Biochemistry》2007,46(42):11718-11726
Myo1c is an unconventional myosin involved in cell signaling and membrane dynamics. Calcium binding to the regulatory-domain-associated calmodulin affects myo1c motor properties, but the kinetic details of this regulation are not fully understood. We performed actin gliding assays, ATPase measurements, fluorescence spectroscopy, and stopped-flow kinetics to determine the biochemical parameters that define the calmodulin-regulatory-domain interaction. We found calcium moderately increases the actin-activated ATPase activity and completely inhibits actin gliding. Addition of exogenous calmodulin in the presence of calcium fully restores the actin gliding rate. A fluorescently labeled calmodulin mutant (N111C) binds to recombinant peptides containing the myo1c IQ motifs at a diffusion-limited rate in the presence and absence of calcium. Measurements of calmodulin dissociation from the IQ motifs in the absence of calcium show that the calmodulin bound to the IQ motif adjacent to the motor domain (IQ1) has the slowest dissociation rate (0.0007 s-1), and the IQ motif adjacent to the tail domain (IQ3) has the fastest dissociation rate (0.5 s-1). When the complex is equilibrated with calcium, calmodulin dissociates most rapidly from IQ1 (60 s-1). However, this increased rate of dissociation is limited by a slow calcium-induced conformational change (3 s-1). Fluorescence anisotropy decay of fluorescently labeled N111C bound to myo1c did not depend appreciably on Ca2+. Our data suggest that the calmodulin bound to the IQ motif adjacent to the motor domain is rapidly exchangeable in the presence of calcium and is responsible for regulation of myo1c ATPase and motile activity.  相似文献   

7.
Calcium and calmodulin both regulate the skeletal muscle calcium release channel, also known as the ryanodine receptor, RYR1. Ca(2+)-free calmodulin (apocalmodulin) activates and Ca(2+)-calmodulin inhibits the ryanodine receptor. The conversion of calmodulin from an activator to an inhibitor is due to Ca(2+) binding to calmodulin. We have previously shown that the binding sites for apocalmodulin and Ca(2+)-calmodulin on RYR1 are overlapping with the Ca(2+)-calmodulin site located slightly N-terminal to the apocalmodulin binding site. We now show that mutations of the calcium binding sites in either the N-terminal or the C-terminal lobes of calmodulin decrease the affinity of calmodulin for the ryanodine receptor, suggesting that both lobes interact with RYR1. Mutation of the two C-terminal Ca(2+) binding sites of calmodulin destroys calmodulin's ability to inhibit ryanodine receptor activity at high calcium concentrations. The mutated calmodulin, however, can still bind to RYR1 at both nanomolar and micromolar Ca(2+) concentrations. Mutating the two N-terminal calcium binding sites of calmodulin does not significantly alter calmodulin's ability to inhibit ryanodine receptor activity. These data suggest that calcium binding to the two C-terminal calcium binding sites within calmodulin is responsible for the switching of calmodulin from an activator to an inhibitor of the ryanodine receptor.  相似文献   

