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Laboratory of Structural Biology, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Joshua S. Sharp, Laboratory of Structural Biology, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Dept. of Health and Human Services, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Because of CaM's role as a Ca2+ sensor that is modulated at the biochemical level by reversible modification by ROS, as well as its biological importance, there has been considerable interest in the structural changes from CaM oxidation that leads to the observed functional changes (8
,14
,16
21
). It was determined that the oxidation of Met144 and Met145 at the C-terminus of the protein stabilizes the inhibited state of PMCA in addition to slightly decreasing the calcium affinity of CaM (14
). Mutation of the other seven methionines is thought to have minimal effects on the interactions with PMCA, including slightly decreasing the binding affinity for PMCA (19
) and decreasing the calcium affinity and binding cooperativity (20
). However, a Met
Leu mutation was made at the seven non-C-terminal methionines, resulting in a protein that was almost fully functional in activating PMCA and that retained much of its native structure (19
). Met144 and Met145 were selectively oxidized in this L7-CaM mutant, and NMR analyses were reported. These analyses found that oxidation of Met144 and Met145 results in a destabilization and shortening of the C-terminal helix (helix H). It was postulated that this conformational change led to a loss of specific contacts with PMCA, leading to a change in the nature of the interaction and causing oxidized CaM to bind PMCA in a down-regulating manner rather than the activating interaction of unoxidized CaM-PMCA (18
). It is important to note that previous studies have indicated that the interactions of CaM to various target proteins probably involve different residues. For example, the M144V mutant of plant CaM does not inhibit the activation of phosphodiesterase or calcineurin but does inhibit NOS activity (22
); indeed, experiments using CaM where every methionine except for M144 or M145 was mutated to leucine showed that M144L and M145L mutations affect nNOS and eNOS in quite different manners (23
). Therefore, to understand the biochemical effects of CaM oxidation, it is important that all oxidation targets be examined, as oxidation of different residues of CaM may well affect different protein-protein interactions.
A fluorescence-based study of CaM oxidation has also recently been reported. A binding site for a fluorescent probe was engineered into the N-terminal domain of CaM, and the probe was used to examine the structural effects of methionine oxidation on both apo- and holo-CaM. The authors reported that oxidation results in a structural uncoupling between the calcium-binding domains of holo-CaM without causing gross structural changes in helix A. Apo-CaM, however, seems to undergo little structural change in the rotational dynamics of the N-terminal domain; indeed, the authors noted that the overall rotational dynamics were essentially the same for oxidized CaM, regardless of the presence or absence of Ca2+ (17
). Although these data are quite valuable for studying the large-scale rotational dynamics of oxidized CaM, they indicate only structural changes directly affecting the fluorophore in helix A and are unable to probe structural changes from the perspective of other regions of CaM.
The biophysical characterization of protein oxidation products is technically challenging. ROS chemistry can be highly complex, leading to a heterogeneous mixture of oxidation products that confound traditional high-resolution structural analysis. CaM, however, has several advantages that have allowed a significant amount of structural data to be gathered. CaM contains nine methionines; the presence of these highly flexible hydrophobic residues is thought to be essential for CaM's ability to bind to a variety of different targets (24
). Methionines are the only significant target of oxidative modification in vivo (25
) and can be selectively modified in vitro by two-electron oxidation using hydrogen peroxide (8
). Heavy oxidation of the methionines of CaM has been shown to cause a dramatic decrease in the helical content of both apo- and holo-CaM as measured by circular dichroism spectroscopy (8
). Mutations of each of the methionines to oxidation-resistant leucine do not greatly impact the fold or calcium-binding properties of the protein (19
), allowing for sophisticated analyses isolating the influence of each methionine. However, mutation of these methionines to leucine influences the binding of CaM to various partners (26
,27
), suggesting that these methionines do indeed play an important role in CaM function. The ability to mutate the oxidation sites of CaM without grossly affecting the structure allows more complete and elegant analyses of the structural effects of protein oxidation than are available for most proteins. Even with the variety of tools available for the study of oxidized CaM, many questions are still unanswered regarding the structural effects of CaM oxidation, including the cumulative structural effects of methionine oxidation to wild-type CaM.
