Molecular Underpinnings of Postsynaptic Calmodulin-dependent Calcium Signaling
ORAL
Abstract
Calcium (Ca2+) signaling is a dynamic system where Ca2+ concentration fluctuates in range of 0.1-10μM with time. These short transient Ca2+ around the entry sites activate Ca2+-binding proteins such as calmodulin (CaM). The prototypical pathway describes CaM as encoding a Ca2+ signal by selectively activating downstream CaM-dependent proteins through molecular binding. However, CaM’s intrinsic Ca2+-binding properties alone appear insufficient to decode rapidly fluctuating Ca2+ signals. It has been proposed that the temporally varying mechanism for producing target selectivity requires CaM-target interactions that directly tune the Ca2+-binding properties of CaM through reciprocal interactions. I will focus on two unique and distinct CaM binding targets, neurogranin (Ng) and CaM-dependent kinase II (CaMKII), which are abundant in postsynaptic neuronal cells and are biochemically known to tune CaM’s affinity for Ca2+ in opposite directions. By employing an integrative approach of quantum mechanical calculations, all-atomistic molecular dynamics, and coarse-grained molecular simulations, we have revealed the molecular mechanisms of CaM’s reciprocal interaction between target binding and Ca2+binding.
*We thank the support from the National Science Foundation (MCB 1412532, PHY 1427654).
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Presenters
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Margaret Cheung
- Department of Physics, University of Houston; Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, Rice University
- Department of Physics, University of Houston
- University of Houston; Center for Theoretical Biological Physics (Rice University)
- Center for Theoretical Biological Physics, Rice University
- University of Houston