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1.
Structural independence of the two EF-hand domains of caltractin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Caltractin (centrin) is a member of the calmodulin subfamily of EF-hand Ca2+-binding proteins that is an essential component of microtubule-organizing centers in many organisms ranging from yeast and algae to humans. The protein contains two homologous EF-hand Ca2+-binding domains linked by a flexible tether; each domain is capable of binding two Ca2+ ions. In an effort to search for domain-specific functional properties of caltractin, the two isolated domains were subcloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Ca2+ binding affinities and the Ca2+ dependence of biophysical properties of the isolated domains were monitored by UV, CD, and NMR spectroscopy. Comparisons to the corresponding results for the intact protein showed that the two domains function independently of each other in these assays. Titration of a peptide fragment from the yeast Kar1p protein to the isolated domains and intact caltractin shows that the two domains interact in a Ca2+-dependent manner, with the C-terminal domain binding much more strongly than the N-terminal domain. Measurements of the macroscopic Ca2+ binding constants show that only the N-terminal domain has sufficient apparent Ca2+ affinity in vitro (1-10 microm) to be classified as a traditional calcium sensor in signal transduction pathways. However, investigation of the microscopic Ca2+ binding events in the C-terminal domain by NMR spectroscopy revealed that the observed macroscopic binding constant likely results from binding to two sites with very different affinities, one in the micromolar range and the other in the millimolar range. Thus, the C-terminal domain appears to also be capable of sensing Ca2+ signals but is activated by the binding of a single ion.  相似文献   

