Paramecium Calmodulin Mutants Defective in Ion Channel Regulation Associate with Melittin in the Absence of Calcium but Require It for Tertiary Collapse

Brenda R. Sorensen, Jason-Thomas Eppel, and Madeline A. Shea*
Department of Biochemistry, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa 52242-1109
Biochemistry, 2001, 40 (4), pp 896–903
DOI: 10.1021/bi0023091
Publication Date (Web): January 3, 2001
Copyright © 2001 American Chemical Society

 These studies were supported by a grant to M.A.S. from the National Institutes of Health (RO1 GM 57001).

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 Corresponding author. Telephone:  (319) 335-7885. FAX:  (319) 335-9570. E-mail:  madeline-shea@uiowa.edu.

Abstract

Calmodulin (CaM) is a small acidic protein essential to calcium-mediated signal transduction. Conformational change driven by calcium binding controls its selective activation of myriad target proteins. In most well characterized cases, both homologous domains of CaM interact with a target protein. However, physiologically separable roles for the two domains were demonstrated by mutants of Paramecium tetraurelia [Kung, C. et al. (1992) Cell Calcium 13, 413], some of which have altered calcium affinities [Jaren, O. R. et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 6881]. To determine whether these mutants can associate with canonical targets in a calcium-dependent manner, their ability to bind melittin was assessed using analytical gel permeation chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The Stokes radius of wild-type PCaM and 11 of the mutants decreased dramatically upon binding melittin in the presence of calcium. Fluorescence spectra and sedimentation velocity studies showed that melittin bound to wild-type PCaM and mutants in a calcium-independent manner. However, there were domain-specific perturbations. Mutations in the N-domain of PCaM did not affect the spectrum of melittin (residue W19) under apo or calcium-saturated conditions, whereas most of the mutations in the C-domain did. These data are consistent with a calcium-dependent model of sequential target association whereby melittin (i) binds to the C-domain of PCaM in the absence of calcium, (ii) remains associated with the C-domain upon calcium binding to sites III and IV, and (iii) subsequently binds to the N-domain upon calcium binding to sites I and II of CaM, causing tertiary collapse.

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History

  • Published In Issue January 30, 2001
  • Received October 3, 2000
    Revised Manuscript Received November 16, 2000

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