Department of Pharmacology, University of Colorado Denver-School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011;6(10):e25245. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025245. Epub 2011 Oct 3.
CaM-KIIN has evolved to inhibit stimulated and autonomous activity of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) efficiently, selectively, and potently (IC50 ∼100 nM). The CN class of peptides, derived from the inhibitory region of CaM-KIIN, provides powerful new tools to study CaMKII functions. The goal of this study was to identify the residues required for CaMKII inhibition, and to assess if artificial mutations could further improve the potency achieved during evolution.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: First, the minimal region with full inhibitory potency was identified (CN19) by determining the effect of truncated peptides on CaMKII activity in biochemical assays. Then, individual residues of CN19 were mutated. Most individual Ala substitutions decreased potency of CaMKII inhibition, however, P3A, K13A, and R14A increased potency. Importantly, this initial Ala scan suggested a specific interaction of the region around R11 with the CaMKII substrate binding site, which was exploited for further rational mutagenesis to generate an optimized pseudo-substrate sequence. Indeed, the potency of the optimized peptide CN19o was >250fold improved (IC50 <0.4 nM), and CN19o has characteristics of a tight-binding inhibitor. The selectivity for CaMKII versus CaMKI was similarly improved (to almost 100,000fold for CN19o). A phospho-mimetic S12D mutation decreased potency, indicating potential for regulation by cellular signaling. Consistent with importance of this residue in inhibition, most other S12 mutations also significantly decreased potency, however, mutation to V or Q did not.
CONLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results provide improved research tools for studying CaMKII function, and indicate that evolution fine-tuned CaM-KIIN not for maximal potency of CaMKII inhibition, but for lower potency that may be optimal for dynamic regulation of signal transduction.
CaM-KIIN 经过进化,能够高效、特异地抑制 Ca(2+)/钙调蛋白 (CaM)-依赖性蛋白激酶 II (CaMKII) 的刺激和自主活性(IC50∼100nM)。CN 类肽来自 CaM-KIIN 的抑制区,为研究 CaMKII 功能提供了强大的新工具。本研究的目的是确定 CaMKII 抑制所需的残基,并评估人工突变是否能进一步提高进化过程中获得的效力。
方法/主要发现:首先,通过确定截短肽对生化测定中 CaMKII 活性的影响,确定了具有完整抑制效力的最小区域(CN19)。然后,对 CN19 的单个残基进行突变。大多数单个 Ala 取代降低了 CaMKII 抑制的效力,然而,P3A、K13A 和 R14A 增加了效力。重要的是,这个初始的 Ala 扫描表明,该区域周围的 R11 与 CaMKII 底物结合位点有特定的相互作用,这被利用来进行进一步的合理诱变,生成优化的拟底物序列。事实上,优化肽 CN19o 的效力提高了>250 倍(IC50<0.4nM),并且 CN19o 具有紧密结合抑制剂的特征。CN19o 对 CaMKII 与 CaMKI 的选择性也得到了类似的提高(对 CN19o 为近 100,000 倍)。S12D 磷酸模拟突变降低了效力,表明可能受到细胞信号的调节。与该残基在抑制中的重要性一致,大多数其他 S12 突变也显著降低了效力,但 V 或 Q 突变则没有。
结论/意义:这些结果为研究 CaMKII 功能提供了改进的研究工具,并表明进化不是为了使 CaM-KIIN 对 CaMKII 的抑制达到最大效力,而是为了较低的效力,这可能对信号转导的动态调节最为理想。