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1.
S Tsuda  K Ogura  Y Hasegawa  K Yagi  K Hikichi 《Biochemistry》1990,29(20):4951-4958
Binding of Mg2+ to rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) is studied by means of two-dimensional (2D) 1H NMR spectroscopy. Using the sequence-specific resonance assignment method we assign several resonances of TnC in the Mg2(+)-saturated state. Assigned resonances are used as probes of the following titration experiments: (1) Mg2+ titration of apo-TnC, (2) Mg2+ titration of Ca2TnC, and (3) Mg2+ titration of Ca4TnC. In experiment 1, the slow-exchange behavior is observed for resonances of Phe99, Asp107, Gly108, Tyr109, Ile110, Asp111, His125, Gly144, Arg145, Ile146, Asp147, and Phe148 located at the high-affinity Ca2(+)-binding sites in the C-terminal-half domain. In experiments 1 and 2, the fast-exchange behavior is observed for resonances of Gly32, Asp33, Ser35, Gly68, Thr69, and Asp71 located at the low-affinity Ca2(+)-binding sites in the N-terminal-half domain. These results suggest that Mg2+ ions bind to the N domain as well as the C domain. In experiment 3, no spectral change is observed for all above-mentioned residues in the C domain and also for Gly32 and Gly68 in the N domain. It can be concluded that all Ca2(+)-binding sites in both the N and C domains can bind Mg2+ ions. No significant change is observed for resonances of Phe23, Ile34, Val68, and Phe72 in experiments 1 and 2. These results suggest that Mg2+ binding to the N domain does not induce conformational change in the hydrophobic region of the N domain. 2D-NMR spectra and Mg2(+)-titration data suggest that the antiparallel beta-sheet conformation is formed in both the N and C domains when Mg2+ ions bind to the two domains.  相似文献   

2.
Isotope labeling of recombinant normal cardiac troponin C (cTnC3) with 15N-enriched amino acids and multidimensional NMR were used to assign the downfield-shifted amide protons of Gly residues at position 6 in Ca(2+)-binding loops II, III, and IV, as well as tightly hydrogen-bonded amides within the short antiparallel beta-sheets between pairs of Ca(2+)-binding loops. The amide protons of Gly70, Gly110, and Gly146 were found to be shifted significantly downfield from the remaining amide proton resonances in Ca(2+)-saturated cTnC3. No downfield-shifted Gly resonance was observed from the naturally inactive site I. Comparison of downfield-shifted amide protons in the Ca(2+)-saturated forms of cTnC3 and CBM-IIA, a mutant having Asp65 replaced by Ala, demonstrated that Gly70 is hydrogen bonded to the carboxylate side chain of Asp65. Thus, the hydrogen bond between Gly and Asp in positions 6 and 1, respectively, of the Ca(2+)-binding loop appears crucial for maintaining the integrity of the helix-loop-helix Ca(2+)-binding sites. In the apo- form of cTnC3, only Gly70 was found to be shifted significantly downfield with respect to the remaining amide proton resonances. Thus, even in the absence of Ca2+ at binding site II, the amide proton of Gly70 is strongly hydrogen bonded to the side-chain carboxylate of Asp65. The amide protons of Ile112 and Ile148 in the C-terminal domain and Ile36 in the N-terminal domain data-sheets exhibit chemical shifts consistent with hydrogen-bond formation between the pair of Ca(2+)-binding loops in each domain of Ca(2+)-saturated cTnC3.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Chemical cross-linking in combination with mass spectrometry has largely been used to study protein structures and protein-protein interactions. Typically, it is used in a qualitative manner to identify cross-linked sites and provide a low-resolution topological map of the interacting regions of proteins. Here, we investigate the capability of chemical cross-linking to quantify protein-protein interactions using a model system of calmodulin and substrates melittin and mastoparan. Calmodulin is a well-characterized protein which has many substrates. Melittin and mastoparan are two such substrates which bind to calmodulin in 1:1 ratios in the presence of calcium. Both the calmodulin-melittin and calmodulin-mastoparan complexes have had chemical cross-linking strategies successfully applied in the past to investigate topological properties. We utilized an excess of immobilized calmodulin on agarose beads and formed complexes with varying quantities of mastoparan and melittin. Then, we applied disuccinimidyl suberate (DSS) chemical cross-linker, digested and detected cross-links through an LC-MS analytical method. We identified five interpeptide cross-links for calmodulin-melittin and three interpeptide cross-links for calmodulin-mastoparan. Using cross-linking sites of calmodulin-mastoparan, we demonstrated that mastoparan also binds in two orientations to calmodulin. We quantitatively demonstrated that both melittin and mastoparan preferentially bind to calmodulin in a parallel fashion, which is opposite to the preferred binding mode of the majority of known calmodulin binding peptides. We also demonstrated that the relative abundances of cross-linked peptide products quantitatively reflected the abundances of the calmodulin peptide complexes formed.  相似文献   

