Crystal Structure of Recoverin with Calcium Ions Bound to Both Functional EF Hands

Biochemistry. 2015 Dec 15;54(49):7222-8. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.5b01160. Epub 2015 Dec 3.

Abstract

Recoverin (Rv), a small Ca(2+)-binding protein that inhibits rhodopsin kinase (RK), has four EF hands, two of which are functional (EF2 and EF3). Activation requires Ca(2+) in both EF hands, but crystal structures have never been observed with Ca(2+) ions in both sites; all previous structures have Ca(2+) bound to only EF3. We suspected that this was due to an intermolecular crystal contact between T80 and a surface glutamate (E153) that precluded coordination of a Ca(2+) ion in EF2. We constructed the E153A mutant, determined its X-ray crystal structure to 1.2 Å resolution, and showed that two Ca(2+) ions are bound, one in EF3 and one in EF2. Additionally, several other residues are shown to adopt conformations in the 2Ca(2+) structure not seen previously and not seen in a second structure of the E153A mutant containing Na(+) instead of Ca(2+) in the EF2 site. The side-chain rearrangements in these residues form a 28 Å allosteric cascade along the surface of the protein connecting the Ca(2+)-binding site of EF2 with the active-site pocket responsible for binding RK.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Amino Acid Substitution
  • Binding Sites
  • Calcium / chemistry*
  • Cations, Divalent / chemistry
  • Crystallography, X-Ray
  • Humans
  • Mutation, Missense
  • Recoverin / chemistry*
  • Recoverin / genetics

Substances

  • Cations, Divalent
  • RCVRN protein, human
  • Recoverin
  • Calcium

Associated data

  • PDB/4YI8
  • PDB/4YI9