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PDBsum entry 4gow
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Protein binding
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PDB id
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4gow
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References listed in PDB file
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Key reference
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Title
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Structure of a ca(2+)/cam:kv7.4 (kcnq4) b-Helix complex provides insight into m current modulation.
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Authors
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Q.Xu,
A.Chang,
A.Tolia,
D.L.Minor.
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Ref.
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J Mol Biol, 2013,
425,
378-394.
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PubMed id
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Abstract
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Calmodulin (CaM) is an important regulator of Kv7.x (KCNQx) voltage-gated
potassium channels. Channels from this family produce neuronal M currents and
cardiac and auditory I(KS) currents and harbor mutations that cause arrhythmias,
epilepsy, and deafness. Despite extensive functional characterization,
biochemical and structural details of the interaction between CaM and the
channel have remained elusive. Here, we show that both apo-CaM and Ca(2+)/CaM
bind to the C-terminal tail of the neuronal channel Kv7.4 (KCNQ4), which is
involved in both hearing and mechanosensation. Interactions between apo-CaM and
the Kv7.4 tail involve two C-terminal tail segments, known as the A and B
segments, whereas the interaction between Ca(2+)/CaM and the Kv7.4 C-terminal
tail requires only the B segment. Biochemical studies show that the calcium
dependence of the CaM:B segment interaction is conserved in all Kv7 subtypes.
X-ray crystallographic determination of the structure of the Ca(2+)/CaM:Kv7.4 B
segment complex shows that Ca(2+)/CaM wraps around the Kv7.4 B segment, which
forms an α-helix, in an antiparallel orientation that embodies a variation of
the classic 1-14 Ca(2+)/CaM interaction motif. Taken together with the context
of prior studies, our data suggest a model for modulation of neuronal Kv7
channels involving a calcium-dependent conformational switch from an apo-CaM
form that bridges the A and B segments to a Ca(2+)/CaM form bound to the
B-helix. The structure presented here also provides a context for a number of
disease-causing mutations and for further dissection of the mechanisms by which
CaM controls Kv7 function.
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