4.
The paramagnetic relaxation reagent, 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyl-1-oxy (HyTEMPO), was used to probe the surface exposure of methionine residues of recombinant cardiac troponin C (cTnC) in the absence and presence of Ca2+ at the regulatory site (site II), as well as in the presence of the troponin I inhibitory peptide (cTnIp). Methyl resonances of the 10 Met residues of cTnC were chosen as spectral probes because they are thought to play a role in both formation of the N-terminal hydrophobic pocket and in the binding of cTnIp. Proton longitudinal relaxation rates (R1's) of the [13C-methyl] groups in [13C-methyl]Met-labeled cTnC(C35S) were determined using a T1 two-dimensional heteronuclear single- and multiple-quantum coherence pulse sequence. Solvent-exposed Met residues exhibit increased relaxation rates from the paramagnetic effect of HyTEMPO. Relaxation rates in 2Ca(2+)-loaded and Ca(2+)-saturated cTnC, both in the presence and absence of HyTEMPO, permitted the topological mapping of the conformational changes induced by the binding of Ca2+ to site II, the site responsible for triggering muscle contraction. Calcium binding at site II resulted in an increased exposure of Met residues 45 and 81 to the soluble spin label HyTEMPO. This result is consistent with an opening of the hydrophobic pocket in the N-terminal domain of cTnC upon binding Ca2+ at site II. The binding of the inhibitory peptide cTnIp, corresponding to Asn 129 through Ile 149 of cTnI, to both 2Ca(2+)-loaded and Ca(2+)-saturated cTnC was shown to protect Met residues 120 and 157 from HyTEMPO as determined by a decrease in their measured R1 values. These results suggest that in both the 2Ca(2+)-loaded and Ca(2+)-saturated forms of cTnC, cTnIp binds primarily to the C-terminal domain of cTnC.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
1H-NMR spectroscopy is employed to study the interaction between rabbit skeletal muscle troponin (C (TnC) and wasp venom tetradecapeptide mastoparan. We monitored the spectral change of the following species of TnC as a function of mastoparan concentration: apoTnC, Ca(2+)-saturated TnC (Ca4TnC) and Ca(2+)-half loaded TnC (Ca2TnC). When apo-TnC is titrated with mastoparan, line-broadening is observed for the ring-current shifted resonance of Phe-23, Ile-34, Val-62 and Phe-72 and the downfield-shifted CH alpha-resonances of Asp-33, Thr-69 and Asp-71; these residues are located in the N-domain. When Ca4TnC is titrated with mastoparan, chemical shift change is observed for the ring-current shifted resonances of Phe-99, Ile-110 and Phe-148 and the downfield-shifted CH alpha-resonances of Asn-105, Ala-106, Ile-110 and Ile-146 and aromatic resonance of Tyr-109 and His-125; these residues are located in the C-domain. The resonance of Phe-23, Asp-33, Asp-71, Phe-72, Phe-99, Tyr-109, Ile-146, His-125 and Phe-148 in both N- and C-domains changes when Ca2TnC is titrated with mastoparan. These results suggest that mastoparan binds to the N-domain of apo-TnC, the C-domain of Ca4TnC and the N- and C-domains of Ca2TnC; the hydrophobic cluster in each domain is involved in binding. As mastoparan binds to TnC, the above resonances shift to their normal chemical shift positions. The stability of the cluster and the beta-sheet is reduced by mastoparan-binding. These results suggest that the conformation of the hydrophobic cluster and the neighboring beta-sheet change to a loose form. The stability of the N-domain of Ca2TnC and Ca4TnC increases when these species bind 1 mol of mastoparan at the C-domain. These results suggest a mastoparan-induced interaction between the N- and C-domains of TnC.  相似文献   

