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 15 毫秒
1.
Binding of calcium to calmodulin (CaM) causes a conformational change in this ubiquitous calcium regulatory protein that allows the activation of many target proteins. Met residues make up a large portion of its hydrophobic target binding surfaces. In this work, we have studied the surface exposure of the Met residues in the apo- and calcium-bound states of CaM in solution. Complexes of calcium-CaM with synthetic peptides derived from the CaM-binding domains of myosin light chain kinase, constitutive nitric-oxide synthase, and CaM-dependent protein kinase I were also studied. The surface exposure was measured by NMR by studying the effects of the soluble nitroxide spin label, 4-hydroxyl-2,2,6, 6-tetramethylpiperidinyl-1-oxy, on the line widths and relaxation rates of the Met methyl resonances in samples of biosynthetically 13C-methyl-Met-labeled CaM. The Met residues move from an almost completely buried state in apo-CaM to an essentially fully exposed state in Ca2+4-CaM. Binding of two Ca2+ to the C-terminal lobe of CaM causes full exposure of the C-terminal Met residues and a partial exposure of the N-terminal Met side chains. Binding of the three target peptides blocks the access of the nitroxide surface probe to nearly all Met residues, although the mode of binding is distinct for the three peptides studied. These data show that calcium binding to CaM controls the surface exposure of the Met residues, thereby providing the switch for target protein binding.  相似文献   

2.
The interactions between the abundant methionine residues of the calcium regulatory protein calmodulin (CaM) and several of its binding targets were probed using fluorescence spectroscopy. Tryptophan steady-state fluorescence from peptides encompassing the CaM-binding domains of the target proteins myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) and caldesmon site A and B (CaD A, CaD B), and the model peptide melittin showed Ca(2+)-dependent blue-shifts in their maximum emission wavelength when complexed with wild-type CaM. Blue-shifts were also observed for complexes in which the CaM methionine residues were replaced by selenomethionine, norleucine and ethionine, and when a quadruple methionine to leucine C-terminal mutant of CaM was studied. Quenching of the tryptophan fluorescence intensity was observed with selenomethionine, but not with norleucine or ethionine substituted protein. Fluorescence quenching studies with added potassium iodide (KI) demonstrate that the non-native proteins limit the solvent accessibility of the Trp in the MLCK peptide to levels close to that of the wild-type CaM-MLCK interaction. Our results show that the methionine residues from CaM are highly sensitive to the target peptide in question, confirming the importance of their role in binding interactions. In addition, we provide evidence that the nature of binding in the CaM-CaD B complex is unique compared with the other complexes studied, as the Trp residue of this peptide remains partially solvent exposed upon binding to CaM.  相似文献   

3.
We have determined solution structures of the N-terminal half domain (N-domain) of yeast calmodulin (YCM0-N, residues 1-77) in the apo and Ca(2+)-saturated forms by NMR spectroscopy. The Ca(2+)-binding sites of YCM0-N consist of a pair of helix-loop-helix motifs (EF-hands), in which the loops are linked by a short beta-sheet. The binding of two Ca(2+) causes large rearrangement of the four alpha-helices and exposes the hydrophobic surface as observed for vertebrate calmodulin (CaM). Within the observed overall conformational similarity in the peptide backbone, several significant conformational differences were observed between the two proteins, which originated from the 38% disagreement in amino acid sequences. The beta-sheet in apo YCM0-N is strongly twisted compared with that in the N-domain of CaM, while it turns to the normal more stable conformation on Ca(2+) binding. YCM0-N shows higher cooperativity in Ca(2+) binding than the N-domain of CaM, and the observed conformational change of the beta-sheet is a possible cause of the highly cooperative Ca(2+) binding. The hydrophobic surface on Ca(2+)-saturated YCM0-N appears less flexible due to the replacements of Met51, Met71, and Val55 in the hydrophobic surface of CaM with Leu51, Leu71, and Ile55, which is thought to be one of reasons for the poor activation of target enzymes by yeast CaM.  相似文献   

