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User:Michael Roberts/BIOL115 CaM
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In each EF hand loop, the Ca<sup>2+</sup> ions are bound by amino acid residues in and near the loops. | In each EF hand loop, the Ca<sup>2+</sup> ions are bound by amino acid residues in and near the loops. | ||
| - | The structure shown here has four <scene name='User:Michael_Roberts/BIOL115_CaM/Structure_plus_c/3'> | + | The structure shown here has four <scene name='User:Michael_Roberts/BIOL115_CaM/Structure_plus_c/3'>Ca2+ ions</scene> bound. In this condition, the protein adopts the extended structure shown. The EF hand-forming helices are bent away from the long linking helix, revealing hydrophobic residues and exposing the linking chain. |
Revision as of 13:23, 19 April 2013
Sequence and structure of EF hands
The EF hand motif is present in a many proteins and it commonly bestows the ability to bind Ca2+ ions. It was first identified in parvalbumin, a muscle protein. Here we'll have a look at the Ca2+-binding protein calmodulin, which possesses four EF hands. Calmodulin and its isoform, troponinC, are important intracellular Ca2+-binding proteins.
The structure below, obtained by X-ray crystallography, represents the Ca2+-binding protein calmodulin. It has a dumbell-shaped structure with two identical lobes connected by a central alpha-helix. Each lobe comprises three α-helices joined by loops. A helix-loop-helix motif forms the basis of each EF hand.
Click on the 'green links' in the text in the scrollable section below to examine this molecule in more detail.
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External Resources. You can view a nice animation of the conformational change undergone by calmodulin upon calcium binding by following this link [1].
