A domain-swapped CaMKII conformation facilitates linker-mediated allosteric regulation.

Bao V Nguyen,Can Özden, Kairong Dong,Ana P Torres-Ocampo, Noelle Dziedzic, Daniel Flaherty, Jian Huang, Saketh Sankura, Nikki Lyn Abromson,Diana R Tomchick,Jianhan Chen,Scott C Garman,Margaret M Stratton

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2024)

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摘要
Ca 2+ signaling plays a key role in physiological processes such as memory formation and cardiac function. Ca 2+ /calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is the primary kinase that responds to Ca 2+ inputs in these cells. There are four CaMKII paralogs in mammals which are alternatively spliced in the variable linker region to create upwards of 70 different variants. In this study, we systematically studied different linker regions and determined that the position of charged residues within the linker region modulates the Ca 2+ /CaM sensitivity of the holoenzyme. We present an X-ray crystal structure of full-length CaMKIIδ that shows a domain-swapped conformation of the subunits within the dodecameric holoenzyme. In this structure, the kinase domain of one subunit is docked onto the hub domain of a different subunit, providing an additional interface within the holoenzyme. Mutations at the equatorial and lateral interfaces revealed that the kinase-hub interaction dissociates as the hub-hub interfaces are disturbed, which led alterations in the stoichiometry of CaMKII holoenzyme and Ca 2+ /CaM sensitivity. Molecular dynamics simulations of linker-containing domain-swapped and non-domain-swapped CaMKIIs reveal that the domain-swapped configuration facilitates an interaction between the calmodulin binding domain and the variable linker region, such that dynamic electrostatic forces between charges on these segments can modulate the equilibrium between the compact and extended conformational states of the holoenzyme. Small angle X-ray scattering data confirms that a negatively charged linker CaMKII holoenzyme adopts a more compact conformation compared to a positively charged linker. These data support a model where patches of charged linker residues interact with the calmodulin binding domain to allosterically regulate sensitivity to Ca 2+ /CaM. Our findings provide a new framework for understanding CaMKII structure and allosteric regulation by the variable linker region in Ca 2+ -sensitive cells.
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