29 research outputs found

    NMR identification of calcineurin B residues affected by binding of a calcineurin A peptide

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    AbstractTriple resonance 3D NMR methods have been used to study the interaction between calcineurin B and a peptide fragment of calcineurin A for which it has high affinity (KD ∼4 × 10−7 M). Although calcineurin B aggregates at NMR concentrations of ∼ 1 mM, in the presence of a target peptide fragment of calcineurin A it becomes monomeric and yields NMR spectra that are very similar to those reported previously for calcineurin B solubilized by the zwitterionic detergent CHAPS. Changes in chemical shifts between CHAPS- and peptide-solubilized calcineurin B are small which is indicative of no differences in secondary structure. Residues most affected by binding to target peptide are found primarily on the hydrophobic faces of the four helices, present in each of the two globular domains in calcineurin B, and in the loops connecting helices II and III, IV and V, and possibly in the C-terminal 12 residues, which also exhibit a change in mobility

    Domain II of calmodulin is involved in activation of calcineurin

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    AbstractA family of mutant proteins related to calmodulin (CaM) has been produced using cDNA constructs in bacterial expression vectors. The new proteins contain amino acid substitutions in Ca2+-binding domains I, II, both I and II, or both II and IV. The calmodulin-like proteins have been characterized with respect to mobility on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, Ca2+-dependent enhancement of tyrosine fluorescence, and abilities to activate the CaM-dependent phosphatase calcineurin. These studies suggest that an intact Ca2+-binding domain II is minimally required for full activation of calcineurin

    CALMODULIN MEDIATED REGULATION OF CYTOSOLIC CALCIUM

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    Low Affinity Ca 2+

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    Identification of the NH2-terminal blocking group of calcineurin B as myristic acid

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    The NH2-terminal blocking group of the Ca2+-binding B-subunit of calcineurin (protein phosphatase-2B) has been identified as myristic acid by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry and gas chromatography. The sequence, myristyl-GlyAsnGluAla-, is very similar to that of the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, the only other protein known to contain this fatty acid. This finding, and the elution of all myristyl peptides at 57% acetonitrile on reverse phase HPLC, may facilitate the identification of other proteins with this blocking group.</p
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