Abstract

Calmodulin (CaM) regulation of voltage-gated calcium (CaV1-2) channels is a powerful Ca2+-feedback mechanism to adjust channel activity in response to Ca2+ influx. Despite progress in resolving mechanisms of CaM-CaV feedback, the stoichiometry of CaM interaction with CaV channels remains ambiguous. Functional studies that tethered CaM to CaV1.2 suggested that a single CaM sufficed for Ca2+ feedback, yet biochemical, FRET, and structural studies showed that multiple CaM molecules interact with distinct interfaces within channel cytosolic segments, suggesting that functional Ca2+ regulation may be more nuanced. Resolving this ambiguity is critical as CaM is enriched in subcellular domains where CaV channels reside, such as the cardiac dyad. We here localized multiple CaMs to the CaV nanodomain by tethering either WT or mutant CaM that lack Ca2+-binding capacity to the pore-forming α-subunit of CaV1.2, CaV1.3, and CaV2.1 and/or the auxiliary β2A subunit. We observed that a single CaM tethered to either the α or β2A subunit tunes Ca2+ regulation of CaV channels. However, when multiple CaMs are localized concurrently, CaV channels preferentially respond to signaling from the α-subunit-tethered CaM. Mechanistically, the introduction of a second IQ domain to the CaV1.3 carboxyl tail switched the apparent functional stoichiometry, permitting two CaMs to mediate functional regulation. In all, Ca2+ feedback of CaV channels depends exquisitely on a single CaM preassociated with the α-subunit carboxyl tail. Additional CaMs that colocalize with the channel complex are unable to trigger Ca2+-dependent feedback of channel gating but may support alternate regulatory functions.

Highlights

  • Calmodulin (CaM) regulation of high-voltage activated calcium channels (CaV1-2) is a dynamic feedback modulation that sculpts calcium entry into neurons and cardiac myocytes [1,2,3,4]

  • FRET analysis suggests a stoichiometry of up to two Ca21/CaM molecules associating with the holo-CaV channel complex [66]

  • We dissected the potential role of multiple CaM in orchestrating CaV feedback modulation

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Summary

Introduction

Calmodulin (CaM) regulation of high-voltage activated calcium channels (CaV1-2) is a dynamic feedback modulation that sculpts calcium entry into neurons and cardiac myocytes [1,2,3,4]. Co-expression of b2A-CaMWT with a1CD1671CaMWT resulted in appreciable CDI (Fig. 2A, Fig. S1G, and Table 1), albeit modestly reduced compared with channels lacking tethered CaM (;25% reduction). Co-expression of b2A-CaM1234 abolished CDI (Fig. 3C, Fig. S3C, and Table 2), suggesting that CaM linked to the b2A subunit is capable of eliciting functional regulation.

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