The eag Potassium Channel Binds and Locally Activates Calcium/Calmodulin-dependent Protein Kinase II

Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) has been implicated in the regulation of neuronal excitability in many systems. Recent studies suggest that local regulation of membrane potential can have important computational consequences for neuronal function. In Drosophila, CaMKII regulates...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2004-03, Vol.279 (11), p.10206-10214
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Xiu Xia, Hodge, James J.L., Zhou, Yi, Nguyen, Maidung, Griffith, Leslie C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) has been implicated in the regulation of neuronal excitability in many systems. Recent studies suggest that local regulation of membrane potential can have important computational consequences for neuronal function. In Drosophila, CaMKII regulates the eag potassium channel, but if and how this regulation was spatially restricted was unknown. Using coimmunoprecipitation from head extracts and in vitro binding assays, we show that CaMKII and Eag form a stable complex and that association with Eag activates CaMKII independently of CaM and autophosphorylation. Ca2+/CaM is necessary to initiate binding of CaMKII to Eag but not to sustain association because binding persists when CaM is removed. The Eag CaMKII-binding domain has homology to the CaMKII autoregulatory region, and the constitutively active CaMKII mutant, T287D, binds Eag Ca2+-independently in vitro and in vivo. These results favor a model in which the CaMKII-binding domain of Eag displaces the CaMKII autoinhibitory region. Displacement results in autophosphorylation-independent activation of CaMKII which persists even when Ca2+ levels have gone down. Activity-dependent binding to this potassium channel substrate allows CaMKII to remain locally active even when Ca2+ levels have dropped, providing a novel mechanism by which CaMKII can regulate excitability locally over long time scales.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M310728200