Mapping of Calmodulin Binding Sites on the IP 3 R1 N. Nadif Kasri, I. Sienaert, J.B. Parys, G. Callewaert, L. Missiaen and H. De Smedt Laboratory of Physiology,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Calmodulin in action: Diversity in target recognition and Activation Mechanism.
Advertisements

Modulation de la structure, localisation et fonction des récepteurs pour l’inositol trisphosphate: le rôle des interactions protéiques. Jan B. Parys K.U.Leuven.
Voltage-gated Ca 2+ Channels (VGCCs) For review, see: Catterall, Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 16:
Regulation of the IP3 Receptor by Ca2+ and Ca2+-Binding Proteins
Intracellular calcium release channels as multi-protein complexes Jan B. Parys K.U.Leuven 7 th ECS meeting, June 13th, 2002.
Mapping of Calmodulin binding sites on the IP3R1 N. Nadif Kasri; I. Sienaert, S. Vanlingen, J.B. Parys, G. Callewaert, L. Missiaen and H. De Smedt Laboratory.
Regulation of intracellular Ca 2+ -release channels by Ca 2+ and Ca 2+ -binding proteins Nael Nadif Kasri September 21st, 2004.
IP 3 -induced Ca 2+ release and calmodulin Laboratory of Physiology KULeuven Leuven, Belgium.
Regulation of the IP 3 Receptor by Ca 2+ and Ca 2+ -binding Proteins.
Cleavage of IP 3 R1 by caspase-3 and intracellular Ca 2+ homeostasis during Apoptosis Laboratory of Physiology, KULeuven, Belgium Assefa Z, Bultynck G,
Chapter 27 Phage Strategies
Regulation of the IP 3 Receptor by Ca 2+ and Ca 2+ -binding Proteins.
Regulation of inositol 1,4,5- trisphosphate (IP 3 ) receptors and IP 3 -induced Ca 2+ release H. De Smedt K.U.Leuven, Belgium.
IP3-induced Ca2+ release and calmodulin
Figure 1 Dependence of DAPI displacement on RecA protein concentration
Proadrenomedullin N-Terminal 20 Peptide
Single Channel Function of Recombinant Type-1 Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate Receptor Ligand Binding Domain Splice Variants  Josefina Ramos-Franco, Sean.
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages (September 1997)
by Abdelbaset Elzagallaai, Sergio D. Rosé, and José-Marı́a Trifaró
Volume 111, Issue 2, Pages (October 2002)
Kinetic Analysis of High Affinity Forms of Interleukin (IL)-13 Receptors: Suppression of IL-13 Binding by IL-2 Receptor γ Chain  Vladimir A. Kuznetsov,
Volume 98, Issue 1, Pages (July 1999)
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages (July 2005)
Protein Complex Discovery
Young Kwon, Thomas Hofmann, Craig Montell  Molecular Cell 
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages (July 2005)
Etienne Roux, Marko Marhl  Biophysical Journal 
The Binding Affinity of Ff Gene 5 Protein Depends on the Nearest-Neighbor Composition of the ssDNA Substrate  Tung-Chung Mou, Carla W. Gray, Donald M.
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages (January 2009)
James Kim, Smita Ghosh, Deborah A Nunziato, Geoffrey S Pitt  Neuron 
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages (June 2009)
Neurexins Are Functional α-Latrotoxin Receptors
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages (September 1997)
Allosteric Activation of DegS, a Stress Sensor PDZ Protease
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages (June 2002)
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages (June 2003)
The Skeletal Muscle Calcium Release Channel
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages (January 2003)
Volume 120, Issue 1, Pages (January 2005)
Volume 89, Issue 5, Pages (May 1997)
Recombinant Scinderin Enhances Exocytosis, an Effect Blocked by Two Scinderin- Derived Actin-Binding Peptides and PIP2  L Zhang, M.G Marcu, K Nau-Staudt,
Blaise Z Peterson, Carla D DeMaria, David T Yue  Neuron 
Cooperative activation of IP3 receptors by sequential binding of IP3 and Ca2+ safeguards against spontaneous activity  Jonathan S. Marchant, Colin W.
Alexander Falkenhagen, Sadhna Joshi  Molecular Therapy - Nucleic Acids 
Volume 19, Issue 6, Pages (June 2012)
Michael D Ehlers, Su Zhang, Jeffrey P Bernhardt, Richard L Huganir 
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages (August 2004)
Protein Complex Discovery
Seung-Jae Lee, Craig Montell  Neuron 
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages (February 2001)
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages (June 1997)
Kevin M. Marks, Michael Rosinov, Garry P. Nolan  Chemistry & Biology 
Volume 122, Issue 2, Pages (July 2005)
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages (July 2008)
Volume 20, Issue 7, Pages (July 2012)
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages (January 2011)
Characterization of Keratinocyte Differentiation Induced by Ascorbic Acid: Protein Kinase C Involvement and Vitamin C Homeostasis1  Isabella Savini, Antonello.