4.
The ability of calcium-bound calmodulin (CaM) to recognize most of its target peptides is caused by its binding to two hydrophobic residues ('anchors'). In most of the CaM complexes, the anchors pack against the hydrophobic pockets of the CaM domains and are surrounded by fully conserved Met side chains. Here, by using metadynamics simulations, we investigate quantitatively the energetics of the final step of this process using the M13 peptide, which has a high affinity and spans the sequence of the skeletal myosin light chain kinase, an important natural CaM target. We established the accuracy of our calculations by a comparison between calculated and NMR-derived structural and dynamical properties. Our calculations provide novel insights into the mechanism of protein/peptide recognition: we show that the process is associated with a free energy gain similar to that experimentally measured for the CaM complex with the homologous smooth muscle MLCK peptide (Ehrhardt et al., 1995, Biochemistry 34, 2731). We suggest that binding is dominated by the entropic effect, in agreement with previous proposals. Furthermore, we explain the role of conserved methionines by showing that the large flexibility of these side chains is a key feature of the binding mechanism. Finally, we provide a rationale for the experimental observation that in all CaM complexes the C-terminal domain seems to be hierarchically more important in establishing the interaction.  相似文献   

5.
D Yin  H Sun  R F Weaver  T C Squier 《Biochemistry》1999,38(41):13654-13660
To investigate the role of hydrophobic interactions involving methionine side chains in facilitating the productive association between calmodulin (CaM) and the plasma membrane (PM) Ca-ATPase, we have substituted the polar amino acid Gln for Met at multiple positions in both the amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains of CaM. Conformationally sensitive fluorescence signals indicate that these mutations have little effect on the backbone fold of the carboxyl-terminal domain of CaM. The insertion of multiple Gln in either globular domain results in a decrease in the apparent affinity of CaM for the PM-Ca-ATPase. However, despite the multiple substitution of Gln for four methionines at positions 36, 51, 71, and 72 in the amino-terminal domain or for three methionines at positions 124, 144, and 145 in the carboxyl-terminal domain, these mutant CaMs are able to fully activate the PM-Ca-ATPase. Thus, although these CaM mutants have a decreased affinity for the CaM-binding site on the Ca-ATPase, they retain the ability to fully activate the Ca-ATPase at saturating concentrations of CaM. The role of individual methionines in modulating the affinity between the carboxyl terminus and the PM-Ca-ATPase was further investigated through the substitution of individual Met with Gln. Upon substitution of Met(124) and Met(144) with Gln, there is a 5- and 10-fold increase in the amount of CaM necessary to obtain half-maximal activation of the PM-Ca-ATPase, indicating that these methionine side chains participate in the high-affinity association between CaM and the PM-Ca-ATPase. However, substitution of Gln for Met(145) results in no change in the apparent affinity between CaM and the PM-Ca-ATPase, indicating that in contrast to all other known CaM targets, Met(145) does not participate in the interaction between CaM and the PM-Ca-ATPase. These results emphasize differences in the binding interactions between individual methionines in CaM and different target enzymes, and suggest that hydrophobic interactions between methionines in CaM and the binding site on the PM-Ca-ATPase are not necessary for enzyme activation. Calculation of the binding affinities of individual CaM domains associated with activation of the PM-Ca-ATPase suggests that mutations of methionines located in either domain of CaM can decrease the initial high-affinity association between CaM and the PM-Ca-ATPase, but have little effect upon the subsequent binding of the opposing globular domain. These results suggest that the initial associations between CaM and the CaM-binding sequence in the PM-Ca-ATPase are guided by nonspecific hydrophobic interactions involving both domains of CaM.  相似文献   

