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1.
We have evaluated the possibility that a major, abundant cellular substrate for protein kinase C might be a calmodulin-binding protein. We have recently labeled this protein, which migrates on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis with an apparent Mr of 60,000 from chicken and 80,000-87,000 from bovine cells and tissues, the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS). The MARCKS proteins from both species could be cross-linked to 125I-calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Phosphorylation of either protein by protein kinase C prevented 125I-calmodulin binding and cross-linking, suggesting that the calmodulin-binding domain might be located at or near the sites of protein kinase C phosphorylation. Both bovine and chicken MARCKS proteins contain an identical 25-amino acid domain that contains all 4 of the serine residues phosphorylated by protein kinase C in vitro. In addition, this domain is similar in sequence and structure to previously described calmodulin-binding domains. A synthetic peptide corresponding to this domain inhibited calmodulin binding to the MARCKS protein and also could be cross-linked to 125I-calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner. In addition, protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of the synthetic peptide inhibited its binding and cross-linking to 125I-calmodulin. The peptide bound to fluorescently labeled 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-calmodulin with a dissociation constant of 2.8 nM, and inhibited the calmodulin-dependent activation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase with an IC50 of 4.8 nM. Thus, the peptide mimics the calmodulin-binding properties of the MARCKS protein and probably represents its calmodulin-binding domain. Phosphorylation of these abundant, high affinity calmodulin-binding proteins by protein kinase C in intact cells could cause displacement of bound calmodulin, perhaps leading to activation of Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent processes.  相似文献   

2.
Bovine adrenal medullae were homogenized in the presence or in the absence of EGTA and different subcellular fractions were prepared by differential and density gradient centrifugations. In the presence of the chelating agent, 69% of the total calmodulin, measured by radioimmunoassay, was present in the cytosol; the rest was bound to different membrane-containing fractions (nuclei, microsomal, and crude granule fraction). When the chelating agent was omitted, 43% of the calmodulin was present in the cytosol, the remaining calmodulin being membrane-bound. Further resolution of the crude granule fraction by sucrose density centrifugation demonstrated that the distribution of calmodulin in the density gradient was similar to the distribution of chromaffin granules rather than to that of mitochondria, Golgi elements, and lysosomes. In this case, there was also more calmodulin bound to chromaffin granules when EGTA was omitted from the density gradient. Experiments with 125I-calmodulin indicated the presence of high-affinity binding sites (KD = 1.3 X 10(-8) M; Bmax = 30 pmol/mg protein) for calmodulin in chromaffin granule membranes. Further, photoaffinity crosslinking experiments with 125I-calmodulin followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography indicated the presence of three calmodulin-binding polypeptide complexes (84,000; 41,000; and 38,000 daltons) in chromaffin granule membranes. These polypeptides were not labelled when either Ca2+ was omitted or an excess of nonradioactive calmodulin was present in the photolysis buffer, indicating the Ca2+ dependency and the specificity of the interaction. On the basis of the results described, it is suggested that the cellular levels of Ca2+ control the cellular distribution of calmodulin and its binding to specific chromaffin granule membrane proteins. Further, it is also suggested that the interactions between calmodulin and granule proteins might play a role in stimulus-secretion coupling.  相似文献   

