Recoverin, a calcium-activated myristoyl switch

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==Myristoyl Switch and Calcium==
==Myristoyl Switch and Calcium==
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<scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_no_calcium/2'>Recoverin</scene> (Initial colors: '''<font color="#808080">Hydrophobic</font>, <font color="#e000e0">Polar</font>''') has a <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_morph/5'>myristic acid</scene> (14-carbon saturated fatty acid, or a similar acyl moiety) covalently linked via an amide bond to its N-terminal glycine. In the absence of calcium, the <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_no_calcium/1'>myristoyl group is buried</scene> in the N-terminal protein domain, surrounded on all sides by alpha helices that form a hydrophobic pocket. The binding of <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_morph/6'>two calcium ions</scene> to each recoverin molecule induces a <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_morph/1'>conformational change </scene> that extrudes the myristoyl and exposes some hydrophobic amino acids on the surface. This enables the molecule to bind to the lipid bilayers of the disc membranes. <scene name='24/241531/Recoverin_storymorph/1'>An alternate morph</scene> <ref>The [[Jmol/Storymorph|Storymorph Jmol scripts]] were used to create the interpolation shown in the morph. [[Image:Morph_recoverin.pdb|Coordinates]] available on Proteopedia</ref> emphasizes that two parts of the molecule rotate relative to each other while retaining their local fold.
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<scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_no_calcium/2'>Recoverin</scene> (Initial colors: '''<font color="#808080">Hydrophobic</font>, <font color="#e000e0">Polar</font>''') has a <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_morph/5'>myristic acid</scene> (14-carbon saturated fatty acid, or a similar acyl moiety) covalently linked via an amide bond to its N-terminal glycine. In the absence of calcium, the <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_no_calcium/1'>myristoyl group is buried</scene> in the N-terminal protein domain, surrounded on all sides by alpha helices that form a hydrophobic pocket. The binding of <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_morph/6'>two calcium ions</scene> to each recoverin molecule induces a <scene name='Recoverin,_a_calcium-activated_myristoyl_switch/Recoverin_morph/1'>conformational change </scene> that extrudes the myristoyl and exposes some hydrophobic amino acids on the surface. This enables the molecule to bind to the lipid bilayers of the disc membranes. <scene name='24/241531/Recoverin_storymorph/1'>An alternate morph</scene> <ref>The [[Jmol/Storymorph|Storymorph Jmol scripts]] were used to create the interpolation shown in the morph. [https://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/Image:Morph_recoverin.pdb Coordinates] available on Proteopedia</ref> emphasizes that two parts of the molecule rotate relative to each other while retaining their local fold.
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Current revision

Recoverin: 1iku model 7 (calcium-free) morphed to 1jsa model 9 (calcium-bound) complex with myristic acid.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

3D structures of recoverin

Updated on 11-August-2021

2d8n – RCV – human
2het, 1omr, 1rec, 4m2q, 4mlw – bRCV – bovine
1jsa, 1iku - bRCV - NMR
1omv, 4m2o, 4m2p, 4yi8, 4yi9 – bRCV (mutant)
1la3 - bRCV (mutant) - NMR
2i94 – bRCV + rhodopsin kinase

Credits

This page was adapted from The Protein Morpher, a defunct, Chime-based website written in 1998 by Eric Martz.

References

  1. The Storymorph Jmol scripts were used to create the interpolation shown in the morph. Coordinates available on Proteopedia
  2. 2.0 2.1 Tanaka T, Ames JB, Harvey TS, Stryer L, Ikura M, Nature 376(6539):444-447, 1995. PMID:7630423
  3. Ames JB, Ishima R, Tanaka T, Gordon JI, Stryer L, Ikura M, Nature 389(6647):198-202, 1997. PMID:9296500

See Also:

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