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1.
Boschek CB  Squier TC  Bigelow DJ 《Biochemistry》2007,46(15):4580-4588
Binding of calcium to CaM exposes clefts in both N- and C-domains to promote their cooperative association with a diverse array of target proteins, functioning to relay the calcium signal regulating cellular metabolism. To clarify relationships between the calcium-dependent activation of individual domains and interdomain structural transitions associated with productive binding to target proteins, we have utilized three engineered CaM mutants that were covalently labeled with N-(1-pyrene) maleimide at introduced cysteines in the C- and N-domains, i.e., T110C (PyC-CaM), T34C (PyN-CaM), and T34C/T110C (Py2-CaM). These sites were designed to detect known conformers of CaM such that upon association with classical CaM-binding sequences, the pyrenes in Py2-CaM are brought close together, resulting in excimer formation. Complementary measurements of calcium-dependent enhancements of monomer fluorescence of PyC-CaM and PyN-CaM permit a determination of the calcium-dependent activation of individual domains and indicate the sequential calcium occupancy of the C- and N-terminal domains, with full saturation at 7.0 and 300 microM calcium, respectively. Substantial amounts of excimer formation are observed for apo-CaM prior to peptide association, indicating that interdomain interactions occur in solution. Calcium binding results in a large and highly cooperative reduction in the level of excimer formation; its calcium dependence coincides with the occupancy of C-terminal sites. These results indicate that interdomain interactions between the opposing domains of CaM occur in solution and that the occupancy of C-terminal calcium binding sites is necessary for the structural coupling between the opposing domains associated with the stabilization of the interdomain linker to enhance target protein binding.  相似文献   

2.
Fifteen independent 1-nsec MD simulations of fully solvated Ca(2+) saturated calmodulin (CaM) mutant D129N were performed from different initial conditions to provide a sufficient statistical basis to gauge the significance of observed dynamical properties. In all MD simulations the four Ca(2+) ions remained in their binding sites, and retained a single water ligand as observed in the crystal structure. The coordination of Ca(2+) ions in EF-hands I, II, and III was sevenfold. In EF-hand IV, which was perturbed by the mutation of a highly conserved Asp129, an anomalous eightfold Ca(2+) coordination was observed. The Ca(2+) binding loop in EF-hand II was observed to dynamically sample conformations related to the Ca(2+)-free form. Repeated MD simulations implicate two well-defined conformations of Ca(2+) binding loop II, whereas similar effect was not observed for loops I, III, and IV. In 8 out of 15 MD simulations Ca(2+) binding loop II adopted an alternative conformation in which the Thr62 >C=O group was displaced from the Ca(2+) coordination by a water molecule, resulting in the Ca(2+) ion ligated by two water molecules. The alternative conformation of the Ca(2+) binding loop II appears related to the "closed" state involved in conformational exchange previously detected by NMR in the N-terminal domain fragment of CaM and the C-terminal domain fragment of the mutant E140Q. MD simulations suggest that conformations involved in microsecond exchange exist partially preformed on the nanosecond time scale.  相似文献   

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

4.
VanScyoc WS  Newman RA  Sorensen BR  Shea MA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(48):14311-14324
Calmodulin (CaM) is an essential, eukaryotic protein comprised of two highly homologous domains (N and C). CaM binds four calcium ions cooperatively, regulating a wide array of target proteins. A genetic screen of Paramecia by Kung [Kung, C. et al. (1992) Cell Calcium 13, 413-425] demonstrated that the domains of CaM have separable physiological roles: "under-reactive" mutations affecting calcium-dependent sodium currents mapped to the N-domain, while "over-reactive" mutations affecting calcium-dependent potassium currents localized to the C-domain of CaM. To determine whether and how these mutations affected intrinsic calcium-binding properties of CaM domains, phenylalanine fluorescence was used to monitor calcium binding to sites I and II (N-domain) and tyrosine fluorescence was used to monitor sites III and IV (C-domain). To explore interdomain interactions, binding properties of each full-length mutant were compared to those of its corresponding domain fragments. The calcium-binding properties of six under-reactive mutants (V35I/D50N, G40E, G40E/D50N, D50G, E54K, and G59S) and one over-reactive mutant (M145V) were indistinguishable from those of wild-type CaM, despite their deleterious physiological effects on ion-channel regulation. Four over-reactive mutants (D95G, S101F, E104K, and H135R) significantly decreased the calcium affinity of the C-domain. Of these, one (E104K) also increased the calcium affinity of the N-domain, demonstrating that the magnitude and direction of wild-type interdomain coupling had been perturbed. This suggests that, while some of these mutations alter calcium-binding directly, others probably alter CaM-channel association or calcium-triggered conformational change in the context of a ternary complex with the affected ion channel.  相似文献   

