Abstract

Calreticulin is a Ca2+ -binding chaperone that resides in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and is involved in the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis and in the folding of newly synthesized glycoproteins. In this study, we have used site-specific mutagenesis to map amino acid residues that are critical in calreticulin function. We have focused on two cysteine residues (Cys(88) and Cys(120)), which form a disulfide bridge in the N-terminal domain of calreticulin, on a tryptophan residue located in the carbohydrate binding site (Trp(302)), and on certain residues located at the tip of the "hairpin-like" P-domain of the protein (Glu(238), Glu(239), Asp(241), Glu(243), and Trp(244)). Calreticulin mutants were expressed in crt(-/-) fibroblasts, and bradykinin-dependent Ca2+ release was measured as a marker of calreticulin function. Bradykinin-dependent Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum was rescued by wild-type calreticulin and by the Glu(238), Glu(239), Asp(241), and Glu(243) mutants. The Cys(88) and Cys(120) mutants rescued the calreticulin-deficient phenotype only partially ( approximately 40%), and the Trp(244) and Trp(302) mutants did not rescue it at all. We identified four amino acid residues (Glu(239), Asp(241), Glu(243), and Trp(244)) at the hairpin tip of the P-domain that are critical in the formation of a complex between ERp57 and calreticulin. Although the Glu(239), Asp(241), and Glu(243) mutants did not bind ERp57 efficiently, they fully restored bradykinin-dependent Ca2+ release in crt(-/-) cells. This indicates that binding of ERp57 to calreticulin may not be critical for the chaperone function of calreticulin with respect to the bradykinin receptor.

Highlights

  • Biochemical and structural studies have demonstrated that calreticulin comprises three distinct structural domains: the amino-terminal N-domain, which is globular, the central P-domain, which is folded into an “extended arm,” and the carboxyl-terminal C-domain (7)

  • We used calreticulin-deficient cells to carry out a functional analysis of specific amino acid residues in calreticulin, a lectin-like chaperone in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)

  • We focused on amino acid residues located in the carbohydrate binding pocket of calreticulin, on the disulfide bridge in the N-domain, and on several residues at the tip of the extended arm of the P-domain

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Materials—Trypsin, malate dehydrogenase (MDH), bradykinin, and Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium were from Sigma.

Amino Acids Essential in Calreticulin Chaperone Function
RESULTS
Kd mM
DISCUSSION
Full Text
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