Dosemeci A, Albers R W
Laboratory of Neurobiology, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Biophys J. 1996 Jun;70(6):2493-501. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79821-1.
A model for the regulation of CaM kinase II is presented based on the following reported properties of the molecule: 1) The holoenzyme is composed of 8-12 subunits, each with the same set of autophosphorylation sites; 2) Autophosphorylation at one group of sites (A sites) requires the presence of Ca2+ and causes a subunit to remain active following the removal of Ca2+; 3) Autophosphorylation at another group of sites (B sites) occurs only after the removal of Ca2+ but requires prior phosphorylation of a threshold number of A sites within the holoenzyme. Because B-site phosphorylation inhibits Ca2+/calmodulin binding, we propose that, for a given subunit, phosphorylation of a B site before an A site prevents subsequent phosphorylation at the A site and thereby locks that subunit in an inactive state. The model predicts that a threshold activation by Ca2+ will initiate an "autophosphorylation phase." Once started, intra-holoenzyme autophosphorylation will proceed, on A sites during periods of high [Ca2+] and on B sites during periods of low [Ca2+]. At "saturation," that is when every subunit has been phosphorylated on a B site, the number of phosphorylated A sites and, therefore, the kinase activity will reflect the relative durations of periods of high [Ca2+] to periods of low [Ca2+] that occurred during the autophosphorylation phase. Using a computer program designed to simulate the above mechanism, we show that the ultimate state of phosphorylation of an array of CaM kinase II molecules could be sensitive to the temporal pattern of Ca2+ pulses. We speculate that such a mechanism may allow arrays of CaM kinase II molecules in postsynaptic densities to act as synaptic frequency detectors involved in setting the direction and level of synaptic modification.
基于该分子以下已报道的特性,提出了一种钙调蛋白激酶II(CaM kinase II)的调节模型:1)全酶由8 - 12个亚基组成,每个亚基具有相同的一组自身磷酸化位点;2)一组位点(A位点)的自身磷酸化需要Ca2+的存在,并且在去除Ca2+后会使一个亚基保持活性;3)另一组位点(B位点)的自身磷酸化仅在去除Ca2+后发生,但需要全酶内一定数量的A位点先进行磷酸化。由于B位点的磷酸化会抑制Ca2+/钙调蛋白的结合,我们提出,对于给定的亚基,在A位点之前B位点的磷酸化会阻止随后A位点的磷酸化,从而将该亚基锁定在无活性状态。该模型预测,Ca2+的阈值激活将启动一个“自身磷酸化阶段”。一旦开始,全酶内的自身磷酸化将进行,在高[Ca2+]时期在A位点进行,在低[Ca2+]时期在B位点进行。在“饱和”状态,即每个亚基都在B位点进行了磷酸化时,磷酸化A位点的数量以及激酶活性将反映自身磷酸化阶段中高[Ca2+]时期与低[Ca2+]时期的相对持续时间。使用一个设计用于模拟上述机制的计算机程序,我们表明一系列CaM激酶II分子的最终磷酸化状态可能对Ca2+脉冲的时间模式敏感。我们推测,这样一种机制可能允许突触后致密物中的CaM激酶II分子阵列作为参与设定突触修饰方向和水平的突触频率检测器。