CREB/CBP and SRE-interacting transcriptional regulators are fast on-off switches: Duration of calcium transients specifies the magnitude of transcriptional responses

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Abstract

Transient increases in the intracellular calcium concentration, which are associated with electrical activation of neurones, control synapse-to-nucleus communication. Calcium signals differ in time and space but it is unclear exactly how this translates into stimulus-specific gene expression. Analysis of transcription induced by calcium transients with defined durations revealed that the evoked genomic responses, unlike those following neurotrophin exposure, are not all-or-none but graded events, The CRE-binding protein CREB, its coactivator CREB-binding protein (CBP), and SRE-interacting transcriptional regulators are fast on-off switches: their activities are induced by short-lasting calcium signals, remain active for the duration of the signal and are rapidly shut-off after calcium concentrations have returned to basal levels. CREB is switched on by a fast, nuclear calmodulin (CaM) kinase-dependent mechanism that mediates CREB phosphorylation on serine 133 within 30 s of calcium entry. The second calciumactivated route to CREB involves the MAP kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK1/2) cascade. This pathway can be triggered by brief, 30-60 s calcium transients. ERK1/2 activity peaks several minutes after calcium entry and can outlast the calcium transient. The shut-off of CREB and ERK1/2 involves rapid dephosphorylation of their activator sites. These properties of transcription factors and their regulating kinases and phosphatases provide a mechanism through which the duration of calcium signals specifies the magnitude of the transcriptional response. The decoding of temporal features of calcium transients is likely to contribute to impulsespecific gene expression.

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Chawla, S., & Bading, H. (2001). CREB/CBP and SRE-interacting transcriptional regulators are fast on-off switches: Duration of calcium transients specifies the magnitude of transcriptional responses. Journal of Neurochemistry, 79(4), 849–858. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.2001.00645.x

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