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1.
WRKY group IId transcription factors interact with calmodulin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Park CY  Lee JH  Yoo JH  Moon BC  Choi MS  Kang YH  Lee SM  Kim HS  Kang KY  Chung WS  Lim CO  Cho MJ 《FEBS letters》2005,579(6):1545-1550
  相似文献   

2.
Moon BC  Choi MS  Kang YH  Kim MC  Cheong MS  Park CY  Yoo JH  Koo SC  Lee SM  Lim CO  Cho MJ  Chung WS 《FEBS letters》2005,579(18):3885-3890
Calmodulin (CaM), a key Ca(2+) sensor in eukaryotes, regulates diverse cellular processes by interacting with many proteins. To identify Ca(2+)/CaM-mediated signaling components, we screened an Arabidopsis expression library with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated Arabidopsis calmodulin2 (AtCaM2) and isolated a homolog of the UBP6 deubiquitinating enzyme family (AtUBP6) containing a Ca(2+)-dependent CaM-binding domain (CaMBD). The CaM-binding activity of the AtUBP6 CaMBD was confirmed by CaM mobility shift assay, phosphodiesterase competition assay and site-directed mutagenesis. Furthermore, expression of AtUBP6 restored canavanine resistance to the Deltaubp6 yeast mutant. This is the first demonstration that Ca(2+) signaling via CaM is involved in ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation and/or stabilization in plants.  相似文献   

3.
CyrA is a novel cysteine-rich protein with four EGFL repeats that was isolated using the calmodulin (CaM) binding overlay technique (CaMBOT), suggesting it is a CaM-binding protein (CaMBP). The full-length 63 kDa cyrA is cleaved into two major C-terminal fragments, cyrA-C45 and cyrA-C40. A putative CaM-binding domain was detected and both CaM-agarose binding and CaM immunoprecipitation verified that cyrA-C45 and cyrA-C40 each bind to CaM in both a Ca2+-dependent and -independent manner. cyrA-C45 was present continuously throughout growth and development but was secreted at high levels during the multicellular slug stage of Dictyostelium development. At this time, cyrA localizes to the extracellular matrix (ECM). ECM purification verified the presence of cyrA-C45. An 18 amino acid peptide (DdEGFL1) from the first EGFL repeat sequence of cyrA (EGFL1) that is present in both cyrA-C45 and -C40 enhances both random cell motility and cAMP-mediated chemotaxis. Here we reveal that the dose-dependent enhancement of motility by DdEGFL1 is related to the time of cell starvation. Addition of DdEGFL1 also inhibits cyrA proteolysis. The status of cyrA as an extracellular CaMBP was further clarified by the demonstration that CaM is secreted during development. Antagonism of CaM with W7 resulted in enhanced cyrA proteolysis suggesting a functional role for extracellular CaM in protecting CaMBPs from proteolysis. cyrA is the first extracellular CaMBP identified in Dictyostelium and since it is an ECM protein with EGF-like repeats that enhance cell motility and it likely also represents the first matricellular protein identified in a lower eukaryote.  相似文献   

4.
Ma L  Liang S  Jones RL  Lu YT 《Plant physiology》2004,135(3):1280-1293
A cDNA encoding a calcium (Ca2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase (CaMK) from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), NtCaMK1, was isolated by protein-protein interaction-based screening of a cDNA expression library using 35S-labeled CaM as a probe. The genomic sequence is about 24.6 kb, with 21 exons, and the full-length cDNA is 4.8 kb, with an open reading frame for NtCaMK1 consisting of 1,415 amino acid residues. NtCaMK1 has all 11 subdomains of a kinase catalytic domain, lacks EF hands for Ca2+-binding, and is structurally similar to other CaMKs in mammal systems. Biochemical analyses have identified NtCaMK1 as a Ca2+/CaMK since NtCaMK1 phosphorylated itself and histone IIIs as substrate only in the presence of Ca2+/CaM with a Km of 44.5 microm and a Vmax of 416.2 nm min(-1) mg(-1). Kinetic analysis showed that the kinase not previously autophosphorylated had a Km for the synthetic peptide syntide-2 of 22.1 microm and a Vmax of 644.1 nm min(-1) mg(-1) when assayed in the presence of Ca2+/CaM. Once the autophosphorylation of NtCaMK1 was initiated, the phosphorylated form displayed Ca2+/CaM-independent behavior, as many other CaMKs do. Analysis of the CaM-binding domain (CaMBD) in NtCaMK1 with truncated and site-directed mutated forms defined a stretch of 20 amino acid residues at positions 913 to 932 as the CaMBD with high CaM affinity (Kd = 5 nm). This CaMBD was classified as a 1-8-14 motif. The activation of NtCaMK1 was differentially regulated by three tobacco CaM isoforms (NtCaM1, NtCaM3, and NtCaM13). While NtCaM1 and NtCaM13 activated NtCaMK1 effectively, NtCaM3 did not activate the kinase.  相似文献   

