Co-reporter: William K. Myers, Xianzhong Xu, Congmin Li, Jens O. Lagerstedt, Madhu S. Budamagunta, John C. Voss, R. David Britt, and James B. Ames
pp:
Publication Date(Web):August 1, 2013
DOI: 10.1021/bi400538w
Recoverin, a member of the neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) branch of the calmodulin superfamily, is expressed in retinal photoreceptor cells and serves as a calcium sensor in vision. Ca2+-induced conformational changes in recoverin cause extrusion of its covalently attached myristate (termed Ca2+-myristoyl switch) that promotes translocation of recoverin to disk membranes during phototransduction in retinal rod cells. Here we report double electron–electron resonance (DEER) experiments on recoverin that probe Ca2+-induced changes in distance as measured by the dipolar coupling between spin-labels strategically positioned at engineered cysteine residues on the protein surface. The DEER distance between nitroxide spin-labels attached at C39 and N120C is 2.5 ± 0.1 nm for Ca2+-free recoverin and 3.7 ± 0.1 nm for Ca2+-bound recoverin. An additional DEER distance (5–6 nm) observed for Ca2+-bound recoverin may represent an intermolecular distance between C39 and N120. 15N NMR relaxation analysis and CW-EPR experiments both confirm that Ca2+-bound recoverin forms a dimer at protein concentrations above 100 μM, whereas Ca2+-free recoverin is monomeric. We propose that Ca2+-induced dimerization of recoverin at the disk membrane surface may play a role in regulating Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of dimeric rhodopsin. The DEER approach will be useful for elucidating dimeric structures of NCS proteins in general for which Ca2+-induced dimerization is functionally important but not well understood.