Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (calcineurin)
17,112 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is now well-established that phosphorylation of the 20,000-dalton light chain of smooth muscle myosin (LC20) is a prerequisite for muscle contraction. However, the relationship between myosin dephosphorylation and muscle relaxation remains controversial. In the present study, we utilized a highly purified catalytic subunit of a type-2, skeletal muscle phosphoprotein phosphatase (protein phosphatase 2A) and a glycerinated smooth muscle preparation to determine if myosin dephosphorylation, in the presence of saturating calcium and calmodulin, would cause relaxation of contracted uterine smooth muscle. Addition of the phosphatase catalytic subunit (0.28 microM) to the muscle bath produced complete relaxation of the muscle. The phosphatase-induced relaxation could be reversed by adding to the muscle bath either purified, thiophosphorylated, chicken gizzard 20,000-dalton myosin light chains or purified, chicken gizzard myosin light chain kinase. Incubation of skinned muscles with adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) prior to the addition of phosphatase resulted in the incorporation of 0.93 mol of PO4/mol of LC20 and prevented phosphatase-induced relaxation. Under all of the above conditions, changes in steady-state isometric force were associated with parallel changes in myosin light chain phosphorylation over a range of phosphorylation extending from 0.01 to 0.97 mol of PO4/mol of LC20. We found no evidence that dephosphorylation of contracted uterine smooth muscles, in the presence of calcium and calmodulin, could produce a latch-state where isometric force was maintained in the absence of myosin light chain phosphorylation. These results show that phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of the 20,000-dalton myosin light chain is adequate for the regulation of contraction or relaxation, respectively, in glycerinated uterine smooth muscle.
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PMID:Dephosphorylation of myosin by the catalytic subunit of a type-2 phosphatase produces relaxation of chemically skinned uterine smooth muscle. 299 Dec 87

High-affinity antibodies against calmodulin (CaM)-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase and protein phosphatase (calcineurin) were purified and characterized. Rabbit anti-phosphodiesterase antibody did not react with other phosphodiesterases or with the regulatory subunits of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Affinity-purified goat anti-calcineurin antibody recognized both the 61-kDa catalytic subunit and the 18-kDa Ca2+-binding subunit of the phosphatase. Neither antibody reacted with CaM, several CaM-binding proteins (calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, myosin light chain kinase, fodrin), or other cytosolic proteins from brain. The antibodies were used to compare the cellular localization of these two CaM-dependent enzymes in rat brain. Both calcineurin and phosphodiesterase were found predominantly in nerve cells; however, phosphodiesterase was restricted to very specific neuronal populations. Phosphodiesterase was prominent in the somatic cytoplasm and dendrites of regional output neurons--e.g., cerebellar Purkinje cells and hippocampal and cortical pyramidal cells. The extensive and uniform staining in the dendrites was consistent with postsynaptic localization and suggested an important function for this enzyme in neurons that integrate multiple convergent inputs. Calcineurin was present in virtually all classes of neurons, with immunoreactivity confined primarily to cell bodies. Both diffuse cytoplasmic staining and characteristic punctate staining of cell bodies were observed; the latter suggested compartmentalization of calcineurin at or near the plasma membrane. The results of this study demonstrate that calcineurin and phosphodiesterase are differentially localized in the central nervous system. Thus, the expression and compartmentalization of CaM-binding proteins may be highly regulated and specific for particular differentiated nerve cell types.
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PMID:Differential localization of calmodulin-dependent enzymes in rat brain: evidence for selective expression of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in specific neurons. 302 62

We investigated the influence of myosin P-LC phosphorylation catalysed by calcium/calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) on the tension-pCa relation of chemically skinned human atrial fibres. MLCK-induced increased myosin P-LC phosphorylation sensitized human atrial skinned fibres for calcium by 0.11 pCa-units in patients with valvular heart disease, and by 0.05 to 0.07 pCa-units in patients with coronary heart disease. The MLCK effect could be antagonized by a light chain phosphatase. The protein phosphatase ocadaic acid (OA) had no influence on the tension-pCa relation of skinned human atrial fibres and had no potentiating effect together with MLCK. The MLCK preparation used in this study was from bovine ventricle and revealed a KM of 1.8 x 10(-5) M and a Vmax of 822 nmol Pi/min/mg using purified bovine ventricular myosin-LCs as substrate.
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PMID:Increased calcium sensitivity of chemically skinned human atria by myosin light chain kinase. 319 Jun 54