7.
The technique of small-angle X-ray scattering has been employed to examine the solution conformation of calmodulin and its complexes with Ca2+ alone, and with both Ca2+ and mastoparan. The radius of gyration decreased by 3.1 +/- 0.3 A upon binding of both 4 mol Ca2+/mol of protein and 1 mol mastoparan/mol of protein to form the ternary complex. A smaller increase was found for the separate binding of 4 mol Ca2+/mol of protein in the absence of mastoparan (0.6 +/- 0.3 A). The analyses of pair distance distribution function showed that the maximal pair distance in calmodulin complex with both Ca2+ and mastoparan decreased by 20-30% in comparison with calmodulin or its complex with Ca2+, and a shoulder near 40 A, which characterizes the dumbbell-shaped molecule of calmodulin, disappeared. These results indicate that the two globular domains of the calmodulin complex with Ca2+ and mastoparan come close together by 8.0-9.5 A on average, if the size and the overall shape of the globular domains are the same in Ca2+-calmodulin-mastoparan complex as in calmodulin or Ca2+-calmodulin complex.  相似文献   

8.
Ca2+-dependent inactivation (CDI) and facilitation (CDF) of the Ca(v)1.2 Ca2+ channel require calmodulin binding to a putative IQ motif in the carboxy-terminal tail of the pore-forming subunit. We present the 1.45 A crystal structure of Ca2+-calmodulin bound to a 21 residue peptide corresponding to the IQ domain of Ca(v)1.2. This structure shows that parallel binding of calmodulin to the IQ domain is governed by hydrophobic interactions. Mutations of residues I1672 and Q1673 in the peptide to alanines, which abolish CDI but not CDF in the channel, do not greatly alter the structure. Both lobes of Ca2+-saturated CaM bind to the IQ peptide but isoleucine 1672, thought to form an intramolecular interaction that drives CDI, is buried. These findings suggest that this structure could represent the conformation that calmodulin assumes in CDF.  相似文献   

9.
The calcium-dependent difference absorption spectrum of scallop calmodulin was measured in the presence of mastoparan. The difference spectrum at 286 nm (delta A286) showed biphasic response to Ca2+ concentration. The first change represents the conformational change around Tyr-138 and the second change may respond to an interaction between N- and C-domain of calmodulin which became apparent in the associated state with mastoparan. Calmodulin-mastoparan complex was eluted from a gel filtration column after free calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+, which indicates a more compact structure of calmodulin-mastoparan complex than of free calmodulin. The biphasic response of delta A286 was also observed with free calmodulin when the ionic strength was as low as 0.02 M NaCl. In the absence of NaCl, the Ca2+ dependence of delta A288 was monophasic, assuming identical affinity of Ca2+ to both domains. Increase in the sensitivity of calmodulin to trypsin was observed with decrease in ionic strength. These results suggest an ionic-strength-dependent decrease in ordered structure of the connecting region. Calmodulin may change shape depending upon the ionic strength by bending at the connecting region. We assumed from the observations that calmodulin in solution may fluctuate between the two extreme shapes of the bent and the dumbbell structure. Target proteins may select and fix the specific bent structure for their activation.  相似文献   

