Hosfield C M, Moldoveanu T, Davies P L, Elce J S, Jia Z
Department of Biochemistry, Queen's University and The Protein Engineering Network of Centres of Excellence, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada.
J Biol Chem. 2001 Mar 9;276(10):7404-7. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M007352200. Epub 2000 Dec 1.
The ubiquitous calpain isoforms (mu- and m-calpain) are Ca(2+)-dependent cysteine proteases that require surprisingly high Ca(2+) concentrations for activation in vitro ( approximately 50 and approximately 300 microm, respectively). The molecular basis of such a high requirement for Ca(2+) in vitro is not known. In this study, we substantially reduced the concentration of Ca(2+) required for the activation of m-calpain in vitro through the specific disruption of interdomain interactions by structure-guided site-directed mutagenesis. Several interdomain electrostatic interactions involving lysine residues in domain II and acidic residues in the C(2)-like domain III were disrupted, and the effects of these mutations on activity and Ca(2+) sensitivity were analyzed. The mutation to serine of Glu-504, a residue that is conserved in both mu- and m-calpain and interacts most notably with Lys-234, reduced the in vitro Ca(2+) requirement for activity by almost 50%. The mutation of Lys-234 to serine or glutamic acid resulted in a similar reduction. These are the first reported cases in which point mutations have been able to reduce the Ca(2+) requirement of calpain. The structures of the mutants in the absence of Ca(2+) were shown by x-ray crystallography to be unchanged from the wild type, demonstrating that the increase in Ca(2+) sensitivity was not attributable to conformational change prior to activation. The conservation of sequence between mu-calpain, m-calpain, and calpain 3 in this region suggests that the results can be extended to all of these isoforms. Whereas the primary Ca(2+) binding is assumed to occur at EF-hands in domains IV and VI, these results show that domain II-domain III salt bridges are important in the process of the Ca(2+)-induced activation of calpain and that they influence the overall Ca(2+) requirement of the enzyme.
普遍存在的钙蛋白酶同工型(μ-钙蛋白酶和m-钙蛋白酶)是依赖Ca(2+)的半胱氨酸蛋白酶,在体外激活时需要惊人的高Ca(2+)浓度(分别约为50和约300微摩尔)。体外对Ca(2+)如此高需求的分子基础尚不清楚。在本研究中,我们通过结构导向的定点诱变特异性破坏结构域间相互作用,大幅降低了体外激活m-钙蛋白酶所需的Ca(2+)浓度。破坏了几个涉及结构域II中赖氨酸残基和类C(2)结构域III中酸性残基的结构域间静电相互作用,并分析了这些突变对活性和Ca(2+)敏感性的影响。将Glu-504突变为丝氨酸,该残基在μ-钙蛋白酶和m-钙蛋白酶中均保守且最显著地与Lys-234相互作用,使体外活性所需的Ca(2+)降低了近50%。将Lys-234突变为丝氨酸或谷氨酸也导致了类似的降低。这些是首次报道的点突变能够降低钙蛋白酶对Ca(2+)需求的案例。X射线晶体学显示,在无Ca(2+)情况下突变体的结构与野生型无变化,表明Ca(2+)敏感性的增加并非归因于激活前的构象变化。该区域μ-钙蛋白酶、m-钙蛋白酶和钙蛋白酶3之间序列的保守性表明,这些结果可扩展至所有这些同工型。虽然假定主要的Ca(2+)结合发生在结构域IV和VI的EF-手结构,但这些结果表明,结构域II-结构域III盐桥在Ca(2+)诱导的钙蛋白酶激活过程中很重要,并且它们影响该酶对Ca(2+)的总体需求。