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Significance of calcium binding, tyrosine phosphorylation, and lysine trimethylation for the essential function of calmodulin in vertebrate cells analyzed in a novel gene replacement system

Authors :
Panina, Svetlana
Stephan, Alexander
la Cour, Jonas Marstrand
Jacobsen, Kivin
Kallerup, Line K.
Bumbuleviciute, Rasita
Knudsen, Kristoffer Vitting Klinkby
Sanchez-Gonzalez, Pablo
Villalobo, Antonio
Olesen, Uffe Høgh
Berchtold, Martin Werner
Panina, Svetlana
Stephan, Alexander
la Cour, Jonas Marstrand
Jacobsen, Kivin
Kallerup, Line K.
Bumbuleviciute, Rasita
Knudsen, Kristoffer Vitting Klinkby
Sanchez-Gonzalez, Pablo
Villalobo, Antonio
Olesen, Uffe Høgh
Berchtold, Martin Werner
Source :
Panina , S , Stephan , A , la Cour , J M , Jacobsen , K , Kallerup , L K , Bumbuleviciute , R , Knudsen , K V K , Sanchez-Gonzalez , P , Villalobo , A , Olesen , U H & Berchtold , M W 2012 , ' Significance of calcium binding, tyrosine phosphorylation, and lysine trimethylation for the essential function of calmodulin in vertebrate cells analyzed in a novel gene replacement system ' , Journal of Biological Chemistry , vol. 287 , no. 22 , pp. 18173-18181 .
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Calmodulin (CaM) was shown to be essential for survival of lower eukaryotes by gene deletion experiments. So far, no CaM gene deletion was reported in higher eukaryotes. In vertebrates, CaM is expressed from several genes, which encode an identical protein, making it difficult to generate a model system to study the effect ofCaMgene deletion. Here, we present a novel genetic system based on the chicken DT40 cell line, in which the two functional CaM genes were deleted and one allele replaced with a CaM transgene that can be artificially regulated.Weshow that CaM is essential for survival of vertebrate cells as they die in the absence of CaM expression. Reversal of CaM repression or ectopic expression of HA-tagged CaM rescued the cells. Cells exclusively expressing HA-CaM with impaired individual calcium binding domains as well as HA-CaM lacking the ability to be phosphorylated at residues Tyr99/Tyr138 or trimethylated at Lys115 survived and grew well. CaM mutated at both Ca2 binding sites 3 and 4 as well as at both sites 1 and 2, but to a lesser degree, showed decreased ability to support cell growth. Cells expressing CaM with all calcium binding sites impaired died with kinetics similar to that of cells expressing no CaM. This system offers a unique opportunity to analyze CaM structurefunction relationships in vivo without the use of pharmacological inhibitors and to analyze the function of wild type and mutated CaM in modulating the activity of different target systems without interference of endogenous CaM.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Panina , S , Stephan , A , la Cour , J M , Jacobsen , K , Kallerup , L K , Bumbuleviciute , R , Knudsen , K V K , Sanchez-Gonzalez , P , Villalobo , A , Olesen , U H & Berchtold , M W 2012 , ' Significance of calcium binding, tyrosine phosphorylation, and lysine trimethylation for the essential function of calmodulin in vertebrate cells analyzed in a novel gene replacement system ' , Journal of Biological Chemistry , vol. 287 , no. 22 , pp. 18173-18181 .
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1322616831
Document Type :
Electronic Resource