10.
Y Izumi  M Wakita  H Yoshino  N Matsushima 《Biochemistry》1992,31(48):12266-12271
The solution X-ray scattering technique has been applied to examine the conformations of the proteolytic fragment F34 (78Asp-148Lys) of calmodulin in the absence of both Ca2+ and mastoparan, in the presence of Ca2+ only, and in the presence of both Ca2+ and mastoparan. The radius of gyration and the molecular weight for the F34 fragment increased by 1.1 +/- 0.3 A and 19%, respectively, upon binding of both 2 mol of Ca2+/mol to the F34 fragment and mastoparan to form the tertiary complex. A smaller change was found for the Ca(2+)-saturated F34 fragment in the absence of mastoparan (0.3 +/- 0.3 A) without any change of the molecular weight. The analysis based on the small-angle scattering data showed that the F34 fragment in the presence of Ca2+ alone preserved the tertiary structure of the globular domain in the crystal to a great extent. Further analyses based on a two-domain model showed that the center-to-center distance between F34 and mastoparan is about 12.7 A, if the structure of the F34 fragment in the presence of mastoparan resembles that in the absence of mastoparan and if mastoparan in the complex retains an alpha-helical conformation. The modeling studies using their crystal structure coordinates have been made on the basis of the solution X-ray scattering data. The combined results support a model proposed by Persechini and Kretsinger [Persechini, A., & Kretsinger, R. H. (1988) J. Cardiovasc. Pharmacol. 12 (Suppl. 5), S1-S12], although the center-to-center distance between mastoparan and the F34 fragment is shorter by about 5 A than that in their model.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Ca2+ binding to calmodulin was measured in the presence of mastoparan or caldesmon fragment. Mastoparan and caldesmon fragment were used as model compounds of enzymes and cytoskeleton proteins, respectively, working as the target of calmodulin. Although the Ca2+ bindings of the two globular domains of calmodulin occur independently in the absence of the target peptide (or proteins), mastoparan and caldesmon fragment increased the affinity of Ca2+ and, at the same time, produced the positive cooperative Ca2+ bindings between the two domains. The result of Ca2+ binding was compared with 1H NMR spectra of calmodulin in the presence of equimolar concentration of mastoparan. It is known that a conformation change of the C-terminal half-region (C-domain) occurs by the Ca2+ binding to C-domain. A further change in conformation of C-domain was demonstrated by the Ca2+ binding to the N-terminal half-region (N-domain) in the presence of mastoparan. It indicates that the two domains of calmodulin get into communication with each other in the associated state with the target, and we concluded that the Ca2+ binding to the N-domain is responsive to the development of calmodulin function.  相似文献   

12.
To gain insight into how the N-terminal three-stranded beta-sheet-like domain in pediocin-like antimicrobial peptides positions itself on membranes, residues in the well-conserved (Y)YGNGV-motif in the domain were substituted and the effect of the substitutions on antimicrobial activity and binding of peptides to liposomes was determined. Peptide-liposome interactions were detected by measuring tryptophan-fluorescence upon exposing liposomes to peptides in which a tryptophan residue had been introduced in the N-terminal domain. The results revealed that the N-terminal domain associates readily with anionic liposomes, but not with neutral liposomes. The electrostatic interactions between peptides and liposomes facilitated the penetration of some of the peptide residues into the liposomes. Measuring the antimicrobial activity of the mutated peptides revealed that the Tyr2Leu and Tyr3Leu mutations resulted in about a 10-fold reduction in activity, whereas the Tyr2Trp, Tyr2Phe, Tyr3Trp and Tyr3Phe mutations were tolerated fairly well, especially the mutations in position 3. The Val7Ile mutation did not have a marked detrimental effect on the activity. The Gly6Ala mutation was highly detrimental, consistent with Gly6 being in one of the turns in the beta-sheet-like N-terminal domain, whereas the Gly4Ala mutation was tolerated fairly well. All mutations involving Asn5, including the conservative mutations Asn5Gln and Asn5Asp, were very deleterious. Thus, both the polar amide group on the side chain of Asn5 and its exact position in space were crucial for the peptides to be fully active. Taken together, the results are consistent with Val7 positioning itself in the hydrophobic core of target membranes, thus forcing most of the other residues in the N-terminal domain into the membrane interface region: Tyr3 and Asn5 in the lower half with their side chains pointing downward and approaching the hydrophobic core, Tyr2, Gly4 and His8 and 12 in the upper half, Lys1 near the middle of the interface region, and the side chain of Lys11 pointing out toward the membrane surface.  相似文献   