5.
Transient influx of Ca(2+) constitutes an early event in the signaling cascades that trigger plant defense responses. However, the downstream components of defense-associated Ca(2+) signaling are largely unknown. Because Ca(2+) signals are mediated by Ca(2+)-binding proteins, including calmodulin (CaM), identification and characterization of CaM-binding proteins elicited by pathogens should provide insights into the mechanism by which Ca(2+) regulates defense responses. In this study, we isolated a gene encoding rice Mlo (Oryza sativa Mlo; OsMlo) using a protein-protein interaction-based screening of a cDNA expression library constructed from pathogen-elicited rice suspension cells. OsMlo has a molecular mass of 62 kDa and shares 65% sequence identity and scaffold topology with barley Mlo, a heptahelical transmembrane protein known to function as a negative regulator of broad spectrum disease resistance and leaf cell death. By using gel overlay assays, we showed that OsMlo produced in Escherichia coli binds to soybean CaM isoform-1 (SCaM-1) in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. We located a 20-amino acid CaM-binding domain (CaMBD) in the OsMlo C-terminal cytoplasmic tail that is necessary and sufficient for Ca(2+)-dependent CaM complex formation. Specific binding of the conserved CaMBD to CaM was corroborated by site-directed mutagenesis, a gel mobility shift assay, and a competition assay with a Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent enzyme. Expression of OsMlo was strongly induced by a fungal pathogen and by plant defense signaling molecules. We propose that binding of Ca(2+)-loaded CaM to the C-terminal tail may be a common feature of Mlo proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Nucleomorphin is a novel nuclear calmodulin (CaM)-binding protein (CaMBP) containing an extensive DEED (glu/asp repeat) domain that regulates nuclear number. GFP-constructs of the 38 kDa NumA1 isoform localize as intranuclear patches adjacent to the inner nuclear membrane. The translocation of CaMBPs into nuclei has previously been shown by others to be mediated by both classic nuclear localization sequences (NLSs) and CaM-binding domains (CaMBDs). Here we show that NumA1 possesses a CaMBD (171EDVSRFIKGKLLQKQQKIYKDLERF195) containing both calcium-dependent-binding motifs and an IQ-like motif for calcium-independent binding. GFP-constructs containing only NumA1 residues 1-129, lacking the DEED and CaMBDs, still localized as patches at the internal periphery of nuclei thus ruling out a direct role for the CaMBD in nuclear import. These constructs contained the amino acid residues 48KKSYQDPEIIAHSRPRK64 that include both a putative bipartite and classical NLS. GFP-bipartite NLS constructs localized uniformly within nuclei but not as patches. As with previous work, removal of the DEED domain resulted in highly multinucleate cells. However as shown here, multinuclearity only occurred when the NLS was present allowing the protein to enter nuclei. Site-directed mutation analysis in which the NLS was changed to 48EF49 abolished the stability of the GFP fusion at the protein but not RNA level preventing subcellular analyses. Cells transfected with the 48EF49 construct exhibited slowed growth when compared to parental AX3 cells and other GFP-NumA1 deletion mutants. In addition to identifying an NLS that is sufficient for nuclear translocation of nucleomorphin and ruling out CaM-binding in this event, this work shows that the nuclear localization of NumA1 is crucial to its ability to regulate nuclear number in Dictyostelium.  相似文献   