5.
Calmodulin is an EF-hand calcium-binding protein (148 a.a.) essential in intracellular signal transduction. Its homologous N- and C-terminal domains are separated by a linker that appears disordered in NMR studies. In a study of an N-domain fragment of Paramecium CaM (PCaM1-75), the addition of linker residues 76 to 80 (MKEQD) raised the Tm by 9 degrees C and lowered calcium binding by 0.54 kcal/mol (Sorensen et al., [Biochemistry 2002;41:15-20]), showing that these tether residues affect energetics as well as being a barrier to diffusion. To determine the individual contributions of residues 74 through 80 (RKMKEQD) to stability and calcium affinity, we compared a nested series of 7 fragments (PCaM1-74 to PCaM1-80). For the first 4, PCaM1-74 through PCaM1-77, single amino acid additions at the C-terminus corresponded to stepwise increases in thermostability and decreases in calcium affinity with a net change of 13.5 degrees C in Tm and 0.55 kcal/mol in free energy. The thermodynamic properties of fragments PCaM1-77 through PCaM1-80 were nearly identical. We concluded that the 3 basic residues in the sequence from 74 to 77 (RKMK) are critical to the increased stability and decreased calcium affinity of the longer N-domain fragments. Comparisons of NMR (HSQC) spectra of 15N-PCaM1-74 and 15N-PCaM1-80 and analysis of high-resolution structural models suggest these residues are latched to amino acids in helix A of CaM. The addition of residues E78, Q79, and D80 had a minimal effect on sites I and II, but they may contribute to the mechanism of energetic communication between the domains.  相似文献   

6.
Chen B  Lowry DF  Mayer MU  Squier TC 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9220-9226
The structural coupling between opposing domains of CaM was investigated using the conformationally sensitive biarsenical probe 4,5-bis(1,3,2-dithioarsolan-2-yl)resorufin (ReAsH), which upon binding to an engineered tetracysteine motif near the end of helix A (Thr-5 to Phe-19) becomes highly fluorescent. Changes in conformation and dynamics are reflective of the native CaM structure, as there is no change in the (1)H- (15)N HSQC NMR spectrum in comparison to wild-type CaM. We find evidence of a conformational intermediate associated with CaM activation, where calcium occupancy of sites in the amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal lobes of CaM differentially affect the fluorescence intensity of bound ReAsH. Insight into the structure of the conformational intermediate is possible from a consideration of calcium-dependent changes in rates of ReAsH binding and helix A mobility, which respectively distinguish secondary structural changes associated with helix A stabilization from the tertiary structural reorganization of the amino-terminal lobe of CaM necessary for high-affinity binding to target proteins. Helix A stabilization is associated with calcium occupancy of sites in the carboxyl-terminal lobe ( K d = 0.36 +/- 0.04 microM), which results in a reduction in the rate of ReAsH binding from 4900 M (-1) s (-1) to 370 M (-1) s (-1). In comparison, tertiary structural changes involving helix A and other structural elements in the amino-terminal lobe require calcium occupancy of amino-terminal sites (K d = 18 +/- 3 microM). Observed secondary and tertiary structural changes involving helix A in response to the sequential calcium occupancy of carboxyl- and amino-terminal lobe calcium binding sites suggest an important involvement of helix A in mediating the structural coupling between the opposing domains of CaM. These results are discussed in terms of a model in which carboxyl-terminal lobe calcium activation induces secondary structural changes within the interdomain linker that release helix A, thereby facilitating the formation of calcium binding sites in the amino-terminal lobe and linked tertiary structural rearrangements to form a high-affinity binding cleft that can associate with target proteins.  相似文献   

