High-speed atomic force microscopy image of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. This image was taken at 3.3 frames/second. Credit: Tsujioka, et al, Science Advances (2023). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adh1069
Researchers
at Kanazawa University report in Science
Advances high-speed atomic force microscopy experiments that show the
structural and chemical changes in an enzyme thought to play a vital role in
modulating the strength of neural connections.
Synapses connect neurons allowing the
transmission of signals around the neural network. The strength of these
connections varies—for instance strengthening or weakening depending on the
signals received and how. This synaptic "plasticity" underlies
learning and memory, and the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent
protein kinase II (CaMKII) is known to play a key role.
Previous studies have provided some
clues to the mechanisms of CaMKII protein activity in these functions but
no-one had seen these proteins in action. Now Hideji Murakoshi at the Graduate
University of Advanced Studies and the National Institute for Physiological
Sciences, and Mikihiro Shibata at Kanazawa University and their colleagues have
used high speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM) to observe the structural dynamics of
these proteins for the first time, not only in various states but in three
different species.
CaMKII is common to a vast range of
species from mammals like rats to older, non-mammalian species like the
roundworms (C elegans) and hydra. In particular, certain structural features of
the protein are particularly well preserved, including the kinase domain, the
regulatory segment that inhibits the activity of the kinase domain and the hub domain.
In addition, the protein has binding sites, phosphorylation sites and linker
regions—however, the linker region shows a little more variability suggesting
that its function and activation mechanisms are more bespoke for the different
species.
Credit: Science Advances (2023).
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adh1069
Previous studies had suggested that
the regulatory segment's inhibition of the kinase domain is released when Ca2+/calmodulin binds to the regulatory segment. The activated kinase domains
then phosphorylate each other, activity that persists even after the Ca2+/calmodulin becomes dissociated, which has been "hypothesized to be a
form of molecular memory," as the researchers describe in their report.
Murakoshi, Shibata and their
colleagues studied the protein using atomic force microscopy, which feels
topologies using a nanoscale tip like a needle reading a vinyl record, raster
scanning the image plane to build up a picture of the sample structure. With
HS-AFM, these images are collected quickly enough to record movies of how these
structures change.
The researchers noted various
measures of the proteins size and motion—the gyrus of rotation—as well as
reactions such as kinase domain oligomerization (that is, where there is a
limited level of polymerization to join molecules into chains) and
phosphorylation—the addition of a phosphoryl group (PO3), which can activate enzymes like kinase.
They found that the kinase domain
was quite mobile, although this decreased with Ca2+/calmodulin binding. The researchers explain this in terms of the binding
stabilizing the protein into a particular helical structure called an α helix. They also note that the binding causes the
protein to extend 3nm from the hub assembly, which they suggest may be what
dissociates the regulatory segment from the active site in the kinase domain.
The mobility then increases again with phosphorylation, which the researchers
attribute to the protein losing some of the order of the helical structure.
Of the three species
investigated—the rat, roundworm and hydra—Murakoshi, Shibata and their
colleagues found that the kinase domain only oligomerized in the rat. In
addition, in the rat, the protein was more resilient to phosphatase, which removes
phosphate groups (PO4) from proteins.
"In conclusion," they report, "Our findings provide a basis for a deeper understanding of the molecular mechanisms of CaMKIIα activation."
Source: Experiments provide insights into the molecular mechanism for memory and learning (phys.org)
No comments:
Post a Comment