A hallmark feature of Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) regulation is the generation of Ca2+-independent autonomous activity by Thr-286 autophosphorylation. CaMKII autonomy has been regarded a form of molecular memory and is indeed important in neuronal plasticity and learning/memory. Thr-286-phosphorylated CaMKII is thought to be essentially fully active (∼70-100%), implicating that it is no longer regulated and that its dramatically increased Ca2+/ CaM affinity is of minor functional importance. However, this study shows that autonomy greater than 15-25% was the exception, not the rule, and required a special mechanism (T-site binding; by the T-substrates AC2 or NR2B). Autonomous activity toward regular R-substrates (including tyrosine hydroxylase and GluR1) was significantly further stimulated by Ca2+/CaM, both in vitro and within cells. Altered Km and Vmax made autonomy also substrate- (and ATP) concentration-dependent, but only over a narrow range, with remarkable stability at physiological concentrations. Such regulation still allows molecularmemory of previous Ca2+ signals, but prevents complete uncoupling from subsequent cellular stimulation. © 2010 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Coultrap, S. J., Buard, I., Kulbe, J. R., Dell’Acqua, M. L., & Bayer, K. U. (2010). CaMKII autonomy is substrate-dependent and further stimulated by Ca 2+/calmodulin. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 285(23), 17930–17937. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.069351
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