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. [[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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Revision as of 11:55, 11 August 2021

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. Image:Morph recoverin.pdb 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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