6.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a cytosolic Ca(2+) signal-transducing protein that binds and activates many different cellular enzymes with physiological relevance, including the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) isozymes. CaM consists of two globular domains joined by a central linker; each domain contains an EF hand pair. Four different mutant CaM proteins were used to investigate the role of the two CaM EF hand pairs in the binding and activation of the mammalian inducible NOS (iNOS) and the constitutive NOS (cNOS) enzymes, endothelial NOS (eNOS) and neuronal NOS (nNOS). The role of the CaM EF hand pairs in different aspects of NOS enzymatic function was monitored using three assays that monitor electron transfer within a NOS homodimer. Gel filtration studies were used to determine the effect of Ca(2+) on the dimerization of iNOS when coexpressed with CaM and the mutant CaM proteins. Gel mobility shift assays were performed to determine binding stoichiometries of CaM proteins to synthetic NOS CaM-binding domain peptides. Our results show that the N-terminal EF hand pair of CaM contains important binding and activating elements for iNOS, whereas the N-terminal EF hand pair in conjunction with the central linker region is required for cNOS enzyme binding and activation. The iNOS enzyme must be coexpressed with wild-type CaM in vitro because of its propensity to aggregate when residues of the highly hydrophobic CaM-binding domain are exposed to an aqueous environment. A possible role for iNOS aggregation in vivo is also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Calmodulin (CaM)-dependent myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) plays a key role in activation of smooth muscle contraction. A soybean isoform of CaM, SCaM-4 (77% identical to human CaM) fails to activate MLCK, whereas SCaM-1 (90.5% identical to human CaM) is as effective as CaM. We exploited this difference to gain insights into the structural requirements in CaM for activation of MLCK. A chimera (domain I of SCaM-4 and domains II-IV of SCaM-1) behaved like SCaM4, and analysis of site-specific mutants of SCaM-1 indicated that K30E and G40D mutations were responsible for the reduction in activation of MLCK. Competition experiments showed that SCaM-4 binds to the CaM-binding site of MLCK with high affinity. Replacement of CaM in skinned smooth muscle by exogenous CaM or SCaM-1, but not SCaM-4, restored Ca(2+)-dependent contraction. K30E/M36I/G40D SCaM-1 was a poor activator of contraction, but site-specific mutants, K30E, M36I and G40D, each restored Ca(2+)-induced contraction to CaM-depleted skinned smooth muscle, consistent with their capacity to activate MLCK. Interpretation of these results in light of the high-resolution structures of (Ca(2+))(4)-CaM, free and complexed with the CaM-binding domain of MLCK, indicates that a surface domain containing Lys(30) and Gly(40) and residues from the C-terminal domain is created upon binding to MLCK, formation of which is required for activation of MLCK. Interactions between this activation domain and a region of MLCK distinct from the known CaM-binding domain are required for removal of the autoinhibitory domain from the active site, i.e., activation of MLCK, or this domain may be required to stabilize the conformation of (Ca(2+))(4)-CaM necessary for MLCK activation.  相似文献   

8.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (smMLCK) is a Ca(2+)-calmodulin (CaM)-dependent enzyme that phosphorylates the 20-kDa light chains of myosin. In a previous study (Bagchi, I.C., Kemp, B.E., and Means, A.R. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 15843-15849), we expressed in bacteria a 40-kDa fragment of smMLCK that displayed Ca(2+)-CaM-regulated catalytic activity. Initial mutagenesis experiments indicated that Gly811 and Arg812 were important for CaM-dependent activation of this 40-kDa enzyme. We have now carried out site-directed mutagenesis within the CaM-binding domain (Ser787 to Leu813) of this enzyme to identify amino acids that are critical for CaM binding and activation. Our studies reveal that the individual mutation of several hydrophobic amino acid residues such as Leu813, Ile810, and Trp800 and the glycine residue Gly804 also resulted in a severe decrease in or complete loss of CaM binding and activation of smMLCK. The hydrophobic residue (Trp800) and the basic residue (Arg812), both of which are mandatory for CaM binding to smMLCK, occur in analogous positions within the CaM-binding domain of a number of CaM-regulated enzymes. We conclude from these results that CaM binding by smMLCK is determined by an interplay of specific hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions which appear to be conserved among various target enzymes of CaM.  相似文献   

9.
利用碘乙酰胺氮氧自由基标记钙调蛋白研究了它与三氟拉嗪(TFP)、酸枣仁皂甙A(JuA)的相互作用。结果表明,每分子CaM分别至少可以结合两分子的TFP及JuA,它们的作用影响了CaM上的Met残基(主要是71,72和76)的环境,使反应自由基运动自由度的旋转相关时间τR值下降。据τR变化的趋势,推测TFP和JuA都是通过疏水作用结合到CaM上的疏水沟区,但两者的结合位点可能不同。  相似文献   