3.
Calmodulin was isolated and purified to homogeneity from dog pancreas. Highly purified subcellular fractions were prepared from dog pancreas by zonal sucrose-density ultracentrifugation and assayed for their ability to bind 125I-calmodulin in vitro. Proteins contained in these fractions were also examined for binding of 125I-calmodulin after their separation by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in SDS. Calmodulin-binding proteins were detected in all subcellular fractions except the zymogen granule and zymogen-granule membrane fractions. One calmodulin-binding protein (Mr 240,000), observed in a washed smooth-microsomal fraction, has properties similar to those of alpha-fodrin. The postribosomal-supernatant fraction contained three prominent calmodulin-binding proteins, with apparent Mr values of 62,000, 50,000 and 40,000. Calmodulin-binding proteins, prepared from a postmicrosomal-supernatant fraction by Ca2+-dependent affinity chromatography on immobilized calmodulin, exhibited calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterase, protein phosphatase and protein kinase activities. In the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, phosphorylation of smooth-muscle myosin light chain and brain synapsin and autophosphorylation of a Mr-50,000 protein were observed. Analysis of the protein composition of the preparation by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis revealed a major protein of Mr 50,000 which bound 125I-calmodulin. This protein shares characteristics with the calmodulin-dependent multifunctional protein kinase (kinase II) recently observed to have a widespread distribution. The possible role of calmodulin-binding proteins and calmodulin-regulated enzymes in the regulation of exocrine pancreatic protein synthesis and secretion is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
A calcium and calmodulin-regulated cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase has been shown to be an integral component of both rat and bovine sperm flagella. The calcium-activated enzyme was inhibited by both trifluoperazine (ID50 = 10 microM) and [ethylene-bis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid (EGTA), and the basal activity measured in the presence of EGTA was stimulated by limited proteolysis to that observed in the presence of calcium/calmodulin. 125I-Calmodulin binding to purified rat sperm flagella has been characterized and the flagellar-associated calmodulin-binding proteins identified by a combination of gel and nitrocellulose overlay procedures and by chemical cross-linking experiments using dimethyl suberimidate. 125I-Calmodulin bound to demembranated rat sperm flagella in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. At equilibrium, 30-40% of the bound 125I-calmodulin remains associated with the flagella after treatment with EGTA or trifluoperazine. The majority of the bound 125I-calmodulin, both the Ca2+-dependent and -independent, was displaced by excess calmodulin. A 67-kDa calmodulin-binding protein was identified by both the gel and nitrocellulose overlay procedures. In both cases, binding was dependent on Ca2+ and was totally inhibited by trifluoperazine, EGTA, and excess calmodulin. On nitrocellulose overlays, the concentration of calmodulin required to decrease binding of 125I-calmodulin by 50% was between 10(-10) and 10(-11) M. Limited proteolysis resulted in the total loss of all Ca2+-dependent binding to the 67-kDa polypeptide. Chemical cross-linking experiments identified a major calcium-dependent 125I-calmodulin:polypeptide complex in the 84-90-kDa molecular mass range and a minor complex of approximately 200 kDa. Immunoblot analysis showed that the major 67-kDa calmodulin-binding protein did not cross-react with polyclonal antibodies raised against either the calcium/calmodulin-regulated cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase or phosphoprotein phosphatase (calcineurin) from bovine brain.  相似文献   

5.
To streamline detection of calmodulin-binding proteins, blotting techniques for the electrophoretic transfer of proteins onto nitrocellulose filters, followed by overlay with 125I-calmodulin, have been adapted. Autoradiography of the 125I-calmodulin-labeled blots allows the identification and quantitation of proteins that possess affinity for calmodulin. Five protocols for suppressing nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific interactions of 125I-calmodulin with electrophoretically separated proteins were investigated. Tween 20 and bovine serum albumin alone, as well as combinations of bovine serum albumin and poly(ethylene oxide) or hemoglobin and gelatin, were evaluated as quenching and enhancing agents. Tween 20 proved highly effective for quenching nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific 125I-calmodulin binding of a 61,000-Mr rat brain protein, which was only faintly observed on blots quenched with proteins alone. However, Tween 20 dissociated 50% of 68,000-Mr proteins and 80% of 21,000-Mr 125I-labeled protein standards from the nitrocellulose filter. An alternative, the combination of bovine serum albumin followed by incubation with 15,000- to 20,000-Mr poly(ethylene oxide), proved satisfactory for the recovery of 61,000-Mr calmodulin-binding activity and for the detection of calmodulin-binding peptides (50,000 to 14,000 Mr) produced by limited proteolysis of rat brain 51,000-Mr calmodulin-binding protein. These blotting procedures for detection of calmodulin-binding proteins are compatible with a variety of one-dimensional and two-dimensional electrophoresis systems, including a two-dimensional electrophoresis system utilizing urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate in the first dimension and nonurea sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the second, a system which proved useful for resolving calmodulin-binding proteins displaying anomalous electrophoretic migration in the presence of urea.  相似文献   

