Direct involvement of protein myristoylation in myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS)-calmodulin interaction.

41Citations
Citations of this article
24Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

MARCKS, a major in vivo substrate of protein kinase C, interacts with plasma membranes in a phosphorylation-, myristoylation-, and calmodulin-dependent manner. Although we have previously observed that myristoylated and non-myristoylated MARCKS proteins behave differently during calmodulin-agarose chromatography, the role of protein myristoylation in the MARCKS-calmodulin interaction remained to be elucidated. Here we demonstrate that the myristoyl moiety together with the N-terminal protein domain is directly involved in the MARCKS-calmodulin interaction. Both myristoylated and non-myristoylated recombinant MARCKS bound to calmodulin-agarose at low ionic strengths, but only the former retained the affinity at high ionic strengths. A quantitative analysis obtained with dansyl (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl)-calmodulin showed that myristoylated MARCKS has an affinity higher than the non-myristoylated protein. Furthermore, a synthetic peptide based on the N-terminal sequence was found to bind calmodulin only when it was myristoylated. Only the N-terminal peptide but not the canonical calmodulin-binding domain showed the ionic strength-independent calmodulin binding. A mutation study suggested that the importance of the positive charge in the N-terminal protein domain in the binding.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Matsubara, M., Titani, K., Taniguchi, H., & Hayashi, N. (2003). Direct involvement of protein myristoylation in myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS)-calmodulin interaction. The Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(49), 48898–48902. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M305488200

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free