2.
Calmyrin is a myristoylated calcium binding protein that contains four putative EF-hands. Calmyrin interacts with a number of proteins, including presenilin-2 (PS2). However, the biophysical properties of calmyrin, and the molecular mechanisms that regulate its binding to different partners, are not well understood. By site-directed mutagenesis and Ca2+ binding studies, we found that calmyrin binds two Ca2+ ions with a dissociation constant of approximately 53 microM, and that the two C-terminal EF-hands 3 and 4 bind calcium. Using ultraviolet spectroscopy, circular dichroism (CD), and NMR, we found that Ca(2+)-free and -bound calmyrin have substantially different protein conformations. By yeast two-hybrid assays, we found that both EF-hands 3 and 4 of calmyrin must be intact for calmyrin to interact with PS2-loop sequences. Pulse-chase studies of HeLa cells transfected with calmyrin expression constructs indicated that wild-type (Wt) calmyrin has a half-life of approximately 75 min, whereas a mutant defective in myristoylation turns over more rapidly (half-life of 35 min). By contrast, the half-lives of calmyrin mutants with a disrupted EF-hand 3 or EF-hand 4 were 52 and 170 min, respectively. Using immunofluorescence staining of HeLa cells transfected with Wt and mutant calmyrin cDNAs, we found that both calcium binding and myristoylation are important for dynamic intracellular targeting of calmyrin. Double immunofluorescence microscopy indicated that Wt and myristoylation-defective calmyrin proteins colocalize efficiently and to the same extent with PS2, whereas calmyrin mutants defective in calcium binding display less colocalization with PS2. Our results suggest that calmyrin functions as a calcium sensor and that calcium binding sequences in calmyrin are important for interaction with the PS2 loop.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Intracellular Ca2+ signals are transduced by the binding of Ca2+ to sensor proteins, which subsequently modify the activity of their target proteins. Identification of these target proteins is, therefore, important for an understanding of cellular signalling processes. We have investigated the binding partners of four EF-hand Ca2+-binding proteins. Three proteins of the neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) family, hippocalcin, NCS-1 and neurocalcin delta were prepared as N-terminally tagged GST fusion proteins, and the less closely related protein L-CaBP1 was prepared in both N- and C-terminally tagged forms, the latter requiring generation of a new vector. Immobilised fusion proteins were used to purify binding partners from bovine brain cytosol and membrane extracts in the presence of 1 microM free Ca2+. Bound proteins were eluted with Ca2+-free and high-salt buffers and eluted proteins were identified by MALDI-MS and Western blotting. New protein targets detected included ARF1, Ca2+-dependent activator protein for secretion 1, cyclic nucleotide 3',5'-phosphodiesterase, the vacuolar ATPase, AP1 and AP2 complexes and the type I TGF-beta receptor. While certain of these interactions occurred with more than one of the Ca2+-binding proteins, others were found to be specific targets for particular Ca2+ sensors, and many of these did not overlap with known calmodulin-binding proteins. These findings provide new clues to the functional roles of the neuronal calcium sensor proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Ames JB  Hamasaki N  Molchanova T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(18):5776-5787
Recoverin, a member of the EF-hand superfamily, serves as a calcium sensor in retinal rod cells. A myristoyl or related fatty acyl group covalently attached to the N-terminus of recoverin facilitates the binding of recoverin to retinal disk membranes by a mechanism known as the Ca2+-myristoyl switch. Previous structural studies revealed that the myristoyl group of recoverin is sequestered inside the protein core in the absence of calcium. The cooperative binding of two calcium ions to the second and third EF-hands (EF-2 and EF-3) of recoverin leads to the extrusion of the fatty acid. Here we present nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), fluorescence, and calcium-binding studies of a myristoylated recoverin mutant (myr-E85Q) designed to abolish high-affinity calcium binding to EF-2 and thereby trap the myristoylated protein with calcium bound solely to EF-3. Equilibrium calcium-binding studies confirm that only one Ca2+ binds to myr-E85Q under the conditions of this study with a dissociation constant of 100 microM. Fluorescence and NMR spectra of the Ca2+-free myr-E85Q are identical to those of Ca2+-free wild type, indicating that the E85Q mutation does not alter the stability and structure of the Ca2+-free protein. In contrast, the fluorescence and NMR spectra of half-saturated myr-E85Q (one bound Ca2+) look different from those of Ca2+-saturated wild type (two bound Ca2+), suggesting that half-saturated myr-E85Q may represent a structural intermediate. We report here the three-dimensional structure of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q as determined by NMR spectroscopy. The N-terminal myristoyl group of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q is sequestered within a hydrophobic cavity lined by many aromatic residues (F23, W31, Y53, F56, F83, and Y86) resembling that of Ca2+-free recoverin. The structure of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q in the N-terminal region (residues 2-90) is similar to that of Ca2+-free recoverin, whereas the C-terminal region (residues 100-202) is more similar to that of Ca2+-bound wild type. Hence, the structure of Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q represents a hybrid between the structures of recoverin with zero and two Ca2+ bound. The binding of Ca2+ to EF-3 leads to local structural changes within the EF-hand that alter the domain interface and cause a 45 degrees swiveling of the N- and C-terminal domains, resulting in a partial unclamping of the myristoyl group. We propose that Ca2+-bound myr-E85Q may represent a stable intermediate state in the kinetic mechanism of the calcium-myristoyl switch.  相似文献   

6.
The human protein NEFA (DNA binding, EF-hand, Acidic region) has previously been isolated from a KM3 cell line and immunolocalized on the plasma membrane, in the cytoplasma, and in the culture medium. Sequence analysis of a cDNA clone encoding NEFA identified a hydrophilic domain, two EF-hands, and a leucine zipper at the C- terminus. These characters are shared with nucleobindin (Nuc). In this paper we have further characterized NEFA and probed its evolutionary origins. Circular dichroism (CD) spectra of recombinant NEFA indicated a helical content of 51% and showed that the EF-hands are capable of binding Ca2+. Experiments with recombinant NEFA and synthesized peptides revealed that the leucine zipper cannot form a homodimer. The leucine zipper may allow heterodimer formation of NEFA and an unknown protein. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that this protein is derived from a four-domain EF-hand ancestor with subsequent duplications and fusions. The leucine zipper and putative DNA-binding domains of NEFA have evolved secondarily from existing EF-hand sequences. These analyses provide insights into how complex proteins may originate and trace the precursor of NEFA to the common ancestor of eukaryotes.   相似文献   

