Calcium Binding to Calmodulin Mutants Having Domain-Specific Effects on the Regulation of Ion Channels

Wendy S. VanScyoc, Rhonda A. Newman, Brenda R. Sorensen, and Madeline A. Shea*
Department of Biochemistry, Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242-1109
Biochemistry, 2006, 45 (48), pp 14311–14324
DOI: 10.1021/bi061134d
Publication Date (Web): November 9, 2006
Copyright © 2006 American Chemical Society

 These studies were supported by a University of Iowa Center for Biocatalysis and Bioprocessing Graduate Fellowship to W.S.V., a University of Iowa Center for Biocatalaysis and Bioprocessing NIH Biotechnology Training grant (NIH T32 GM08365-13) to R.A.N., and a grant to M.A.S. from the National Institutes of Health (RO1 GM 57001).

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*

 To whom correspondence should be addressed. Telephone:  (319) 335-7885. Fax:  (319) 335-9570. E-mail:  madeline-shea@uiowa.edu.

Abstract

Abstract Image

Calmodulin (CaM) is an essential, eukaryotic protein comprised of two highly homologous domains (N and C). CaM binds four calcium ions cooperatively, regulating a wide array of target proteins. A genetic screen of Paramecia by Kung [Kung, C. et al. (1992) Cell Calcium 13, 413−425] demonstrated that the domains of CaM have separable physiological roles:  “under-reactive” mutations affecting calcium-dependent sodium currents mapped to the N-domain, while “over-reactive” mutations affecting calcium-dependent potassium currents localized to the C-domain of CaM. To determine whether and how these mutations affected intrinsic calcium-binding properties of CaM domains, phenylalanine fluorescence was used to monitor calcium binding to sites I and II (N-domain) and tyrosine fluorescence was used to monitor sites III and IV (C-domain). To explore interdomain interactions, binding properties of each full-length mutant were compared to those of its corresponding domain fragments. The calcium-binding properties of six under-reactive mutants (V35I/D50N, G40E, G40E/D50N, D50G, E54K, and G59S) and one over-reactive mutant (M145V) were indistinguishable from those of wild-type CaM, despite their deleterious physiological effects on ion-channel regulation. Four over-reactive mutants (D95G, S101F, E104K, and H135R) significantly decreased the calcium affinity of the C-domain. Of these, one (E104K) also increased the calcium affinity of the N-domain, demonstrating that the magnitude and direction of wild-type interdomain coupling had been perturbed. This suggests that, while some of these mutations alter calcium-binding directly, others probably alter CaM-channel association or calcium-triggered conformational change in the context of a ternary complex with the affected ion channel.

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