4 research outputs found

    A CaVĪ² SH3/Guanylate Kinase Domain Interaction Regulates Multiple Properties of Voltage-gated Ca2+ Channels

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    Auxiliary Ca2+ channel Ī² subunits (CaVĪ²) regulate cellular Ca2+ signaling by trafficking pore-forming Ī±1 subunits to the membrane and normalizing channel gating. These effects are mediated through a characteristic src homology 3/guanylate kinase (SH3ā€“GK) structural module, a design feature shared in common with the membrane-associated guanylate kinase (MAGUK) family of scaffold proteins. However, the mechanisms by which the CaVĪ² SH3ā€“GK module regulates multiple Ca2+ channel functions are not well understood. Here, using a split-domain approach, we investigated the role of the interrelationship between CaVĪ² SH3 and GK domains in defining channel properties. The studies build upon a previously identified split-domain pair that displays a trans SH3ā€“GK interaction, and fully reconstitutes CaVĪ² effects on channel trafficking, activation gating, and increased open probability (Po). Here, by varying the precise locations used to separate SH3 and GK domains and monitoring subsequent SH3ā€“GK interactions by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), we identified a particular split-domain pair that displayed a subtly altered configuration of the trans SH3ā€“GK interaction. Remarkably, this pair discriminated between CaVĪ² trafficking and gating properties: Ī±1C targeting to the membrane was fully reconstituted, whereas shifts in activation gating and increased Po functions were selectively lost. A more extreme case, in which the trans SH3ā€“GK interaction was selectively ablated, yielded a split-domain pair that could reconstitute neither the trafficking nor gating-modulation functions, even though both moieties could independently engage their respective binding sites on the Ī±1C (CaV1.2) subunit. The results reveal that CaVĪ² SH3 and GK domains function codependently to tune Ca2+ channel trafficking and gating properties, and suggest new paradigms for physiological and therapeutic regulation of Ca2+ channel activity
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