We report the application of dose-dependent protein oxidative surface mapping for examining the local environment of several sites in both apo-CaM and holo-CaM simultaneously as the protein suffers increasing amounts of oxidative damage from diffusing hydroxyl radicals. The first use of dose-dependent protein oxidative surface mapping has been previously reported for the study of structural changes to the sporulation regulatory protein Spo0F in Bacillus subtilis in response to oxidative damage (28
). The technique relies on previous work on protein oxidative surface mapping (29
35
), including a previous report using the technique to map the CaM-mellitin binding surface (36
). To perform dose-dependent oxidative surface mapping, a dilute solution of the analyte protein is
-irradiated, forming a constant, low concentration of hydroxyl radicals in solution. These hydroxyl radicals oxidize amino acid side chains at a rate depending largely on two factors: the inherent reactivity of the amino acid and the accessibility of the amino acid to the radical (30
,32
,34
,37
41
). This phenomenon has been used to qualitatively and semiquantitatively map the surface of proteins and protein-protein complexes, as previously reviewed (42
44
). Catalase is included in solution to prevent either direct two-electron oxidation by hydrogen peroxide (45
) or metal-catalyzed Fenton-like reactions (40
).
This technique takes advantage of the kinetics of oxidation by low-intensity
-rays. A detailed review of protein-hydroxyl radical chemistry in oxygenated solution is beyond the intended scope of this article and has been previously published (46
). Amino acid oxidation is known to occur primarily by second-order kinetics, dependent on the concentrations of hydroxyl radical and oxidation target (47
). Under conditions of constant
-irradiation, the hydroxyl radical concentration is maintained at a constant level (dependent on the radiation intensity and the rate of scavenging by the various components of the buffer, including the hydroxyl radical itself), leading to pseudo-first-order kinetics. The hydroxyl radicals are formed in the dilute solution in a uniform manner. The likelihood of any particular hydroxyl radical reacting with a protein oxidation target nearby rather than another radical, a buffer molecule, or another nonprotein molecule in solution is a direct function of that oxidation target's reactivity (i.e., the rate constant of oxidation). The pseudo-first-order rate constant of oxidation for any protein oxidation target is dependent on the inherent chemical reactivity of the oxidation target (which is not grossly affected by oxidation at other residues) and the accessibility of the target to the radical (which changes as a result of conformational change). Therefore, we can probe the solvent accessibility of each oxidation target as a function of irradiation time (or, in this case, overall absorbed dosage at a constant dose rate).
This technique has been applied in this study to probe the conformation of bovine CaM as a result of oxidative damage in both the Ca2+-bound form and the Ca2+-free form. Pseudo-first-order kinetics were measured simultaneously for 10 different peptides in CaM, representing all 9 methionines as well as at least 3 nonmethionine residues. The kinetics of oxidation were monitored over a range of absorbed dosages from 116.5 Gy to 1398 Gy. The resulting data allow us to describe the conformational changes experienced by each region of the protein in a gross level of detail and to directly compare the differences in the response of apo-CaM and holo-CaM to oxidative damage.
| EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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98%, essentially salt-free), lyophilized catalase from bovine liver (
10,000 units/mg protein), ammonium bicarbonate, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), and 96% formic acid were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Sequencing grade modified trypsin was obtained from Promega (Madison, WI). Acetonitrile was purchased from Caledon Laboratories (Georgetown, Ontario). Purified water (17.8 M
) was obtained from an in-house Hydro Picopure 2 system. All chemicals were used without further purification unless otherwise specified.
CaM oxidation
Two CaM samples were prepared for
-irradiation. The first sample (apo-CaM) consisted of 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate (pH 7.54), 20 µM CaM, 100 µM EDTA, and 10 nM catalase tetramer. The second sample (holo-CaM) consisted of 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate (pH 7.54), 20 µM CaM, 100 µM calcium carbonate, and 10 nM catalase tetramer. Catalase tetramer was added to prevent indirect two-electron oxidation of methionines from hydrogen peroxide formed during
-irradiation (45
). The samples were allowed to equilibrate overnight. Twenty-six aliquots of 10 µl each were prepared from both the holo-CaM and apo-CaM samples and placed in 500 µl polyethylene microfuge tubes. These samples were placed in a dual-point 127Cs
-irradiator and rotated at
60 rpm. These samples were irradiated at a dosage rate of 23.3 Gray (Gy)/min. The samples were irradiated between 0 and 60 min, with two aliquots of holo-CaM and two aliquots of apo-CaM taken every 5 min.
