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    J Biol Chem. 2001 Nov 2;276(44):41005-13. Epub 2001 Sep 4.

    Calcium-regulated DNA binding and oligomerization of the neuronal calcium-sensing protein, calsenilin/DREAM/KChIP3.

    Osawa M, Tong KI, Lilliehook C, Wasco W, Buxbaum JD, Cheng HY, Penninger JM, Ikura M, Ames JB.

    Center for Advanced Research in Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Rockville, Maryland 20850, USA.

    Calsenilin/DREAM/KChIP3, a member of the recoverin branch of the EF-hand superfamily, interacts with presenilins, serves as a calcium-regulated transcriptional repressor, and interacts with A-type potassium channels. Here we report physicochemical characterization of calcium binding, oligomerization, and DNA binding of human calsenilin/DREAM/KChIP3. Equilibrium Ca(2+) binding measurements indicate that the protein binds 3 Ca(2+) with a dissociation constant of 14 microM and a Hill coefficient of 0.7. Dynamic light scattering and size exclusion chromatography show that the Ca(2+)-bound protein exists as a dimer at protein concentrations lower than 150 microM and forms a tetramer at concentrations above 200 microM. The Ca(2+)-free protein is a tetramer in the concentration range 20-450 microM. Isothermal titration calorimetry and dynamic light scattering indicate that the Ca(2+)-free protein tetramer binds endothermically (DeltaH = +25 kcal/mol) to four molecules of DNA derived from the downstream regulatory element (DRE) of either the prodynorphin or c-fos genes. One DRE molecule binds tightly to the protein with a dissociation constant (K(d)) of 75 nM, and the other three bind more weakly (K(d) = 640 nM). No significant DNA binding was observed for the Ca(2+)-bound protein. The N-terminal protein fragment (residues 1-70) binds nonspecifically to DRE in a Ca(2+)-independent manner, whereas a C-terminal fragment containing the four EF-hands (residues 65-256) binds DRE (K(d) = 200 nM) in a Ca(2+)-regulated and sequence-specific fashion. The C-terminal fragment is a tetramer in the Ca(2+)-free state and dissociates into dimers at saturating Ca(2+) levels.

    PMID: 11535596 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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