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1.
We have used chemical synthesis, functional reconstitution, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to probe the functional dynamics of phospholamban (PLB), which regulates the Ca-ATPase (SERCA) in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. The transmembrane domain of PLB inhibits SERCA at low [Ca(2+)], but the cytoplasmic domain relieves this inhibition upon Ser16 phosphorylation. Monomeric PLB was synthesized with Ala11 replaced by the 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl-4-amino-4-carboxylic acid (TOAC) spin label, which reports peptide backbone dynamics directly. PLB was reconstituted into membranes in the presence or absence of SERCA. TOAC-PLB showed normal inhibitory function, which was reversed by phosphorylation at Ser16 or by micromolar [Ca(2+)]. EPR showed that the PLB cytoplasmic domain exhibits two resolved conformations, a tense T state that is ordered and a relaxed R state that is dynamically disordered and extended. PLB phosphorylation shifts this equilibrium toward the R state and makes it more dynamic (hyperextended). Phosphorylation strongly perturbs the dynamics of SERCA-bound PLB without dissociating the complex, while micromolar [Ca(2+)] has no effect on PLB dynamics. A lipid anchor synthetically attached to the N terminus of PLB permits Ca-dependent SERCA inhibition but prevents the phosphorylation-induced disordering and reversal of inhibition. We conclude that the relief of SERCA inhibition by PLB phosphorylation is due to an order-to-disorder transition in the cytoplasmic domain of PLB, which allows this domain to extend above the membrane surface and induce a structural change in the cytoplasmic domain of SERCA. This mechanism is distinct from the one that relieves PLB-dependent SERCA inhibition upon the addition of micromolar [Ca(2+)].  相似文献   

2.
The 52-amino acid transmembrane protein phospholamban (PLB) regulates calcium cycling in cardiac cells by forming a complex with the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) and reversibly diminishing the rate of calcium uptake by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The N-terminal cytoplasmic domain of PLB interacts with the cytoplasmic domain of SERCA, but, in the absence of the enzyme, can also associate with the surface of anionic phospholipid membranes. This work investigates whether the cytoplasmic domain of PLB can also associate with membrane surfaces in the presence of SERCA, and whether such interactions could influence the regulation of the enzyme. It is shown using solid-state NMR and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) that an N-terminally acetylated peptide representing the first 23 N-terminal amino acids of PLB (PLB1-23) interacts with membranes composed of zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) and anionic phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids in the absence and presence of SERCA. Functional measurements of SERCA in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles, planar SR membranes and reconstituted into PC/PG membranes indicate that PLB1-23 lowers the maximal rate of ATP hydrolysis by acting at the cytoplasmic face of the enzyme. A small, but statistically significant, reduction in the inhibitory effect of the peptide is observed for SERCA reconstituted into PC/PG membranes compared to SERCA in membranes of PC alone. It is suggested that interactions between the cytoplasmic domain of PLB and negatively charged phospholipids might play a role in moderating the regulation of SERCA, with implications for cardiac muscle contractility.  相似文献   

3.
We have used site-directed spin labeling and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to map interactions between the transmembrane (TM) domains of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA) and phospholamban (PLB) as affected by PLB phosphorylation. In the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, PLB binding to SERCA results in Ca-dependent enzyme inhibition, which is reversed by PLB phosphorylation at Ser16. Previous spectroscopic studies on SERCA-PLB have largely focused on the cytoplasmic domain of PLB, showing that phosphorylation induces a structural shift in this domain relative to SERCA. However, SERCA inhibition is due entirely to TM domain interactions. Therefore, we focus here on PLB’s TM domain, attaching Cys-reactive spin labels at five different positions. In each case, continuous-wave EPR indicated moderate spin-label mobility, with the addition of SERCA revealing two populations, one indistinguishable from PLB alone and another with more restricted rotational mobility, presumably due to SERCA-binding. Phosphorylation had no effect on the rotational mobility of either component but significantly decreased the mole fraction of the restricted component. Solvent-accessibility experiments using power-saturation EPR and saturation-recovery EPR confirmed that these two spectral components were SERCA-bound and unbound PLB and showed that phosphorylation increased the overall lipid accessibility of the TM domain by increasing the fraction of unbound PLB. However—based on these results—at physiological levels of SERCA and PLB, most SERCA would have bound PLB even after phosphorylation. Additionally, no structural shift in the TM domain of SERCA-bound PLB was detected, as there were no significant changes in membrane insertion depth or its accessibility. Therefore, we conclude that under physiological conditions, the phosphorylation of PLB induces little or no change in the interaction of the TM domain with SERCA, so relief of inhibition is predominantly due to the previously observed structural shift in the cytoplasmic domain.  相似文献   