7.
N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor-dependent long term potentiation (LTP), a model of memory formation, requires Ca2+·calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (αCaMKII) activity and Thr286 autophosphorylation via both global and local Ca2+ signaling, but the mechanisms of signal transduction are not understood. We tested the hypothesis that the Ca2+-binding activator protein calmodulin (CaM) is the primary decoder of Ca2+ signals, thereby determining the output, e.g. LTP. Thus, we investigated the function of CaM mutants, deficient in Ca2+ binding at sites 1 and 2 of the N-terminal lobe or sites 3 and 4 of the C-terminal CaM lobe, in the activation of αCaMKII. Occupancy of CaM Ca2+ binding sites 1, 3, and 4 is necessary and sufficient for full activation. Moreover, the N- and C-terminal CaM lobes have distinct functions. Ca2+ binding to N lobe Ca2+ binding site 1 increases the turnover rate of the enzyme 5-fold, whereas the C lobe plays a dual role; it is required for full activity, but in addition, via Ca2+ binding site 3, it stabilizes ATP binding to αCaMKII 4-fold. Thr286 autophosphorylation is also dependent on Ca2+ binding sites on both the N and the C lobes of CaM. As the CaM C lobe sites are populated by low amplitude/low frequency (global) Ca2+ signals, but occupancy of N lobe site 1 and thus activation of αCaMKII requires high amplitude/high frequency (local) Ca2+ signals, lobe-specific sensing of Ca2+-signaling patterns by CaM is proposed to explain the requirement for both global and local Ca2+ signaling in the induction of LTP via αCaMKII.  相似文献   

8.
Calmodulin (CaM) is the primary calcium sensor in eukaryotes. Calcium binds cooperatively to pairs of EF-hand motifs in each domain (N and C). This allows CaM to regulate cellular processes via calcium-dependent interactions with a variety of proteins, including ion channels. One neuronal target is NaV1.2, voltage-dependent sodium channel type II, to which CaM binds via an IQ motif within the NaV1.2 C-terminal tail (residues 1901-1938) [Mori, M., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 1316-1323]. Here we report on the use of circular dichroism, fluorescein emission, and fluorescence anisotropy to study the interaction between CaM and NaV1.2 at varying calcium concentrations. At 1 mM MgCl2, both full-length CaM (CaM1-148) and a C-domain fragment (CaM76-148) exhibit tight (nanomolar) calcium-independent binding to the NaV1.2 IQ motif, whereas an N-domain fragment of CaM (CaM1-80) binds weakly, regardless of calcium concentration. Equilibrium calcium titrations of CaM at several concentrations of the NaV1.2 IQ peptide showed that the peptide reduced the calcium affinity of the CaM C-domain sites (III and IV) without affecting the N-domain sites (I and II) significantly. This leads us to propose that the CaM C-domain mediates constitutive binding to the NaV1.2 peptide, but that interaction then distorts calcium-binding sites III and IV, thereby reducing their affinity for calcium. This contrasts with the CaM-binding domains of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, kinases, and phosphatases, which increase the calcium binding affinity of the C-domain of CaM.  相似文献   

