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Structural Basis for the Calmodulin-Mediated Activation of eEF-2K

Authors :
Andrea Piserchio
Eta A. Isiorho
Kimberly Long
Amanda L. Bohanon
Eric A. Kumar
Nathan Will
David Jeruzalmi
Kevin N. Dalby
Ranajeet Ghose
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Translation is a highly energy consumptive process1 tightly regulated for optimal protein quality2 and adaptation to energy and nutrient availability. A key facilitator of this process is the α-kinase eEF-2K that specifically phosphorylates the GTP-dependent translocase eEF-2, thereby reducing its affinity for the ribosome and suppressing the elongation phase of protein synthesis3,4. eEF-2K activation requires calmodulin binding and auto-phosphorylation at the primary stimulatory site, T348. Biochemical studies have predicted that calmodulin activates eEF-2K through a unique allosteric process5 mechanistically distinct from other calmodulin-dependent kinases6. Here we resolve the atomic details of this mechanism through a 2.3 Å crystal structure of the heterodimeric complex of calmodulin with the functional core of eEF-2K (eEF-2KTR). This structure, which represents the activated T348-phosphorylated state of eEF-2KTR, highlights how through an intimate association with the calmodulin C-lobe, the kinase creates a “spine” that extends from its N-terminal calmodulin-targeting motif through a conserved regulatory element to its active site. Modification of key spine residues has deleterious functional consequences.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........98b4e67f5d9df2d1be3963b38a053761