7.
Cadmium-113 and calcium-43 NMR spectra of Cd2+ and Ca2+ bound to the porcine intestinal calcium binding protein (ICaBP; Mr 9000) contain two resonances. The first resonance is characterized by NMR parameters resembling those found for these cations bound to proteins containing the typical helix-loop-helix calcium binding domains of parvalbumin, calmodulin, and troponin C, which are defined as EF-hands by Kretsinger [Kretsinger, R. H. (1976) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 45, 239]. The second resonance in both spectra has a unique chemical shift and is consequently assigned to the metal ion bound in the N-terminal site of ICaBP. This site is characterized by an insertion of a proline in the loop of the helix-loop-helix domain and will be called the pseudo-EF-hand site. The binding of Cd2+ to the apo form of ICaBP is sequential. The EF-hand site is filled first. Both binding sites have similar, but not identical, affinities for Ca2+: at a Ca2+ to protein ratio of 1:1, 65% of the ion is bound in the EF-hand site and 35% in the pseudo-EF-hand site. The two sites do not appear to act independently; thus, replacement of Ca2+ or Cd2+ by La3+ in the EF-hand site causes changes in the environment of the ions in the pseudo-EF-hand site. In addition, the chemical shift of Cd2+ bound to the EF-hand site is dependent on the presence or absence of Ca2+ or Cd2+ in the pseudo-EF-hand site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The EF-hand calcium-binding loop III from calmodulin was inserted with glycine linkers into the scaffold protein CD2.D1 at three locations to study site-specific calcium binding properties of EF-hand motifs. After insertion, the host protein retains its native structure and forms a 1:1 metal-protein complex for calcium and its analog, lanthanum. Tyrosine-sensitized Tb3+ energy transfer exhibits metal binding and La3+ and Ca2+ compete for the metal binding site. The grafted EF-loop III in different environments has similar La3+ binding affinities, suggesting that it is largely solvated and functions independently from the host protein.  相似文献   

9.
Isolated Ca2+-binding EF-hand peptides have a tendency to dimerize. This study is an attempt to account for the coupled equilibria of Ca2+-binding and peptide association for two EF-hands with strikingly different loop sequence and net charge. We have studied each of the two separate EF-hand fragments from calbindin D9k. A series of Ca2+-titrations at different peptide concentrations were monitored by CD and fluorescence spectroscopy. All data were fitted simultaneously to both a complete model of all possible equilibrium intermediates and a reduced model not including dimerization in the absence of Ca2+. Analytical ultracentrifugation shows that the peptides may occur as monomers or dimers depending on the solution conditions. Our results show strikingly different behavior for the two EF-hands. The fragment containing the N-terminal EF-hand shows a strong tendency to dimerize in the Ca2+-bound state. The average Ca2+-affinity is 3.5 orders of magnitude lower than for the intact protein. We observe a large apparent cooperativity of Ca2+ binding for the overall process from Ca2+-free monomer to fully loaded dimer, showing that a Ca2+-free EF-hand folds upon dimerization to a Ca2+-bound EF-hand, thereby presenting a preformed binding site to the second Ca2+-ion. The C-terminal EF-hand shows a much smaller tendency to dimerize, which may be related to its larger net negative charge. In spite of the differences in dimerization behavior, the Ca2+ affinities of both EF-hand fragments are similar and in the range lgK = 4.6-5.3.  相似文献   

