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1.
Small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering data were used to study the solution structure of calmodulin complexed with a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 577-603 of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase. The X-ray data indicate that, in the presence of Ca2+, the calmodulin-peptide complex has a structure that is considerably more compact than uncomplexed calmodulin. The radius of gyration, Rg, for the complex is approximately 20% smaller than that of uncomplexed Ca2+.calmodulin (16 vs 21 A), and the maximum dimension, dmax, for the complex is also about 20% smaller (49 vs 67 A). The peptide-induced conformational rearrangement of calmodulin is [Ca2+] dependent. The length distribution function for the complex is more symmetric than that for uncomplexed Ca2+.calmodulin, indicating that more of the mass is distributed toward the center of mass for the complex, compared with the dumbell-shaped Ca2+.calmodulin. The solvent contrast dependence of Rg for neutron scattering indicates that the peptide is located more toward the center of the complex, while the calmodulin is located more peripherally, and that the centers of mass of the calmodulin and the peptide are not coincident. The scattering data support the hypothesis that the interconnecting helix region observed in the crystal structure for calmodulin is quite flexible in solution, allowing the two lobes of calmodulin to form close contacts on binding the peptide. This flexibility of the central helix may play a critical role in activating target enzymes such as myosin light chain kinase.  相似文献   

2.
Peptide-induced conformational changes in five isofunctional mutants of calmodulin (CaM), each bearing a single tryptophan residue either at the seventh position of each of the four calcium-binding loops (i.e., amino acids 26, 62, 99, and 135) or in the central helix (amino acid 81) were studied by using fluorescence spectroscopy. The peptides RS20F and RS20CK correspond to CaM-binding amino acid sequence segments of either nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) or calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMPK-II), respectively. Both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence data were collected from the various peptide-CaM complexes. Steady-state fluorescence intensity measurements indicated that, in the presence of an excess of calcium, both peptides bind to the calmodulin mutants with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The tryptophans located in loops I and IV exhibited red-shifted emission maxima (356 nm), high quantum yields (0.3), and long average lifetimes (6 ns). They responded in a similar manner to peptide binding, by only slight changes in their fluorescence features. In contrast, the fluorescence intensity of the tryptophans in loops II and III decreased markedly, and their fluorescence spectrum was blue-shifted upon peptide binding. Analysis of the tryptophan fluorescence decay of the last mentioned calmodulins supports a model in which the equilibrium between two (Trp-99) or three (Trp-62) states of these tryptophan residues, each characterized by a different lifetime, was altered toward the blue-shifted short lifetime component upon peptide binding. Taken together, these data provide new evidence that both lobes of calmodulin are involved in peptide binding. Both peptides induced similar changes in the fluorescence properties of the tryptophan residues located in the calcium-binding loops, with the exception of calmodulin with Trp-135. For this last mentioned calmodulin, slight differences were observed. Tryptophan in the central helix responded differently to RS20F and RS20CK binding. RS20F binding induced a red-shift in the emission maximum of Trp-81 while RS20CK induced a blue-shift. The quenching rate of Trp-81 by iodide was slightly reduced upon RS20CK binding, while RS20F induced a 2-fold increase. These results provide evidence that the environment of Trp-81 is different in each case and are, therefore, consistent with the hypothesis that the central helix can play a differential role in the recognition of, or response to, CaM-binding structures.  相似文献   

3.
Myosin light chain kinase and a fraction of type II cAMP-dependent protein kinase have been partially purified from bovine brain by affinity chromatography on calmodulin-Sepharose. The myosin kinase was purified approximately 3700-fold and has an estimated molecular weight of 130,000 +/- 10,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. A fraction of soluble cAMP-dependent protein kinase also bound to calmodulin-Sepharose and was purified 2300-fold. A fraction of this cAMP-dependent protein kinase after purification by glycerol gradient centrifugation was shown to contain the two subunits of calcineurin, a major calmodulin-binding protein in brain, and the two subunits of type II cAMP-dependent protein kinase in a ratio of 1:1:2:2. Its sedimentation coefficient was 8.1 S and 9.0 S when centrifuged in the absence or presence of calmodulin, suggesting the formation of a complex between calmodulin and protein kinase. Our results suggest the possibility that calcineurin may be involved in the interaction between the protein kinase and calmodulin. Furthermore, our studies imply that the regulatory subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, but not the catalytic subunit, is the site of interaction with calmodulin since the catalytic subunit of protein kinase was partially resolved from the complex by cAMP.  相似文献   

