Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
Abstract
ABSTRACT
To explore the structural basis for the essential role of calmodulin (CaM) in
Aspergillus nidulans,
we have compared the biochemical and in vivo properties of
A. nidulans
CaM (AnCaM) with those of heterologous CaMs. Neither
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
CaM (ScCaM) nor a Ca
2+
binding mutant of
A. nidulans
CaM (1234) interacts appreciably with
A. nidulans
CaM binding proteins by an overlay assay or activates two essential CaMKs, CMKA and CMKB. In contrast, although vertebrate CaM (VCaM) binds a spectrum of proteins similar to that for AnCaM, it is unable to fully activate CMKA and CMKB, displaying a higher
K
CaM
and reduced
V
max
for both enzymes. In correlation with the biochemical analysis, neither ScCaM nor 1234 can support
A. nidulans
growth in the absence of the endogenous protein, whereas VCaM only partially complements the absence of wild-type CaM. Analysis of VCaM and AnCaM chimeras demonstrates that amino acid variations in both N- and C-terminal domains contribute to the inability of VCaM to activate CMKB, but differences in the N terminus are largely responsible for the reduced activity towards CMKA. In vivo, the chimeric molecules support growth equivalently, but only to levels intermediate between those of VCaM and AnCaM, suggesting that the reduced ability to activate the CaMKs is not solely responsible for the inability of VCaM to complement the absence of the wild-type protein. Thus, not only is Ca
2+
binding required for CaM function in
A. nidulans,
but the essential in vivo functions of
A. nidulans
CaM are uniquely sensitive to the subtle amino acid variations present in vertebrate CaM.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
24 articles.
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