9.
The edema factor exotoxin produced by Bacillus anthracis is an adenylyl cyclase that is activated by calmodulin (CaM) at resting state calcium concentrations in infected cells. A C-terminal 60-kDa fragment corresponding to the catalytic domain of edema factor (EF3) was cloned, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and purified. The N-terminal 43-kDa domain (EF3-N) of EF3, the sole domain of edema factor homologous to adenylyl cyclases from Bordetella pertussis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is highly resistant to protease digestion. The C-terminal 160-amino acid domain (EF3-C) of EF3 is sensitive to proteolysis in the absence of CaM. The addition of CaM protects EF3-C from being digested by proteases. EF3-N and EF3-C were expressed separately, and both fragments were required to reconstitute full CaM-sensitive enzyme activity. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments using a double-labeled CaM molecule were performed and indicated that CaM adopts an extended conformation upon binding to EF3. This contrasts sharply with the compact conformation adopted by CaM upon binding myosin light chain kinase and CaM-dependent protein kinase type II. Mutations in each of the four calcium binding sites of CaM were examined for their effect on EF3 activation. Sites 3 and 4 were found critical for the activation, and neither the N- nor the C-terminal domain of CaM alone was capable of activating EF3. A genetic screen probing loss-of-function mutations of EF3 and site-directed mutations based on the homology of the edema factor family revealed a conserved pair of aspartate residues and an arginine that are important for catalysis. Similar residues are essential for di-metal-mediated catalysis in mammalian adenylyl cyclases and a family of DNA polymerases and nucleotidyltransferases. This suggests that edema factor may utilize a similar catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Removal of cholesterol-containing particles from the circulation is mediated by the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor. Upon ligand binding, the receptor-ligand complex is endocytosed, and the ligand is released. The important biological role of the LDL receptor (LDLR) has been highlighted by the identification of more than 400 LDLR mutations that are associated with familial hypercholesterolemia. The extracellular region of the LDLR is modular in nature and principally comprises multiple copies of ligand binding, epidermal growth factor-like (EGF), and YWTD-type domains. This report describes characterization of the calcium binding properties of the tandem pair of EGF domains. While only the C-terminal EGF module contains the consensus sequence associated with calcium binding, a noncanonical calcium binding site in the N-terminal domain has been revealed using solution NMR spectroscopy. The calcium dissociation constants for the N- and C-terminal sites have been measured under physiologically relevant pH and ionic strength conditions using a combination of solution NMR, intrinsic protein fluorescence, and chromophoric chelator methods to be approximately 50 microM and approximately 10-20 microM, respectively. Identification of the novel calcium binding motif in LDLR sequences from other species suggests that it may confer specificity within the LDLR gene family. Comparison of the K(d) for the C-terminal site with the calcium concentration in late vesicles indicates that the binding properties of this module may be tuned to titrate upon endocytosis of the LDL receptor-ligand complex, and thus calcium binding may play a role in the ligand dissociation process.  相似文献   

11.
Ca(2+) binds to calmodulin (CaM) and triggers the interaction of CaM with its target proteins; CaM binding proteins (CaMBPs) can also regulate the metal binding to CaM. In the present paper, La(3+) binding to CaM was studied in the presence of the CaM binding peptides, Mastoparan (Mas) and Mas X, using ultrafiltration and titration of fluorescence. Ca(2+) binding was used as an analog to understand La(3+) binding in intact CaM and isolated N/C-terminal CaM domain of metal-CaM binary system and metal-CaM-CaMBPs ternary system. Mas/Mas X increased binding affinity of La(3+) to CaM by 0.5 approximately 3 orders magnitude. The metal ions binding affinity to the C-terminal or the N-terminal CaM domain suggested that in the first phase of binding process both Ca(2+) and La(3+) bind to C-terminal of CaM in the presence of Mas/Mas X. In the presence of CaM binding peptides, La(3+) binding preference was substantially altered from the metal-CaM binary system where La(3+) slightly preferred binding to the N-terminal sites of CaM. Our results will be helpful in understanding La(3+) interactions with CaM in the biological systems.  相似文献   

