scholarly journals Localization of calmodulin binding sites on the ryanodine receptor from skeletal muscle by electron microscopy

1994 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 2286-2295 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Wagenknecht ◽  
J. Berkowitz ◽  
R. Grassucci ◽  
A.P. Timerman ◽  
S. Fleischer
2001 ◽  
Vol 355 (3) ◽  
pp. 827-833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus KLINGER ◽  
Elisa BOFILL-CARDONA ◽  
Bernd MAYER ◽  
Christian NANOFF ◽  
Michael FREISSMUTH ◽  
...  

Calmodulin-binding sites on target proteins show considerable variation in primary sequence; hence compounds that block the access of calmodulin to these binding sites may be more selective than compounds that inactivate calmodulin. Suramin and its analogue NF307 inhibit the interaction of calmodulin with the ryanodine receptor. We have investigated whether inhibition of calmodulin binding to target proteins is a general property of these compounds. Suramin inhibited binding of [125I]calmodulin to porcine brain membranes and to sarcoplasmic reticulum from skeletal muscle (IC50 = 4.9±1.2µM and 19.9±1.8µM, respectively) and blocked the cross-linking of [125I]calmodulin to some, but not all, target proteins in brain membranes by [125I]calmodulin. Four calmodulin-binding proteins were purified [ryanodine receptor-1 (RyR1) from rabbit skeletal muscle, neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) from Sf9 cells, G-protein βγ dimers (Gβγ) from porcine brain and a glutathione S-transferase-fusion protein comprising the C-terminal calmodulin-binding domain of the metabotropic glutamate receptor 7A (GST-CmGluR7A) from bacterial lysates]. Three of the proteins employed (Gβγ, GST-CmGluR7A and RyR1) display a comparable affinity for calmodulin (in the range of 50–70nM). Nevertheless, suramin and NF307 only blocked the binding of Gβγ and RyR1 to calmodulin–Sepharose. In contrast, the association of GST-CmGluR7A and nNOS was not impaired, whereas excess calmodulin uniformly displaced all proteins from the matrix. Thus suramin and NF307 are prototypes of a new class of calmodulin antagonists that do not interact directly with calmodulin but with calmodulin-recognition sites. In addition, these compounds discriminate among calmodulin-binding motifs.


Biochemistry ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 33 (31) ◽  
pp. 9078-9084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola Menegazzi ◽  
Fulvia Larini ◽  
Susan Treves ◽  
Remo Guerrini ◽  
Manfredo Quadroni ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Fujimoto ◽  
N Araki ◽  
K S Ogawa ◽  
S Kondo ◽  
T Kitaoka ◽  
...  

Calmodulin (CaM) has been implicated as a multifunctional regulator of Ca2+ in the cytoplasm of cells. We have recently introduced biologically active colloidal gold-labeled CaM as a marker for identifying potential CaM binding sites (unoccupied by endogenous CaM at the time of fixation) by electron microscopy and have stained frozen thin sections of rat cardiac muscle with this conjugate. In the presence of Ca2+, gold particles indicating CaM binding sites were found localized on the sarcoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and gap junctions. Control tissue sections treated with EGTA or exposed to excess amounts of unlabeled native CaM before staining showed no binding. We believe that cytochemistry of potential CaM binding sites revealed by staining with labeled exogenous CaM is useful in correlating known biochemical reactions of CaM with particular cell activities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 280a
Author(s):  
Venkat R. Chirasani ◽  
Daniel A. Pasek ◽  
Hannah G. Addis ◽  
Naohiro Yamaguchi ◽  
Gerhard Meissner

1992 ◽  
Vol 285 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
V Shoshan-Barmatz ◽  
A Zarka

In this paper we describe a simple, fast, one-step method for the purification of the skeletal-muscle ryanodine receptor. The ryanodine receptor from CHAPS-solubilized junctional sarcoplasmic-reticulum membranes was adsorbed to a spermine-agarose column and eluted by 2 mM-spermine. The purified receptor, consisting predominantly of a 450 kDa polypeptide on SDS/PAGE, binds [3H]ryanodine with a specific activity of approximately 300 pmol/mg of protein and with a high affinity (KD = 4.7 +/- 2 nM). The purified receptor appears to retain the pharmacological properties of the receptor in the original membranes. The purification resulted in over 80% recovery of the initial ryanodine-binding sites and about 30-96-fold purification. This simple and fast method is highly reproducible and suitable for purification of small as well as large quantities of ryanodine receptor.