CaM digestion
Each aliquot of CaM was heated to 65°C for 90 min directly after irradiation to enhance denaturation of the protein, 20 µg of sequencing-grade modified trypsin was dissolved in 40 µl of 50 mM acetic acid, and 1 µl of the trypsin solution was added to each sample aliquot. These samples were incubated at 37°C overnight. Each sample was then diluted with 30 µl of acetonitrile with 0.1% formic acid (v/v) to a final CaM concentration of
5 µM.
Nanoelectrospray quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry
Although the samples did include significant nonvolatile salts, we were able to analyze them directly without further purification using a flow injection device (48
) to infuse sample into the orthogonal nanoelectrospray source of a Micromass Q-TOF Ultima Global mass spectrometer (nESI-Q-TOF MS). Mass spectra were collected under typical nanoelectrospray conditions, with a capillary potential of 3200 V, a 100-V cone potential, and a 10-V collision cell potential. Mass spectra were collected from m/z 270 to 2500 for 9 min (530 spectra), and the signal was summed to increase signal to noise. A typical resolving power of
12,000 full width at half maximum was achieved, with a typical mass accuracy of
40 ppm using external calibration only. Peptides were identified by mass measurement and later verified by LC-MS/MS by use of a quadrupole ion trap (described below).
Although oxidized peptides may be separated from unoxidized peptides by reverse-phase HPLC, this separation can also introduce differential ion suppression effects from coeluting ions as well as the inability to compare signal abundance ratios directly to determine the apparent rate of oxidation, which can introduce more error into the analysis than direct infusion. Therefore, only direct infusion mass spectra were used for quantification of the amount of oxidation per peptide. The resulting mass spectra were used to determine the kinetics of oxidation by measuring the signal intensity of the unoxidized version of each peptide and comparing the signal intensity with that of each of the various oxidized versions.
Kinetics analysis
Only ions with a signal/noise ratio
2 were quantitated. The concentration of unoxidized peptide at t = 0 (M0) was arbitrarily set to 1, and all product concentrations were measured as a fraction of overall products. The average number of oxidation reactions per peptide was generated by the function
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
![]() | (3) |
This nonstandard rate constant unit (Gy1) was used to better allow the direct comparison of future experiments performed at different dose rates.
Unfortunately, the exact steady-state concentration of hydroxyl radical in solution is unknown. Although the rate of hydroxyl radical formation during
-irradiation can be calculated as
1.09 x 107 mol ·OH liter1 s1 (47
,49
), the steady-state concentration is highly dependent on the buffer composition and cannot be readily calculated when the buffer contains complicated components such as proteins. However, based solely on the rate of hydroxyl radical recombination to form H2O2 (k = 6 x 109 liter mol1 s1), the maximum possible concentration of ·OH in solution at the radiation dose rate used here, ignoring the scavenging properties of the buffer and the protein, is 4.26 nM, which is approximately four orders of magnitude lower than the concentration of protein. The radical-scavenging properties of the buffer and protein in solution will lower this concentration even further, allowing one to use an upper limit of [·OH] = 4.26 nM to calculate a limit of k from k', if desired.
The nonirradiated samples were used to determine any background oxidation, and that amount of oxidation was subtracted from later irradiated samples so the kinetics represented only radiation-induced oxidation. When the signal from the ion of a measured oxidized peptide overlapped with the isotopic distribution of signal from another peptide ion, the contribution of the overlapping isotopic peak was determined from the 0 time point by taking the ratio of the abundance of the minor isotopic component of interest to the most abundant isotopic component in the isotopic packet, and the same measurement was made and subtracted from all later signals to determine only the contribution of the oxidized peptide to the overlapping signal. When multiple charge states could be measured, the charge state that had no overlapping signal with other ion signals was preferentially analyzed to minimize error. When this did not apply, the charge state that showed the lowest variation in the amount of oxidation across all irradiation dosages was used for analysis to minimize experimental error (usually the most abundant ion without overlapping ion signals). No significant difference in peptide cation adduction was detected between oxidized and unoxidized peptides; therefore, only the ratios of the unadducted peptides were measured. The average of the two replicates was plotted. Error bars representing the range of the measurements were also generated for all data points, although in many cases the size of the error bars is smaller than the physical size of the plotted data point. These replicates were designed and performed to isolate the effects of increasing radiation dosage versus the effects of uncontrolled experimental variables among time points (different reaction vessels, different locations in the sample rack, small differences in the mass spectrometric measurements, etc.).