6.
We have uniformly labeled calmodulin with tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate (CaM-RITC) and used the derivative as a molecular probe in order to identify available, unoccupied calmodulin-binding sites. In mildly fixed (3% formalin) cultured 3T3 cells, the biologically active CaM-RITC bound predominantly to mitochondria. Binding was markedly reduced in the presence of 1 mM EGTA. Stelazine, a phenothiozine which binds to calmodulin, prevented the interaction of CaM-RITC with mitochondrial sites. A 10 fold excess of unlabeled CaM competitively inhibited binding. Fluorescently labeled troponin C and parvalbumin did not bind to mitochondria on any other cellular organelle. Rhodamine (TMRITC) alone did not bind to 3T3 mitochondria. Similar results were obtained using 125I-calmodulin binding to isolated rat liver mitochondria. When solubilized mitochondrial proteins were subjected to calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography and eluted with 1 mM EGTA, there were two major polypeptides 120,000 and 67,000 daltons and at least three minor species (100,000, 60,000 and 40,000 daltons). The interaction required an active Ca2+-CaM complex and is specific for CaM. Double fluorescent staining with CaM-RITC and fluorescein-labeled antibodies to tubulin and DNAase I revealed a mitochondrial distribution pattern similar to that of microtubule arrays but unrelated to actin cabling. There was no evidence that CaM-RITC directly interacted with either microtubules or microfilaments.  相似文献   

7.
Calmodulin-binding proteins have been identified in human platelets by using Western blotting techniques and 125I-calmodulin. Ten distinct proteins of 245, 225, 175, 150, 90, 82 (2), 60, and 41 (2) kilodaltons (kDa) bound 125I-calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner; the binding was blocked by ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N'N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), trifluoperazine, and nonradiolabeled calmodulin. Proteins of 225 and 90 kDa were labeled by antisera against myosin light chain kinase; 60- and 82-kDa proteins were labeled by antisera against the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase and caldesmon, respectively. The remaining calmodulin-binding proteins have not been identified. Calmodulin-binding proteins were degraded upon addition of Ca2+ to a platelet homogenate; the degradation could be blocked by either EGTA, leupeptin, or N-ethylmaleimide which suggests that the degradation was due to a Ca2+-dependent protease. Activation of intact platelets by thrombin, adenosine 5'-diphosphate, and collagen under conditions which promote platelet aggregation (i.e., stirring with extracellular Ca2+) also resulted in limited proteolysis of calmodulin-binding proteins including those labeled with antisera against myosin light chain kinase and the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase. Activation by the Ca2+ ionophores A23187 and ionomycin also promoted degradation of the calmodulin-binding proteins in the presence of extracellular Ca2+; however, degradation in response to the ionophores did not require stirring of the platelet suspension to promote aggregation. Many Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated enzymes are irreversibly activated in vitro by limited proteolysis. Our data indicate that limited proteolysis of Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated enzymes also occurs in the intact platelet and suggest that the proteolysis is triggered by an influx of extracellular Ca2+ associated with platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

