Abstract

Although the calpain system has been studied extensively in mammalian animals, much less is known about the properties of μ-calpain, m-calpain, and calpastatin in lower vertebrates such as fish. These three proteins were isolated and partly characterized from rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, muscle. Trout m-calpain contains an 80-kDa large subunit, but the ∼ 26-kDa small subunit from trout m-calpain is smaller than the 28-kDa small subunit from mammalian calpains. Trout μ-calpain and calpastatin were only partly purified; identity of trout μ-calpain was confirmed by labeling with antibodies to bovine skeletal muscle μ-calpain, and identity of trout calpastatin was confirmed by specific inhibition of bovine skeletal muscle μ- and m-calpain. Trout μ-calpain requires 4.4 ± 2.8 μM and trout m-calpain requires 585 ± 51 μM Ca 2+ for half-maximal activity, similar to the Ca 2+ requirements of μ- and m-calpain from mammalian tissues. Sequencing tryptic peptides indicated that the amino acid sequence of trout calpastatin shares little homology with the amino acid sequences of mammalian calpastatins. Screening a rainbow trout cDNA library identified three cDNAs encoding for the large subunit of a putative m-calpain. The amino acid sequence predicted by trout m-calpain cDNA was 65% identical to the human 80-kDa m-calpain sequence. Gene duplication and polyploidy occur in fish, and the amino acid sequence of the trout m-calpain 80-kDa subunit identified in this study was 83% identical to the sequence of a trout m-calpain 80-kDa subunit described earlier. This is the first report of two isoforms of m-calpain in a single species.

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