10.
The activation of six target enzymes by calmodulin phosphorylated on Tyr99 (PCaM) and the binding affinities of their respective calmodulin binding domains were tested. The six enzymes were: myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), 3'-5'-cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE), plasma membrane (PM) Ca2+-ATPase, Ca2+-CaM dependent protein phosphatase 2B (calcineurin), neuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and type II Ca2+-calmodulin dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase II). In general, tyrosine phosphorylation led to an increase in the activatory properties of calmodulin (CaM). For plasma membrane (PM) Ca2+-ATPase, PDE and CaM kinase II, the primary effect was a decrease in the concentration at which half maximal velocity was attained (Kact). In contrast, for calcineurin and NOS phosphorylation of CaM significantly increased the Vmax. For MLCK, however, neither Vmax nor Kact were affected by tyrosine phosphorylation. Direct determination by fluorescence techniques of the dissociation constants with synthetic peptides corresponding to the CaM-binding domain of the six analysed enzymes revealed that phosphorylation of Tyr99 on CaM generally increased its affinity for the peptides.  相似文献   

11.
The heterodimer complex of calmodulin (CaM) and the protein kinase catalytic subunit of myosin light chain kinase from vertebrate smooth muscle and non-muscle tissues (sm/nmMLCK) is one of the most extensively characterized CaM-regulated enzyme complexes and it has an established in vivo role in the transduction of calcium signals into biological responses. We have used a combination of approaches to the study of CaM and sm/nmMLCK in order to derive initial insight into the key features of each protein and of the CaM-MLCK heterodimeric complex that are involved in protein-protein and calcium-protein recognition and regulation of enzyme activity. On-going studies are described here that include site-specific mutagenesis, fluorescence spectroscopy, enzymology and peptide analog analysis. These and previous results indicate that: (1), both electrostatic and hydrophobic features are important in the functionally correct interactions between CaM and MLCK; (2), even the interactions between CaM and peptide analogs of the CaM binding site of MLCK are heterogeneous and non-trivial in nature; (3), amino-acid residues that have been conserved in CaM across millions of years of evolution and that are conserved in CaMs with quantitative MLCK activator activity can be mutated without any detectable effect on activity and (4), structures different from the prototypical EF-hand domain of CaM can have similar calcium-binding activity in the presence of a CaM binding structure.  相似文献   

12.
Several calmodulin (CaM) mutants were engineered in an effort to identify the functional implications of the oxidation of individual methionines in CaM on the activity of the constitutive isoforms of nitric oxide synthase (NOS). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to substitute the majority of methionines with leucines. Substitution of all nine methionine residues in CaM with leucines had minimal effects on the binding affinity or maximal enzyme activation for either the neuronal (nNOS) or endothelial (eNOS) isoform. Selective substitution permitted determination of the functional consequences of the site-specific oxidation of Met(144) and Met(145) on the regulation of electron transfer within nNOS and eNOS. Site-specific oxidation of Met(144) and Met(145) resulted in changes in the CaM concentration necessary for half-maximal activation of nNOS and eNOS, suggesting that these side chains are involved in stabilizing the productive association between CaM and NOS. However, the site-specific oxidation of Met(144) and Met(145) had essentially no effect on the maximal extent of eNOS activation in the presence of saturating concentrations of CaM. In contrast, the site-specific oxidation of Met(144) (but not Met(145)) resulted in a reduction in the level of nNOS activation that was associated with decreased rates of electron transfer within the reductase domain. Thus, nNOS and eNOS exhibit different functional sensitivities to conditions of oxidative stress that are expected to oxidize CaM. This may underlie some aspects of the observed differences in the sensitivities of proteins in vasculature and neuronal tissues to nitration that are linked to NOS activation and the associated generation of peroxynitrite.  相似文献   