Volume 96, Issue 3, Pages (February 1999)
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages (October 2000)
Volume 60, Issue 2, Pages (October 2015)
D. Fu, P. Vissavajjhala, Hemmings H.C.   British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Volume 97, Issue 2, Pages (April 1999)
Volume 113, Issue 9, Pages (November 2017)
CRM1 Is an Export Receptor for Leucine-Rich Nuclear Export Signals
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages (April 1996)
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages (April 1998)
Apocalmodulin and Ca2+Calmodulin-Binding Sites on the CaV1.2 Channel
Figure 5. The endonucleolytic product from PfuPCNA/MR activity is displaced from dsDNA. Results from real-time ... Figure 5. The endonucleolytic product.
Volume 13, Issue 14, Pages (July 2003)
Volume 13, Issue 15, Pages (August 2003)
Presentation transcript:

Mapping of Calmodulin Binding Sites on the IP 3 R1 N. Nadif Kasri, I. Sienaert, J.B. Parys, G. Callewaert, L. Missiaen and H. De Smedt Laboratory of Physiology, K.U.Leuven Campus Gasthuisberg, 3000 Belgium Introduction Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous protein that plays a critical role in regulating cellular functions by altering the activity of a large number of proteins, including the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP 3 R). CaM inhibits IP 3 binding in both the presence and absence of Ca 2+ and IP 3 - induced Ca 2+ release (IICR) in the presence of Ca 2+. Aim In this study we further charactarized the different CaM- binding sites on the IP 3 R1 in search for their role in the functioning of the intact IP 3 R1. We therefore used recombinant CaM and CaM1234, a Ca 2+ -insensitive mutant. Conclusion In this study we show the presence of two complex CaM-binding sites on the IP 3 R1. 1) In the N-terminal part we show the presence of a discontinuous Ca 2+ - independent CaM-binding site (aa P49-N81and aa E106-S128) that might be responsible for the inhibition of IP 3 binding. 2) In the regulatory domain we show that CaM-binding consists of overlapping Ca 2+ -independent and Ca 2+ -dependent CaM-binding sequences, with the Ca 2+ - independent sequence (aa L1554-R1585) located N-terminal of the Ca 2+ - dependent CaM-binding sequence (aa 1564-R1585). 3) It is conceivable that simultaneous binding to multiple CaM-binding sites is required for proper function on the intact IP 3 R1. Figure 2. Detailed analysis of CaM-binding properties of the N- terminal amino acid region of IP 3 R1. (A) Map showing positions of synthetic peptides (A-F) used for binding experiments relative to the N-terminal 159 amino acid region of IP 3 R1. Partial consensus domains for CaM binding are indicated. (B) The increase in dCaM fluorescence emission at = 500 nm upon addition of 1  M peptide(A-F) in the presence or absence of Ca 2+. Data for each peptide are shown as mean  S.D. (n = 3). (C) The Ca 2+ -dependent CaM-binding curve of peptide B to dCaM, data in the presence of 50  M free Ca 2+ were fitted to a bindingcurve with K d  0.1  M. (D) CaM- binding curve of peptide E to dCaM in the presence or absence of Ca 2+ ; data in the presence of 1 mM EGTA are fitted to a binding curve with K d  1  M; in the presence of 50  M free Ca 2+ the estimated K d value was  1.5  M. Further analysis of the N-terminal 159 aa of the IP 3 R1 shows that two amino acid stretches, peptide B and E were able to bind to dansyl-CaM in a Ca 2+ -independent way. Same conclusions could be drawn from the band-shift experiments(data not shown). A B C E D F % IQ (site1) 76% IQ 53% IQ A F/F B Fraction dCaM bound [Peptide B] (  M) K d  0.1 µM C 1 mM EGTA 50 µM free Ca 2+ [Peptide E] (µM) K d  1 µM Fraction dCaM bound D Figure 1 The effect of Ca 2+, CaM and CaM1234 on binding to Lbs-1His, and Lbs-1His  (A) 3  H  IP 3 binding to IP 3 -binding proteins purified on Ni-NTA (Qiagen) (Lbs-1His and Lbs-1His  1-225) was measured in the presence and absence of Ca 2+ (5 µM) and/or CaM/CaM1234 (10µM) and was expressed as the percentage in absence of these modulators (control). Binding was measured at pH 7.0 in the