8.
To streamline detection of calmodulin-binding proteins, blotting techniques for the electrophoretic transfer of proteins onto nitrocellulose filters, followed by overlay with 125I-calmodulin, have been adapted. Autoradiography of the 125I-calmodulin-labeled blots allows the identification and quantitation of proteins that possess affinity for calmodulin. Five protocols for suppressing nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific interactions of 125I-calmodulin with electrophoretically separated proteins were investigated. Tween 20 and bovine serum albumin alone, as well as combinations of bovine serum albumin and poly(ethylene oxide) or hemoglobin and gelatin, were evaluated as quenching and enhancing agents. Tween 20 proved highly effective for quenching nonspecific binding and for enhancing specific 125I-calmodulin binding of a 61,000-Mr rat brain protein, which was only faintly observed on blots quenched with proteins alone. However, Tween 20 dissociated 50% of 68,000-Mr proteins and 80% of 21,000-Mr 125I-labeled protein standards from the nitrocellulose filter. An alternative, the combination of bovine serum albumin followed by incubation with 15,000- to 20,000-Mr poly(ethylene oxide), proved satisfactory for the recovery of 61,000-Mr calmodulin-binding activity and for the detection of calmodulin-binding peptides (50,000 to 14,000 Mr) produced by limited proteolysis of rat brain 51,000-Mr calmodulin-binding protein. These blotting procedures for detection of calmodulin-binding proteins are compatible with a variety of one-dimensional and two-dimensional electrophoresis systems, including a two-dimensional electrophoresis system utilizing urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate in the first dimension and nonurea sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the second, a system which proved useful for resolving calmodulin-binding proteins displaying anomalous electrophoretic migration in the presence of urea.  相似文献   

9.
The presence of calmodulin-binding proteins in three neurosecretory vesicles (bovine adrenal chromaffin granules, bovine posterior pituitary secretory granules, and rat brain synaptic vesicles) was investigated. When detergent-solubilized membrane proteins from each type of secretory organelle were applied to calmodulin-affinity columns in the presence of calcium, several calmodulin-binding proteins were retained and these were eluted by EGTA from the columns. In all three membranes, a 65-kilodalton (63 kilodaltons in rat brain synaptic vesicles) and a 53-kilodalton protein were found consistently in the EGTA eluate. 125I-Calmodulin overlay tests on nitrocellulose sheets containing transferred chromaffin and posterior pituitary secretory granule membrane proteins showed a similarity in the protein bands labeled with radioactive calmodulin. In the presence of 10(-4) M calcium, eight major protein bands (240, 180, 145, 125, 65, 60, 53, and 49 kilodaltons) were labeled with 125I-calmodulin. The presence of 10 microM trifluoperazine (a calmodulin antagonist) significantly reduced this labeling, while no labeling was seen in the presence of 1 mM EGTA. Two monoclonal antibodies (mAb 30, mAb 48), previously shown to react with a cholinergic synaptic vesicle membrane protein of approximate molecular mass of 65 kilodaltons, were tested on total membrane proteins from the three different secretory vesicles and on calmodulin-binding proteins isolated from these membranes using calmodulin-affinity chromatography. Both monoclonal antibodies reacted with a 65-kilodalton protein present in membranes from chromaffin and posterior pituitary secretory granules and with a 63-kilodalton protein present in rat brain synaptic vesicle membranes. When the immunoblotting was repeated on secretory vesicle membrane calmodulin-binding proteins isolated by calmodulin-affinity chromatography, an identical staining pattern was obtained. These results clearly indicate that an immunologically identical calmodulin-binding protein is expressed in at least three different neurosecretory vesicle types, thus suggesting a common role for this protein in secretory vesicle function.  相似文献   

10.
Human erythrocyte membranes reveal different calmodulin-binding proteins determined by a 125I-calmodulin gel overlay procedure. Beside the well-established Ca2+-transport ATPase, other proteins (205, 91, 72 and 42 kDa) bind calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Two proteins of the human erythrocyte membrane are able to bind calmodulin only in the absence of Ca2+. One of them (76 kDa) is probably an integral, the other (240 kDa) a peripheral protein.  相似文献   