Chip-based HPLC-nanoelectrospray quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometry
Although sufficient signal could be obtained to quantify the amount of oxidation for the peptides, it was insufficient to obtain informative tandem mass spectra (MS/MS) for any of the oxidized peptides to identify the actual sites of oxidation without prior enrichment. To determine these sites of oxidation, we analyzed an aliquot of the apo-CaM irradiated with a 1398-Gy dosage using an Agilent chip-based reverse-phase HPLC-nanoelectrospray device coupled to an Agilent LC/MSD Trap XCT Ultra quadrupole ion trap (QIT). The sample was diluted 5:1 in distilled water to dilute the organic content. An Agilent 1100 series dual HPLC system with an autosampler was used to load 20 µl of the diluted sample into a 40 µl sample loop. This sample was washed onto a C-18 enrichment cartridge for 5 min in 97% Buffer A (water, 0.1% formic acid), 3% Buffer B (acetonitrile, 0.1% formic acid) using a capillary pump at a flow rate of 4 µl/min. A switching valve was then used to bring a nanoflow pump in line with the enrichment cartridge and a 75-µm x 43 mm chip-based column packed with 5 µm C-18 SB-ZX material (Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, CA). The sample was then eluted at a flow rate of 0.3 µl/min using a 40-min linear gradient from 3% to 55% Buffer B, followed by a 5-min linear gradient from 55% to 80% Buffer B, followed by a column wash. The eluent flowed directly into the built-in chip-based nanoelectrospray emitter and into the QIT. The QIT nanoelectrospray source was operated under typical conditions (1900 V capillary potential, 180 V capillary exit potential, and 40 V skimmer potential), and automated data-dependent MS/MS analyses were performed. The mass spectrometer was set to select only ions for MS/MS that had an m/z ±2 of an oxidized peptide previously detected and quantified in the Q-TOF experiment. MS/MS parameters were set to isolate the ion with a 10 m/z-wide window and to ramp the excitation frequency from 0.3 V to 2 V to induce collision-induced dissociation fragmentation, with fragments scanned from m/z 200 to 2200. All MS/MS spectra were interpreted manually by comparison to in silico fragmentation of the peptide using PROWL (50
).
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
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In addition to determining the sites and nature of oxidation, the order of oxidation for the two C-terminal methionines, Met144 and Met145, could be determined. MS/MS analysis of the singly oxidized peptide 127148 from apo-CaM after 1398 Gy radiation dosage showed all detectable oxidation to have occurred on Met144 (Fig. 3). Only when two oxygens are added to the peptide is Met145 found to be oxidized. This indicates that in apo-CaM, hydroxyl-radical-mediated oxidation of Met144 occurs before oxidation of Met145. In holo-CaM, it was previously shown that Met145 is oxidized before Met144 (55
), suggesting that structural differences between apo- and holo-CaM strongly influence the order of oxidation of the structurally important C-terminal methionines. This difference may be of biological importance, as oxidation of Met145 was shown to significantly alter the tertiary structure of CaM as well as to increase the rate at which CaM was degraded by the proteasome, whereas oxidation of Met144 had no effect on the rate of proteasome degradation and little effect on the CD spectrum (55
).
The radiation-induced addition of two oxygens was observed at the lowest radiation dosage (116.5 Gy) for holo-CaM and at the second lowest radiation dosage (233 Gy) for apo-CaM. The relative abundance of the 127148+2O ion remained very comparable to the relative abundance of the 127148+1O ion across most radiation dosages for both apo- and holo-CaM (Table 1). If the oxidation of Met144 and Met145 were independent, one would expect that the amount of the 127148+1O peptide would increase detectably faster than the amount of the 127148+2O peptide, as the rate of oxidation of Met144 in apo-CaM (Fig. 3) and Met145 in holo-CaM (55
) is greater than the rate of oxidation of the neighboring methionine. However, we find that the ratio of M+O to M+2O remains similar throughout most of the time course of the experiment, with the exception of the early timepoints for apo-CaM, where the ratio of singly oxidized peptide to doubly oxidized peptide is actually lower than at later time points. This observation indicates that the oxidation of one C-terminal methionine causes the neighboring methionine to become significantly more solvent accessible and, therefore, to become oxidized relatively rapidly. Such a model would be in agreement with NMR data, which show that on oxidation, the segment of helix H containing both methionines becomes disordered (18
). It is also possible that the generation of a highly polar sulfoxide at one C-terminal methionine causes an increase in the inherent reactivity of the neighboring methionine independent of an increase in solvent accessibility. Although there does exist some evidence for field-inductive effects of formal charges to influence the rate of oxidation at aliphatic sites (56
), no systematic study of the effects of adjacent polar residues on the rate of oxidation of methionines has been published. However, no such effect has been previously documented in protein oxidative surface-mapping studies; therefore, because of a combination of these data and the previous NMR data, we conclude that the initial oxidation of one of the two C-terminal methionines leads to a destabilization of part of helix H, causing the neighboring methionine to become considerably more exposed.
