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J Biol Chem. 1989 Aug 5;264(22):12794-9.Calcium ion binding to delta- and to beta-crystallins. The presence of the "EF-hand" motif in delta-crystallin that aids in calcium ion binding.Sharma Y, Rao CM, Narasu ML, Rao SC, Somasundaram T, Gopalakrishna A, Balasubramanian D.Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad, India. Abnormal levels of endogenous calcium ions are known to induce eye lens opacity,
and a variety of causative factors has been proposed, including calcium-mediated
aggregation and precipitation of the lens proteins crystallins. We have
specifically looked in some detail at the interaction of Ca2+ with various
crystallins and its consequences. Lenses incubated in solutions containing 10 mM
Ca2+ or 5 mM Tb3+ opacified. Fluorescence titration of crystallins with TbCl3
revealed that this ion binds to delta- and beta-crystallins in solution.
Equilibrium dialysis showed that four Ca2+ ions bind to one delta-crystallin
tetramer with an affinity of 4.3 x 10(3) M-1. Analysis of the amino acid
sequence of delta-crystallin reveals the presence of a calmodulin-type
"helix-loop-helix" or "EF-hand" calcium ion binding conformational motif in the
region comprising residues 300-350. This is a novel feature of the molecule not
reported so far. No other crystallins appear to have this motif. beta-Crystallin
also binds four Ca2+ ions/aggregate unit of mass 160 kDa, with an affinity of
2.6 x 10(3) M-1, presumably in the midregion of the molecule that is rich in
anionic and polar residues. Circular dichroism spectroscopy shows that the
binding of calcium ion leads to subtle conformational changes in the molecules,
notably in the tertiary structure.
PMID: 2753888 [PubMed] |
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