The carboxyl‐terminal region of ahnak provides a link between cardiac L‐type Ca 2+ channels and the actinbased cytoskeleton
pmid: 12153988
The carboxyl‐terminal region of ahnak provides a link between cardiac L‐type Ca 2+ channels and the actinbased cytoskeleton
ABSTRACT Ahnak is a ubiquitously expressed giant protein of 5643 amino acids implicated in cell differentiation and signal transduction. In a recent study, we demonstrated the association of ahnak with the regulatory β2 subunit of the cardiac L‐type Ca 2+ channel. Here we identify the most carboxyl‐terminal ahnak region (aa 5262–5643) to interact with recombinant β2a as well as with β2 and β1a isoforms of native muscle Ca 2+ channels using a panel of GST fusion proteins. Equilibrium sedimentation analysis revealed K d values of 55 ± 11 nM and 328 ± 24 nM for carboxyl‐terminal (aa 195–606) and amino‐terminal (aa 1–200) truncates of the β2a subunit, respectively. The same carboxylterminal ahnak region (aa 5262–5643) bound to G‐actin and cosedimented with F‐actin. Confocal microscopy of human left ventricular tissue localized the carboxylterminal ahnak portion to the sarcolemma including the T‐tubular system and the intercalated disks of cardiomyocytes. These results suggest that ahnak provides a structural basis for the subsarcolemmal cytoarchitecture and confers the regulatory role of the actin‐based cytoskeleton to the L‐type Ca 2+ channel.—Hohaus, A., Person, V., Behlke, J., Schaper, J., Morano, I., Haase, H. The carboxyl‐terminal region of ahnak provides a link between cardiac L‐type Ca 2+ channels and the actin‐based cytoskeleton. FASEB J . 16, 1205–1216 (2002)
- University of Vienna Austria
- Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres Germany
- Max Planck Society Germany
- Humboldt State University United States
- Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine Germany
Calcium Channels, L-Type, Swine, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Toxicology, Models, Biological, Sarcolemma, Toxikologie, Animals, Humans, Amino Acid Sequence, Muscle, Skeletal, Sequence Deletion, Pharmacology, Pharmakologie, Binding Sites, Myocardium, Membrane Proteins, Actins, Neoplasm Proteins, Actin Cytoskeleton, Protein Subunits, 3012 Pharmacy, 3012 Pharmazie
Calcium Channels, L-Type, Swine, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Toxicology, Models, Biological, Sarcolemma, Toxikologie, Animals, Humans, Amino Acid Sequence, Muscle, Skeletal, Sequence Deletion, Pharmacology, Pharmakologie, Binding Sites, Myocardium, Membrane Proteins, Actins, Neoplasm Proteins, Actin Cytoskeleton, Protein Subunits, 3012 Pharmacy, 3012 Pharmazie
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