11.
The 125I-calmodulin gel overlay procedure was used to evaluate the effect of a heparin treatment on the calmodulin-binding proteins of bull spermatozoa. At concentrations that increase the in vitro fertilization rate of in vitro-matured oocytes, heparin induced a decrease in the binding to calmodulin (CaM) in 3 sperm proteins of 28, 30, and 49 kDa. The binding of these proteins to CaM was higher when Ca2+ was absent from the overlay procedure, and this binding was negatively correlated to the fertilization rate. These results suggest that sperm capacitation is associated with a decrease in the binding of CaM to the 28, 30, and 49 kDa sperm CaM-binding proteins. Implications of such a decrease are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Glycogen phosphorylase (a or b) binds 125I-calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent manner, in the 125I-calmodulin overlay technique. This binding is quantitatively identical to 125I-calmodulin binding to myosin light chain kinase. In an in vitro assay, calmodulin stimulates phosphorylase activity at limiting concentrations of either glucose-1-phosphate or glycogen, but the Ka is 1000 fold higher than for the kinase, and is not Ca2+-dependent. Activation of phosphorylase, but not myosin light chain kinase, by calmodulin can be mimicked by troponin C or bovine serum albumin. These results demonstrate that the properties of calmodulin interaction with proteins can vary between the 125I-calmodulin technique and a functional assay of calmodulin effect on the same protein.  相似文献   

13.
B B Olwin  C H Keller  D R Storm 《Biochemistry》1982,21(22):5669-5675
Rabbit skeletal muscle troponin I was covalently labeled with N-dansylaziridine, resulting in a fluorescent labeled protein. This derivative (DANZTnI) and native troponin I (TnI) inhibited calmodulin (CaM) stimulation of bovine heart Ca2+-sensitive cyclic nucleodite phosphodiesterase with identical inhibition constants. Association of DANZTnI with calmodulin was monitored directly by changes in flourescence intensity in the presence of Ca2+ and by changes in fluorescence anisotropy in the absence of Ca2+. Quantitation of the affinity of calmodulin for calmodulin-binding proteins in both the presence and absence of Ca2+ is necessary for prediction of the extent of interaction of both Ca2+ and calmodulin-binding proteins with calmodulin in vivo. The dissociation constants for the DANZTnI-calmodulin-l4Ca2+ and DANZTnI-calmodulin complexes were 20 nM and 70 micrometers, respectively. These dissociation constants define a free energy coupling of-4.84 kcal/mol of troponin I for binding of Ca2+ and troponin I to calmodulin. The Ca2+ dependence for troponin I-calmodulin complex formation predicted from these experimentally determined parameters was closely approximated by the Ca2+ dependence for complex formation between troponin I and fluorescent 5-[[[(iodoacetyl)amino]ethyl]-amino]-1-napthalenesulfonic acid derivatized calmodulin as determined by fluorescence anisotropy. Complex formation occurred over a relatively narrow range of Ca2+ concentration, indicative of positive heterotropic cooperativity for Ca2+ and troponin I binding to calmodulin.  相似文献   

