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. 1999 Mar;22(3):549-58.
doi: 10.1016/s0896-6273(00)80709-6.

Calmodulin is the Ca2+ sensor for Ca2+ -dependent inactivation of L-type calcium channels

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Free article

Calmodulin is the Ca2+ sensor for Ca2+ -dependent inactivation of L-type calcium channels

B Z Peterson et al. Neuron. 1999 Mar.
Free article

Erratum in

  • Neuron 1999 Apr;22(4):following 893

Abstract

Elevated intracellular Ca2+ triggers inactivation of L-type calcium channels, providing negative Ca2+ feedback in many cells. Ca2+ binding to the main alpha1c channel subunit has been widely proposed to initiate such Ca2+ -dependent inactivation. Here, we find that overexpression of mutant, Ca2+ -insensitive calmodulin (CaM) ablates Ca2+ -dependent inactivation in a "dominant-negative" manner. This result demonstrates that CaM is the actual Ca2+ sensor for inactivation and suggests that CaM is constitutively tethered to the channel complex. Inactivation is likely to occur via Ca2+ -dependent interaction of tethered CaM with an IQ-like motif on the carboxyl tail of alpha1c. CaM also binds to analogous IQ regions of N-, P/Q-, and R-type calcium channels, suggesting that CaM-mediated effects may be widespread in the calcium channel family.

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