10.
The pleckstrin homology (PH) domains of phospholipase C (PLC)-delta1 and a related catalytically inactive protein, p130, both bind inositol phosphates and inositol lipids. The binding to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] by PLC-delta1 is proposed to be the critical interaction required for membrane localization to where the substrate resides; it is also required for the Ca(2+)-dependent activation of PLC-delta1 observed in the permeabilized cells. In the proximity of the PH domain, both PLC-delta1 and p130 possess the EF-hand domain, containing classical motifs implicated in calcium binding. Therefore, in the present study we examined whether the binding of the PH domain to PtdIns(4,5)P2 is regulated by changes in free Ca2+ concentration within the physiological range. A Ca2+ dependent increase in the binding to PtdIns(4,5)P2 was observed with a full-length PLC-delta1, while the isolated PH domain did not show any Ca2+ dependence. However, the connection of the EF-hand motifs to the PH domain restored the Ca2+ dependent increase in binding, even in the absence of the C2 domain. The p130 protein showed similar properties to PLC-delta1, and the EF-hand motifs were again required for the PH domain to exhibit a Ca2+ dependent increase in the binding to PtdIns(4,5)P2. The isolated PH domains from several other proteins which have been demonstrated to bind PtdIns(4,5)P2 showed no Ca2+ dependent enhancement of binding. However, when present within a chimera also containing PLC-delta1 EF-hand motifs, the Ca2+ dependent binding was again observed. These results suggest that the binding of Ca2+ to the EF-hand motifs can modulate binding to PtdIns(4,5)P2 mediated by the PH domain.  相似文献   

11.
A new low molecular weight calcium binding protein, designated 12-kDa CaBP, has been isolated from chicken gizzard using a phenyl-Sepharose affinity column followed by ion-exchange and gel filtration chromatographies. The isolated protein was homogeneous and has a molecular weight of 12,000 based on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of this protein is similar to but distinct from other known low molecular weight Ca2+ binding proteins. Ca2+ binding assays using Arsenazo III (Sigma) indicated that the protein binds 1 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein. The 12-kDa CaBP underwent a conformational change upon binding Ca2+, as revealed by uv difference spectroscopy and circular dichroism studies in the aromatic and far-ultraviolet range. Addition of Ca2+ to the 12-kDa CaBP labeled with 2-p-toluidinylnaphthalene-6-sulfonate (TNS) resulted in a sevenfold increase in fluorescence intensity, accompanied by a blue shift of the emission maximum from 463 to 445 nm. Hence, the probe in the presence of Ca2+ moves to a more nonpolar microenvironment. Like calmodulin and other related Ca2+ binding proteins, this protein also exposes a hydrophobic site upon binding calcium. Fluorescence titration with Ca2+ using TNS-labeled protein revealed the presence of a single high affinity calcium binding site (kd approximately 1 x 10(-6) M).  相似文献   

12.
We have determined the relative affinities in solution for various metals which bind to the lone calcium-binding site of the D-galactose-binding protein which resembles the EF-hand loop. In order of affinity the metals are: Ca2+ approximately Tb3+ approximately Pb2+ greater than Cd2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Mg2+ much greater than Ba2+. The binding affinity for calcium (Kd = 2 microM) and the slow off-rate determined for terbium (1 x 10(-3) s-1) and that the metal-binding site is unperturbed by sugar binding argue for a structural role. Furthermore, we have crystallographically refined the structure of the binding protein with the calcium substituted by cadmium, compared it with the calcium-bound structure, and found them to be identical. The results of these structural and solution studies support the hypothesis that for a given metal-binding loop, cation hydration energy, size, and charge are major factors contributing to binding affinity.  相似文献   

13.
Recoverin is a neuronal calcium sensor protein that controls the activity of rhodopsin kinase in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. Mutations in the EF-hand Ca2+ binding sites are valuable tools for investigating the functional properties of recoverin. In the recoverin mutant E121Q (Rec E121Q ) the high-affinity Ca2+ binding site is disabled. The non-myristoylated form of Rec E121Q binds one Ca2+ via its second Ca(2+)-binding site (EF-hand 2), whereas the myristoylated variant does not bind Ca2+ at all. Binding of Ca2+ to non-myristoylated Rec E121Q apparently triggers exposure of apolar side chains, allowing for association with hydrophobic matrices. Likewise, an interaction surface for the recoverin target rhodopsin kinase is constituted upon Ca2+ binding to the non-acylated mutant. Structural changes resulting from Ca(2+)-occupation of EF-hand 2 in myristoylated and non-myristoylated recoverin variants are discussed in terms of critical conditions required for biological activity.  相似文献   