13.
Yamada Y  Matsuo T  Iwamoto H  Yagi N 《Biochemistry》2012,51(19):3963-3970
Calmodulin undergoes characteristic conformational changes by binding Ca(2+), which allows it to bind to more than 300 target proteins and regulate numerous intracellular processes in all eukaryotic cells. We measured the conformational changes of calmodulin upon Ca(2+) and mastoparan binding using the time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering technique combined with flash photolysis of caged calcium. This measurement system covers the time range of 0.5-180 ms. Within 10 ms of the stepwise increase in Ca(2+) concentration, we identified a distinct compact conformational state with a drastically different molecular dimension. This process is too fast to study with a conventional stopped-flow apparatus. The compact conformational state was also observed without mastoparan, indicating that the calmodulin forms a compact globular conformation by itself upon Ca(2+) binding. This new conformational state of calmodulin seems to regulate Ca(2+) binding and conformational changes in the N-terminal domain. On the basis of this finding, an allosteric mechanism, which may have implications in intracellular signal transduction, is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
Probable role of amphiphilicity in the binding of mastoparan to calmodulin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Two-dimensional helical wheel diagrams and calculations of mean hydrophobic moments show mastoparan, mastoparan X, and Polistes mastoparan to have all the properties expected for amphiphilic helices. Circular dichroic properties are consistent with a random form for these peptides in dilute aqueous solution, but greater than 50% helix is apparent when the peptides are dissolved in 70% trifluoroethanol/water mixtures (v/v) or when the peptides are bound to calmodulin. Changes in the fluorescence spectra, anisotropy, and accessibility of tryptophan whose indole side chain is on the apolar surface of the amphiphilic helix imply a significant role for the apolar surface in the binding of the mastoparans and another amphiphilic peptide, melittin, to calmodulin. These data provide a useful model for designing high-affinity synthetic peptide inhibitors of calmodulin.  相似文献   

15.
Tikunova SB  Rall JA  Davis JP 《Biochemistry》2002,41(21):6697-6705
Troponin C (TnC) is an EF-hand Ca(2+) binding protein that regulates skeletal muscle contraction. The mechanisms that control the Ca(2+) binding properties of TnC and other EF-hand proteins are not completely understood. We individually substituted 27 Phe, Ile, Leu, Val, and Met residues with polar Gln to examine the role of hydrophobic residues in Ca(2+) binding and exchange with the N-domain of a fluorescent TnC(F29W). The global N-terminal Ca(2+) affinities of the TnC(F29W) mutants varied approximately 2340-fold, while Ca(2+) association and dissociation rates varied less than 70-fold and more than 45-fold, respectively. Greater than 2-fold increases in Ca(2+) affinities were obtained primarily by slowing of Ca(2+) dissociation rates, while greater than 2-fold decreases in Ca(2+) affinities were obtained by slowing of Ca(2+) association rates and speeding of Ca(2+) dissociation rates. No correlation was found between the Ca(2+) binding properties of the TnC(F29W) mutants and the solvent accessibility of the hydrophobic amino acids in the apo state, Ca(2+) bound state, or the difference between the two states. However, the effects of these hydrophobic mutations on Ca(2+) binding were contextual possibly because of side chain interactions within the apo and Ca(2+) bound states of the N-domain. These results demonstrate that a single hydrophobic residue, which does not directly ligate Ca(2+), can play a crucial role in controlling Ca(2+) binding and exchange within a coupled and functional EF-hand system.  相似文献   

16.
Shi Q  Wang X  Ren J 《Biophysical chemistry》2008,138(3):138-143
p21 is a protein with important roles in cell proliferation, cell cycle regulation and apoptosis. Several studies have demonstrated that its intracellular localization plays an important role in the functional regulation and binding of calmodulin favors its nuclear translocation. However, the detail mechanism of the interaction with p21 and calmodulin is not well understood. In this report, peptides derived from the C-terminal of p21 that cover the binding domain of calmodulin were used to investigate the association of p21 with calmodulin. We found p21(141-164) interaction with Ca(2+)-saturated dansyl-labelled calmodulin caused a significant increase in dansyl fluorescence intensity and a blue shift of the maximum emission from 510 to 475 nm. The Trp fluorescence intensities of mutated p21(141-164) peptides (F150W, Y151W and F159W) increased upon binding to Ca(2+)-saturated calmodulin and fluorescence maxima were blue shifted from 350 nm to 330 nm. The results suggested p21(141-164) is most likely buried in the hydrophobic binding tunnel of calmodulin. Both dansyl and Trp fluorescence titrations generated dissociation constants around 0.1 muM and a stoichiometry of 1:1, which was further confirmed by nondenaturing gel band shift electrophoresis. Fluorescence titrations and Trp fluorescence quenching results indicated electrostatic interaction is involved in this association. Upon binding to calmodulin, p21(141-164) remained largely unstructured and showed only about 15% alpha-helix. In contrast to other calmodulin binding peptide, the dominant force in the association of p21(141-164) with calmodulin may be electrostatic interaction. Our results would be helpful for understanding the molecular details of p21 and calmodulin interaction.  相似文献   