8.
Stopped-flow kinetic and fluorescence spectroscopic analyses, including solvent and temperature perturbations, of five isofunctional structural mutants of calmodulin indicate that calcium binding to calmodulin follows the order site III, site IV, site I, site II, with dissociation occurring in the reverse order. Each of the isofunctional structural mutants contains a single tryptophan residue, introduced by site-specific mutagenesis, as an internal spectroscopic reporter group that was used as a probe of local conformational change. Calcium binding was studied by using flow dialysis or by using fluorescence spectroscopy and monitoring the change in the single tryptophan residue in each calcium-binding site. Calcium removal was examined by using EDTA and monitoring tryptophan fluorescence or by using Quin 2 and monitoring the change in the chromophoric chelator. Computational analysis of the data suggests a rate-limiting step for dissociation between calcium removal from sites I/II and sites III/IV. Unexpected results with the site IV isofunctional mutant (Q135W-CaM) indicated cross-talk between the amino and carboxyl terminal halves of CaM during the calcium-binding mechanism. Studies with ethylene glycol provided empirical data that suggest the functional importance of the electrostatic potential of CaM, or the molarity of water, in the calcium-binding process. Altogether, the data allowed a kinetic extension of the sequential, cooperative model for calcium binding to calmodulin and provided values for additional parameters in the model of calcium binding to CaM, a prototypical member of the family of proteins required for calcium signal transduction in eukaryotic cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Calcium binding to tryptic fragments of calmodulin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Fragments of scallop testis calmodulin were prepared by tryptic digestion. One peptide consisted of 75 amino acid residues from N-acetylalanine to lysine at position 75 (F12) and the other of 71 residues from aspartic acid at position 78 to C-terminal lysine (F34). Flow dialysis and equilibrium dialysis experiments revealed the existence of two Ca2+ binding sites in each fragment. Half-saturating concentrations of the Ca2+ titration curves were 11 microM for F12 and 3.2 microM for F34, and Hill coefficients were obtained as 1.14 and 1.84, respectively. The results indicate that the high-affinity sites for Ca2+ are located on the C-terminal region of the calmodulin. The sum of the two Ca2+ titration curves of F12 and F34 fits well to the curves of Ca2+ binding to intact calmodulin. This shows that the characteristic of Ca2+ bindings in intact calmodulin did not change after separation of the whole molecule into two domains, F12 and F34. The domains corresponding to F12 and F34 may exist independently from each other in the intact calmodulin molecule.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction between calmodulin (CaM) and peptide M13, its target binding sequence from skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase, involves predominantly two sets of interactions, between the N-terminal target residues and the C-domain of calmodulin, and between the C-terminal target residues and the N-domain of calmodulin (Ikura M et al., 1992, Science 256:632-638). Using short synthetic peptides based on the two halves of the target sequence, the interactions with calmodulin and its separate C-domain have been studied by fluorescence and CD spectroscopy, calcium binding, and kinetic techniques. Peptide WF10 (residues 1-10 of M13) binds to CaM with Kd approximately 1 microM; peptide FW10 (residues 9-18 of M13, with Phe-17-->Trp substitution) binds to CaM with Kd approximately 100 microM. The effect of peptide WF10 on calcium binding to calmodulin produces a biphasic saturation curve, with marked enhancement of affinity for the binding of two calcium ions to the C-domain, forming a stable half-saturated complex, Ca2-CaM-peptide, and confirming the functional importance of the interaction of this sequence with the C-domain. Stopped-flow studies show that the EGTA-induced dissociation of WF10 from Ca4-CaM proceeds by a reversible relaxation mechanism from a kinetic intermediate state, also involving half-saturation of CaM, and the same mechanism is evident for the full target peptide. Interaction of the N-terminal target residues with the C-domain is energetically the most important component, but interaction of calmodulin with the whole target sequence is necessary to induce the full cooperative interaction of the two contiguous elements of the target sequence with both N- and C-domains of calmodulin. Thus, the interaction of calmodulin with the M13 sequence can be dissected on both a structural and kinetic basis into partial reactions involving intermediates comprising distinct regions of the target sequence. We propose a general mechanism for the calcium regulation of calmodulin-dependent enzyme activation, involving an intermediate complex formed by interaction of the calmodulin C-domain and the corresponding part of the target sequence. This intermediate species can function to regulate the overall calcium sensitivity of activation and to determine the affinity of the calmodulin target interaction.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Hu J  Jia X  Li Q  Yang X  Wang K 《Biochemistry》2004,43(10):2688-2698
Binding of La(3+) to calmodulin (CaM) and its effects on the complexes of CaM and CaM-binding peptide, polistes mastoparan (Mas), were investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy, and by the fluorescence stopped-flow method. The four binding sites of La(3+) on CaM were identified as the same as the binding sites of Ca(2+) on CaM through NMR titration of La(3+) to uniformly (15)N-labeled CaM. La(3+) showed a slightly higher affinity to the binding sites on the N-terminal domain of CaM than that to the C-terminal. Large differences between the (1)H-(15)N heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra of Ca(4)CaM and La(4)CaM suggest conformational differences between the two complexes. Fluorescence and CD spectra also exhibited structural differences. In the presence of Ca(2+) and La(3+), a hybrid complex, Ca(2)La(2)CaM, was formed, and the binding of La(3+) to the N-terminal domain of CaM seemed preferable over binding to the C-terminal domain. Through fluorescence titration, it was shown that La(4)CaM and Ca(2)La(2)CaM had similar affinities to Mas as Ca(4)CaM. Fluorescence stopped-flow experiments showed that the dissociation rate of La(3+) from the C-terminal domain of CaM was higher than that from the N-terminal. However, in the presence of Mas, the dissociation rate of La(3+) decreased and the dissociation processes from both global domains were indistinguishable. In addition, compared with the case of Ca(4)CaM-Mas, the slower dissociations of Mas from La(4)CaM-Mas and Ca(2)La(2)CaM-Mas complexes indicate that in the presence of La(3+), the CaM-Mas complex became kinetically inert. A possible role of La(3+) in the Ca(2+)-CaM-dependent pathway is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Sato S  Kuhlman B  Wu WJ  Raleigh DP 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5643-5650
The folding and unfolding behavior of the multidomain ribosomal protein L9 from Bacillus stearothermophilus was studied by a novel combination of stopped-flow fluorescence and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. One-dimensional 1H spectra acquired at various temperatures show that the C-terminal domain unfolds at a lower temperature than the N-terminal domain (Tm = 67 degrees C for the C-terminal domain, 80 degrees C for the N-terminal domain). NMR line-shape analysis was used to determine the folding and unfolding rates for the N-terminal domain. At 72 degrees C, the folding rate constant equals 2980 s-1 and the unfolding rate constant equals 640 s-1. For the C-terminal domain, saturation transfer experiments performed at 69 degrees C were used to determine the folding rate constant, 3.3 s-1, and the unfolding rate constant, 9.0 s-1. Stopped-flow fluorescence experiments detected two resolved phases: a fast phase for the N-terminal domain and a slow phase for the C-terminal domain. The folding and unfolding rate constants determined by stopped-flow fluorescence are 760 s-1 and 0.36 s-1, respectively, for the N-terminal domain at 25 degrees C and 3.0 s-1 and 0.0025 s-1 for the C-terminal domain. The Chevron plots for both domains show a V-shaped curve that is indicative of two-state folding. The measured folding rate constants for the N-terminal domain in the intact protein are very similar to the values determined for the isolated N-terminal domain, demonstrating that the folding kinetics of this domain is not affected by the rest of the protein. The remarkably different rate constants between the N- and C-terminal domains suggest that the two domains can fold and unfold independently. The folding behavior of L9 argues that extremely rapid folding is not necessarily functionally important.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Calmodulin of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has different Ca2+ binding properties from other calmodulins. We previously reported that the maximum number of Ca2+ binding was 3 mol/mol and the fourth binding site was defective, which was different from 4 mol/mol for others. Their macroscopic dissociation constants suggested the cooperative three Ca2+ bindings rather than a pair of cooperative two Ca2+ bindings of ordinary calmodulin. Here we present evidence for yeast calmodulin showing the intramolecular close interaction between the N-terminal half domain and the C-terminal half domain, while the two domains of ordinary calmodulin are independent of each other. We will discuss the relationship of the shape and the shape change caused by the Ca2+ binding to the enzyme activation in yeast. The functional feature of calmodulin in yeast will also be considered, which might be different from the one of vertebrate calmodulin.  相似文献   