4.
M Ikura  G Barbato  C B Klee  A Bax 《Cell calcium》1992,13(6-7):391-400
The solution structure of Ca2+ ligated calmodulin and of its complex with a 26-residue peptide fragment of skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (skMLCK) have been investigated by multi-dimensional NMR. In the absence of peptide, the two globular domains of calmodulin adopt the same structure as observed in the crystalline form. The so-called 'central helix' which is observed in the crystalline state is disrupted in solution. 15N relaxation studies show that residues Asp78 through Ser81, located near the middle of this 'central helix', form a very flexible link between the two globular domains. In the presence of skMLCK target peptide, the peptide-protein complex adopts a globular ellipsoidal shape. The helical peptide is located in a hydrophobic channel that goes through the center of the complex and makes an angle of approximately 45 degrees with the long axis of the ellipsoid.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction between the peptide corresponding to the calmodulin-binding domain of the smooth muscle myosin light-chain kinase and (Ca2+)4-calmodulin has been studied by multinuclear and multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The study was facilitated by the use of 15N-labeled peptide in conjunction with 15N-edited and 15N-correlated 1H spectroscopy. The peptide forms a 1:1 complex with calcium-saturated calmodulin which is in slow exchange with free peptide. The 1H and 15N resonances of the bound have been assigned. An extensive set of structural constraints for the bound peptide has been assembled from the analysis of nuclear Overhauser effects and three-bond coupling constants. The backbone conformation of the bound peptide has been determined using these constraints by use of distance geometry and related computational methods. The backbone conformation of the peptide has been determined to high precision and is generally indicative of helical secondary structure. Nonhelical backbone conformations are seen in the middle and at the C-terminal end of the bound peptide. These studies provide the first direct confirmation of the amphiphilic helix model for the structure of peptides bound to calcium-saturated calmodulin.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction with calmodulin of the 17-residue C-terminal fragment M5 of myosin light chain kinase has been studied by several physical techniques. Circular dichroism measurements suggest that M5 exists within the complex primarily as an alpha-helix. Fluorescence intensity measurements of the single tryptophan of M5 (Trp-4) indicate that it is in a relatively nonpolar environment and is shielded from solvent. Dynamic measurements of fluorescence anisotropy decay indicate that Trp-4 changes from a freely rotating fluorophore to one which is largely immobilized upon complex formation. Static fluorescence measurements show that 2,6-TNS is displaced from its binding site on calmodulin by M5. The binding of M5 also partially inhibits the proteolytic scission by trypsin of the bond between residues 77 and 78.  相似文献   

7.
Calcium is necessary for secretion of pituitary hormones. Many of the biological effects of Ca2+ are mediated by the Ca2+-binding protein calmodulin (CaM), which interacts specifically with proteins regulated by the Ca2+-CaM complex. One of these proteins is myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), a Ca2+-calmodulin dependent enzyme that phosphorylates the regulatory light chains of myosin, and has been implicated in motile processes in both muscle and non-muscle tissues. We determined the content and distribution of CaM and CaM-binding proteins in bovine pituitary homogenates, and subcellular fractions including secretory granules and secretory granule membranes. CaM measured by radioimmunoassay was found in each fraction; although approximately one-half was in the cytosolic fraction, CaM was also associated with the plasma membrane and secretory granule fractions. CaM-binding proteins were identified by an 251-CaM gel overlay technique and quantitated by densitometric analysis of the autoradiograms. Pituitary homogenates contained nine major CaM-binding proteins of 146, 131, 90, 64, 58, 56, 52, 31 and 22 kilodaltons (kDa). Binding to all the bands was specific, Cat+-sensitive, and displaceable with excess unlabeled CaM. Severe heat treatment (100°C, 15 min), which results in a 75% reduction in phosphodiesterase activation by CaM, markedly decreased 251I-CaM binding to all protein bands. Secretory granule membranes showed enhancement for CaM-binding proteins with molecular weights of 184, 146, 131, 90, and 52000. A specific, affinity purified antibody to chicken gizzard MLCK bound to the 146 kDa band in homogenates, centrifugal subcellular fractions, and secretory granule membranes. No such binding was associated with the granule contents. The enrichment of MLCK and other CaM-binding proteins in pituitary secretory granule membranes suggests a possible role for CaM and/or CaM-binding proteins in granule membrane function and possibly exocytosis.  相似文献   