cAMP-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase C, cGMP-dependent protein kinase, smooth muscle myosin light-chain kinase, and phosphorylase kinase were examined with respect to their ability to phosphorylate porcine atrial muscarinic receptors (mAcChRs). Experiments were performed both in detergent solution and in a reconstituted system containing the mAcChR alone or in the presence of the purified porcine atrial inhibitor guanine nucleotide binding protein (Gi). Only cAMP-dependent protein kinase was capable of phosphorylating the receptor under any of the experimental conditions examined. Phosphorylation of the mAcChR in the detergent-solubilized state resulted in a loss of ligand binding sites that was reversible upon treatment with calcineurin in the presence of calcium and calmodulin. Upon reconstitution, the apparent stoichiometry of phosphorylation was increased by about 15-fold. Carbachol-stimulated covalent incorporation of phosphate was found only in the reconstituted system in the presence of Gi, suggesting that the large agonist-stimulated increase in phosphorylation observed in vivo [Kwatra, M. M., & Hosey, M. M. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 12429-12432] may in part result from a unique receptor conformation that occurs upon association with this protein. Ligand binding studies indicated that phosphorylation of the mAcChR in the detergent-solubilized or reconstituted state did not affect its interaction with carbachol or L-quinuclidinyl benzilate in vitro. Carbachol-induced stimulation of the GTPase activity of Gi in the reconstituted system was also unaffected by phosphorylation.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of the porcine atrial muscarinic acetylcholine receptor by cyclic AMP dependent protein kinase. 344 51

Three mutant calmodulin (CaM) genes together with the normal chicken CaM cDNA have been expressed in bacteria for the purpose of determining structure/function relationships in CaM. The mutant CaM genes were generated by in vitro recombination between a chicken CaM cDNA and a processed pseudogene that encodes a full-length CaM but with 19 amino acid substitutions as compared to authentic vertebrate CaM. The calmodulin-like (CaML) proteins derived from the pseudogene are called CaML19, CaML16, and CaML3 and contain 19, 16, and 3 amino acid substitutions, respectively. CaML3 is functionally identical to CaM by all criteria tested. The functional characteristics of CaML16 and CaML19 are also indistinguishable yet quite different from normal CaM. CaML19 and CaML16 will maximally activate myosin light chain kinase but will only half-maximally activate calcineurin and CaM-dependent multiprotein kinase. In addition, CaML16 and CaML19 do not activate phosphorylase kinase. The differential activation of these enzymes does not result from the loss of Ca2+-binding sites, since CaML16 binds four Ca2+ with affinity similar to CaM or CaM23. It is more likely that the functional characteristics of the mutant proteins result from an altered tertiary structure, since the Ca2+-dependent enhancement of tyrosine fluorescence and limited proteolysis pattern of CaML16 are different from that of CaM. The data demonstrate that the nature of the interaction of CaM with myosin light chain kinase is different from its interaction with calcineurin, CaM-dependent multiprotein kinase, and phosphorylase kinase and may involve different functional domains in CaM.
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PMID:Genetically engineered calmodulins differentially activate target enzymes. 346 Sep 91

Ultraviolet (280-nm) irradiation of bovine brain calmodulin results in calcium-dependent changes in its fluorescence emission spectrum. These consist of a decline in the intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence of the protein and the appearance of a new emission maximum at 400 nm. Chromatography of irradiated calmodulin, using Ultrogel AcA 54 and phenyl-agarose columns, yields several distinctive fractions. One of these, representing 2.8% of the total recovered protein and 53% of the total fluorescence emission at 400 nm, was selected for detailed characterization. Analyses performed on acid hydrolysates reveal the presence of dityrosine, a derivative of tyrosine known for its fluorescence near 400 nm, at the level of 0.59-0.89 mol per 16,700 g of protein. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis experiments demonstrate two components of apparent molecular weights 14,000 (80%) and 16,000 (20%). Observations on the effects of UV irradiation on the thrombic fragments of calmodulin and on related calcium binding proteins (rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C, bovine cardiac troponin C, and parvalbumin) support the interpretation that dityrosine formation in calmodulin results from the intramolecular cross-linking of Tyr-99 and Tyr-138. The dityrosine-containing photoproduct of calmodulin is unable to stimulate the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of calcineurin under standard assay conditions. Fluorescence titrations show a generally weakened interaction with calcium ion occurring in two stages. The pKa of the derivative is considerably higher than that of free dityrosine and is calcium dependent, decreasing from 7.88 to 7.59 on the addition of 3 mM CaCl2. Smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase binds the derivative about 280-fold less effectively than it binds native calmodulin. Of several metal ions tested, only Cd2+ approaches Ca2+ in its ability to promote the appearance of the 400-nm emission band during UV irradiation of calmodulin. Mn2+ and Cu2+ appear to inhibit dityrosine formation. Ascorbic acid, dithiothreitol, and glutathione are also inhibitory.
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PMID:Dityrosine formation in calmodulin. 356 41