7.
Probing of Dictyostelium discoideum cell extracts after SDS-PAGE using (35)S-recombinant calmodulin (CaM) as a probe has revealed approximately three-dozen Ca(2+)-dependent calmodulin binding proteins. Here, we report the molecular cloning, expression, and subcellular localization of a gene encoding a novel calmodulin-binding protein (CaMBP); we have called nucleomorphin, from D. discoideum. A lambdaZAP cDNA expression library of cells from multicellular development was screened using a recombinant calmodulin probe ((35)S-VU1-CaM). The open reading frame of 1119 nucleotides encodes a polypeptide of 340 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 38.7 kDa and is constitutively expressed throughout the Dictyostelium life cycle. Nucleomorphin contains a highly acidic glutamic/aspartic acid inverted repeat (DEED) with significant similarity to the conserved nucleoplasmin domain and a putative transmembrane domain in the carboxyl-terminal region. Southern blotting reveals that nucleomorphin exists as a single copy gene. Using gel overlay assays and CaM-agarose we show that bacterially expressed nucleomorphin binds to bovine CaM in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. Amino-terminal fusion to the green fluorescence protein (GFP) showed that GFP-NumA localized to the nucleus as distinct arc-like patterns similar to heterochromatin regions. GFP-NumA lacking the acidic DEED repeat still showed arc-like accumulations at the nuclear periphery, but the number of nuclei in these cells was increased markedly compared with control cells. Cells expressing GFP-NumA lacking the transmembrane domain localized to the nuclear periphery but did not affect nuclear number or gross morphology. Nucleomorphin is the first nuclear CaMBP to be identified in Dictyostelium. Furthermore, these data present the first identification of a member of the nucleoplasmin family as a calmodulin-binding protein and suggest nucleomorphin has a role in nuclear structure in Dictyostelium.  相似文献   

8.
Calmodulin binding to the Fas death domain. Regulation by Fas activation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Fas (APO-1/CD95) is a cell surface receptor that initiates apoptotic pathways, and its cytoplasmic domain interacts with various molecules suggesting that Fas signaling is complex and regulated by multiple proteins. Calmodulin (CaM) is an intracellular Ca(2+)-binding protein, and it mediates many of the effects of Ca2+. Here, we demonstrate that CaM binds to Fas directly and identify the CaM-binding site on the cytoplasmic death domain (DD) of Fas. Fas binds to CaM-Sepharose and is co-immunoprecipitated with CaM. Other death receptors, such as tumor necrosis factor receptor, DR4, and DR5 do not bind to CaM. The interaction between Fas and CaM is Ca(2+)-dependent. Deletion mapping analysis with various GST-fused Fas cytoplasmic domain fragments revealed that the fragment containing helices 1, 2, and 3 of the Fas DD has the CaM-binding ability. Sequence analysis of this fragment predicted a potential CaM-binding site in helix 2 and connected loops. A valine 254 to asparagine mutation in this region, which is analogous to the identified mutant allele of Fas in lpr mice that have a deficiency in Fas-mediated apoptosis, showed reduced CaM binding. Computer modeling of the interaction between CaM and helix 2 of the Fas DD predicted that amino acids, which are important for Fas-CaM binding, and point mutations of these amino acids caused reduced Fas-CaM binding. The interaction between Fas and CaM is increased approximately 2-fold early upon Fas activation (at 30 min) and is decreased to approximately 50% of control at 2 h. These findings suggest a novel function of CaM in Fas-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A full-length cDNA coding a calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase gene was cloned from Physarum plasmodia poly(A)-RNA by polymerase chain reaction with the oligonucleotide primers that were designed after the amino acid sequence of highly conserved regions of myosin light-chain kinase. Sequence analysis of the cDNA revealed that this Physarum kinase was a 42,519-Da protein with an ATP-binding domain, Ser/Thr kinase active site signature, and CaM-binding domain. Expression of the cDNA in Escherichia coli demonstrated that the Physarum kinase in the presence of Ca2+ and CaM phosphorylated the recombinant phosphorylatable light chain (PLc) of Physarum myosin II. The peptide analysis after proteolysis of the phosphorylated PLc indicated that Ser 18 was phosphorylated. The site was confirmed by the failure of phosphorylation of PLc, the Ser 18 of which was replaced by Ala. The physiological role of the kinase will be discussed with special reference to the 55-kDa kinase, which had been previously purified from Physarum plasmodia for phosphorylated PLc.  相似文献   

11.
Ca2+-calmodulin (CaM)-binding proteins in rat testes were characterized by assays for CaM-binding activity using the CaM-overlay method on transblots of electrophoresed gels and purification by gel-filtration, ion exchange, and adsorption chromatographies. A major CaM-binding protein complex (CaMBP) was identified and found to be comprised of three proteins with molecular masses 110, 100, and 70 kDa. Amino acid sequence analyses of lysylendopeptidase digests from these proteins indicated that all of the constituents of CaMBP are very similar to the members of the heat-shock protein family, i.e., the 110-kDa protein is similar to the APG-2/94 kDa rat ischemia-responsive protein, the 100-kDa protein is similar to the rat counterpart of the mouse APG-1/94 kDa osmotic stress protein, and the 70-kDa protein is similar to the rat testis-specific major heat-shock protein (HSP70). Immunohistochemistry using anti-CaMBP and anti-CaM antibodies demonstrated that CaMBP was co-localized with CaM in the cytoplasm of pachytene spermatocytes and nuclei of round spermatids. In addition, CaMBP, but not CaM, was localized at a high level in the residual bodies of elongated spermatids. The possible relevance of CaMBP to regulation of cell cycle progression and spermatogenesis is discussed in this paper.  相似文献   

