The calcium pump (a.k.a. Ca-ATPase or SERCA) is a membrane transport protein ubiquitously found in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of all eukaryotic cells. As a calcium transporter, SERCA maintains the low cytosolic calcium level that enables a vast array of signaling pathways and physiological processes (e.g. synaptic transmission, muscle contraction, fertilization). In muscle cells, SERCA promotes relaxation by pumping calcium ions from the cytosol into the lumen of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), the main storage compartment for intracellular calcium. X-ray crystallographic studies have provided an extensive understanding of the intermediate states that SERCA populates as it progresses through the calcium transport cycle. Historically, SERCA is also known to be regulated by small transmembrane peptides, phospholamban (PLN) and sarcolipin (SLN). PLN is expressed in cardiac muscle, whereas SLN predominates in skeletal and atrial muscle. These two regulatory subunits play critical roles in cardiac contractility. While our understanding of these regulatory mechanisms are still developing, SERCA and PLN are one of the best understood examples of peptide-transporter regulatory interactions. Nonetheless, SERCA appeared to have only two regulatory subunits, while the related sodium pump (a.k.a. Na, K-ATPase) has at least nine small transmembrane peptides that provide tissue specific regulation. The last few years have seen a renaissance in our understanding of SERCA regulatory subunits. First, structures of the SERCA-SLN and SERCA-PLN complexes revealed molecular details of their interactions. Second, an array of micropeptides concealed within long non-coding RNAs have been identified as new SERCA regulators. This chapter will describe our current understanding of SERCA structure, function, and regulation.
The interaction of phospholamban (PLN) with the sarco-endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2þ -ATPase (SERCA) pump is a major regulatory axis in cardiac muscle contractility. The prevailing model involves reversible inhibition of SERCA by monomeric PLN and storage of PLN as an inactive pentamer. However, this paradigm has been challenged by studies demonstrating that PLN remains associated with SERCA and that the PLN pentamer is required for the regulation of cardiac contractility. We have previously used two-dimensional (2D) crystallization and electron microscopy to study the interaction between SERCA and PLN. To further understand this interaction, we compared small helical crystals and large 2D crystals of SERCA in the absence and presence of PLN. In both crystal forms, SERCA molecules are organized into identical antiparallel dimer ribbons. The dimer ribbons pack together with distinct crystal contacts in the helical versus large 2D crystals, which allow PLN differential access to potential sites of interaction with SERCA. Nonetheless, we show that a PLN oligomer interacts with SERCA in a similar manner in both crystal forms. In the 2D crystals, a PLN pentamer interacts with transmembrane segments M3 of SERCA and participates in a crystal contact that bridges neighboring SERCA dimer ribbons. In the helical crystals, an oligomeric form of PLN also interacts with M3 of SERCA, though the PLN oligomer straddles a SERCA-SERCA crystal contact. We conclude that the pentameric form of PLN interacts with M3 of SERCA and that it plays a distinct structural and functional role in SERCA regulation. The interaction of the pentamer places the cytoplasmic domains of PLN at the membrane surface proximal to the calcium entry funnel of SERCA. This interaction may cause localized perturbation of the membrane bilayer as a mechanism for increasing the turnover rate of SERCA.
The sarco-endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) is responsible for maintaining calcium homeostasis in all eukaryotic cells by actively transporting calcium from the cytosol into the sarco-endoplasmic reticulum (SR/ER) lumen. Calcium is an important signaling ion, and the activity of SERCA is critical for a variety of cellular processes such as muscle contraction, neuronal activity, and energy metabolism. SERCA is regulated by several small transmembrane peptide subunits that are collectively known as the “regulins”. Phospholamban (PLN) and sarcolipin (SLN) are the original and most extensively studied members of the regulin family. PLN and SLN inhibit the calcium transport properties of SERCA and they are required for the proper functioning of cardiac and skeletal muscles, respectively. Myoregulin (MLN), dwarf open reading frame (DWORF), endoregulin (ELN), and another-regulin (ALN) are newly discovered tissue-specific regulators of SERCA. Herein, we compare the functional properties of the regulin family of SERCA transmembrane peptide subunits and consider their regulatory mechanisms in the context of the physiological and pathophysiological roles of these peptides. We present new functional data for human MLN, ELN, and ALN, demonstrating that they are inhibitors of SERCA with distinct functional consequences. Molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations of SERCA in complex with the transmembrane domains of MLN and ALN provide insights into how differential binding to the so-called inhibitory groove of SERCA—formed by transmembrane helices M2, M6, and M9—can result in distinct functional outcomes.
The sequential rise and fall of cytosolic calcium underlies the contraction-relaxation cycle of muscle cells. Whereas contraction is initiated by the release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, muscle relaxation involves the active transport of calcium back into the sarcoplasmic reticulum. This reuptake of calcium is catalyzed by the sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca 2þ -ATPase (SERCA), which plays a lead role in muscle contractility. The activity of SERCA is regulated by small membrane protein subunits, the most well-known being phospholamban (PLN) and sarcolipin (SLN). SLN physically interacts with SERCA and differentially regulates contractility in skeletal and atrial muscle. SLN has also been implicated in skeletal muscle thermogenesis. Despite these important roles, the structural mechanisms by which SLN modulates SERCA-dependent contractility and thermogenesis remain unclear. Here, we functionally characterized wild-type SLN and a pair of mutants, Asn 4 -Ala and Thr 5 -Ala, which yielded gain-of-function behavior comparable to what has been found for PLN. Next, we analyzed two-dimensional crystals of SERCA in the presence of wild-type SLN by electron cryomicroscopy. The fundamental units of the crystals are antiparallel dimer ribbons of SERCA, known for decades as an assembly of calcium-free SERCA molecules induced by the addition of decavanadate. A projection map of the SERCA-SLN complex was determined to a resolution of 8.5 Å , which allowed the direct visualization of an SLN pentamer. The SLN pentamer was found to interact with transmembrane segment M3 of SERCA, although the interaction appeared to be indirect and mediated by an additional density consistent with an SLN monomer. This SERCA-SLN complex correlated with the ability of SLN to decrease the maximal activity of SERCA, which is distinct from the ability of PLN to increase the maximal activity of SLN. Protein-protein docking and molecular dynamics simulations provided models for the SLN pentamer and the novel interaction between SERCA and an SLN monomer.
Staphylococcal autolysin is an enzyme involved in the hydrolysis of peptidoglycan contained in cell walls. Certain structures of bacterial cell walls serve as
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