12.
Calmodulin (CaM) is an EF-hand protein composed of two calcium (Ca(2+))-binding EF-hand motifs in its N-domain (EF-1 and EF-2) and two in its C-domain (EF-3 and EF-4). In this study, we examined the structure, dynamics, and Ca(2+)-binding properties of a fragment of CaM containing only EF-2 and EF-3 and the intervening linker sequence (CaM2/3). Based on NMR spectroscopic analyses, Ca(2+)-free CaM2/3 is predominantly unfolded, but upon binding Ca(2+), adopts a monomeric structure composed of two EF-hand motifs bridged by a short antiparallel beta-sheet. Despite having an "even-odd" pairing of EF-hands, the tertiary structure of CaM2/3 is similar to both the "odd-even" paired N- and C-domains of Ca(2+)-ligated CaM, with the conformationally flexible linker sequence adopting the role of an inter-EF-hand loop. However, unlike either CaM domain, CaM2/3 exhibits stepwise Ca(2+) binding with a K (d1) = 30 +/- 5 microM to EF-3, and a K (d2) > 1000 microM to EF-2. Binding of the first equivalent of Ca(2+) induces the cooperative folding of CaM2/3. In the case of native CaM, stacking interactions between four conserved aromatic residues help to hold the first and fourth helices of each EF-hand domain together, while the loop between EF-hands covalently tethers the second and third helices. In contrast, these aromatic residues lie along the second and third helices of CaM2/3, and thus are positioned adjacent to the loop between its "even-odd" paired EF-hands. This nonnative hydrophobic core packing may contribute to the weak Ca(2+) affinity exhibited by EF-2 in the context of CaM2/3.  相似文献   

13.
Backbone and side chain dynamics of mutant calmodulin-peptide complexes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Igumenova TI  Lee AL  Wand AJ 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12627-12639
The mechanism of long-range coupling of allosteric sites in calcium-saturated calmodulin (CaM) has been explored by characterizing structural and dynamics effects of mutants of calmodulin in complex with a peptide corresponding to the smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase calmodulin-binding domain (smMLCKp). Four CaM mutants were examined: D95N and D58N, located in Ca2+-binding loops; and M124L and E84K, located in the target domain-binding site of CaM. Three of these mutants have altered allosteric coupling either between Ca2+-binding sites (D58N and D95N) or between the target- and Ca2+-binding sites (E84K). The structure and dynamics of the mutant calmodulins in complex with smMLCKp were characterized using solution NMR. Analysis of chemical shift perturbations was employed to detect largely structural perturbations. 15N and 2H relaxation was employed to detect perturbations of the dynamics of the backbone and methyl-bearing side chains of calmodulin. The least median squares method was found to be robust in the detection of perturbed sites. The main chain dynamics of calmodulin are found to be largely unresponsive to the mutations. Three mutants show significantly perturbed dynamics of methyl-bearing side chains. Despite the pseudosymmetric location of Ca2+-binding loop mutations D58N and D95N, the dynamic response of CaM is asymmetric, producing long-range perturbation in D58N and almost none in D95N. The mutations located at the target domain-binding site have quite different effects. For M124L, a local perturbation of the methyl dynamics is observed, while the E84K mutation produces a long-range propagation of dynamic perturbations along the target domain-binding site.  相似文献   

14.
The three-dimensional structure of the complex between calmodulin (CaM) and a peptide corresponding to the N-terminal portion of the CaM-binding domain of the plasma membrane calcium pump, the peptide C20W, has been solved by heteronuclear three-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The structure calculation is based on a total of 1808 intramolecular NOEs and 49 intermolecular NOEs between the peptide C20W and calmodulin from heteronuclear-filtered NOESY spectra and a half-filtered experiment, respectively. Chemical shift differences between free Ca(2+)-saturated CaM and its complex with C20W as well as the structure calculation reveal that C20W binds solely to the C-terminal half of CaM. In addition, comparison of the methyl resonances of the nine assigned methionine residues of free Ca(2+)-saturated CaM with those of the CaM/C20W complex revealed a significant difference between the N-terminal and the C-terminal domain; i.e., resonances in the N-terminal domain of the complex were much more similar to those reported for free CaM in contrast to those in the C-terminal half which were significantly different not only from the resonances of free CaM but also from those reported for the CaM/M13 complex. As a consequence, the global structure of the CaM/C20W complex is unusual, i.e., different from other peptide calmodulin complexes, since we find no indication for a collapsed structure. The fine modulation in the peptide protein interface shows a number of differences to the CaM/M13 complex studied by Ikura et al. [Ikura, M., Clore, G. M., Gronenborn, A. M., Zhu, G., Klee, C. B., and Bax, A. (1992) Science 256, 632-638]. The unusual binding mode to only the C-terminal half of CaM is in agreement with the biochemical observation that the calcium pump can be activated by the C-terminal half of CaM alone [Guerini, D., Krebs, J., and Carafoli, E. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 15172-15177].  相似文献   