A 20-residue peptide analogue (IASGRTGRRNAIHDILVSSA) of the 8000-dalton heat-stable cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor undergoes efficient calcium-dependent binding by calmodulin, with Kd approximately 70 nM when calcium is present. It is a potent inhibitor of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase and of the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase activity of calcineurin. At concentrations above 3 microM, the peptide stimulates the basal activity of calcineurin. The native protein kinase inhibitor has no effect on the catalytic activity of myosin light chain kinase and is moderately inhibitory to both the calmodulin-dependent and -independent phosphatase activity of calcineurin. Competition experiments using excess concentrations of calcineurin and calmodulin suggest that the primary interaction of the native heat-stable inhibitor is with the catalytic subunit of protein kinase. Dansylcalmodulin exhibits only a weak interaction with the inhibitor. Observations on deletion peptides of the 20-residue analogue help to delineate the overlapping peptide binding specificities of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase [Scott, J. D., Glaccum, M. B., Fischer, E. H., & Krebs, E. G. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 1613-1616] and calmodulin. In both cases, the most effectively bound peptides contain the RTGRR sequence.
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PMID:Association of calmodulin with peptide analogues of the inhibitory region of the heat-stable protein inhibitor of adenosine cyclic 3',5'-phosphate dependent protein kinase. 375 57

Stimulus-response coupling mediated by calmodulin involves several steps: a transitory increase in calcium concentration from 0.1 to 10 microM, induced by external stimuli; interaction of calcium with calmodulin, accompanied by stepwise structural transitions; the coordinated interaction with and activation of the many calmodulin-regulated enzymes and proteins. The binding of calcium to calmodulin is a cooperative and selective process that is modulated by magnesium. At physiological ionic strength, and only in the presence of magnesium, a large difference is seen between the affinities of sites III and IV (0.09 X 10(6) M-1) and sites I and II (0.0007 X 10(6) M-1) for calcium. This difference, together with the positive cooperativity previously observed, explains the stepwise conformational changes induced by calcium. The interaction of calmodulin with its target proteins requires the integrity of different portions of the calmodulin molecule. Calmodulin-regulated enzymes can be divided into three classes according to their abilities to bind with and to be activated by calmodulin fragments: enzymes which are activated by the C-terminal fragment, such as the Ca2+-ATPase and phosphorylase kinase; enzymes which require both halves of the molecule, such as cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and myosin light chain kinase; and enzymes whose interaction with calmodulin fragments is too weak to be detected by activation, such as calcineurin and the multiprotein kinase. Thus different enzymes may be activated by different calmodulin conformers and the stepwise changes exhibited by calmodulin at different calcium levels can be used to regulate different metabolic pathways.
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PMID:Regulation of the calcium signal by calmodulin. 379 36

Purified rabbit skeletal muscle myosin is phosphorylated on one type of light-chain subunit (P-light chain) by calmodulin-dependent myosin light chain kinase and dephosphorylated by phosphoprotein phosphatase C. Analyses of the time courses of both phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of skeletal muscle myosin indicated that both reactions, involving at least 90% of the P-light chain, were kinetically homogeneous. These results suggest that phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin heads are simple random processes in contrast to the sequential phosphorylation mechanism proposed for myosin from gizzard smooth muscle. We also examined the effect of phosphorylation of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin on the actin-activated ATPase activity. We observed an apparent 2-fold decrease in the Km for actin, from about 6 microM to about 2.5 microM, with no significant effect on the Vmax (1.8s-1) in response to P-light-chain phosphorylation. There was no significant effect of phosphorylation on the ATPase activity of myosin alone (0.045 s-1). ATPase activation could be fully reversed by addition of phosphatase catalytic subunit. The relationship between the extents of P-light-chain phosphorylation and ATPase activation (at 3.5 microM actin and 0.6 microM myosin) was essentially linear. Thus, in contrast to results obtained with myosin from gizzard smooth muscle, these results suggest that cooperative interactions between the myosin heads do not play an important role in the activation process in skeletal muscle. Since the effect of P-light-chain phosphorylation is upon the Km for actin, it would appear to be associated with a significant activation of ATPase activity only at appropriate concentrations of actin and salt.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Phosphorylation kinetics of skeletal muscle myosin and the effect of phosphorylation on actomyosin adenosinetriphosphatase activity. 623 85

Myosin light chain kinase and a fraction of type II cAMP-dependent protein kinase have been partially purified from bovine brain by affinity chromatography on calmodulin-Sepharose. The myosin kinase was purified approximately 3700-fold and has an estimated molecular weight of 130,000 +/- 10,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. A fraction of soluble cAMP-dependent protein kinase also bound to calmodulin-Sepharose and was purified 2300-fold. A fraction of this cAMP-dependent protein kinase after purification by glycerol gradient centrifugation was shown to contain the two subunits of calcineurin, a major calmodulin-binding protein in brain, and the two subunits of type II cAMP-dependent protein kinase in a ratio of 1:1:2:2. Its sedimentation coefficient was 8.1 S and 9.0 S when centrifuged in the absence or presence of calmodulin, suggesting the formation of a complex between calmodulin and protein kinase. Our results suggest the possibility that calcineurin may be involved in the interaction between the protein kinase and calmodulin. Furthermore, our studies imply that the regulatory subunit of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, but not the catalytic subunit, is the site of interaction with calmodulin since the catalytic subunit of protein kinase was partially resolved from the complex by cAMP.
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PMID:Interaction of calmodulin with myosin light chain kinase and cAMP-dependent protein kinase in bovine brain. 626 40


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