presence of 1 mM EGTA and 3.5 nM  3 H  IP 3. Data are expressed as the means  S.E. of at least three experiments, consisting of independent triplicates. (B) 3  H  IP 3 binding to purified Lbs-1His ( ) and Lbs-1His  ( ) in the presence of indicated concentrations of CaM1234 was expressed as a percentage of the binding measured in Ca 2+ -free buffer (1 mM EGTA, pH 7.0) without CaM1234. Curve fitting was done by Microcal TM Origin Version 6.0. (Northampton, MA) and yielded a EC 50 value of  1.7  M for Lbs-1His. (C) A scatchard analysis of IP 3 binding to Lbs-1His in the presence and absence of CaM is presented. Affinity purified Lbs-1His (1.5  g) was incubated with 3.5 nM [ 3 H]IP 3 at pH 7.0 and increasing concentrations of unlabeled IP 3 in the absence (  ) or presence (  ) of 10  M CaM. CaM and CaM1234 inhibit IP 3 binding in both the presence and absence of Ca 2+. Ca 2+ CaM µM CaM1234 Ca 2+ CaM 10 µM apoCaM 5 µM Ca 2+ control [ 3 H]IP 3 binding (%) Lbs-1His Lbs-1  1-225His W B/F Bound (nM ) EC 50 = 1.7µM A B C Results Figure 4.The effect of CaM and CaM1234 on the IP 3 - induced Ca 2+ release in permeabilized A7r5 cells. The IP 3 induced Ca 2+ release in efflux medium containing 6 mM BAPTA was calculated as the difference between the Ca 2+ release in the presence and that in the absence of IP 3. Ca 2+ release was induced by 1 µM IP 3 in the absence or presence of 10 µM CaM or CaM1234 at different free [Ca 2+ ] Ca 2+ /CaM is required for inhibitory effects on IP 3 IICR while CaM1234 does not inhibit IICR in the same conditions as Ca 2+ /CaM Endoplasmic reticulum Cytosol CaM R1:LDSQVNNLFLKSHN-IVQKTAMNWRLSARN-AARRDSVLA R2:LDSQVNTLFMKNHSSTVQRAAMGWRLSARSGPRFKEALGG R3:LDAHMSALLSSGGSCSAAAQRSAANYKTATRTFPRVIPTA R1:PPKKFRDCLFKLCPMNRYSAQKQFWKAAKPGAN R2:PPKKFRDCLFKVCPMNRYSAQKQYWKAKQAKQG R3:PPKKFRDCLFKVCPMNRYSAQKQYWKAKQTKQD Ca 2+ /CaM Figure 5. Overview of the CaM binding sites on the IP 3 R. N-terminal: a discontinuous Ca 2+ -independent CaM binding site (P49-N81, E106-E128). Amino acids P49-N81 are highly conserved among the three isoforms. Regulatory domain: Complex site consisting of a high affinity Ca 2+ -dependent CaM-binding site and a low affinity Ca 2+ -independent CaM- binding site. No conserved amino acids between type 1 and 3 IP 3 R. Table 1. Different methods were used to assay both the Ca 2+ -dependent and Ca 2+ -independent CaM and/or CaM1234 interaction of IP 3 R1 fusion proteins GST-Cyt1 (aa 1-159) or GST-Cyt11 (aa ). Figure 3. Detailed analysis of CaM-binding properties of the amino acid region in the regulatory domain of IP 3 R1. (A) Map showing positions of synthetic peptides (G-J) used for binding experiments relative to the amino acid region of IP 3 R1. Partial consensus domains for CaM binding are indicated. (B) The Increase in dCaM fluorescence emission at = 500 nm upon addition of 1  M peptide (G-J) in the presence or absence of Ca 2+. (C) CaM-binding curve of peptide H to dCaM in the presence or absence of Ca 2+ ; data in the presence of 1 mM EGTA are fitted to a binding curve with K d  0.35 µM; in the presence of 50  M free Ca 2+ the estimated K d value was  0.5 µM. (D) The Ca 2+ -dependent CaM-binding curve of peptide I to dCaM, data in the presence of 50  M free Ca 2+ ; data are fitted to a binding curve with K d  µM. (E) The Ca 2+ -dependent CaM-binding curve of peptide J to dCaM, data in the presence of 50  M free Ca 2+ ; data are fitted to a binding curve with K d  µM. The CaM binding site of the regulatory domain of the IP 3 R1 contains both, a high affinity Ca 2+ -dependent and a low affinity (K d 0.5 µM) Ca 2+ -independent CaM binding sequence. Same conclusions could be drawn from the band-shift experiments(data not shown). ldsqvnnlflkshnivqkta ldsqvnnlflkshnivqktalmwrlsarnaar kshnivqktalmwrlsarnaar kshnivqktalmwrlsarnaarrdsvlaasrd % % IQ 76 % IQ G H I J Fraction dCaM bound [Peptide H] (µM) 1 mM EGTA 50 µM free Ca 2+ K d ~ µM Fraction dCaM bound [Peptide I] (µM) K d ~ µM Fraction dCaM bound [Peptide J] (µM) K d ~ µM A ED C B Different assays show the Ca 2+ -independent interaction of CaM with both GST-Cyt1 and GST-Cyt11