2007 ◽  
Vol 283 (8) ◽  
pp. 5046-5057 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin L. Prosser ◽  
Nathan T. Wright ◽  
Erick O. Hernãndez-Ochoa ◽  
Kristen M. Varney ◽  
Yewei Liu ◽  
...  

2004 ◽  
Vol 96 (5) ◽  
pp. 1619-1625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher P. Ingalls ◽  
Gordon L. Warren ◽  
Jia-Zheng Zhang ◽  
Susan L. Hamilton ◽  
R. B. Armstrong

The purpose of this study was to determine whether there are alterations in the dihydropyridine and/or ryanodine receptors that might explain the excitation-contraction uncoupling associated with eccentric contraction-induced skeletal muscle injury. The left anterior crural muscles (i.e., tibialis anterior, extensor digitorum longus, and extensor hallucis longus) of mice were injured in vivo by 150 eccentric contractions. Peak isometric tetanic torque of the anterior crural muscles was reduced ∼45% immediately and 3 days after the eccentric contractions. Partial restoration of peak isometric tetanic and subtetanic forces of injured extensor digitorum longus muscles by 10 mM caffeine indicated the presence of excitation-contraction uncoupling. Scatchard analysis of [3H]ryanodine binding indicated that the number of ryanodine receptor binding sites was not altered immediately postinjury but decreased 16% 3 days later. Dihydropyridine receptor binding sites increased ∼20% immediately after and were elevated to the same extent 3 days after the injury protocol. Muscle injury did not alter the sensitivity of either receptor. These data suggest that a loss or altered sensitivity of the dihydropyridine and ryanodine receptors does not contribute to the excitation-contraction uncoupling immediately after contraction-induced muscle injury. We also concluded that the loss in ryanodine receptors 3 days after injury is not the primary cause of excitation-contraction uncoupling at that time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean X. Liu ◽  
Hugh R. Matthews ◽  
Christopher L.-H. Huang

AbstractSkeletal muscle Na+ channels possess Ca2+- and calmodulin-binding sites implicated in Nav1.4 current (INa) downregulation following ryanodine receptor (RyR1) activation produced by exchange protein directly activated by cyclic AMP or caffeine challenge, effects abrogated by the RyR1-antagonist dantrolene which itself increased INa. These findings were attributed to actions of consequently altered cytosolic Ca2+, [Ca2+]i, on Nav1.4. We extend the latter hypothesis employing cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) challenge, which similarly increases [Ca2+]i, but through contrastingly inhibiting sarcoplasmic reticular (SR) Ca2+-ATPase. Loose patch clamping determined Na+ current (INa) families in intact native murine gastrocnemius skeletal myocytes, minimising artefactual [Ca2+]i perturbations. A bespoke flow system permitted continuous INa comparisons through graded depolarizing steps in identical stable membrane patches before and following solution change. In contrast to the previous studies modifying RyR1 activity, and imposing control solution changes, CPA (0.1 and 1 µM) produced persistent increases in INa within 1–4 min of introduction. CPA pre-treatment additionally abrogated previously reported reductions in INa produced by 0.5 mM caffeine. Plots of peak current against voltage excursion demonstrated that 1 µM CPA increased maximum INa by ~ 30%. It only slightly decreased half-maximal activating voltages (V0.5) and steepness factors (k), by 2 mV and 0.7, in contrast to the V0.5 and k shifts reported with direct RyR1 modification. These paradoxical findings complement previously reported downregulatory effects on Nav1.4 of RyR1-agonist mediated increases in bulk cytosolic [Ca2+]. They implicate possible local tubule-sarcoplasmic triadic domains containing reduced [Ca2+]TSR in the observed upregulation of Nav1.4 function following CPA-induced SR Ca2+ depletion.


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