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Canonical structural-binding modes in the calmodulin-target protein complexes

Year of publication

2023

Authors

Alexandre Denesyuk; Sergei E. Permyakov; Eugene A. Permyakov; Mark Johnson; Konstantin Denessiouk; Vladimir N. Uversky

Abstract

<p>Intracellular calcium sensor protein calmodulin (CaM) belongs to the large EF-hand protein superfamily. CaM shows a unique and not fully understood ability to bind to multiple targets, allows them to participate in a variety of regulatory processes. The protein has two approximately symmetrical globular domains (the N- and C-lobes). Analysis of the CaM-binding sites of target proteins showed that they have two hydrophobic ‘anchor’ amino acids separated by 10 to 17 residues. Consequently, several CaM-binding motifs: {1–10}, {1–11}, {1–13}, {1–14}, {1–16}, {1–17}, differing by the distance between the two anchor residues along the amino acid sequence, have been identified. Despite extensive structural information on the role of target–protein amino acid residues in the formation of complexes with CaM, much less is known about the role of amino acids from CaM contributing to these interactions. In this work, a quantitative analysis of the contact surfaces of CaM and target proteins has been carried out for 35 representative three-dimensional structures. It has been shown that, in addition to the two hydrophobic terminal residues of the target fragment, the interaction also involves residues that are 4 residues earlier in the sequence (binding mode {1–5}). It has also been found that the N- and C-lobes of CaM bind the {1–5} motif located at the ends of the target in a structurally identical manner. Methionine residues at positions 51 (corresponding to 124 in the C-lobe), 71 (144), and 72 (145) of the CaM amino acid sequence are key hydrophobic residues for this interaction. They are located at the N- and C-boundaries of the even EF-hand motifs. The hydrophobic core of CaM (‘Ф-quatrefoil’) consists of 10 amino acids in the N-lobe (and in the C-lobe): Phe <sub>16</sub> (Phe <sub>89</sub>), Phe <sub>19</sub> (Phe <sub>92</sub>), Ile <sub>27</sub> (Ile <sub>100</sub>), Thr <sub>29</sub> (Ala <sub>102</sub>), Leu <sub>32</sub> (Leu <sub>105</sub>), Ile <sub>52</sub> (Ile <sub>125</sub>), Val <sub>55</sub> (Ala <sub>128</sub>), Ile <sub>63</sub> (Val <sub>136</sub>), Phe <sub>65</sub> (Tyr <sub>138</sub>), and Phe <sub>68</sub> (Phe <sub>141</sub>) and do not intersect with the target-binding methionine residues. CaM belongs to the ‘dynamic’ group of EF-hand proteins, in which calcium and protein ligand binding causes only global conformational changes but does not alter the conservative ‘black’ and ‘grey’ clusters described in our earlier works (PLoS One. 2014; 9(10):e109287). The membership of CaM in the ‘dynamic’ group is determined by the triggering and protective methionine layer: Met <sub>51</sub> (Met <sub>124</sub>), Met <sub>71</sub> (Met <sub>144</sub>) and Met <sub>72</sub> (Met <sub>145</sub>). HIGHLIGHTS Interchain interactions in the unique 35 CaM complex structures were analyzed. Methionine amino acids of the N- and C-lobes of CaM form triggering and protective layers. Interactions of the target terminal residues with these methionine layers are structurally identical. CaM belonging to the ‘dynamic’ group is determined by the triggering and protective methionine layer. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.</p>
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Organizations and authors

Åbo Akademi University

Denesyuk Alexandre

Denessiouk Konstantin

Johnson Mark

Publication type

Publication format

Article

Parent publication type

Journal

Article type

Original article

Audience

Scientific

Peer-reviewed

Peer-Reviewed

MINEDU's publication type classification code

A1 Journal article (refereed), original research

Publication channel information

Volume

41

Issue

16

Pages

7582-7594

​Publication forum

59751

​Publication forum level

1

Open access

Open access in the publisher’s service

No

Self-archived

Yes

Other information

Fields of science

Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology

Keywords

[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]

Internationality of the publisher

International

Language

English

International co-publication

Yes

Co-publication with a company

No

DOI

10.1080/07391102.2022.2123391

The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection

Yes