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    Date Issued1998 (1)AuthorBeckingham, Kathleen M. (1)Ikebe, Mitsuo (1)
    Zhu, Tong (1)
    UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Physiology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (1)KeywordActins (1)Adenosine Triphosphatases (1)Animals (1)Binding Sites (1)Calcium (1)View MoreJournalThe Journal of biological chemistry (1)

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    High affinity Ca2+ binding sites of calmodulin are critical for the regulation of myosin Ibeta motor function

    Zhu, Tong; Beckingham, Kathleen M.; Ikebe, Mitsuo (1998-08-01)
    We coexpressed myosin Ibeta heavy chain with three different calmodulin mutants in which the two Ca2+-binding sites of the two N-terminal domain (E12Q), C-terminal domain (E34Q), or all four sites (E1234Q) are mutated in order to define the importance of these Ca2+ binding sites to the regulation of myosin Ibeta. The calmodulin mutated at the two Ca2+ binding sites in N-terminal domain and C-terminal domain lost its lower affinity Ca2+ binding site and higher affinity Ca2+ binding site, respectively. We found that, based upon the change in the actin-activated ATPase activities and actin translocating activities, myosin Ibeta with E12Q calmodulin has the regulatory characteristics similar to myosin Ibeta containing wild-type calmodulin, while myosin Ibeta with E34Q or E1234Q calmodulin lose all Ca2+ regulation. While the increase in myosin Ibeta ATPase activity paralleled the dissociation of 1 mol of calmodulin from myosin Ibeta heavy chain for both wild type (above pCa 5) and E12Q calmodulin (above pCa 6), the Ca2+ level required for the inhibition of actin-translocating activity of myosin Ibeta was lower than that required for dissociation of calmodulin, suggesting that the conformational change induced by the binding of Ca2+ at the high affinity site but not the dissociation of calmodulin is critical for the inhibition of the motor activity. Our results suggest that the regulation of unconventional myosins by Ca2+ is directly mediated by the Ca2+ binding to calmodulin, and that the C-terminal pair of Ca2+-binding sites are critical for this regulation.
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