Abstract
Calmodulin (CaM) is the major Ca2+ sensor in eukaryotic cells. It consists of four EF-hand Ca2+ binding motifs, two in its N-terminal domain and two in its C-terminal domain. Through a negative feedback loop, CaM inhibits Ca2+ influx through N-methyl-D-aspartate-type glutamate receptors in neurons by binding to the C0 region in the cytosolic tail of the NR1 subunit. Ca2+ -depleted (apo)CaM is pre-associated with a variety of ion channels for fast and effective regulation of channel activities upon Ca2+ influx. Using the NR1 C0 region for fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy studies we found that not only Ca2+ -saturated CaM but also apoCaM bound to NR1 C0. In vitro interaction assays showed that apoCaM also binds specifically to full-length NR1 solubilized from rat brain and to the complete C terminus of the NR1 splice form that contains the C0 plus C2' domain. The Ca2+ -independent interaction of CaM was also observed with the isolated C-but not N-terminal fragment of calmodulin in the independent spectroscopic assays. Fluorescence polarization studies indicated that apoCaM associated via its C-terminal domain with NR1 C0 in an extended conformation and collapsed to adopt a more compact conformation of faster rotational mobility in its complex with NR1 C0 upon addition of Ca2+. Our results indicate that apoCaM is associated with NR1 and that the complex of CaM bound to NR1 C0 undergoes a dramatic conformational change when Ca2+ binds to CaM.
Highlights
Glutamate is the prevailing excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian brain
CaM regulates the activity of a variety of ion channels including voltage-gated Kϩ channels [20], Ca2ϩ channels [21,22,23, 25], and glutamate-gated NMDA receptors [5]
Because apoCaM is associated with other ion channels for fast and efficient signaling, we investigated with complementary spectroscopic methods and pull-down assays whether CaM may be able to interact in a similar Ca2ϩ-independent manner with NR1 C0
Summary
Glutamate is the prevailing excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian brain. The ionotropic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)1-type glutamate receptor is a major source of Ca2ϩ influx into neurons in the central nervous system. In contrast to the experiments with full-length CaM, addition of Ca2ϩ to the solution containing apoCaM76–148 and NR1C0p did not cause any further changes in anisotropy (Fig. 6C, right).
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