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Interhelical interactions within the STIM1 CC1 domain modulate CRAC channel activation

Authors :
Linda Cerofolini
Matthias Bechmann
Petr Rathner
Marc Fahrner
Norbert Müller
Herwig Grabmayr
Ferdinand Horvath
Marco Fragai
Agrim Gupta
Christoph Romanin
Thomas Renger
Enrico Ravera
Claudio Luchinat
Heinrich Krobath
Source :
Nature chemical biology
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The calcium release activated calcium channel is activated by the endoplasmic reticulum-resident calcium sensor protein STIM1. On activation, STIM1 C terminus changes from an inactive, tight to an active, extended conformation. A coiled-coil clamp involving the CC1 and CC3 domains is essential in controlling STIM1 activation, with CC1 as the key entity. The nuclear magnetic resonance-derived solution structure of the CC1 domain represents a three-helix bundle stabilized by interhelical contacts, which are absent in the Stormorken disease-related STIM1 R304W mutant. Two interhelical sites between the CC1α1 and CC1α2 helices are key in controlling STIM1 activation, affecting the balance between tight and extended conformations. Nuclear magnetic resonance-directed mutations within these interhelical interactions restore the physiological, store-dependent activation behavior of the gain-of-function STIM1 R304W mutant. This study reveals the functional impact of interhelical interactions within the CC1 domain for modifying the CC1-CC3 clamp strength to control the activation of STIM1.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15524469 and 15524450
Volume :
17
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature chemical biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ff7bab8d41642db89d1d766ded86dd02