4.
We have used time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) to characterize the interaction between phospholamban (PLB) and the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca-ATPase (SERCA) under conditions that relieve SERCA inhibition. Unphosphorylated PLB inhibits SERCA in cardiac SR, but inhibition is relieved by either micromolar Ca2+ or PLB phosphorylation. In both cases, it has been proposed that inhibition is relieved by dissociation of the complex. To test this hypothesis, we attached fluorophores to the cytoplasmic domains of SERCA and PLB, and reconstituted them functionally in lipid bilayers. TR-FRET, which permitted simultaneous measurement of SERCA–PLB binding and structure, was measured as a function of PLB phosphorylation and [Ca2+]. In all cases, two structural states of the SERCA–PLB complex were resolved, probably corresponding to the previously described T and R structural states of the PLB cytoplasmic domain. Phosphorylation of PLB at S16 completely relieved inhibition, partially dissociated the SERCA–PLB complex, and shifted the T/R equilibrium within the bound complex toward the R state. Since the PLB concentration in cardiac SR is at least 10 times that in our FRET measurements, we calculate that most of SERCA contains bound phosphorylated PLB in cardiac SR, even after complete phosphorylation. 4 μM Ca2+ completely relieved inhibition but did not induce a detectable change in SERCA–PLB binding or cytoplasmic domain structure, suggesting a mechanism involving structural changes in SERCA’s transmembrane domain. We conclude that Ca2+ and PLB phosphorylation relieve SERCA–PLB inhibition by distinct mechanisms, but both are achieved primarily by structural changes within the SERCA–PLB complex, not by dissociation of that complex.  相似文献   

5.
Kirby TL  Karim CB  Thomas DD 《Biochemistry》2004,43(19):5842-5852
We used EPR spectroscopy to probe directly the interaction between phospholamban (PLB) and its regulatory target, the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA). Synthetic monomeric PLB was prepared with a single cytoplasmic cysteine at residue 11, which was then spin labeled. PLB was reconstituted into membranes in the presence or absence of SERCA, and spin label mobility and accessibility were measured. The spin label was quite rotationally mobile in the absence of SERCA, but became more restricted in the presence of SERCA. SERCA also decreased the dependence of spin label mobility on PLB concentration in the membrane, indicating that SERCA reduces PLB-PLB interactions. The spin label MTSSL, attached to Cys11 on PLB by a disulfide bond, was stable at position 11 in the absence of SERCA. In the presence of SERCA, the spin label was released and a covalent bond was formed between PLB and SERCA, indicating direct interaction of one or more SERCA cysteine residues with Cys11 on PLB. The accessibility of the PLB-bound spin label IPSL to paramagnetic agents, localized in different phases of the membrane, indicates that SERCA greatly reduces the level of interaction of the spin label with the membrane surface. We propose that the cytoplasmic domain of PLB associates with the lipid surface, and that association with SERCA induces a major conformational change in PLB in which the cytoplasmic domain is drawn away from the lipid surface by SERCA.  相似文献   

