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The
primary mediator of Ca2+ -dependent signalling
in eukaryotic cells is calmodulin, which serves as a high affinity intracellular
Ca2+ receptor. Calmodulin is a ubiquitous, highly conserved
protein that plays a critical role in numerous essential cellular functions,
including Ca2+ transport, cell motility, cytoskeletal assembly,
protein phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, cell proliferation and cell
cycle progression.
The
physical characteristics of calmodulin are as follows:
Mr : 16.7 kDa
pI: 3.9
Primary sequence: 148 AA, >1/3 are glutamate or aspartate
Tertiary structural features: Four EF-hand helix-loop-helix domains
The
effects of calmodulin are produced by direct interaction with target enzymes
or indirectly via multiple specific kinases. The crystal structure
of Ca2+-bound calmodulin has been solved both in the absence
and presence of associated peptides. As the concentration of intracellular
free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i ) transiently rises,
calmodulin undergoes a conformational change that allows it to bind to
calmodulin-binding domains on a variety of proteins. Calmodulin
and Ca2+/calmodulin-binding proteins typically contain either
basic amphiphilic a-helices or IQ motifs. IQ motifs consist of approximately
25 residues with the core consensus sequence IQXXXRGXXXR, (where X is
any amino acid).
Because
calmodulin is essential in normal cellular proliferation, abnormal cellular
proliferation should exhibit alterations in levels of calmodulin, and
/ or its interactions with target proteins. The calmodulin content
in several transformed cells in culture and tumor tissue is significantly
increased. For example, chicken embryo fibroblasts transformed by
Rous sarcoma virus and a human acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell line
have two- to threefold higher calmodulin levels than normal cells. Moreover,
we and others have demonstrated that transformed cells have altered levels
of selected calmodulin-binding proteins. Importantly, calmodulin
was recently identified using DNA microarray technology to be upregulated
in highly metastatic melanoma cells. |