1. Academic Validation
  2. The calmodulin regulator protein, PEP-19, sensitizes ATP-induced Ca2+ release

The calmodulin regulator protein, PEP-19, sensitizes ATP-induced Ca2+ release

  • J Biol Chem. 2013 Jan 18;288(3):2040-8. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M112.411314.
Xu Wang 1 Liang Wen Xiong Amina El Ayadi Darren Boehning John A Putkey
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Structural Biology Imaging Center, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Abstract

PEP-19 is a small, intrinsically disordered protein that binds to the C-domain of Calmodulin (CaM) via an IQ motif and tunes its Ca(2+) binding properties via an acidic sequence. We show here that the acidic sequence of PEP-19 has intrinsic Ca(2+) binding activity, which may modulate Ca(2+) binding to CaM by stabilizing an initial Ca(2+)-CaM complex or by electrostatically steering Ca(2+) to and from CaM. Because PEP-19 is expressed in cells that exhibit highly active Ca(2+) dynamics, we tested the hypothesis that it influences ligand-dependent Ca(2+) release. We show that PEP-19 increases the sensitivity of HeLa cells to ATP-induced Ca(2+) release to greatly increase the percentage of cells responding to sub-saturating doses of ATP and increases the frequency of Ca(2+) oscillations. Mutations in the acidic sequence of PEP-19 that inhibit or prevent it from modulating Ca(2+) binding to CaM greatly inhibit its effect on ATP-induced Ca(2+) release. Thus, this cellular effect of PEP-19 does not depend simply on binding to CaM via the IQ motif but requires its acidic metal binding domain. Tuning the activities of Ca(2+) mobilization pathways places PEP-19 at the top of CaM signaling cascades, with great potential to exert broad effects on downstream CaM targets, thus expanding the biological significance of this small regulator of CaM signaling.

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