14.
The co-operative calcium binding mechanism of the two C-terminal EF-hands of human alphaII-spectrin has been investigated by site-specific mutagenesis and multi-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. To analyse the calcium binding of each EF-hand independently, two mutant structures (E33A and D69S) of wild type alpha-spectrin were prepared. According to NMR analysis both E33A and D69S were properly folded. The unmutated EF-hand in these mutants remained nearly intact and active in calcium binding, whereas the mutated EF-hand lost its affinity for calcium completely. The apparent calcium binding affinity of the E33A mutant was much lower compared to the D39S mutant (approximately 2470 microM and approximately 240 microM, respectively). When the chemical shift perturbations were followed upon calcium titration, a positive correlation between the D69S mutant and the binding of the first calcium ion to the wild type was revealed. These observations showed that the first EF-hand in spectrin binds the first calcium ion and thereby triggers a conformational change that allows the second calcium ion to bind to the other EF-hand.  相似文献   

15.
A molecule of the photoreceptor Ca(2+)-binding protein recoverin contains four potential EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding sites, of which only two, the second and the third, are capable of binding calcium ions. We have studied the effects of substitutions in the second, third and fourth EF-hand sites of recoverin on its Ca(2+)-binding properties and some other characteristics, using intrinsic fluorescence, circular dichroism spectroscopy and differential scanning microcalorimetry. The interaction of the two operating binding sites of wild-type recoverin with calcium increases the protein's thermal stability, but makes the environment around the tryptophan residues more flexible. The amino acid substitution in the EF-hand 3 (E121Q) totally abolishes the high calcium affinity of recoverin, while the mutation in the EF-hand 2 (E85Q) causes only a moderate decrease in calcium binding. Based on this evidence, we suggest that the binding of calcium ions to recoverin is a sequential process with the EF-hand 3 being filled first. Estimation of Ca(2+)-binding constants according to the sequential binding scheme gave the values 3.7 x 10(6) and 3.1 x 10(5) M(-1) for third and second EF-hands, respectively. The substitutions in the EF-hand 2 or 3 (or in both the sites simultaneously) do not disturb significantly either tertiary or secondary structure of the apo-protein. Amino acid substitutions, which have been designed to restore the calcium affinity of the EF-hand 4 (G160D, K161E, K162N, D165G and K166Q), increase the calcium capacity and affinity of recoverin but also perturb the protein structure and decrease the thermostability of its apo-form.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of the isolated EF-hand domain of phospholipase C delta1 with arachidonic acid (AA) was characterized using circular dichroism (CD) and fluorescence spectroscopy. The far-UV CD spectral changes indicate that AA binds to the EF domain. The near-UV CD spectra suggest that the orientations of aromatic residues in the peptide are affected when AA binds to the protein. The fluorescence of the single intrinsic tryptophan located in EF1 was enhanced by the addition of dodecylmaltoside (DDM) and AA suggesting that this region of the protein is involved in hydrophobic interactions. In the presence of a low concentration of DDM it was found that AA induced a change in fluorescence resonance energy transfer, which is indicative of a conformational change. The lipid induced conformational change may play a role in calcium binding because the isolated EF-hand domain did not bind Ca2+ in the absence of lipids, but Ca2+-dependent changes in the intrinsic tryptophan emission were observed when free fatty acids were present. These studies identify specific EF-hand domains as allosteric regulatory domains that require hydrophobic ligands such as lipids.  相似文献   

17.
1. The calcium binding properties of factor X and its analogous decarboxyprotein have been compared with the aid of flow rate dialysis and ultraviolet difference spectroscopy. 2. Factor X binds approx. 20 mol of calcium per mol of protein. The first four sites exhibit positive cooperativity. 3. Changes in the ultraviolet difference spectrum when Ca2+ is bound suggest a conformational change. 4. In decarboxyfactor X low affinity of Ca2+ and no ligand-induced conformational change was observed. It is concluded that the presence of gamma-carboxyglutamate residues is a prerequisite for positive cooperative Ca2+ binding.  相似文献   

