4.8 Article

Enzyme-inhibitor-like tuning of Ca2+ channel connectivity with calmodulin

Journal

NATURE
Volume 463, Issue 7283, Pages 968-U149

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature08766

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Institute of Mental Health
  2. US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
  3. US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

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Ca2+ channels and calmodulin (CaM) are two prominent signalling hubs(1) that synergistically affect functions as diverse as cardiac excitability(2), synaptic plasticity(3) and gene transcription(4). It is therefore fitting that these hubs are in some sense coordinated, as the opening of Ca(V)1-2 Ca2+ channels are regulated by a single CaM constitutively complexed with channels(5). The Ca2+-free form of CaM (apoCaM) is already pre-associated with the isoleucine-glutamine (IQ) domain on the channel carboxy terminus, and subsequent Ca2+ binding to this 'resident' CaM drives conformational changes that then trigger regulation of channel opening(6). Another potential avenue for channel-CaM coordination could arise from the absence of Ca2+ regulation in channels lacking a pre-associated CaM6,7. Natural fluctuations in CaM concentrations might then influence the fraction of regulable channels and, thereby, the overall strength of Ca2+ feedback. However, the prevailing view has been that the ultrastrong affinity of channels for apoCaM ensures their saturation with CaM8, yielding a significant form of concentration independence between Ca2+ channels and CaM. Here we show that significant exceptions to this autonomy exist, by combining electrophysiology (to characterize channel regulation) with optical fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) sensor determination of free-apoCaM concentration in live cells(9). This approach translates quantitative CaM biochemistry from the traditional test-tube context into the realm of functioning holochannels within intact cells. From this perspective, we find that long splice forms of Ca(V)1.3 and Ca(V)1.4 channels include a distal carboxy tail(10-12) that resembles an enzyme competitive inhibitor that retunes channel affinity for apoCaM such that natural CaM variations affect the strength of Ca2+ feedback modulation. Given the ubiquity of these channels(13,14), the connection between ambient CaM levels and Ca2+ entry through channels is broadly significant for Ca2+ homeostasis. Strategies such as ours promise key advances for the in situ analysis of signalling molecules resistant to in vitro reconstitution, such as Ca2+ channels.

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