8.
Calmodulin-dependent protein kinases such as myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), calmodulin kinase II, and phosphorylase kinase contain specific sequences responsible for binding calmodulin. These regions are known as calmodulin-binding domains and in many cases are contained within sequences that are short enough to be synthesized by solidphase techniques. The ability to chemically-synthesize target enzyme calmodulin-binding domains has permitted the use of a variety of biophysical techniques to study the interactions between calmodulin and calmodulin-binding domain peptides. The work reviewed here describes the development and characterization of peptides based on the sequence, of the calmodulin-binding domain of skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase which were labeled with the fluorescent reagent, acrylodan. Data are presented demonstrating the use of fluorescently-labeled peptides to study various aspects of calmodulin-peptide interactions including binding affinity, stoichiometry, specificity, changes in peptide conformation, and thermal stability of the peptide-calmodulin complex. These data indicate the peptides exhibit many of the salient features seen with calmodulin-target enzyme interactions. The fluorescently-labeled peptides should thus serve as useful models for studying calmodulin-target enzyme interactions at the molecular level.  相似文献   

9.
Limited proteolysis has been utilized to study the structural organization of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase. The enzyme (Mr approximately 89,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) consists of an amino-terminal, protease-susceptible region of unidentified function and a carboxyl-terminal, protease-resistant region of Mr approximately 40,000 containing the catalytic and calmodulin-binding domains. Partial digestion with trypsin produced an intermediate 56,000-dalton fragment and a stable 38,000-dalton fragment, both of which were catalytically active and calmodulin-dependent. Chymotryptic digestion yielded three catalytically active fragments of about 37,000, 36,000, and 35,000 daltons. The Mr = 37,000 fragment was calmodulin-dependent with an apparent affinity equivalent to that of the native enzyme (approximately 1 nM). The 36,000-dalton fragment was also calmodulin-dependent but had a approximately 200-fold lower apparent affinity. The Mr = 35,000 fragment was calmodulin-independent. These three chymotryptic fragments, had identical amino termini. Nineteen residues were missing from the carboxyl terminus of the calmodulin-independent chymotryptic fragment whereas only 8 or 9 carboxyl-terminal residues were missing from the calmodulin-dependent tryptic fragments. These results suggest that the 11-residue sequence (IAVSAANRFKK) in the carboxyl-terminal region of myosin light chain kinase contributes directly to the binding of calmodulin. This conclusion is in accord with data (Blumenthal, D. K., Takio, K., Edelman, A. M., Charbonneau, H., Titani, K., Walsh, K. A., and Krebs, E. G. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 82, 3187-3191) that the carboxyl-terminal, 27-residue CNBr peptide of the native enzyme shows Ca2+-dependent, high affinity binding to calmodulin and that similar calmodulin-binding activity, although detectable in unfractionated CNBr digests of calmodulin-dependent enzyme forms, is much reduced in a CNBr digest of the calmodulin-independent, Mr = 35,000 chymotryptic fragment.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction between bovine testes calmodulin and rabbit fast skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase was investigated with the zero-length cross-linking reagent N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. A cross-linked product of 110 kDa was produced only in the presence of Ca2+. The reaction mixture was separated on diethylaminoethyl cellulose, and a fraction containing the cross-linked complex of calmodulin and myosin light chain kinase was found to have an elevated kinase activity in the absence of Ca2+, which constituted approximately 50% of the maximally stimulated kinase activity of control, and additional kinase activity in the presence of Ca2+, which constituted the remaining 50% of control activity. Calmodulin added exogenously to the cross-linked complex had no effect on the measured Ca2+ dependence or the maximal extent of kinase activity, which is consistent with the cross-linking of calmodulin in close proximity to a regulatory region of myosin light chain kinase. Moreover, the results are consistent with a mechanism whereby the association of calmodulin is sufficient to stimulate kinase activity and the binding of Ca2+ to bound calmodulin increases catalytic efficiency.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is activated by calcium-calmodulin and, in turn, phosphorylates and activates the smooth muscle actomyosin ATPase, resulting in muscle contraction. The amino acid sequence of the regulatory domain of MLCK is known, and it contains a region that binds calmodulin and also bears a strong homology to the phosphorylation site in the substrate. Thus, it has been called the "pseudosubstrate". It has been proposed that calmodulin activates MLCK by binding to and reversing the autoinhibitory function of the pseudosubstrate. Synthetic peptides based on this sequence inhibit MLCK both by binding to calmodulin and by competing with the substrate at the active site. In the work reported here, we have synthesized a large number of peptides from the regulatory region of MLCK (MLCK 480-516). The region was systematically analyzed by dividing it into fragments of two to six amino acids, each containing one or more basic residues, in order to map in detail the calmodulin binding site and the autoinhibitory region. It was observed that both calmodulin binding and autoinhibition are mediated by several different fragments of the regulatory sequence. Two nonoverlapping peptides, MLCK 480-493 and MLCK 494-504, are similar in potency in inhibiting the enzyme (IC50's of 2 and 6 microM, respectively). Larger fragments, combining multiple inhibitory regions, are more potent inhibitors. For example, MLCK 480-504 is extremely potent, with an IC50 of 13 nM. The calmodulin binding site and active site directed inhibitory regions overlap, but are not identical. Residues 505-512 are important only for calmodulin binding.  相似文献   

