Abstract
Edema factor (EF), a toxin from Bacillus anthracis (anthrax), possesses adenylyl cyclase activity and requires the ubiquitous Ca2+-sensor calmodulin (CaM) for activity. CaM can exist in three major structural states: an apo state with no Ca2+ bound, a two Ca2+ state with its C-terminal domain Ca2+-loaded, and a four Ca2+ state in which the lower Ca2+ affinity N-terminal domain is also ligated. Here, the interaction of EF with the three Ca2+ states of CaM has been examined by NMR spectroscopy and changes in the Ca2+ affinity of CaM in the presence of EF have been determined by flow dialysis. Backbone chemical shift perturbations of CaM show that EF interacts weakly with the N-terminal domain of apoCaM. The C-terminal CaM domain only engages in the interaction upon Ca2+ ligation, rendering the over-all interaction much tighter. In the presence of EF, the C-terminal domain binds Ca2+ with higher affinity, but loses binding cooperativity, whereas the N-terminal domain exhibits strongly reduced Ca2+ affinity. As judged by chemical shift differences, the N-terminal CaM domain remains bound to EF upon subsequent Ca2+ ligation. This Ca2+ dependence of the EF-CaM interaction differs from that observed for most other CaM targets, which normally interact only with the Ca2+-bound CaM domains and become active following the transition to the four Ca2+ state.
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CITATION STYLE
Ulmer, T. S., Soelaiman, S., Li, S., Klee, C. B., Tang, W. J., & Bax, A. (2003). Calcium dependence of the interaction between calmodulin and anthrax edema factor. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(31), 29261–29266. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M302837200
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