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MARCKS is a major PKC-dependent regulator of calmodulin targeting in smooth muscle
Author(s) -
Cynthia Gallant,
Jae Young You,
Yasuharu Sasaki,
Ze Grabarek,
Kathleen G. Morgan
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of cell science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.384
H-Index - 278
eISSN - 1477-9137
pISSN - 0021-9533
DOI - 10.1242/jcs.02493
Subject(s) - biology , calmodulin , regulator , marcks , protein kinase c , microbiology and biotechnology , phosphorylation , biochemistry , enzyme , gene
Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous transducer of intracellular Ca(2+) signals and plays a key role in the regulation of the function of all cells. The interaction of CaM with a specific target is determined not only by the Ca(2+)-dependent affinity of calmodulin but also by the proximity to that target in the cellular environment. Although a few reports of stimulus-dependent nuclear targeting of CaM have appeared, the mechanisms by which CaM is targeted to non-nuclear sites are less clear. Here, we investigate the hypothesis that MARCKS is a regulator of the spatial distribution of CaM within the cytoplasm of differentiated smooth-muscle cells. In overlay assays with portal-vein homogenates, CaM binds predominantly to the MARCKS-containing band. MARCKS is abundant in portal-vein smooth muscle ( approximately 16 microM) in comparison to total CaM ( approximately 40 microM). Confocal images indicate that calmodulin and MARCKS co-distribute in unstimulated freshly dissociated smooth-muscle cells and are co-targeted simultaneously to the cell interior upon depolarization. Protein-kinase-C (PKC) activation triggers a translocation of CaM that precedes that of MARCKS and causes multisite, sequential MARCKS phosphorylation. MARCKS immunoprecipitates with CaM in a stimulus-dependent manner. A synthetic MARCKS effector domain (ED) peptide labelled with a photoaffinity probe cross-links CaM in smooth-muscle tissue in a stimulus-dependent manner. Both cross-linking and immunoprecipitation increase with increased Ca(2+) concentration, but decrease with PKC activation. Introduction of a nonphosphorylatable MARCKS decoy peptide blocks the PKC-mediated targeting of CaM. These results indicate that MARCKS is a significant, PKC-releasable reservoir of CaM in differentiated smooth muscle and that it contributes to CaM signalling by modulating the intracellular distribution of CaM.

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