15.
Calmodulin (CaM) is an essential eukaryotic calcium receptor that regulates many kinases, including CaMKII. Calcium‐depleted CaM does not bind to CaMKII under physiological conditions. However, binding of (Ca2+)4‐CaM to a basic amphipathic helix in CaMKII releases auto‐inhibition of the kinase. The crystal structure of CaM bound to CaMKIIp, a peptide representing the CaM‐binding domain (CaMBD) of CaMKII, shows an antiparallel interface: the C‐domain of CaM primarily contacts the N‐terminal half of the CaMBD. The two domains of calcium‐saturated CaM are believed to play distinct roles in releasing auto‐inhibition. To investigate the underlying mechanism of activation, calcium‐dependent titrations of isolated domains of CaM binding to CaMKIIp were monitored using fluorescence anisotropy. The binding affinity of CaMKIIp for the domains of CaM increased upon saturation with calcium, with the C‐domain having a 35‐fold greater affinity than the N‐domain. Because the interdomain linker of CaM regulates calcium‐binding affinity and contribute to conformational change, the role of each CaM domain was explored further by investigating effects of CaMKIIp on site‐knockout mutants affecting the calcium‐binding sites of a single domain. Investigation of the thermodynamic linkage between saturation of individual calcium‐binding sites and CaM‐domain binding to CaMKIIp showed that calcium binding to Sites III and IV was sufficient to recapitulate the behavior of (Ca2+)4‐CaM. The magnitude of favorable interdomain cooperativity varied depending on which of the four calcium‐binding sites were mutated, emphasizing differential regulatory roles for the domains of CaM, despite the high degree of homology among the four EF‐hands of CaM. Proteins 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
Jaren OR  Kranz JK  Sorensen BR  Wand AJ  Shea MA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(48):14158-14166
Calmodulin (CaM) is an intracellular calcium-binding protein essential for many pathways in eukaryotic signal transduction. Although a structure of Ca(2+)-saturated Paramecium CaM at 1.0 A resolution (1EXR.pdb) provides the highest level of detail about side-chain orientations in CaM, information about an end state alone cannot explain driving forces for the transitions that occur during Ca(2+)-induced conformational switching and why the two domains of CaM are saturated sequentially rather than simultaneously. Recent studies focus attention on the contributions of interdomain linker residues. Electron paramagnetic resonance showed that Ca(2+)-induced structural stabilization of residues 76-81 modulates domain coupling [Qin and Squier (2001) Biophys. J. 81, 2908-2918]. Studies of N-domain fragments of Paramecium CaM showed that residues 76-80 increased thermostability of the N-domain but lowered the Ca(2+) affinity of sites I and II [Sorensen et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 15-20]. To probe domain coupling during Ca(2+) binding, we have used (1)H-(15)N HSQC NMR to monitor more than 40 residues in Paramecium CaM. The titrations demonstrated that residues Glu78 to Glu84 (in the linker and cap of helix E) underwent sequential phases of conformational change. Initially, they changed in volume (slow exchange) as sites III and IV titrated, and subsequently, they changed in frequency (fast exchange) as sites I and II titrated. These studies provide evidence for Ca(2+)-dependent communication between the domains, demonstrating that spatially distant residues respond to Ca(2+) binding at sites I and II in the N-domain of CaM.  相似文献   