18.
The 'EF-hand' Ca2+-binding motif plays an essential role in eukaryotic cellular signalling, and the proteins containing this motif constitute a large and functionally diverse family. The EF-hand is defined by its helix-loop-helix secondary structure as well as the ligands presented by the loop to bind the Ca2+ ion. The identity of these ligands is semi-conserved in the most common (the 'canonical') EF-hand; however, several non-canonical EF-hands exist that bind Ca2+ by a different co-ordination mechanism. EF-hands tend to occur in pairs, which form a discrete domain so that most family members have two, four or six EF-hands. This pairing also enables communication, and many EF-hands display positive co-operativity, thereby minimizing the Ca2+ signal required to reach protein saturation. The conformational effects of Ca2+ binding are varied, function-dependent and, in some cases, minimal, but can lead to the creation of a protein target interaction site or structure formation from a molten-globule apo state. EF-hand proteins exhibit various sensitivities to Ca2+, reflecting the intrinsic binding ability of the EF-hand as well as the degree of co-operativity in Ca2+ binding to paired EF-hands. Two additional factors can influence the ability of an EF-hand to bind Ca2+: selectivity over Mg2+ (a cation with very similar chemical properties to Ca2+ and with a cytoplasmic concentration several orders of magnitude higher) and interaction with a protein target. A structural approach is used in this review to examine the diversity of family members, and a biophysical perspective provides insight into the ability of the EF-hand motif to bind Ca2+ with a wide range of affinities.  相似文献   

19.
A large-scale preparation method for bovine brain 28-kDa cholecalcin-like protein is described. Flow dialysis binding studies revealed that the protein binds at least 3 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein. The protein undergoes conformational changes on binding calcium as shown by UV differential absorption spectroscopy, near and far UV circular dichroism, and intrinsic fluorescence. Circular dichroism (CD) studies in the far UV indicate an apparent increase in helical content in the presence of Ca2+. The effect of calcium on the protein structure is nearly maximum for 1 Ca2+ bound/protein molecule. UV differential absorption studies on the binding of the Ca2+ agonist Tb3+ and Tb3+ luminescence induced by energy Trp----Tb3+ transfer indicate that Tb3+ binds to two higher affinity Ca2+-binding sites. These sites are probably very close to the single Trp residue. Analysis of the fluorescence parameters of the single tryptophan residue in the apoprotein and its accessibility to ionic and neutral quenchers suggests that this residue is located in a highly hydrophobic domain on the protein surface.  相似文献   

20.
Calbindin D28k, a highly conserved protein with Ca2+-sensing and Ca2+-buffering capabilities, is abundant in brain and sensory neurons. This protein contains six EF-hand subdomains, four of which bind Ca2+ with high affinity. Calbindin D28k can be reconstituted from six synthetic peptides corresponding to the six EF-hands, indicating a single-domain structure with multiple interactions between the EF-hand subdomains. In this study, we have undertaken a detailed characterization of the Ca2+-binding and oligomerization properties of each individual EF-hand peptide using CD spectroscopy and analytical ultracentrifugation. Under the conditions tested, EF2 is monomeric and does not bind Ca2+, whereas EF6, which binds Ca2+ weakly, aggregates severely. We have therefore focused this study on the high-affinity binding sites, EF-hands 1, 3, 4, and 5. Our sedimentation equilibrium data show that, in the presence of Ca2+, EF-hands 1, 3, 4, and 5 all form dimers in solution in which the distribution between the monomer, dimer, and higher order oligomers differs. The processes of Ca2+ binding and oligomerization are linked to different degrees, and three main mechanisms emerge. For EF-hands 1 and 5, the dimer binds Ca2+ more strongly than the monomer and Ca2+ binding drives dimerization. For EF-hand 4, dimer formation requires only one of the monomers to be Ca2+-bound. In this case, the Ca2+ affinity is independent of dimerization. For EF-hand 3, dimerization occurs both in the absence and presence of Ca2+, while oligomerization increases in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

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