13.
A 22-residue synthetic peptide encompassing the calmodulin (CaM)-binding domain of skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase was studied by two-dimensional NMR and CD spectroscopy. In water the peptide does not form any regular structure; however, addition of the helix-inducing solvent trifluoroethanol (TFE) causes it to form an alpha-helical structure. The proton NMR spectra of this peptide in 25% and 40% TFE were assigned by double quantum-filtered J-correlated spectroscopy, total correlation spectroscopy, and nuclear Overhauser effect correlated spectroscopy spectra. In addition, the alpha-carbon chemical shifts were obtained from (1H,13C)-heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence spectra. The presence of numerous dNN(i, i + 1), d alpha N(i, i + 3), and d alpha beta(i, i + 3) NOE crosspeaks indicates that an alpha-helix can be formed from residues 3 to 20; this is further supported by the CD data. Upfield alpha-proton and downfield alpha-carbon shifts in this region of the peptide provide further support for the formation of an alpha-helix. The helix induced by TFE appears to be similar to that formed upon binding of the peptide to CaM.  相似文献   

14.
Flow microcalorimetric titrations of calmodulin with seminalplasmin at 25 degrees C revealed that the high affinity one-to-one complex in the presence of Ca2+ (Comte, M., Malnoe, A., and Cox, J. A. (1986) Biochem. J. 240, 567-573) is entirely enthalpy-driven (delta H0 = -50 kJ.mol-1; delta S0 = O J.K-1.mol-1; delta Cp0 = O J.K-1.mol-1) and is not influenced by the proton or Mg2+ concentration. The Sr2+- and Cd2+-promoted high affinity complexes are also exothermic for -49 and -45 kJ.mol-1, respectively. The observed low affinity interaction in the absence of divalent ions displays no enthalpy change. No enthalpy changes are observed when calmodulin and seminalplasmin are mixed in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Mg2+, Zn2+, or Mn2+. Enthalpy titrations of the 1:1 calmodulin-seminalplasmin complex with Ca2+ and of partly Ca2+-saturated calmodulin with seminalplasmin revealed that only the species calmodulin.Can greater than or equal to 2 is fully competent for high affinity interaction with seminalplasmin. Binding of the second Ca2+ is strongly enhanced (K2 greater than or equal to 5 X 10(7) M-1) as compared to that in free calmodulin (K2 = 2.6 X 10(5) M-1). This is essentially due to the concomitant strongly exothermic step of isomerization of the calmodulin-seminalplasmin complex from its low to its high affinity form. Binding of the remaining two Ca2+ to the high affinity seminalplasmin-calmodulin complex displays the same affinity constants and endothermic enthalpy change as in free calmodulin. A microcalorimetric study on the complex formation between Ca2+-saturated calmodulin and turkey gizzard myosin light chain kinase revealed that the interaction is strongly exothermic with an important overall gain of order (delta H0 = -85 kJ.mol-1; delta S0 = -122 J.K-1.mol-1) and occurs with significant proton uptake (0.44 H+ per mol at pH 7.5). The observed low affinity interaction (K = 2.2 X 10(5) M-1) in the absence of Ca2+ (Mamar-Bachi, A., and Cox, J. A. (1987) Cell Calcium 8, 473-482) displays neither a change in enthalpy nor in protonation.