6.
Phospholamban (PLB) is a 52 amino acid integral membrane protein that interacts with the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2 + ATPase (SERCA) and helps to regulate Ca2 + flow. PLB inhibits SERCA impairing Ca2 + translocation. The inhibition can be relieved upon phosphorylation of PLB. The Arg9 to Cys (R9C) mutation is a loss of function mutation with reduced inhibitory potency. The effect R9C PLB has on the membrane surface and the hydrophobic region dynamics was investigated by 31P and 2H solid-state NMR spectroscopy in multilamellar vesicles (MLVs). The 31P NMR spectra indicate that, like the phosphorylated PLB (P-PLB), the mutated R9C-PLB protein has significantly less interaction with the lipid bilayer headgroup when compared to wild-type PLB (WT-PLB). Similar to P-PLB, R9C-PLB slightly decreases 31P T1 values in the lipid headgroup region. 2H SCD order parameters of 2H nuclei along the lipid acyl chain decrease less dramatically for R9C-PLB and P-PLB when compared to WT-PLB. The results suggest that R9C-PLB interacts less with the membrane surface and hydrophobic region than WT-PLB. Detachment of the cytoplasmic domain of R9C-PLB from the membrane surface could be related to its loss of function.  相似文献   

7.
Calcium transport across the sarcoplasmic reticulum of cardiac myocytes is regulated by a reversible inhibitory interaction between the Ca2+-ATPase and the small transmembrane protein phospholamban (PLB). A nullcysteine analogue of PLB, containing isotope labels in the transmembrane domain or cytoplasmic domain, was reconstituted into membranes in the absence and presence of the SERCA1 isoform of Ca2+-ATPase for structural investigation by cross-polarization magic-angle spinning (CP-MAS) NMR. PLB lowered the maximal hydrolytic activity of SERCA1 and its affinity for calcium in membrane preparations suitable for structural analysis by NMR. Novel backbone amide proton-deuterium exchange CP-MAS NMR experiments on the two PLB analogues co-reconstituted with SERCA1 indicated that labeled residues Leu42 and Leu44 were situated well within the membrane interior, whereas Pro21 and Ala24 lie exposed outside the membrane. Internuclear distance measurements on PLB using rotational resonance NMR indicated that the sequences Pro21-Ala24 and Leu42-Leu44 adopt an alpha-helical structure in pure lipid bilayers, which is unchanged in the presence of Ca2+-ATPase. By contrast, rotational echo double resonance (REDOR) NMR experiments revealed that the sequence Ala24-Gln26 switches from an alpha-helix in pure lipid membranes to a more extended structure in the presence of SERCA1, which may reflect local structural distortions which change the orientations of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains. These results suggest that Ca2+-ATPase has a long-range effect on the structure of PLB around residue 25, which promotes the functional association of the two proteins.  相似文献   

8.
The integral membrane protein complex between phospholamban (PLN) and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA) regulates cardiac contractility. In the unphosphorylated form, PLN binds SERCA and inhibits Ca(2+) flux. Upon phosphorylation of PLN at Ser16, the inhibitory effect is reversed. Although structural details on both proteins are emerging from X-ray crystallography, cryo-electron microscopy, and NMR studies, the molecular mechanisms of their interactions and regulatory process are still lacking. It has been speculated that SERCA regulation depends on PLN structural transitions (order to disorder, i.e., folding/unfolding). Here, we investigated PLN conformational changes upon chemical unfolding by a combination of electron paramagnetic resonance and NMR spectroscopies, revealing that the conformational transitions involve mostly the cytoplasmic regions, with two concomitant phenomena: (1) membrane binding and folding of the amphipathic domain Ia and (2) folding/unfolding of the juxtamembrane domain Ib of PLN. Analysis of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated PLN with two phosphomimetic mutants of PLN (S16E and S16D) shows that the population of an unfolded state in domains Ia and Ib (T' state) is linearly correlated to the extent of SERCA inhibition measured by activity assays. Inhibition of SERCA is carried out by the folded ground state (T state) of the protein (PLN), while the relief of inhibition involves promotion of PLN to excited conformational states (Ser16 phosphorylated PLN). We propose that PLN population shifts (folding/unfolding) are a key regulatory mechanism for SERCA.  相似文献   

9.
Wild-type phospholamban (WT-PLB), a Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA) regulator in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane, was studied using TOAC nitroxide spin labeling, magnetically aligned bicelles, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to ascertain structural and dynamic information. Different structural domains of PLB (transmembrane segment: positions 42 and 45, loop region: position 20, and cytoplasmic domain: position 10) were probed with rigid TOAC spin labels to extract the transmembrane helical tilt and structural dynamic information, which is crucial for understanding the regulatory function of PLB in modulating Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. Aligned experiments indicate that the transmembrane domain of wild-type PLB has a helical tilt of 13°±4° in DMPC/DHPC bicelles. TOAC spin labels placed on the WT-PLB transmembrane domain showed highly restricted motion with more than 100ns rotational correlation time (τ(c)); whereas the loop, and the cytoplasmic regions each consists of two distinct motional dynamics: one fast component in the sub-nanosecond scale and the other component is slower dynamics in the nanosecond range.  相似文献   