16.
Kinetic studies of calcium and magnesium binding to troponin C   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The kinetic mechanism of calcium binding was investigated for the high-affinity calcium-magnesium sites of troponin C (TN-C), for the C-terminal fragment containing only the high-affinity sites (TR2) and for the TN-C:TN-I (where TN-I represents the inhibitory subunit of troponin) complex. Rate constants were measured by the change in fluorescence of the proteins labeled with 4-(N-iodoacetoxyethyl-N-methyl-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole at Cys 98. Rate constants for calcium dissociation were also measured using the fluorescent calcium chelating agent quin 2. Calcium binding to TR2 at 4 degrees C is a two-step process at each binding site. (formula; see text) A first order transition (k1 = 700 s-1) follows the formation of a weakly bound collision complex (K0 = 2.5 X 10(3) M-1). The two sits of the labeled protein are distinguishable because of a 2-4-fold difference in rate constants of calcium dissociation. The kinetic evidence is consistent with additive changes in structure induced by calcium binding to two identical or nearly identical high-affinity sites. The mechanism for TN-C:TN-I is similar to TR2. TN-C gave complex kinetic behavior for calcium binding but calcium dissociation occurred with the same rate constants found for TR2. Calcium binding to the high-affinity sites of TnC can be interpreted by the same mechanism as for TR2 but an additional reaction possibly arriving from calcium binding to the low-affinity sites leads to a high-fluorescence intermediate state which is detected by the fluorophore. The interactions between the two classes of sites are interpreted by a model in which calcium binding at the high-affinity sites reverses the fluorescence change induced by calcium binding at the low-affinity sites. Magnesium binding to the calcium-magnesium sites of TR2 and TN-C occurs by the same two-step binding mechanism with a smaller value for K0 and a 5-fold larger rate constant of dissociation.  相似文献   

17.
The rate constant of the conformational change of skeletal troponin C (TnC) induced by the Ca2+ binding reaction with the high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites was determined in the presence of Mg2+ by the fluorescence stopped-flow method in 0.1 M KCl, 50 mM Na-cacodylate-HCl pH 7.0 at 20 degrees C. The [MgCl2] dependence of the rate constants of the observed biphasic conformational change leveled off at the high [MgCl2] region: the rate constants were 60 +/- 9 s-1 and 8 +/- 2 s-1, respectively. These values are larger than the rate constants of the biphasic fluorescence intensity change of TnC induced by Mg2+ removal reaction at the high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites (37 +/- 7 s-1 and 3.0 +/- 0.6 s-1) under the same experimental conditions. These results suggest that the Ca2+-Mg2+ exchange reaction at the high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites is faster than the resultant conformational change accompanying the fluorescence intensity change. Based on these results, we also reexamine the molecular kinetic mechanism of the conformational change of the protein induced by the Mg2+ binding or removal reaction with the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of skeletal TnC.  相似文献   

