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Publication : Trypsinized cerebellar inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor. Structural and functional coupling of cleaved ligand binding and channel domains.

First Author  Yoshikawa F Year  1999
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  274
Issue  1 Pages  316-27
PubMed ID  9867846 Mgi Jnum  J:51825
Mgi Id  MGI:1327005 Doi  10.1074/jbc.274.1.316
Citation  Yoshikawa F, et al. (1999) Trypsinized cerebellar inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor. Structural and functional coupling of cleaved ligand binding and channel domains. J Biol Chem 274(1):316-27
abstractText  The type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R1) is a tetrameric intracellular inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-gated Ca2+ release channel (calculated molecular mass = approximately 313 kDa/subunit). We studied structural and functional coupling in this protein complex by limited (controlled) trypsinization of membrane fractions from mouse cerebellum, the predominant site for IP3R1. Mouse IP3R1 (mIP3R1) was trypsinized into five major fragments (I-V) that were positioned on the entire mIP3R1 sequence by immuno-probing with 11 site-specific antibodies and by micro-sequencing of the N termini. Four fragments I-IV were derived from the N-terminal cytoplasmic region where the IP3-binding region extended over two fragments I (40/37 kDa) and II (64 kDa). The C-terminal fragment V (91 kDa) included the membrane-spanning channel region. All five fragments were pelleted by centrifugation as were membrane proteins. Furthermore, after solubilizing with 1% Triton X-100, all were co-immunoprecipitated with the C terminus-specific monoclonal antibody that recognized only the fragment V. These data suggested that the native mIP3R1-channel is an assembly of four subunits, each of which is constituted by non-covalent interactions of five major, well folded structural components I-V that are not susceptible to attack by mild trypsinolysis. Ca2+ release experiments further revealed that even the completely fragmented mIP3R1 retained significant IP3-induced Ca2+ release activity. These data suggest that structural coupling among five split components conducts functional coupling for IP3-induced Ca2+ release, despite the loss of peptide linkages. We propose structural-functional coupling in the mIP3R1, that is neighboring coupling between components I and II for IP3 binding and long-distant coupling between the IP3 binding region and the channel region (component V) beyond trypsinized gaps for ligand gating.
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