10.
We have used multifrequency electron paramagnetic resonance to define the multistate structural dynamics of an integral membrane protein, phospholamban (PLB), in a lipid bilayer. PLB is a key regulator of cardiac calcium transport, and its function requires transitions between distinct states of intramolecular dynamics. Monomeric PLB was synthesized with the TOAC spin label at positions 11 (in the cytoplasmic domain) and 46 (in the transmembrane domain) and reconstituted into lipid bilayers. Unlike other protein spin labels, TOAC reports directly the motion of the peptide backbone, so quantitative analysis of its dynamics is worthwhile. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra at 9.4 GHz (X-band) and 94 GHz (W-band) were analyzed in terms of anisotropic rotational diffusion of the two domains. Motion of the transmembrane domain is highly restricted, while the cytoplasmic domain exhibits two distinct conformations, a major one with moderately restricted nanosecond dynamics (T) and another with nearly unrestricted subnanosecond motion (R). The global analysis of spectra at two frequencies yielded values for the rotational correlation times and order parameters that were much more precisely determined than at either frequency alone. Multifrequency EPR is a powerful approach for analysis of complex rotational dynamics of proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Karim CB  Marquardt CG  Stamm JD  Barany G  Thomas DD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(35):10892-10897
Chemical synthesis, functional reconstitution, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) have been used to analyze the structure and function of phospholamban (PLB), a 52-residue integral membrane protein that regulates the calcium pump (Ca-ATPase) in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). PLB exists in equilibrium between monomeric and pentameric forms, as observed by SDS-PAGE, EPR, and fluorescence. It has been proposed that inhibition of the pump is due primarily to the monomeric form, with both pentameric stability and inhibition dependent primarily on the transmembrane (TM) domain. To test these hypotheses, we have studied the physical and functional properties of a synthetic null-cysteine PLB analogue that is entirely monomeric on SDS-PAGE, and compared it with the synthetic null-cysteine TM domain (residues 26-52). The TM domain was found to be primarily oligomeric on SDS-PAGE, and boundary lipid spin label analysis in lipid bilayers verified that the isolated TM domain is more oligomeric than the full-length parent molecule. These results indicate that the stability of the PLB pentamer is due primarily to attractive interactions between hydrophobic TM domains, overcoming the repulsive electrostatic interactions between the cationic cytoplasmic domains (residues 1-25). When reconstituted into liposomes containing the Ca-ATPase, the null-cysteine TM domain had the same inhibitory function as that of the full-length parent molecule. We conclude that the TM domain of PLB is sufficient for inhibitory function, the oligomeric stability of PLB does not determine its inhibitory activity, and the three Cys residues in the TM domain are not required for inhibitory function.  相似文献   

12.
Phospholamban (PLB) is a pentameric protein that plays an important role in regulating cardiac contractility via a reversible inhibitory association with the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ATPase (SERCA), the enzyme responsible for maintaining correct calcium homeostasis. Here we study the functional and biophysical characteristics of a PLB mutant associated with human dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), with a deletion of arginine at position 14 (PLBR14Δ). In agreement with recent findings, we find that PLBR14Δ has a reduced inhibitory effect on SERCA compared to wild type PLB (PLBWT) when reconstituted into lipid membranes. The mutation also leads to a large reduction in the protein kinase A-catalysed phosphorylation of Ser-16 in the cytoplasmic domain of PLBR14Δ. Measurements on SERCA co-reconstituted with an equimolar mixture of PLBWT and PLBR14Δ (representing the lethal heterozygous state associated with DCM) indicates that the loss-of-function mutation has a dominant effect on PLBWT functionality and phosphorylation capacity, suggesting that mixed PLBWT/PLBR14Δ pentamers are formed that have characteristics typical of the mutant protein. Structural and biophysical analysis of PLBR14Δ indicates that the mutation perturbs slightly the helical structure of the PLB cytoplasmic domain and reduces its affinity for the phospholipid bilayer surface, thereby altering the orientation of the cytoplasmic domain relative to the wild-type protein. These results indicate that the structure and function consequences of the R14 deletion have profound effects on the regulation of SERCA which may contribute to the aetiology of DCM.  相似文献   