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Additional analyses of the dose-dependent rate constants reveal an interesting response to oxidative damage. With slight oxidative damage, the rate constants of oxidation of methionines in holo-CaM begin to drop. The rate constants drop rapidly for Met36, Met109, Met124, and Met144-Met145 between 116.5 and 349.5 Gy (Fig. 5). Because of large experimental errors at low dose rates, it is not possible to accurately determine the amount of decline in the rate constant of oxidation for Met51, Met71, Met72, and Met76 (Fig. 5, D and E). The early dramatic decreases in the rate constants for oxidation of Met36, Met109, Met124, Met144, and Met145 suggest a cooperative conformational change that buries the sulfur of the affected methionines, indicating a closing of the hydrophobic clefts in the C-terminal lobe of the protein, and quite probably at least a partial closing of the N-terminal cleft in the protein, as based on the data for Met36.
At very high radiation dosages, the rate constants of oxidation for Met51, Met71, Met72, Ser101, Met144, and Met145 experience a slow but statistically significant decline. This later slow decline in the rate of oxidation indicates that the sites of oxidation are continuing to become less exposed to the hydroxyl radical as a result of noncooperative conformational changes resulting from further oxidation. Noncooperative changes in the rate constants of oxidation suggest either a noncooperative unfolding event of a collapsed, nonnative tertiary structure (indicative of a molten globule-like state) or a heterogeneous collection of different folding conformations with similar unfolding transitions that occlude the observation of a single defined cooperative unfolding event. In any case, the gradual decline is indicative of a further average closing of the hydrophobic clefts of heavily oxidized CaM within the ensemble of conformations present in solution.
Examination of the rate constants of oxidation for apo-CaM yields a significantly different result from holo-CaM. All methionine-containing peptides exhibit a significant increase in the rate constants between 116.5 and 233 Gy with the exception of Met76, which is already highly exposed in the native structure in the linker region between the two lobes of CaM. This is quite interesting, as it shows that the methionine-containing hydrophobic clefts of apo-CaM undergo exposure to solvent at very mild levels of oxidation. Even more interesting is the fact that, for all methionine-containing peptides except for Met76, the rate constants at 233 Gy are very similar to the initial rate constants of the peptide in holo-CaM. Continued comparison of apo-CaM and holo-CaM shows that the two continue to have roughly the same changes in the rate constants at each methionine during both the early cooperatively folding transitions and the later, molten globule-like transitions, suggesting that they both assume a similar collection of local conformations around the methionine-containing clefts. These data suggest a model in which slight oxidative damage of apo-CaM causes the methionine-containing hydrophobic pockets to open into a local conformation similar to that of unoxidized holo-CaM, although probably not identical. From this point, the methionine clefts of both apo-CaM and holo-CaM then proceed through roughly the same series of local conformational changes as they become more heavily oxidized, both entering either a molten globule-like conformation or a suite of conformations that reduce the average solvent accessibility of the oxidation targets after heavy oxidative damage.
The rate constant of oxidation for Met76 in apo-CaM actually increases through 582.5 Gy (Fig. 5 E). This result indicates that, as apo-CaM undergoes oxidative damage, the conformations that occlude Met76 are destabilized, causing Met76 to become more exposed on average. However, it never reaches the rate constant measured for Met76 in holo-CaM, indicating that the local conformation of the linker region is significantly different between oxidized apo-CaM and oxidized holo-CaM at all levels of oxidation, consistent with the large-scale dynamics reported from previous fluorescence studies (17
) and suggesting that, even if the local conformations of the calcium-binding lobes are similar between oxidized apo-CaM and oxidized holo-CaM, the overall structure remains significantly different.
Examination of the peptides oxidized at amino acids other than methionine reveals a similar story. Peptide 214 (Fig. 5 A) was shown by MS/MS to be oxidized primarily at Ile9, although a minor amount of oxidation was detected at Phe12, and MS/MS evidence also suggested potential unidentified minor oxidation sites elsewhere along the peptide. The amount of oxidation of this peptide is below our limits of detection until 466-Gy radiation exposure. From this point throughout the remainder of the experiment, both apo-CaM and holo-CaM oxidize with about the same rate constant, suggesting a similar local conformation.