14.
The presence of calmodulin-binding sites on chromaffin granule membranes has been investigated. Saturable, high-affinity 125I-calmodulin-binding sites (KD = 9.8 nM; Bmax = 25 pmol/mg protein) were observed in the presence of 10(-4) M free calcium. A second, nonsaturable, calmodulin-binding activity could also be detected at 10(-7) M free calcium. No binding occurred at lower calcium levels. When chromaffin granule membranes were delipidated by solvent extraction, calmodulin binding was observed at 10(-4) M free calcium. However no binding was detected at lower calcium concentrations. Thus it appears that a calcium concentration of 10(-7) M promotes the binding of calmodulin to some solvent-soluble components of the chromaffin granule membrane. Calmodulin-binding proteins associated with the granule membrane identified by photoaffinity cross-linking. A calmodulin-binding protein complex, of molecular weight 82K, was formed in the presence of 10(-4) M free calcium. This cross-linked product was specific because it was not detected either in the absence of calcium, in the presence of nonlabeled calmodulin, or in the absence of cross-linker activation. When solvent-treated membranes were used, a second, specific, calmodulin-binding protein complex (70K) was formed. Since the apparent molecular weight of calmodulin in our electrophoresis system was 17K, these experiments suggested the presence of two calmodulin-binding proteins, of molecular weights 65K and 53K, in the chromaffin granule membrane. This result was confirmed by the use of calmodulin-affinity chromatography. When detergent-solubilized membranes were applied on the column in the presence of calcium, two polypeptides of apparent molecular weights of 65K and 53K were specifically eluted by EGTA buffers. Since detergent treatments or solvent extractions are necessary to detect the 53K calmodulin-binding protein, it is concluded that only the 65K calmodulin-binding polypeptide may play a role in the interaction between calmodulin and secretory granules in chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(5):1644-1647
Purified chloroplasts from spinach and pea leaves were subfractionated into envelope, thylakoid, and stroma fractions and were analyzed for calmodulin-binding proteins using a 125I-calmodulin gel overlay assay. Calmodulin binding was primarily associated with a major polypeptide (Mr 33,000) in the envelope membrane fraction. In contrast, major calmodulin-binding proteins were not detected in the thylakoid or stroma fractions. Our results provide the first evidence of calmodulin- binding proteins in the chloroplast envelope, and raise the possibility that calmodulin may contribute to the regulation of chloroplast function through its interaction with calmodulin-binding proteins in the chloroplast envelope. In addition, our results combined with those of other investigators support the proposal that subcellular organelles may be a primary site of calmodulin action.  相似文献   

16.
Calcium-binding proteins and calmodulin-binding proteins were identified in gametes and zygotes of the marine brown algae Fucus vesiculosus, Fucus distichus, and Pelvetia fastigiata using gel (SDS-PAGE) overlay techniques. A calcium current appears to be important during cell polarization in fucoid zygotes (K.R. Robinson and L.F. Jaffe, 1975, Science 187, 70-72; K.R. Robinson and R. Cone, 1980, Science 207, 77-78), but there are no biochemical data on calcium-binding proteins in these algae. By using a sensitive 45Ca2+ overlay method designed to detect high-affinity calcium-binding proteins, at least 9-11 polypeptides were detected in extracts of fucoid gametes and zygotes. All samples had calcium-binding proteins with apparent molecular weights of about 17 and 30 kDa. A 17-kDa calcium-binding protein was purified by calcium-dependent hydrophobic chromatography and was identified as calmodulin by immunological and enzyme activator criteria. A 125I-calmodulin overlay assay was used to identify potential targets of calmodulin action. Sperm contained one major calmodulin-binding protein of about 45 kDa. Eggs lacked major calmodulin-binding activity. A 72-kDa calmodulin-binding protein was prominent in zygotes from 1-65 hr postfertilization. Both calmodulin-binding proteins showed calcium-dependent binding activity. Overall, the data suggest that the appearance and distribution of certain calcium-binding and calmodulin-binding proteins are under developmental regulation, and may reflect the different roles of calcium during fertilization and early embryogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Specific anti-calmodulin rabbit polyclonal and murine monoclonal antibodies have been produced with a thyroglobulin-linked peptide corresponding to amino acids 128-148 of bovine brain calmodulin. The monoclonal antibody is IgG-1 with kappa light chains. Both sets of antibodies recognize native vertebrate calmodulin, with the polyclonal antibody exhibiting an approximately fourfold higher sensitivity than the monoclonal antibody in a radioimmunoassay. The affinity of both polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies is approximately 2.5-fold higher for Ca(2+)-free calmodulin than for Ca(2+)-calmodulin. Other selected members of the calmodulin family (S100, troponin, and parvalbumin) do not exhibit significant cross-reactivity with the monoclonal antibody. Troponin and S100 beta displace some 125I-calmodulin from the polyclonal antibody, but require at least 900-fold excess concentration. The monoclonal antibody recognizes intact vertebrate calmodulin in solution and also on solid-phase. In addition, plant calmodulin and some forms of post-translationally modified calmodulin (phosphorylated or glycated) bind the monoclonal antibody. The affinity of the monoclonal antibody is approximately 5 x 10(8) liters/mol determined by displacement of 125I-calmodulin. On dot blotting the sensitivity for vertebrate calmodulin is 50 pg. The epitope for the monoclonal antibody is in the carboxyl terminal region (residues 107-148) of calmodulin. This highly specific anti-calmodulin monoclonal antibody should be a useful reagent in elucidating the mechanism by which calmodulin regulates intracellular metabolism.  相似文献   

