Modulator proteins regulate the activity of other proteins.
Calmodulin (Ca2+-regulated modulator protein,
CaM) is a ubiquitous
eukaryotic intracellular calcium receptor that
regulates the biological activities of many cellular proteins and transmembrane ion
transporters.
Calmodulin possess four
EF-hand domains that alter
conformation upon binding
calcium ions. Calcium ions bind to the EF-loop region, shifting the relative positions of the EF-alpha helices. (The other group of proteins that depend on calcium ions for their function belong to the
annexin family, which bind calcium and phospholipids). In the
absence of calcium, the α-helices in the EF-hand motif of calmodulin are in the closed conformation, almost parallel to each other. When the intracellular calcium level rises, Ca2+ ions bind to calmodulin, causing calmodulin to open into a dumbell shape and increasing CaM's binding affinity. (Nine of CaM's 148 aa residues are
methionines, and 8 of these 9
Met are directly involved in binding to all target peptides.) The open conformation Ca2+-calmodulin complex binds
target proteins, initiating various
signaling cascades. Over a hundred proteins are known to bind calmodulin (above left are three). Calmodulin is essential for
cell-cycle progression through
mitosis. []
molecule of month[]
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