17.
The N-terminal domain of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) comprising residues 33-80 and lacking the cardiac-specific amino terminus forms a stable binary complex with the C-terminal domain of cardiac troponin C (cTnC) comprising residues 81-161. We have utilized heteronuclear multidimensional NMR to assign the backbone and side-chain resonances of Ca2+-saturated cTnC(81-161) both free and bound to cTnI(33-80). No significant differences were observed between secondary structural elements determined for free and cTnI(33-80)-bound cTnC(81-161). We have determined solution structures of Ca2+-saturated cTnC(81-161) free and bound to cTnI(33-80). While the tertiary structure of cTnC(81-161) is qualitatively similar to that observed free in solution, the binding of cTnI(33-80) results mainly in an opening of the structure and movement of the loop region between helices F and G. Together, these movements provide the binding site for the N-terminal domain of cTnI. The putative binding site for cTnI(33-80) was determined by mapping amide proton and nitrogen chemical shift changes, induced by the binding of cTnI(33-80), onto the C-terminal cTnC structure. The binding interface for cTnI(33-80), as suggested from chemical shift changes, involves predominantly hydrophobic interactions located in the expanded hydrophobic pocket. The largest chemical shift changes were observed in the loop region connecting helices F and G. Inspection of available TnC sequences reveals that these residues are highly conserved, suggesting a common binding motif for the Ca2+/Mg2+-dependent interaction site in the TnC/TnI complex.  相似文献   

18.
Solution x-ray scattering using synchrotron radiation as an x-ray source was used to analyze the Ca2+-dependent shape change of pig brain calmodulin in detail. The radius of gyration of calmodulin at 10 mg/ml was increased by 0.9 A. The increase was nearly completed when 2.5 mol of Ca2+/mol of calmodulin was added, whereas the radius of gyration of calmodulin with mastoparan decreased by about 3 A with an increasing Ca2+ concentration up to 4 mol of Ca2+/mol of calmodulin. At a moderate angle of region, both scattering profiles from calmodulin with or without Ca2+ displayed clear humps at s = 0.03 A-1 which are characteristic of a dumbbell structure. However, in the presence of mastoparan, the hump in the scattering profile became obscure and later disappeared with the third and fourth Ca2+ binding to calmodulin. These findings are attributable to the Ca2+-induced shape change of calmodulin with mastoparan from a dumbbell structure to a non-dumbbell structure in which the distance between the two lobes of calmodulin become closer by a bend in the central helix.  相似文献   

19.
113Cd-NMR experiments were performed to characterize the nature of Cd2+ binding to calmodulin in the presence of a tetradecapeptide mastoparan or a 26-residue peptide M13 (calmodulin-binding region of skeletal muscle myosin light-chain kinase). The results indicate that binding of these peptides to calmodulin induces a positive cooperativity between Ca2+ binding to C- and N-terminal domains. The results imply that the activation of myosin light-chain kinase caused by the increase in Ca2+ concentration occurs as a result of cooperative interactions not only between two Ca2+ binding sites in each domain but also between the two domains. The interdomain interaction manifests itself only in the presence of such peptides.  相似文献   

20.
Association with the cytoactive tetradecapeptide mastoparan perturbs the downfield 1H NMR spectrum of the calmodulin-Ca42+ complex. Changes occur in the resonances assigned to His-107 and Tyr-138. Composite peaks assigned to Phe-16 and Phe-89 and to Phe-68 and Tyr-99 are also affected. Both the upfield and downfield 1H NMR spectra contain evidence for spectroscopically distinct intermediates in Ca2+ binding by the calmodulin-mastoparan complex.  相似文献   

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