17.
Voltage-gated sodium channels maintain the electrical cadence and stability of neurons and muscle cells by selectively controlling the transmembrane passage of their namesake ion. The degree to which these channels contribute to cellular excitability can be managed therapeutically or fine-tuned by endogenous ligands. Intracellular calcium, for instance, modulates sodium channel inactivation, the process by which sodium conductance is negatively regulated. We explored the molecular basis for this effect by investigating the interaction between the ubiquitous calcium binding protein calmodulin (CaM) and the putative sodium channel inactivation gate composed of the cytosolic linker between homologous channel domains III and IV (DIII-IV). Experiments using isothermal titration calorimetry show that CaM binds to a novel double tyrosine motif in the center of the DIII-IV linker in a calcium-dependent manner, N-terminal to a region previously reported to be a CaM binding site. An alanine scan of aromatic residues in recombinant DIII-DIV linker peptides shows that whereas multiple side chains contribute to CaM binding, two tyrosines (Tyr1494 and Tyr1495) play a crucial role in binding the CaM C-lobe. The functional relevance of these observations was then ascertained through electrophysiological measurement of sodium channel inactivation gating in the presence and absence of calcium. Experiments on patch-clamped transfected tsA201 cells show that only the Y1494A mutation of the five sites tested renders sodium channel steady-state inactivation insensitive to cytosolic calcium. The results demonstrate that calcium-dependent calmodulin binding to the sodium channel inactivation gate double tyrosine motif is required for calcium regulation of the cardiac sodium channel.  相似文献   

18.
Voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs), calmodulin (CaM), and calmodulin kinase II (CaMKII) are essential for various nervous system functions. CaM and CaMKII differentially regulate calcium dependent facilitation (CDF) and calcium dependent inactivation (CDI) of the Cav1 and Cav2 families of VGCCs. It is generally accepted that conserved structures in the C-terminus of these channels regulate CDF and CDI, and yet recent evidence indicates that other intracellular regions may be involved. We recently discovered that N-terminal sequences in Cav1.2 bind CaM and CaMKII, and function to regulate CDI as well as surface expression and open probability, respectively. Cav1 and Cav2 share significant portions of N-terminal sequence and therefore we explored whether homologous binding sites might exist in Cav2.1. Here, we show that like the proximal N-terminus of Cav1.2, the homologous region of Cav2.1 contains sequences which interact either directly or indirectly with CaM.  相似文献   

19.
The potential for using paramagnetic lanthanide ions to partially align troponin C in solution as a tool for the structure determination of bound troponin I peptides has been investigated. A prerequisite for these studies is an understanding of the order of lanthanide ion occupancy in the metal binding sites of the protein. Two-dimensional [(1)H, (15)N] HSQC NMR spectroscopy has been used to examine the binding order of Ce(3+), Tb(3+), and Yb(3+) to both apo- and holo-forms of human cardiac troponin C (cTnC) and of Ce(3+) to holo-chicken skeletal troponin C (sTnC). The disappearance of cross-peak resonances in the HSQC spectrum was used to determine the order of occupation of the binding sites in both cTnC and sTnC by each lanthanide. For the lanthanides tested, the binding order follows that of the net charge of the binding site residues from most to least negative; the N-domain calcium binding sites are the first to be filled followed by the C-domain sites. Given this binding order for lanthanide ions, it was demonstrated that it is possible to create a cTnC species with one lanthanide in the N-domain site and two Ca(2+) ions in the C-domain binding sites. By using the species cTnC.Yb(3+).2 Ca(2+) it was possible to confer partial alignment on a bound human cardiac troponin I (cTnI) peptide. Residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) were measured for the resonances in the bound (15)N-labeled cTnI(129-148) by using two-dimensional [(1)H, (15)N] inphase antiphase (IPAP) NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

20.
Voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs), calmodulin (CaM), and calmodulin kinase II (CaMKII) are essential for various nervous system functions. CaM and CaMKII differentially regulate calcium dependent facilitation (CDF) and calcium dependent inactivation (CDI) of the Cav1 and Cav2 families of VGCCs. It is generally accepted that conserved structures in the C-terminus of these channels regulate CDF and CDI, and yet recent evidence indicates that other intracellular regions may be involved. We recently discovered that N-terminal sequences in Cav1.2 bind CaM and CaMKII, and function to regulate CDI as well as surface expression and open probability, respectively. Cav1 and Cav2 share significant portions of N-terminal sequence and therefore we explored whether homologous binding sites might exist in Cav2.1. Here, we show that like the proximal N-terminus of Cav1.2, the homologous region of Cav2.1 contains sequences which interact either directly or indirectly with CaM.  相似文献   

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