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. 2005 Dec;12(12):1108-15.
doi: 10.1038/nsmb1027. Epub 2005 Nov 20.

Insights into voltage-gated calcium channel regulation from the structure of the CaV1.2 IQ domain-Ca2+/calmodulin complex

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Insights into voltage-gated calcium channel regulation from the structure of the CaV1.2 IQ domain-Ca2+/calmodulin complex

Filip Van Petegem et al. Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2005 Dec.

Abstract

Changes in activity-dependent calcium flux through voltage-gated calcium channels (Ca(V)s) drive two self-regulatory calcium-dependent feedback processes that require interaction between Ca(2+)/calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM) and a Ca(V) channel consensus isoleucine-glutamine (IQ) motif: calcium-dependent inactivation (CDI) and calcium-dependent facilitation (CDF). Here, we report the high-resolution structure of the Ca(2+)/CaM-Ca(V)1.2 IQ domain complex. The IQ domain engages hydrophobic pockets in the N-terminal and C-terminal Ca(2+)/CaM lobes through sets of conserved 'aromatic anchors.' Ca(2+)/N lobe adopts two conformations that suggest inherent conformational plasticity at the Ca(2+)/N lobe-IQ domain interface. Titration calorimetry experiments reveal competition between the lobes for IQ domain sites. Electrophysiological examination of Ca(2+)/N lobe aromatic anchors uncovers their role in Ca(V)1.2 CDF. Together, our data suggest that Ca(V) subtype differences in CDI and CDF are tuned by changes in IQ domain anchoring positions and establish a framework for understanding CaM lobe-specific regulation of Ca(V)s.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Structure of the Ca2+/CaM–CaV1.2 IQ domain complex. (a) Ribbon diagram of the complex. Green, CaM Ca2+/N lobe; blue, Ca2+/C lobe; red, IQ domain, with residues Ile1624 and Q1625 from complex A in stick representation; darker shades, complex A; lighter shades, complex C. The complexes were superposed using the Ca2+/C lobes and IQ domains. Labels indicate termini of components in complex A. Dashed lines indicate regions absent from the structures. (b) 90° rotation of a. The shift in Ca2+/N lobe Ca2+ position in EF-hand 2 is indicated. (c) Sequence alignment of IQ regions from each CaV1 and CaV2 isoform. Zigzag, α-helical regions; straight line, nonhelical residues; dashed lines, residues present in the crystallized construct but absent from the electron density. Residues contacting CaM (≤4 Å) for conformation A and conformation C are highlighted as follows: green, contacts to Ca2+/N lobe; cyan, Ca2+/C lobe; purple, Ca2+/N lobe and Ca2+/C lobe. Asterisks indicate principal aromatic anchor positions. Sequences are human CaV1.2 1609–1647, human CaV1.1 1514–1552, rat CaV1.3 1641–1679, human CaV1.4 1563–1602, human CaV2.1 1947–1985, human CaV2.2 1845–1883 and rat CaV2.3 1811–1850.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Lobe-specific Ca2+/CaM–CaV1.2 IQ domain interactions. (a) Ca2+/CaM C lobe from complex A bound to the IQ domain. Buried surface area = 1,819 Å2 (965 Å2 hydrophobic). (b) Ca2+/CaM N lobe from complex A bound to the IQ domain. Buried surface area = 1,450 Å2 (743 Å2 hydrophobic). (c) Ca2+/CaM N lobe from complex C bound to the IQ domain. Buried surface area = 1,491 Å2 (500 Å2 hydrophobic). IQ domain is shown in stick representation with aromatic anchor residues in white. CaM lobes are shown in surface representation with residues that contribute hydrophobic (yellow), negatively charged (red), positively charged (blue) and polar (green) side chain contacts (≤4 Å) to the IQ domain indicated. Select residues are labeled to orient the reader. IQ domain residue labels are boxed.
Figure 3
Figure 3
ITC characterization of Ca2+/CaM–CaV1.2 IQ domain interactions. (a) 70 μM IQ domain into 7 μM Ca2+/C lobe. (b) 500 μM Ca2+/N lobe into 50 μM IQ domain. (c) 200 μM Ca2+/N lobe into a solution of 20 μM IQ domain and 37 μM C lobe. (d) 60 μM IQ domain F1628A mutant into 6 μM Ca2+/C lobe. (e) 500 μM Ca2+/N lobe into a solution of 5 μM IQ domain F1628A mutant. Isotherms are fit to a single binding site model for a and d and a double binding site model for b and e. Panels show addition of 10 μl aliquots of titrant into the target solution (top) and binding isotherms (bottom).
Figure 4
Figure 4
Lobe-specific interactions affect CDI and CDF. (a) Voltage-activated Ba2+ and Ca2+ currents from wild-type (WT) and TripleA channels during a 600-ms depolarizing step from −90 mV to +20 mV. Traces are normalized to the peak current to facilitate comparison. Tail currents are not shown. (b) r300 values (current fraction 300 ms after depolarization) in Ba2+ (black) and Ca2+ (grey). Error bars show s.d. (c) I1624A and I1624A TripleA Ca2+ currents in a 3-Hz 40-pulse train (50-ms steps to +20-mV from −90-mV holding potential). The first pulse currents are scaled to the same level for comparison. (d) Relative current increase between last and first pulses for I1624A and I1624A TripleA. Error bars show s.d.
Figure 5
Figure 5
Schematic of Ca2+/CaM lobe multiple binding modes on the CaV1.2 IQ domain. (a) Ca2+/N lobe (green) has medium-affinity and low-affinity binding sites on the IQ domain. (b) Ca2+/C lobe (blue) has a high-affinity binding site on the IQ domain. (c) Binding of Ca2+/C lobe to the IQ domain blocks Ca2+/N lobe access to the Ca2+/N lobe medium-affinity site (black X) and reduces Ca2+/N lobe binding to the Ca2+/N lobe low-affinity site (grey X). (d) Representation of how Ca2+/C lobe binding to the IQ domain tethers Ca2+/N lobe near the Ca2+/N lobe low-affinity site. Yellow line indicates the CaM interlobe linker. In all panels, the approximate position of aromatic anchor Phe1628, which is shared by the Ca2+/N lobe medium-affinity site and the Ca2+/C lobe high-affinity site, is indicated by the white hexagon.

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