18.
Calmodulin was detected in dogfish erythrocyte lysates by means of phosphodiesterase activation. Anucleate dogfish erythrocyte cytoskeletons bound calmodulin. Binding of calmodulin was calcium- dependent, concentration-dependent, and saturable. Cytoskeletons consisted of a marginal band of microtubules containing primarily tubulin, and trans-marginal band material containing actin and spectrinlike proteins. Dogfish erythrocyte ghosts and cytoskeletons were found to contain a calcium-dependent calmodulin-binding protein, CBP, by two independent techniques: (a) 125I-calmodulin binding to cytoskeletal proteins separated by SDS PAGE, and (b) in situ azidocalmodulin binding in whole anucleate ghosts and cytoskeletons. CBP, with an apparent molecular weight of 245,000, co-migrated with the upper band of human and dogfish erythrocyte spectrin. CBP was present in anucleate ghosts devoid of marginal bands and absent from isolated marginal bands. CBP therefore appears to be localized in the trans- marginal band material and not in the marginal band. Similarities between CBP and high molecular weight calmodulin-binding proteins from mammalian species are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
R Busse  A Mülsch 《FEBS letters》1990,265(1-2):133-136
We investigated whether calmodulin mediates the stimulating effect of Ca2+ on nitric oxide synthase in the cytosol of porcine aortic endothelial cells. Nitric oxide was quantified by activation of a purified soluble guanylate cyclase. The Ca2(+)-sensitivity of nitric oxide synthase was lost after anion exchange chromatography of the endothelial cytosol and could only be reconstituted by addition of calmodulin or heat-denatured endothelial cytosol. The Ca2(+)-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase in the cytosol was inhibited by the calmodulin-binding peptides/proteins melittin, mastoparan, and calcineurin (IC50 450, 350 and 60 nM, respectively), but not by the calmodulin antagonist, calmidazolium. In contrast, Ca2(+)-calmodulin-reconstituted nitric oxide synthase was inhibited with similar potency by melittin and calmidazolium. The results suggest that the Ca2(+)-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase in endothelial cells is mediated by calmodulin.  相似文献   

20.
P-57 is a neural specific calmodulin-binding protein   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
P-57 is a novel calmodulin-binding protein which has recently been isolated from bovine cerebral cortex (Andreasen, T. J., Luetje, C. W., Heideman, W., and Storm, D. R. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4615-4618). In contrast to all other calmodulin-binding proteins characterized thus far, P-57 has equivalent or higher affinity for calmodulin in the absence of free Ca2+ compared to the presence of Ca2+. In this study, the distribution of P-57 in other tissues and within brain was examined using a radioimmune assay and photoaffinity labeling with azido-125I-calmodulin. P-57 was not found in tissues other than brain, retina, and spinal cord. Within brain, P-57 levels varied from 0.1% of the total protein in white matter regions to about 0.5% in cell body-rich fractions. The protein was found in both membrane and soluble fractions. P-57 is the most abundant calmodulin-binding protein in brain and appears to be neural specific. The concentrations of P-57 in brain and its affinity for calmodulin in the absence of Ca2+ are sufficient to complex a significant fraction of the total calmodulin present.  相似文献   

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