13.
The ability of two loss-of-function mutants, L31A and L31C, of phospholamban (PLB) to bind to and inhibit the Ca(2+) pump of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SERCA2a) was investigated using a molecular cross-linking approach. Leu(31) of PLB, located at the cytoplasmic membrane boundary, is a critical amino acid shown previously to be essential for Ca(2+)-ATPase inhibition. We observed that L31A or L31C mutations of PLB prevented the inhibition of Ca(2+)-ATPase activity and disabled the cross-linking of N27C and N30C of PLB to Lys(328) and Cys(318) of SERCA2a. Although L31C-PLB failed to cross-link to any Cys or Lys residue of wild-type SERCA2a, L31C did cross-link with high efficiency to T317C of SERCA2a with use of the homobifunctional sulfhydryl cross-linking reagent, 1,6-bismaleimidohexane. This places Leu(31) of PLB within 10 angstroms of Thr(317) of SERCA2a in the M4 helix. Thus, contrary to previous suggestions, PLB with loss-of-function mutations at Leu(31) retains the ability to bind to SERCA2a, despite losing inhibitory activity. Cross-linking of L31C-PLB to T317C-SERCA2a occurred only in the absence of Ca(2+) and in the presence of nucleotide and was prevented by thapsigargin and by anti-PLB antibody, demonstrating for a fourth cross-linking pair that PLB interacts near M4 only when the Ca(2+) pump is in the Ca(2+)-free, nucleotide-bound E2 conformation, but not in the E2 state inhibited by thapsigargin. L31I-PLB retained full functional and cross-linking activity, suggesting that a bulky hydrophobic residue at position 31 of PLB is essential for productive interaction with SERCA2a. A model for the three-dimensional structure of the interaction site is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphorylation of phospholamban (PLB) at Ser16 and/ or Thr17 is believed to release its inhibitory effect on sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase. Ser16 phosphorylation of PLB has been suggested to cause a conformational change that alters the interaction between the enzyme and protein. Using computer simulations, the conformational sampling of Ser16 phosphorylated PLB in implicit membrane environment is compared here with the unphosphorylated PLB system to investigate these conformational changes. The results suggest that conformational changes in the cytoplasmic domain of PLB upon phosphorylation at Ser16 increase the likelihood of unfavorable interactions with SERCA in the E2 state prompting a conformational switch of SERCA from E2 to E1. Phosphorylation of PLB at Thr17 on the other hand does not appear to affect interactions with SERCA significantly suggesting that the mechanism of releasing the inhibitory effect is different between Thr17 phosphorylated and Ser16 phosphorylated PLB.  相似文献   

15.
Afara MR  Trieber CA  Glaves JP  Young HS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(28):8617-8627
The sequence of phospholamban (PLB) is practically invariant among mammalian species. The hydrophobic transmembrane domain has 10 leucine and 8 isoleucine residues. Two roles have been proposed for the leucines; one subset stabilizes PLB oligomers, while a second subset physically interacts with SERCA. On the basis of the sequence of the PLB transmembrane domain, we chemically synthesized a series of peptides and tested their ability to regulate SERCA in reconstituted membranes. In all, eight peptides were studied: a peptide corresponding to the null-cysteine transmembrane domain of PLB (TM-Ala-PLB), two polyleucine peptides (Leu18 and Leu24), polyalanine peptides containing 4, 7, and 12 leucine residues (Leu4, Leu7, and Leu12, respectively), and a polyalanine peptide containing the 9 leucine residues present in the transmembrane domain of PLB with and without the essential Asn34 residue (Asn1Leu9 and Leu9, respectively). With the exception of Leu18, co-reconstitution of the peptides revealed effects on the apparent calcium affinity of SERCA. The TM-Ala-PLB peptide possessed approximately 70% of the inhibitory function of wild-type PLB. The remaining peptides exhibited significant inhibitory activity decreasing in the following order: Leu12, Leu9, Leu24, Leu7, and Leu4. Replacing Asn34 of PLB in the Leu9 peptide resulted in superinhibition of SERCA. On the basis of these observations, we conclude that a partial requirement for SERCA inhibition is met by a simple hydrophobic surface on a transmembrane alpha-helix. In addition, the superinhibition observed for the Asn34-containing peptide suggests that the model peptides mimic the inhibitory properties of PLB. A model is presented in which surface complementarity around key amino acid positions is enhanced in the interaction with SERCA.  相似文献   