12.
Identification of the calmodulin binding domain of connexin 43   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Calmodulin (CaM) has been implicated in mediating the Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of gap junctions. This report identifies a CaM-binding motif comprising residues 136-158 in the intracellular loop of Cx43. A 23-mer peptide encompassing this CaM-binding motif was shown to bind Ca(2+)-CaM with 1:1 stoichiometry by using various biophysical approaches, including surface plasmon resonance, circular dichroism, fluorescence spectroscopy, and NMR. Far UV circular dichroism studies indicated that the Cx43-derived peptide increased its alpha-helical contents on CaM binding. Fluorescence and NMR studies revealed conformational changes of both the peptide and CaM following formation of the CaM-peptide complex. The apparent dissociation constant of the peptide binding to CaM in physiologic K(+) is in the range of 0.7-1 microM. Upon binding of the peptide to CaM, the apparent K(d) of Ca(2+) for CaM decreased from 2.9 +/- 0.1 to 1.6 +/- 0.1 microM, and the Hill coefficient n(H) increased from 2.1 +/- 0.1 to 3.3 +/- 0.5. Transient expression in HeLa cells of two different mutant Cx43-EYFP constructs without the putative Cx43 CaM-binding site eliminated the Ca(2+)-dependent inhibition of Cx43 gap junction permeability, confirming that residues 136-158 in the intracellular loop of Cx43 contain the CaM-binding site that mediates the Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of Cx43 gap junctions. Our results provide the first direct evidence that CaM binds to a specific region of the ubiquitous gap junction protein Cx43 in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner, providing a molecular basis for the well characterized Ca(2+)-dependent inhibition of Cx43-containing gap junctions.  相似文献   

13.
Cx50 (connexin50), a member of the α-family of gap junction proteins expressed in the lens of the eye, has been shown to be essential for normal lens development. In the present study, we identified a CaMBD [CaM (calmodulin)-binding domain] (residues 141-166) in the intracellular loop of Cx50. Elevations in intracellular Ca2+ concentration effected a 95% decline in gj (junctional conductance) of Cx50 in N2a cells that is likely to be mediated by CaM, because inclusion of the CaM inhibitor calmidazolium prevented this Ca2+-dependent decrease in gj. The direct involvement of the Cx50 CaMBD in this Ca2+/CaM-dependent regulation was demonstrated further by the inclusion of a synthetic peptide encompassing the CaMBD in both whole-cell patch pipettes, which effectively prevented the intracellular Ca2+-dependent decline in gj. Biophysical studies using NMR and fluorescence spectroscopy reveal further that the peptide stoichiometrically binds to Ca2+/CaM with an affinity of ~5 nM. The binding of the peptide expanded the Ca2+-sensing range of CaM by increasing the Ca2+ affinity of the C-lobe of CaM, while decreasing the Ca2+ affinity of the N-lobe of CaM. Overall, these results demonstrate that the binding of Ca2+/CaM to the intracellular loop of Cx50 is critical for mediating the Ca2+-dependent inhibition of Cx50 gap junctions in the lens of the eye.  相似文献   