13.
The classic type of transient receptor potential channel (TRPC) is a molecular candidate for Ca(2+)-permeable cation channels in mammalian cells. Because TRPC channels have calmodulin (CaM) binding sites at their COOH termini, we investigated the effect of CaM on mTRPC5. TRPC5 was initially activated by muscarinic stimulation with 50 microM carbachol and then decayed rapidly even in the presence of carbachol. Intracellular CaM (150 microg/ml) increased the amplitude of mTRPC5 current activated by muscarinic stimulation. CaM antagonists (W-7 and calmidazolium) inhibited mTRPC5 currents when they were applied during the activation of mTRPC5. Pretreatment of W-7 and calmidazolium also inhibited the activation of mTRPC5 current. Inhibitors of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) inhibited the activation of mTRPC5 currents, whereas inhibitors of CaM-dependent protein kinase II did not. Small interfering RNA against cardiac type MLCK also inhibited the activation of mTRPC5 currents. However, inhibitors of CaM or MLCK did not show any effect on GTPgammaS-induced currents. Application of both Rho kinase inhibitor and MLCK inhibitor inhibited GTPgammaS-induced currents. We conclude that CaM and MLCK modulates the activation process of mTRPC5.  相似文献   

14.
CaM (calmodulin) has been implicated in the regulation of IP3R [IP3 (inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate) receptors] and a recent report suggested that CaM tightly tethered to IP3R was essential for IP3R activation [Nadif Kasri, Torok, Galione, Garnham, Callewaert, Missiaen, Parys and De Smedt (2006) J. Biol. Chem. 281, 8332-8338]. In the present study, we confirm that a CaM-binding peptide derived from MLCK (myosin light chain kinase) inhibits IP3-evoked Ca2+ release via all three IP3R subtypes. However,inhibition by MLCK peptide is not mimicked by other CaM antagonists that effectively block regulation of IP3R by CaM. Inhibition by MLCK peptide is rapid, fully reversible and occurs under conditions where there is no CaM associated with IP3R. MLCK peptide stimulates IP3 binding to IP3R1 and to its bacterially expressed N-terminal, but not after removal of the suppressor domain (residues 1-224).We suggest that MLCK peptide mimics a sequence within the suppressor domain that is similar to a1-8-14 CaM-binding motif. The peptide may thereby unzip an interdomain interaction that is essential for IP3R activation. We conclude that CaM is not essential for IP3R activation, and that MLCK peptide is a selective antagonist of the IP3R that binds directly to the N-terminal to uncouple IP3 binding from channel gating. The results of the present study highlight the importance of the suppressor domain in IP3R activation and suggest that MLCK peptide may provide a route to novel non-competitive antagonists of IP3R.  相似文献   

15.
Calmodulin (CaM), the ubiquitous Ca(2+)-sensing protein, consists of two globular domains separated by a flexible central linker that properly orients CaM's globular domains to bind and regulate various intracellular proteins, including the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes. In the present study we determined that the charge and length of the central linker of CaM has an effect on the binding and activation of the NOS isozymes by using a variety of charge CaM mutants (T79D, S81D, T79D/S81D, S101D and E84R/E87K) and CaM mutants with residues removed (Delta84, Delta83-84, and Delta81-84). Our kinetic and spectropolarimetry results demonstrate that the NOS enzymes are not adversely affected by the CaM mutants with the exceptions of S101D, E84R/E87K and the deletion of residue 84. Electrostatic interactions in the central linker between residues 82-87 in combination with hydrophobic interactions in the globular domains of CaM are important for its tight association to inducible NOS.  相似文献   

