CHARACTERIZATION OF THE RECOMBINANT C-TERMINAL DOMAIN OF DYSTROPHIN -PHOSPHORYLATION BY CALMODULIN-DEPENDENT PROTEIN-KINASE-II AND DEPHOSPHORYLATION BY TYPE 2B PROTEIN PHOSPHATASE
Mp. Walsh et al., CHARACTERIZATION OF THE RECOMBINANT C-TERMINAL DOMAIN OF DYSTROPHIN -PHOSPHORYLATION BY CALMODULIN-DEPENDENT PROTEIN-KINASE-II AND DEPHOSPHORYLATION BY TYPE 2B PROTEIN PHOSPHATASE, Biochemistry, 34(16), 1995, pp. 5561-5568
We report that the C-terminal domain of skeletal muscle dystrophin exp
ressed as a fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase (designated
GST-CT-1) is a substrate for Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation
and dephosphorylation. GST-CT-1 and GST-CT-1(F) (GST-CT-1 truncated b
y 20-25 residues) were phosphorylated by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent pro
tein kinase II (CaM kinase II). The stoichiometries of phosphorylation
by CaM kinase II were 1.65 mol of P-i/mol of GST-CT-1 and 0.39 mol of
P-i/mol of GST-CT-1(F), respectively, suggesting that the principal s
ite(s) of phosphorylation is (are) located in the C-terminal 20-25 res
idues that are missing from GST-CT-1(F). The GST-CT-1 fusion protein w
as phosphorylated on both serine, and threonine residues, whereas GST-
CT-1(F) was phosphorylated only on serine, CaM kinase II-phosphorylate
d GST-CT-1 and GST-CT-1(F) were efficiently dephosphorylated by calcin
eurin, a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase (type 2B protei
n phosphatase). Importantly, calcineurin was found to be associated wi
th a purified sarcolemmal membrane preparation enriched in dystrophin.
Type 2A protein phosphatase isolated from smooth muscle (SMP-I) and i
ts catalytic subunit (SMP-i(c)) also dephosphorylated GST-CT-1, but we
re less active toward these substrates than was calcineurin. Type 2C p
hosphatase (SMP-II) and type 1 protein phosphatases [SMP-III, SMP-IV,
and myosin-associated phosphatase (PP1M) of smooth muscle and skeletal
muscle protein phosphatase 1c] were ineffective in dephosphorylating
the C-terminal region of dystrophin. We conclude that calmodulin-depen
dent phosphorylation-dephosphorylation of the C-terminal domain of dys
trophin may play a role in regulating dystrophin-membrane interactions
and/or transducing signals from the extracellular matrix via the dyst
rophin molecule to the cytoskeleton.