18.
Boschek CB  Jones TE  Squier TC  Bigelow DJ 《Biochemistry》2007,46(37):10621-10628
Calmodulin (CaM) regulates calcium release from intracellular stores in skeletal muscle through its association with the ryanodine receptor (RyR1) calcium release channel, where CaM association enhances channel opening at resting calcium levels and its closing at micromolar calcium levels associated with muscle contraction. A high-affinity CaM-binding sequence (RyRp) has been identified in RyR1, which corresponds to a 30-residue sequence (i.e., K3614-N3643) located within the central portion of the primary sequence. However, it is presently unclear whether the identified CaM-binding sequence in association with CaM (a) senses calcium over the physiological range of calcium concentrations associated with RyR1 regulation or alternatively, (b) plays a structural role unrelated to the calcium-dependent modulation of RyR1 function. Therefore, we have measured the calcium-dependent activation of the individual domains of CaM in association with RyRp and their relationship to the CaM-dependent regulation of RyR1. These measurements utilize an engineered CaM, permitting the site-specific incorporation of N-(1-pyrene)maleimide at either T34C (PyN-CaM) or T110C (PyC-CaM) in the N- and C-domains, respectively. Consistent with prior measurements, we observe a high-affinity association of both apo-CaM and calcium-activated CaM with RyRp. Upon association with RyRp, fluorescence changes in PyN-CaM or PyC-CaM permit the measurement of the calcium-dependent activation of these individual domains. Fluorescence changes upon calcium activation of PyC-CaM in association with RyRp are indicative of high-affinity calcium-dependent activation of the C-terminal domain of CaM at resting calcium levels; at calcium levels associated with muscle contraction, activation of the N-terminal domain occurs with concomitant increases in the fluorescence intensity of PyC-CaM that is associated with structural changes within the CaM-binding sequence of RyR1. Occupancy of calcium-binding sites in the N-domain of CaM mirrors the calcium dependence of RyR1 inhibition observed at activating calcium levels, where [Ca]1/2 = 4.3 +/- 0.4 microM, suggesting a direct regulation of RyR1 function upon the calcium-dependent activation of CaM. These results indicate that occupancy of the N-terminal domain calcium binding sites in CaM bound to the identified CaM-binding sequence K3614-N3643 induces conformational rearrangements within the complex between CaM and RyR1 responsible for the CaM-dependent modulation of the RyR1 calcium release channel.  相似文献   

19.
Binding of simple peptides, hormones, and neurotransmitters by calmodulin   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
D A Malencik  S R Anderson 《Biochemistry》1982,21(14):3480-3486
We have prepared a fluorescent conjugate of porcine calmodulin with 5-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalene-sulfonyl chloride that is highly sensitive to both calcium binding and protein binding. We have used the fluorescence of this conjugate in addition to the intrinsic peptide fluorescence to show that adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), beta-endorphin, glucagon, and substance P undergo calcium-dependent binding by calmodulin, with competition for common binding sites. The dissociation constants determined in the presence of 0.85 mM CaCl2 and 0.2 N KC1, pH 7.3 at 25 degrees C, range from 1.5 muM to 3.4 muM. The alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, bombesin, and somatostatin also bind, with dissociation constants between 60 muM and 90 muM. Angiotensins I and III, bradykinin, neurotensin, physalaemin, substance P octapeptide, insulin, and Leu- and Met-enkephalin show little or no binding. Sequence comparisons show that the peptides that bind calmodulin well contain regions structurally similar to the recognition sequence for the cAMP-dependent protein kinase and to the sequences surrounding phosphorylated serine residues in several calmodulin binding proteins. This result suggests that modification of calmodulin binding sites in calmodulin-dependent proteins is one of the functions of protein kinase. Calcium has a dual role in peptide binding by calmodulin. The occupation of calcium binding sites having a pK approximately 4 results in a 2-fold increase in peptide binding affinity.  相似文献   

20.
113Cd-NMR studies of solutions of cadmium-loaded calmodulin (Cd4CaM) and the tetradecapeptide mastoparan in different ratios show that mastoparan binds to Cd4CaM with high affinity. The off-rate of protein- bound mastoparan is found to be 40 s-1 or less. The binding of one molecule of mastoparan to Cd4CaM is observed to affect all four metal-binding sites, indicating that both the N-terminal and C-terminal globular domains of the protein undergo conformational changes.  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