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Disruption of Ca2+/calmodulin:KSR1 interaction lowers ERK activation

  1. Author:
    Thines, Louise
    Jang,Hyunbum
    Li, Zhigang
    Sayedyahossein, Samar
    Maloney, Ryan
    Nussinov,Ruth [ORCID]
    Sacks, David B [ORCID]
  2. Author Address

    Department of Laboratory Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA., Computational Structural Biology Section, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research in the Cancer Innovation Laboratory, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland, USA., Department of Human Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.,
    1. Year: 2024
    2. Date: May
  1. Journal: Protein Science : a publication of the Protein Society
    1. 33
    2. 5
    3. Pages: e4982
  2. Type of Article: Article
  3. Article Number: e4982
  1. Abstract:

    KSR1, a key scaffold protein for the MAPK pathway, facilitates ERK activation upon growth factor stimulation. We recently demonstrated that KSR1 binds the Ca2+-binding protein calmodulin (CaM), thereby providing an intersection between KSR1-mediated and Ca2+ signaling. In this study, we set out to generate a KSR1 point mutant with reduced Ca2+/CaM binding in order to unravel the functional implications of their interaction. To do so, we solved the structural determinants of complex formation. Using purified fragments of KSR1, we showed that Ca2+/CaM binds to the CA3 domain of KSR1. We then used in silico molecular modeling to predict contact residues for binding. This approach identified two possible modes of interaction: (1) binding of extended Ca2+/CaM to a globular conformation of KSR1-CA3 via electrostatic interactions or (2) binding of collapsed Ca2+/CaM to a-helical KSR1-CA3 via hydrophobic interactions. Experimentally, site-directed mutagenesis of the predicted contact residues for the two binding models favored that where collapsed Ca2+/CaM binds to the a-helical conformation of KSR1-CA3. Importantly, replacing KSR1-Phe355 with Asp reduces Ca2+/CaM binding by 76%. The KSR1-F355D mutation also significantly impairs the ability of EGF to activate ERK, which reveals that Ca2+/CaM binding promotes KSR1-mediated MAPK signaling. This work, by uncovering structural insight into the binding of KSR1 to Ca2+/CaM, identifies a KSR1 single-point mutant as a bioreagent to selectively study the crosstalk between Ca2+ and KSR1-mediated signaling. Published 2024. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA. Protein Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Protein Society.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1002/pro.4982
  2. PMID: 38591710
  3. PMCID: PMC11002989

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2023-2024
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