Abstract

Calmodulin is a highly versatile protein that regulates intracellular calcium homeostasis and is involved in a variety of cellular functions including cardiac excitability, synaptic plasticity and signaling transduction. During osteoclastic bone resorption, calmodulin has been reported to concentrate at the ruffled border membrane of osteoclasts where it is thought to modulate bone resorption activity in response to calcium. Here we report an interaction between calmodulin and Rab3D, a small exocytic GTPase and established regulator osteoclastic bone resorption. Using yeast two-hybrid screening together with a series of protein-protein interaction studies, we show that calmodulin interacts with Rab3D in a calcium dependent manner. Consistently, expression of a calcium insensitive form of calmodulin (i.e. CaM1234) perturbs calmodulin-Rab3D interaction as monitored by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) assays. In osteoclasts, calmodulin and Rab3D are constitutively co-expressed during RANKL-induced osteoclast differentiation, co-occupy plasma membrane fractions by differential gradient sedimentation assay and colocalise in the ruffled border as revealed by confocal microscopy. Further, functional blockade of calmodulin-Rab3D interaction by calmidazolium chloride coincides with an attenuation of osteoclastic bone resorption. Our data imply that calmodulin- Rab3D interaction is required for efficient bone resorption by osteoclasts in vitro.

Highlights

  • Calmodulin is a versatile protein that regulates Ca(2+) homeostasis[1], synaptic plasticity[2], and cardiac excitability[3]

  • We show that inhibition of calmodulin calcium binding perturbs this association in vivo by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET)

  • In this study we document that calmodulin interacts with Rab3D in a calcium-dependent manner

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Summary

Introduction

Calmodulin is a versatile protein that regulates Ca(2+) homeostasis[1], synaptic plasticity[2], and cardiac excitability[3]. It has been implicated in osteoclast differentiation, function, and survival. Calmodulin regulates Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII) and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase, calcineurin[4]; both are critical for osteoclast differentiation[5,6,7] It mediates osteoclast survival through a mechanism involving the binding of calmodulin with the death receptor Fas[8,9]. Via modulating calcium, imparts an additional layer of regulation on Rab3D trafficking during osteoclastic bone resorption

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