14.
The Ca2+-sensing receptor (CaSR) is a member of family C of the GPCRs responsible for sensing extracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]o) levels, maintaining extracellular Ca2+ homeostasis, and transducing Ca2+ signaling from the extracellular milieu to the intracellular environment. In the present study, we have demonstrated a Ca2+-dependent, stoichiometric interaction between CaM and a CaM-binding domain (CaMBD) located within the C terminus of CaSR (residues 871–898). Our studies suggest a wrapping around 1–14-like mode of interaction that involves global conformational changes in both lobes of CaM with concomitant formation of a helical structure in the CaMBD. More importantly, the Ca2+-dependent association between CaM and the C terminus of CaSR is critical for maintaining proper responsiveness of intracellular Ca2+ responses to changes in extracellular Ca2+ and regulating cell surface expression of the receptor.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Tuberization in potato is controlled by hormonal and environmental signals. Ca(2+), an important intracellular messenger, and calmodulin (CaM), one of the primary Ca(2+) sensors, have been implicated in controlling diverse cellular processes in plants including tuberization. The regulation of cellular processes by CaM involves its interaction with other proteins. To understand the role of Ca(2+)/CaM in tuberization, we have screened an expression library prepared from developing tubers with biotinylated CaM. This screening resulted in isolation of a cDNA encoding a novel CaM-binding protein (potato calmodulin-binding protein (PCBP)). Ca(2+)-dependent binding of the cDNA-encoded protein to CaM is confirmed by (35)S-labeled CaM. The full-length cDNA is 5 kb long and encodes a protein of 1309 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence showed significant similarity with a hypothetical protein from another plant, Arabidopsis. However, no homologs of PCBP are found in nonplant systems, suggesting that it is likely to be specific to plants. Using truncated versions of the protein and a synthetic peptide in CaM binding assays we mapped the CaM-binding region to a 20-amino acid stretch (residues 1216-1237). The bacterially expressed protein containing the CaM-binding domain interacted with three CaM isoforms (CaM2, CaM4, and CaM6). PCBP is encoded by a single gene and is expressed differentially in the tissues tested. The expression of CaM, PCBP, and another CaM-binding protein is similar in different tissues and organs. The predicted protein contained seven putative nuclear localization signals and several strong PEST motifs. Fusion of the N-terminal region of the protein containing six of the seven nuclear localization signals to the reporter gene beta-glucuronidase targeted the reporter gene to the nucleus, suggesting a nuclear role for PCBP.  相似文献   

17.
Yamniuk AP  Vogel HJ 《Biochemistry》2005,44(8):3101-3111
The conserved calmodulin (CaM) isoform SCaM-1 and the divergent SCaM-4 from soybean bind to many of the same target enzymes, but differentially activate or competitively inhibit them. Class 1 target enzymes are activated by both calcium (Ca(2+))-bound SCaM-1 (Ca(2+)-SCaM-1) and Ca(2+)-bound SCaM-4 (Ca(2+)-SCaM-4), while class 2 enzymes are activated by Ca(2+)-SCaM-1 but competitively inhibited by Ca(2+)-SCaM-4, and class 3 enzymes are activated by Ca(2+)-SCaM-4 but competitively inhibited by Ca(2+)-SCaM-1. To determine whether these differences can be attributed to unique interactions with the CaM-binding domains (CaMBD) of these enzymes, we have studied the binding of each protein to peptides derived from the CaMBD of a representative target enzyme from each of these three classes. Using a combination of NMR spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry, we demonstrate that the N- and C-domains of either Ca(2+)-SCaM bind to each peptide to form structurally compact complexes driven by the burial of hydrophobic surfaces. Interestingly, the interactions with the CaMBD peptides from classes 1 and 2 are similar for the two proteins; however, binding to the peptide from class 3 is structurally and thermodynamically distinct for Ca(2+)-SCaM-1 and -4. We also demonstrate that both calcium-free SCaM-1 (apo-SCaM-1) and calcium-free SCaM-4 (apo-SCaM-4) bind to the CaMBD from cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase, and that the interactions are similar to each other and to the interactions with apo-mammalian CaM. Therefore, the apo-SCaMs are also capable of binding to the same target enzymes, which could provide an additional mechanism for CaM-dependent signaling in plants.  相似文献   

18.
A cDNA encoding a pea nuclear apyrase was previously cloned. Overexpressions of a full-length and a truncated cDNA have been successfully expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3). The resulting fusion proteins, apyrase and the C-terminus (residues 315-453) of apyrase, were used for calmodulin (CaM) binding and phosphorylation studies. Fusion protein apyrase but not the C-terminus of apyrase can be recognized by polyclonal antibody pc480. This suggested that the motif recognized by pc480 was located in the N-terminal region of apyrase. The recombinant apyrase protein also showed an activity 70 times higher than that of endogenous apyrase using ATP as a substrate. The recombinant apyrase has a preference for ATP more than other nucleoside triphosphate substrates. CaM can bind to recombinant apyrase, but not to the C-terminus of apyrase. This implies that the CaM-binding domain must be in the first 315 amino acids of the N-terminal region of apyrase. We found that one segment from residue 293 to 308 was a good candidate for the CaM-binding domain. This segment 293 FNKCKNTIRKALKLNY 308 has a basic amphiphilic-helical structure, which shows the predominance of basic residues on one side and hydrophobic residues on the other when displayed on a helical wheel plot. Using the gel mobility shift binding assay, this synthetic peptide was shown to bind to CaM, indicating that it is the CaM-binding domain. Both recombinant apyrase and the C-terminus of apyrase can be phosphorylated by a recombinant human protein kinase CKII. Phosphorylation does not affect CaM binding to recombinant apyrase. However, CaM does inhibit CKII phosphorylation of recombinant apyrase and this inhibition can be blocked by 5 mM EGTA.  相似文献   