Peptide 1421 (Fig. 5 B) is also consistent with this model. Based on the MS/MS data, the sole major oxidation site for this peptide appears to be Phe16, which is more exposed in the native structure of holo-CaM than apo-CaM (Table 2). The initial amount of oxidation is below our limits of detection; however, the oxidation of holo-CaM rises above our limits of detection well before the rate of apo-CaM, suggesting that the initial rate constant of Phe16 was higher for holo-CaM than for apo-CaM. After 466-Gy radiation exposure, the rate constant of holo-CaM appears to drop, although because of the relatively high amount of experimental error for the low-signal-to-noise holo-CaM data points, we cannot state with much certainty the degree of the decline. However, at radiation dosages of 582.5 Gy and greater, we observe a similar rate constant for both apo-CaM and holo-CaM, suggesting a similar local conformation around Phe16 after this amount of oxidation.
Of the nonmethionine oxidized residues, Ser101 was oxidized most rapidly, giving the best signal/noise ratios and allowing for the most accurate measurements of oxidation kinetics. Examination of the kinetics of oxidation of Ser101 (Fig. 5 F) reveals a story similar to the one revealed by the methionine kinetics. The ß-carbon of Ser101, which is the oxidation target atom (46
), is essentially fully exposed in both apo-CaM and holo-CaM; appropriately, they have identical rate constants. Interestingly, they also clearly show that the residue experiences what may appear to be a cooperative conformation change between the 233-Gy and 349.5-Gy dosages that buries the ß-carbon; after more extensive oxidative damage, the rate constant of oxidation for Ser101 gradually declines, indicating that the molten globule-like state also buries Ser101 more extensively. The rate of decrease in the rate constant of Ser101 is identical for apo-CaM and holo-CaM, again suggesting that the oxidized versions of both proteins assume similar conformations local to Ser101.
One possible explanation of the observed similarity in the kinetics of oxidation of damaged apo-CaM and holo-CaM is that modest oxidation of holo-CaM lowers the Ca2+ binding affinity of CaM sufficiently that holo-CaM is stripped of its calcium ions, becoming apo-CaM. Measurements of calcium affinity of wheat germ CaM that has been oxidized at a C-terminal methionine have been reported. These results showed that oxidized CaM fully assumed the calcium-bound form in the presence of 100 µM free calcium (14
). Although this measurement was performed only with a CaM oxidized at one residue, previous results indicate that oxidation of this C-terminal methionine causes the majority of functional changes (19
) as well as significant changes in the tertiary structure (18
). Additionally, a fluorescently labeled tetracysteine mutant of CaM in which all nine methionines were chemically oxidized to methionine sulfoxide was shown to be in the calcium-bound form at a concentration of 200 µM free Ca2+ (17
), indicating that CaM should be fully calcium bound under our conditions for holo-CaM. Therefore, we conclude that the similarity in oxidation kinetics between apo-CaM and holo-CaM does indeed indicate a similarity in local conformation as a result of oxidative damage and not the conversion of holo-CaM to apo-CaM as a result of a loss of calcium-binding affinity.
One point of significant interest is the lack of data for amino acids in the central linker between the two lobes of CaM. Met76 (Fig. 5 E) is part of this unstable helix in holo-CaM and part of the highly flexible portion of the central linker in apo-CaM. However, Met76 is fully exposed in both the apo-CaM and holo-CaM native structures (Table 2), making it useless for determining local unfolding (although it is a very good probe for detecting local folding). No other oxidation targets were detected in this central helix region. The fact that the rate constant changes in response to oxidative damage to Met76 in holo-CaM are not mimicked by apo-CaM suggests that the conformations assumed by the linker region of oxidized holo-CaM are not identical to those assumed by apo-CaM, even though previous reports have shown that methionine oxidation leads to structural uncoupling of the opposing domains of holo-CaM similar to that observed for apo-CaM (17
). These data also indicate that there is a structural difference between apo-CaM and oxidized apo-CaM in the linker region, as the rate constant of oxidation of Met76 in apo-CaM is seen to rapidly increase on initial oxidative damage, followed by a noncooperative decrease.
| CONCLUSIONS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
Submitted on October 6, 2006; accepted for publication November 6, 2006.
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