Calmodulin·(Ca2+)4 is the active calmodulin-calcium species activating the calcium-, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum in the regulation of the calcium pump

1984 
Abstract Calcium-, calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum increases the rate of calcium transport. The complex dependence of calmodulin-dependent phosphoester formation on free calcium and total calmodulin concentrations can be satisfactorily explained by assuming that CaM · (Ca 2+ ) 4 is the sole calmodulin-calcium species which activates the calcium-, calmodulin-dependent, membrane-bound protein kinase. The apparent dissociation constant of the E · CaM · (Ca 2+ ) 4 complex determined from the calcium dependence of calmodulin-dependent phosphoester formation over a 100-fold range of total calmodulin concentrations (0.01–1 μ M) was 0.9 nM; the respective apparent dissoclation constant at 0.8 mM free calcium, 1 mM free magnesium with low calmodulin concentrations (0.1–50 nM) was 2.60 nM. These results are in good agreement with the apparent dissociation constant of 2.54 nM of high affinity calmodulin binding determined by 125 I-labelled calmodulin binding to sarcoplasmic reticulum fractions at 1 mM free calcium, 1 mM free magnesium and total calmodulin concentration ranging from 0.1 to 150 nM, i.e. conditions where approximately 98% of the total calmodulin is present as CaM · (Ca 2+ ) 4 . The apparent dissociation constant of the calcium-free calmodulin-enzyme complex (E · CaM) is at least 100-fold greater than the apparent dissociation constant of the E · CaM · (Ca 2+ ) 4 complex, as judged from non-saturation 125 I-labelled calmodulin binding at total calmodulin concentrations of up to 150 nM, in the absence of calcium.
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