19.
Protein phosphatases regulated by calmodulin (CaM) mediate the action of intracellular Ca2+ and modulate functions of various target proteins by dephosphorylation. In plants, however, the role of Ca2+ in the regulation of protein dephosphorylation is not well understood due to a lack of information on characteristics of CaM-regulated protein phosphatases. Screening of a cDNA library of the moss Physcomitrella patens by using 35S-labeled calmodulin as a ligand resulted in identification of a gene, PCaMPP, that encodes a protein serine/threonine phosphatase with 373 amino acids. PCaMPP had a catalytic domain with sequence similarity to type 2C protein phosphatases (PP2Cs) with six conserved metal-associating amino acid residues and also had an extra C-terminal domain. Recombinant GST fusion proteins of PCaMPP exhibited Mn2+-dependent phosphatase activity, and the activity was inhibited by pyrophosphate and 1 mm Ca2+ but not by okadaic acid, orthovanadate, or beta-glycerophosphate. Furthermore, the PCaMPP activity was increased 1.7-fold by addition of CaM at nanomolar concentrations. CaM binding assays using deletion proteins and a synthetic peptide revealed that the CaM-binding region resides within the basic amphiphilic amino acid region 324-346 in the C-terminal domain. The CaM-binding region had sequence similarity to amino acids in one of three alpha-helices in the C-terminal domain of human PP2Calpha, suggesting a novel role of the C-terminal domains for the phosphatase activity. These results provide the first evidence showing possible regulation of PP2C-related phosphatases by Ca2+/CaM in plants. Genes similar to PCaMPP were found in genomes of various higher plant species, suggesting that PCaMPP-type protein phosphatases are conserved in land plants.  相似文献   

20.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a Ca2+ signal transducing protein that binds and activates many cellular enzymes with physiological relevance, including the mammalian nitric oxide synthase (NOS) isozymes: endothelial NOS (eNOS), neuronal NOS (nNOS), and inducible NOS (iNOS). The mechanism of CaM binding and activation to the iNOS enzyme is poorly understood in part due to the strength of the bound complex and the difficulty of assessing the role played by regions outside of the CaM-binding domain. To further elucidate these processes, we have developed the methodology to investigate CaM binding to the iNOS holoenzyme and generate CaM mutant proteins selectively labeled with fluorescent dyes at specific residues in the N-terminal lobe, C-terminal lobe, or linker region of the protein. In the present study, an iNOS CaM coexpression system allowed for the investigation of CaM binding to the holoenzyme; three different mutant CaM proteins with cysteine substitutions at residues T34 (N-domain), K75 (central linker), and T110 (C-domain) were fluorescently labeled with acrylodan or Alexa Fluor 546 C5-maleimide. These proteins were used to investigate the differential association of each region of CaM with the three NOS isoforms. We have also N-terminally labeled an iNOS CaM-binding domain peptide with dabsyl chloride in order to perform FRET studies between Alexa-labeled residues in the N- and C-terminal domains of CaM to determine CaM's orientation when associated to iNOS. Our FRET results show that CaM binds to the iNOS CaM-binding domain in an antiparallel orientation. Our steady-state fluorescence and circular dichroism studies show that both the N- and C-terminal EF hand pairs of CaM bind to the CaM-binding domain peptide of iNOS in a Ca2+-independent manner; however, only the C-terminal domain showed large Ca2+-dependent conformational changes when associated with the target sequence. Steady-state fluorescence showed that Alexa-labeled CaM proteins are capable of binding to holo-iNOS coexpressed with nCaM, but this complex is a transient species and can be displaced with the addition of excess CaM. Our results show that CaM does not bind to iNOS in a sequential manner as previously proposed for the nNOS enzyme. This investigation provides additional insight into why iNOS remains active even under basal levels of Ca2+ in the cell.  相似文献   

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