16.
The first primary structure for a nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) has been determined by elucidation of the cDNA sequence encoding the protein kinase from chicken embryo fibroblasts, and insight into the molecular mechanism of calmodulin (CaM) recognition and activation has been obtained by the use of site-specific mutagenesis and suppressor mutant analysis. Treatment of chicken and mouse fibroblasts with antisense oligodeoxynucleotides based on the cDNA sequence results in an apparent decrease in MLCK levels, an altered morphology reminiscent of that seen in v-src-transformed cells, and a possible effect on cell proliferation. nmMLCK is distinct from and larger than smooth muscle MLCK (smMLCK), although their extended DNA sequence identity is suggestive of a close genetic relationship not found with skeletal muscle MLCK. The analysis of 20 mutant MLCKs indicates that the autoinhibitory and CaM recognition activities are centered in distinct but functionally coupled amino acid sequences (residues 1,068-1,080 and 1,082-1,101, respectively). Analysis of enzyme chimeras, random mutations, inverted sequences, and point mutations in the 1,082-1,101 region demonstrates its functional importance for CaM recognition but not autoinhibition. In contrast, certain mutations in the 1,068-1,080 region result in a constitutively active MLCK that still binds CaM. These results suggest that CaM/protein kinase complexes use similar structural themes to transduce calcium signals into selective biological responses, demonstrate a direct link between nmMLCK and non-muscle cell function, and provide a firm basis for genetic studies and analyses of how nmMLCK is involved in development and cell proliferation.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Myosin II regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation by Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is implicated in many cellular actin cytoskeletal functions. We examined MLCK activation quantitatively with a fluorescent biosensor MLCK where Ca(2+)-dependent increases in kinase activity were coincident with decreases in fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) in vitro. In cells stably transfected with CaM sensor MLCK, increasing [Ca(2+)](i) increased MLCK activation and RLC phosphorylation coincidently. There was no evidence for CaM binding but not activating MLCK at low [Ca(2+)](i). At saturating [Ca(2+)](i) MLCK was not fully activated probably due to limited availability of cellular Ca(2+)/CaM.  相似文献   

19.
Chin D  Schreiber JL  Means AR 《Biochemistry》1999,38(46):15061-15069
Segments of the autoregulatory domain of MK, a catalytically active fragment of the monomeric smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (smMLCK) (residues 472-972), were replaced with their counterparts from a homologous but multimeric enzyme, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM KII). Chimeric proteins in which both the autoregulatory and oligomerization domains of CaM KII (residues 281-478) were substituted for residues 781-972 of smMLCK, MK(CK281-478), or only the autoregulatory domain of CaM KII (residues 281-315) was exchanged for residues 781-813 of smMLCK, MK(CK281-315), exhibited significant enzymatic activity in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM. In contrast, both MK and a chimeric protein in which the C-terminal half of the autoregulatory domain of smMLCK was replaced with CaM KII residues 301-315, MK(CK301-315), were inactive in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM. These results indicate that the sequence of the N-terminal half of the autoregulatory domain of smMLCK is important for complete autoinhibition of its enzymatic activity. All proteins bound to Ca(2+)/CaM, and the chimeric proteins MK(CK281-478) and MK(CK281-315) were activated by Ca(2+)/CaM with activation constants (K(CaM)) and maximal enzymatic activities comparable to those of the wild-type MK enzyme. This demonstrates that the entire autoregulatory domain of CaM KII can replace that of smMLCK in its ability to promote efficient CaM-dependent activation of the smMLCK enzyme. However, the inability of the chimeric protein MK(CK301-315) to be activated by Ca(2+)/CaM suggests that replacement of only the C-terminal half of the autoregulatory domain of smMLCK, while still retaining the ability to bind Ca(2+)/CaM, also substitutes residues that prevent activation of the enzyme by Ca(2+)/CaM.  相似文献   

20.
We report that the genetic locus that encodes vertebrate smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and kinase-related protein (KRP) has a complex arrangement and a complex pattern of expression. Three proteins are encoded by 31 exons that have only one variation, that of the first exon of KRP, and the genomic locus spans approximately 100 kb of DNA. The three proteins can differ in their relative abundance and localization among tissues and with development. MLCK is a calmodulin (CaM) regulated protein kinase that phosphorylates the light chain of myosin II. The chicken has two MLCK isoforms encoded by the MLCK/KRP locus. KRP does not bind CaM and is not a protein kinase. However, KRP binds to and regulates the structure of myosin II. Thus, KRP and MLCK have the same subcellular target, the myosin II molecular motor system. We examined the tissue and cellular localization of KRP and MLCK in the chicken embryo and in adult chicken tissues. We report on the selective localization of KRP and MLCK among and within tissues and on a differential distribution of the proteins between embryonic and adult tissues. The results fill a void in our knowledge about the organization of the MLCK/KRP genetic locus, which appears to be a late evolving regulatory paradigm, and suggest an independent and complex regulation of expression of the gene products from the MLCK/KRP genetic locus that may reflect a basic principle found in other eukaryotic gene clusters that encode functionally linked proteins. J. Cell. Biochem. 70:402–413, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  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