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of Ca2+(4).calmodulin (CaM) to rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is required for expression of the enzyme's activity. While both MLCK and CaM were stable at 30 degrees C, their complex was not. The binding of CaM to MLCK resulted in a time- and temperature-dependent inactivation that reflected an intrinsic instability of the complex. Separation of the components of the inactive complex yielded functional CaM, but catalytically inert MLCK, indicating that the site of the inactivating event was confined to MLCK. The behavior of proteolytic fragments further localized this event to the C-terminal 60% of the 603-residue protein. Changes in the tryptophan fluorescence and proteolytic susceptibility of MLCK-CaM indicated that a conformational change accompanied, and thus may have caused, inactivation. Substrates protected against inactivation, as did millimolar concentrations of Mg2+, Mn2+, and Ca2+. These metals appeared to bind to a site on MLCK distinct from that which recognized Mg2+.ATP. A proteolytic fragment of MLCK lacking the ability to bind CaM, C beta 35 (residues 255-584; Edelman, A. M., Takio, K., Blumenthal, D. K., Hansen, R. S., Walsh, K. A., Titani, K., and Krebs, E. G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11275-11285), was unstable at 30 degrees C, whereas a similar fragment which does bind CaM, T beta 40 (residues 236-595; Edelman, A. M., Takio, K., Blumenthal, D. K., Hansen, R. S., Walsh, K. A., Titani, K., and Krebs, E. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11275-11285), was unstable only when CaM was bound.  相似文献   

16.
A synthetic peptide representing the calmodulin-binding domain of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (K-R-R-W-K-K-N-F-I-A-V-S-A-A-N-R-F-K-K-I-S-S-S-G-A-L) was used as an antigen to produce a monoclonal antibody. The antibody (designated MAb RSkCBP1, of the IgM class) reacted with similar affinity (KD approximately 20 nM) by competitive enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) with the antigen peptide and intact rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase. MAb RSkCBP1 inhibited rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase activity competitively with respect to calmodulin (Ki = 20 nM). The antibody also inhibited myosin light chain kinase activity in extracts of skeletal muscle from several mammalian species (rabbit, sheep, and bovine) and an avian species (chicken). The concentration of MAb RSKCBP1 required for 50% inhibition of enzyme activity was similar for the mammalian species (80 nM) but was significantly higher for the avian species (1.2 microM). A competitive ELISA protocol was used to analyze weak cross-reactivity to other calmodulin-binding peptides and proteins. This assay demonstrated no cross-reactivity with the venom peptides melittin or mastoparan; smooth muscle myosin light chain kinases from hog carotid, bovine trachea, or chicken gizzard; bovine brain calmodulin-dependent calcineurin; or rabbit skeletal muscle troponin I. These data support the contention that the synthetic peptide used as the antigen represents the calmodulin-binding domain of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase and that the calmodulin-binding domains of different calmodulin-regulated proteins may have distinct primary and/or higher order structures.  相似文献   

