Abstract

To determine the structural and regulatory role of the C-terminal residues of phospholamban (PLB) in the membranes of living cells, we fused fluorescent protein tags to PLB and sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA). Alanine substitution of PLB C-terminal residues significantly altered fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from PLB to PLB and SERCA to PLB, suggesting a change in quaternary conformation of PLB pentamer and SERCA-PLB regulatory complex. Val to Ala substitution at position 49 (V49A) had particularly large effects on PLB pentamer structure and PLB-SERCA regulatory complex conformation, increasing and decreasing probe separation distance, respectively. We also quantified a decrease in oligomerization affinity, an increase in binding affinity of V49A-PLB for SERCA, and a gain of inhibitory function as quantified by calcium-dependent ATPase activity. Notably, deletion of only a few C-terminal residues resulted in significant loss of PLB membrane anchoring and mislocalization to the cytoplasm and nucleus. C-terminal truncations also resulted in progressive loss of PLB-PLB FRET due to a decrease in the apparent affinity of PLB oligomerization. We quantified a similar decrease in the binding affinity of truncated PLB for SERCA and loss of inhibitory potency. However, despite decreased SERCA-PLB binding, intermolecular FRET for Val(49)-stop (V49X) truncation mutant was paradoxically increased as a result of an 11.3-Å decrease in the distance between donor and acceptor fluorophores. We conclude that PLB C-terminal residues are critical for localization, oligomerization, and regulatory function. In particular, the PLB C terminus is an important determinant of the quaternary structure of the SERCA regulatory complex.

Highlights

  • BackgroundResults: Deletion or mutation of C-terminal residues significantly altered PLB structure and the structure of the PLB-sarco/ endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) regulatory complex

  • Loss of phospholamban (PLB) C-terminal residues causes cardiomyopathy in humans

  • The other mutant with a significant change in sarco/ endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) binding was V49A, which showed a 23% increase in FRETmax, suggesting a very compact regulatory complex conformation, and a 73% decrease in KD2 (Fig. 4D), indicating an increase in the apparent affinity for SERCA

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Summary

Background

Results: Deletion or mutation of C-terminal residues significantly altered PLB structure and the structure of the PLB-SERCA regulatory complex. To determine the structural and regulatory role of the C-terminal residues of phospholamban (PLB) in the membranes of living cells, we fused fluorescent protein tags to PLB and sarco/ endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA). A naturally occurring missense mutation in PLB caused by substitution of a stop codon for Leu (L39X) results in loss of PLB protein in humans, resulting in dysregulation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2ϩ cycling, dilated cardiomyopathy, hypertrophic. The results provide insight into the structural and functional consequences of mutating or truncating the TM domain and reveal an unexpected role for PLB C-terminal residues in determining the quaternary conformation of the PLB-SERCA regulatory complex

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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