16.
We used fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to detect and quantitate the interaction of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) with phospholamban (PLB) in membranes. PLB inhibits SERCA only at submicromolar Ca. It has been proposed that relief of inhibition at micromolar Ca is due to dissociation of the inhibitory complex. To test this hypothesis, we co-reconstituted donor-labeled SERCA and acceptor-labeled I40A-PLB (superinhibitory, monomeric PLB mutant) in membranes of defined lipid and protein composition, with full retention of Ca-dependent ATPase activity and inhibitory regulation by PLB. FRET from SERCA to PLB was measured as a function of membrane concentrations of PLB and SERCA, and functional activity was measured on the same samples. The data revealed clearly that the stoichiometry of binding is one PLB per SERCA, and that binding is a strict function of the ratio of total PLB to SERCA in the membrane. We conclude that the dissociation constant of PLB binding to SERCA is far less than physiological PLB membrane concentrations. Binding at low Ca (pCa 6.5), where I40A-PLB inhibits SERCA, was virtually identical to that at high Ca (pCa 5.0), where no inhibition was observed. However, the limiting energy transfer at saturating PLB was less at high Ca, indicating a greater donor-acceptor distance. We conclude that (a) the affinity of PLB for SERCA is so great that PLB is essentially a SERCA subunit under physiological conditions and (b) relief of inhibition at micromolar Ca is due to a structural rearrangement within the SERCA-PLB complex, rather than dissociation.  相似文献   

17.
Metcalfe EE  Traaseth NJ  Veglia G 《Biochemistry》2005,44(11):4386-4396
Phospholamban (PLB) is a 52 amino acid membrane-endogenous regulator of the sarco(endo)plasmic calcium adenosinetriphosphatase (SERCA) in cardiac muscle. PLB's phosphorylation and dephosphorylation at S16 modulate its regulatory effect on SERCA by an undetermined mechanism. In this paper, we use multidimensional (1)H/(15)N solution NMR methods to establish the structural and dynamics basis for PLB's control of SERCA upon S16 phosphorylation. For our studies, we use a monomeric, fully active mutant of PLB, where C36, C41, and C46 have been mutated to A36, F41, and A46, respectively. Our data show that phosphorylation disrupts the "L-shaped" structure of monomeric PLB, causing significant unwinding of both the cytoplasmic helix (domain Ia) and the short loop (residues 17-21) connecting this domain to the transmembrane helix (domains Ib and II). Concomitant with this conformational transition, we also find pronounced changes in both the pico- to nanosecond and the micro- to millisecond time scale dynamics. The (1)H/(15)N heteronuclear NOE values for residues 1-25 are significantly lower than those of unphosphorylated PLB, with slightly lower NOE values in the transmembrane domain, reflecting less restricted motion throughout the whole protein. These data are supported by the faster spin-lattice relaxation rates (R(1)) present in both the cytoplasmic and loop regions and by the enhanced spin-spin transverse relaxation rates (R(2)) observed in the transmembrane domain. These results demonstrate that while S16 phosphorylation induces a localized structural transition, changes in PLB's backbone dynamics are propagated throughout the protein backbone. We propose that the regulatory mechanism of PLB phosphorylation involves an order-to-disorder transition, resulting in a decrease in the PLB inhibition of SERCA.  相似文献   