17.
A method is described for rapidly surveying the effects of modifying individual amino acid residues of a protein on its ability to interact specifically with another macromolecule. The procedure has been used to examine the individual roles of the seven lysyl residues of calmodulin in its ability to bind to smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase; previous studies by Jackson et al. (J. Biol. Chem. 261:1226-12232, 1986) have suggested that certain lysines may be located close to the interaction site. Trace [3H]-acetylated calmodulin, consisting predominantly of molecules acetylated at single sites together with unmodified protein, was incubated in excess (five- to 20-fold) with smooth muscle MLC kinase to allow the modified and unmodified molecules to compete for binding to the enzyme. Subsequently, the calmodulin-enzyme complex was separated from unbound calmodulin, and the level of acetylation of each of the seven lysines of the bound fraction of calmodulin was determined and compared to that of each corresponding group of the starting preparation. Significant changes were found at only two of the lysines, 21 and 75, where the extent of acetylation in the bound fraction was three- and fivefold lower, respectively, than that in the original preparation. These results were reproducible in three separate selection experiments employing both chicken and turkey gizzard MLC kinase. It is concluded that acetylation of calmodulin at either lysine 21 or 75 markedly reduces its affinity for MLC kinase, but acetylation at any of the other lysines (13, 30, 77, 94, or 148) has only minor effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Fajmut A  Brumen M  Schuster S 《FEBS letters》2005,579(20):4361-4366
Active Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) plays an important role in the process of MLC phosphorylation and consecutive smooth muscle contraction. Here, we propose a mathematical model of a detailed kinetic scheme describing interactions among Ca2+, CaM and MLCK and taking into account eight different aggregates. The main model result is the prediction of the Ca2+ dependent active form of MLCK, which is in the model taken as proportional to the concentration of Ca4CaM · MLCK complex. Wegscheider’s condition is additionally applied as a constraint enabling the prediction of some parameter values that have not yet been obtained by experiments.  相似文献   

19.
Marlow MS  Wand AJ 《Biochemistry》2006,45(29):8732-8741
As the primary intracellular calcium sensor, calcium-saturated calmodulin (CaM) regulates numerous and diverse proteins. Several mechanisms, including tissue-specific expression, localization, and sequestration, work in concert to limit the total number of available targets of calmodulin within a cell. While the free energies of binding of calmodulin-binding domains of regulated proteins by CaM have been shown to be highly similar, they result from vastly different enthalpic and entropic contributions. Here, we report the backbone and side-chain methyl dynamics of calcium-activated calmodulin in complex with a peptide corresponding to the CaM-binding domain of calmodulin kinase kinase, along with the thermodynamic underpinnings of complex formation. The results show a considerable reduction in side-chain mobility throughout CaM upon binding the CaMKKalpha peptide, which is consistent with the enthalpically driven nature of the binding. Site-specific comparison to another kinase-derived peptide complex with similar thermodynamic values reveals significant differences in dynamics largely localized to the hydrophobic binding sites.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of the binding of smooth muscle myosin light chain (MLC) kinase on the microenvironments of different regions of calmodulin (CaM) were investigated by comparing the acylation rate constants of the seven lysine amino groups of free CaM with those of CaM complexed with MLC kinase. Equimolar amounts of CaM and CaM-MLC kinase complex were trace labeled with [3H]acetic anhydride in the presence of phenylalanine as a standard nucleophile. After completion of the reaction, equal amounts of a trace 14C-acetylated CaM sample, together with [14C]acetylphenylalanine, were added to each reaction mixture. The 3H/14C-labeled CaM and acetylphenylalanine were then isolated from each solution. After complete reaction with nonradioactive acetylating reagent, 3H/14C ratios (r) were determined for each epsilon-N-acetyllysine in the two CaM samples. These values were obtained either from isolated peptide fragments containing one lysine or from epsilon-N-acetyl phenylthiohydantoin lysine obtained by Edman degradation of peptide fragments containing two lysines. From the ratios, protection factors (= rfree/rcomplex) were determined as a measure of the perturbation produced by MLC kinase binding. These protection factors were corrected, using the isotope ratios of the internal standard, for differences in the degree of competition for labeling reagent between the two mixtures. In two separate labeling experiments employing different levels of trace labeling, very little change was observed in the reactivities of four lysines on MLC kinase binding (lysines 13, 30, 77, and 94). Small but reproducible decreases (about 2-fold) were observed in the reactivities of lysines 21 and 148, while lysine 75 underwent a major (more then 7-fold) decrease in labeling. In conjunction with previously published data, these results are interpreted as suggesting that the major perturbation in lysine 75 is a direct effect of MLC kinase contact with CaM and that a region in the central helix containing this residue, but not lysine 77, represents or is near the CaM-binding site for MLC kinase. The smaller changes in reactivities at lysines 21 and 148 may reflect a conformational change that occurs in CaM as a result of binding to MLC kinase.  相似文献   

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