Calcium sensor proteins in hearing and sight. Biochemical investigation of diseases-associated variants.

Abstract

Calcium is a cation which plays a pivotal role as second messenger, thus its concentration in cells needs to be finely regulated. Many systems work for that purpose, including Ca2+ sensor proteins, which undergo conformational changes upon Ca2+ coordination via EF-hands. Ca2+ sensors can be ubiquitous or tissue specific. Examples in this sense are represented by Guanylate Cyclase Activating Protein 1 (GCAP1) and Calcium- and Integrin-Binding Protein 2 (CIB2), involved in sight and hearing respectively. Missense point mutations in GCAP1 and CIB2 were found to be associated with genetic diseases characterized by retinal dystrophies and/or deafness. During my PhD, I focused my attention on the characterization of two point mutations namely p.Glu111Val (E111V) in GCAP1, leading to Cone/Rod dystrophy in an Italian family, and p.Glu64Asp (E64D) in CIB2, linked to Usher syndrome type 1J (USH1J), a rare disease characterized by the copresence of blindness and deafness. In particular, I spent the first part of the PhD investigating the role of CIB2 which is still under debate, finding that it is per se uncapable to work as a Ca2+ sensor under physiological conditions and that the conservative mutation linked to USH1J perturbs an allosteric communication between pseudo-EF1 and EF3, thus blocking the protein in an unfunctional conformation. Then, I characterized E111V GCAP1, finding that it is incapable of regulating its molecular target (Guanylate Cyclase), leading to a constitutive active enzyme and thus a progressively high concentrations of Ca2+ and cGMP in cells, which may explain the pathological phenotype. Looking for a potential therapeutic approach for Cone-Rod dystrophies, we found that the well-established Ca2+-relay model, explaining the gradual activation of Guanylate Cyclase by multiple GCAP molecules following gradual changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentrations, seems to be species-specific, since it apparently does not work in the same way in humans as in mouse and bovine photoreceptors. Finally, we identified a general method for the characterization of the interaction between a ubiquitous Ca2+ sensor protein (calmodulin) and inorganic CaF2 nanoparticles, suggesting their suitability as devices for nanomedicine applications

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