18.
Approximately, 70% of the Ca2+ ion transport into the sarcoplasmic reticulum is catalyzed by the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA), whose activity is endogenously regulated by phospholamban (PLN). PLN comprises a TM inhibitory region and a cytoplasmic regulatory region that harbors a consensus sequence for cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). The inhibitory region binds the ATPase, reducing its apparent Ca2+ binding affinity. β-adrenergic stimulation activates PKA, which phosphorylates PLN at Ser 16, reversing its inhibitory function. Mutations and post-translational modifications of PLN may lead to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and heart failure. PLN's cytoplasmic region interconverts between a membrane-associated T state and a membrane-detached R state. The importance of these structural transitions on SERCA regulation is emerging, but the effects of natural occurring mutations and their relevance to the progression of heart disease are unclear. Here we use solid-state NMR spectroscopy to investigate the structural dynamics of two lethal PLN mutations, R9C and R25C, which lead to DCM. We found that the R25C mutant enhances the dynamics of PLN and shifts the conformational equilibrium toward the R state confirmation, whereas the R9C mutant drives the amphipathic cytoplasmic domain toward the membrane-associate state, enriching the T state population. The changes in membrane interactions caused by these mutations may explain the aberrant regulation of SERCA.  相似文献   

19.
Clayton JC  Hughes E  Middleton DA 《Biochemistry》2005,44(51):17016-17026
Phospholamban (PLB) and phospholemman (PLM, also called FXYD1) are small transmembrane proteins that interact with P-type ATPases and regulate ion transport in cardiac cells and other tissues. This work has investigated the hypothesis that the cytoplasmic domains of PLB and PLM, when not interacting with their regulatory targets, are stabilized through associations with the surface of the phospholipid membrane. Peptides representing the 35 C-terminal cytoplasmic residues of PLM (PLM(37-72)), the 23 N-terminal cytoplasmic residues of PLB (PLB(1-23)), and the same sequence phosphorylated at Ser-16 (P-PLB(1-23)) were synthesized to examine their interactions with model membranes composed of zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids alone or in admixture with anionic phosphatidylglycerol (PG) lipids. Wide-line 2H NMR spectra of PC/PG membranes, with PC deuterated in the choline moiety, indicated that all three peptides interacted with the membrane surface and perturbed the orientation of the choline headgroups. Fluorescence and 31P magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR measurements indicated that PLB(1-23) and P-PLB(1-23) had a higher affinity for PC/PG membranes, which carry an overall negative surface charge, than for PC membranes, which have no net surface charge. The 31P MAS NMR spectra of the PC/PG membranes in the presence of PLM(37-72), PLB(1-23), and P-PLB(1-23) indicated that all three peptides induced clustering of the lipids into PC-enriched and PG-enriched regions. These findings support the theory that the cytoplasmic domains of PLB and PLM are stabilized by interacting with lipid headgroups at the membrane surface, and it is speculated that such interactions may modulate the functional properties of biological membranes.  相似文献   

20.
We have used electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to probe the homo- and heterooligomeric interactions of reconstituted sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) and its regulator phospholamban (PLB). SERCA is responsible for restoring calcium to the sarcoplasmic reticulum to allow muscle relaxation, whereas PLB inhibits cardiac SERCA unless phosphorylated at Ser16. To determine whether changes in protein association play essential roles in regulation, we detected the microsecond rotational diffusion of both proteins using saturation transfer EPR. Peptide synthesis was used to create a fully functional and monomeric PLB mutant with a spin label rigidly coupled to the backbone of the transmembrane helix, while SERCA was reacted with a Cys-specific spin label. Saturation transfer EPR revealed that sufficiently high lipid/protein ratios minimized self-association for both proteins. Under these dilute conditions, labeled PLB was substantially immobilized after co-reconstitution with unlabeled SERCA, reflecting their association to form the regulatory complex. Ser16 phosphorylation slightly increased this immobilization. Complementary measurements with labeled SERCA showed no change in mobility after co-reconstitution with unlabeled PLB, regardless of its phosphorylation state. We conclude that phosphorylating monomeric PLB can relieve SERCA inhibition without changes in the oligomeric states of these proteins, indicating a structural rearrangement within the heterodimeric regulatory complex.  相似文献   

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