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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 2000, 20(8):2860-2866
Calmodulin-Binding Peptide PEP-19 Modulates Activation of
Calmodulin Kinase II In Situ
Roy A.
Johanson1,
Henry
M.
Sarau2,
James J.
Foley2, and
J. Randall
Slemmon1
Departments of 1 Protein Biochemistry and
2 Pulmonary Pharmacology, SmithKline Beecham Research and
Development, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania 19406
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ABSTRACT |
PEP-19 is a 6 kDa polypeptide that is highly expressed in
select populations of neurons that sometimes demonstrate resistance to
degeneration. These include the granule cells of the hippocampus and
the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum. Its only identified activity to
date is that of binding apo-calmodulin. As a consequence, it has been
demonstrated to act as an inhibitor of calmodulin-dependent neuronal
nitric oxide synthase in vitro, although PEP-19
regulation of calmodulin-dependent enzymes has never been characterized
in intact cells. The activation of the calmodulin-dependent enzyme calmodulin kinase II (CaM kinase II) was studied in PC12 cells that had
been transfected so as to express physiological levels of PEP-19. The
expression of PEP-19 yielded a stable phenotype that failed to activate
CaM kinase II upon depolarization in high K+.
However, CaM kinase II could be fully activated when calcium influx was
achieved with ATP. The effect of PEP-19 on CaM kinase II activation was
not attributable to changes in the cellular expression of
calmodulin. The cellular permeability of the transfected cells to
calcium ions also appeared essentially unchanged. The results of this
study demonstrated that PEP-19 can regulate CaM kinase II in
situ in a manner that was dependent on the stimulus used to
mobilize calcium. The selective nature of the regulation by PEP-19
suggests that its function is not to globally suppress calmodulin
activity but rather change the manner in which different stimuli can
access this activity.
Key words:
PEP-19; calmodulin; calmodulin kinase II; calcium; regulation; enzyme assay; PC12; transfection
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INTRODUCTION |
Calmodulin is a widespread and
abundant transducer of calcium signaling in cells. The primary
mechanism through which it accomplishes this is by complexing with
calcium and then directly activating several types of intracellular
enzymes, including kinases (Stull et al., 1986 ), phosphatases (Cohen,
1997 ), proteases (Harris et al., 1989 ), and adenyl cyclases
(Taussig and Gilman, 1995 ). Calmodulin can also modulate the function
of other types of proteins, including several cytoskeletal proteins,
making it an important regulator of cellular restructuring (Landry et
al., 1988 ; Pierce et al., 1989 ; Beckingham et al., 1998 ). Recent
studies have also linked calmodulin to the regulation of ion channels,
including those for NMDA (Leonard et al., 1999 ) and voltage-sensitive
channels (Lee et al., 1999 ).
In addition to the direct action of calmodulin on cellular proteins,
signaling through Ca+2/calmodulin provides
a crossover between calcium signaling and other receptor-mediated
signaling cascades. An early example was the action of calmodulin on
Ras-GTPase-activating proteins (Weissbach et al., 1994 ; Farnsworth et
al., 1995 ; Joyal et al., 1997 ), which can place the downstream
activation of Ras-dependent pathways under the control of intracellular
calcium concentrations. A more recent example is the demonstration that
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation
of cAMP response element-binding protein works in concert with
other cellular kinases, including extracellular signal-regulated
kinase and protein kinase A to activate transcription
(Finkbeiner et al., 1997 ; Chawla et al., 1998 ) (but see Impey et al.,
1998 ).
Because of its widespread and sometimes opposing action in cells, it
seemed likely that calmodulin might itself be regulated. This appeared
even more likely when small intracellular peptides were identified that
contained an IQ motif, which gave them a unique ability to bind
calcium-poor calmodulin. These peptides had the capacity to bind
calmodulin during conditions when cytosolic calcium levels were low and
subsequently change its availability for activating targets once the
cell was stimulated. The best characterized examples of such peptides
are neuromodulin (Skene, 1989 ; Baudier et al., 1989 ; Liu and Storm,
1990 ; Coggins and Zwiers, 1991 ), neurogranin (Baudier et al., 1991 ;
Watson et al., 1996 ; Gerendasy and Sutcliffe, 1997 ), and PEP-19
(Ziai et al., 1986 ; Slemmon et al., 1996 ). All of these have been
demonstrated to inhibit calmodulin-dependent nitric oxide synthase
in vitro by way of binding to calmodulin (Slemmon et al.,
1996 ; Slemmon and Martzen, 1994 ; Martzen and Slemmon, 1995 ), suggesting
that they could function to modulate calmodulin in cells.
To determine whether PEP-19 could regulate calmodulin activity in
intact cells, it was transfected into pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells, and the activation of the
Ca+2/calmodulin-dependent enzyme
calmodulin kinase II (CaM kinase II) (MacNicol et al., 1990 ) was
studied. PEP-19 expression was found to inhibit the activation of CaM
kinase II when PC12 cells were depolarized in high
K+. However, stimulating calcium influx
through purinergic receptors resulted in normal levels of CaM kinase II
activation, despite PEP-19 expression. Based on the present study, it
appears that PEP-19 regulates calcium signaling but that this
regulation is dependent on the type of stimulus used to induce calcium influx.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Materials. The
Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase
Assay System, Geneticin (G418), LipofectAMINE Reagent, LipofectAMINE PLUS, heat-inactivated fetal calf serum, and nonessential amino acids
were from Life Technologies (Gaithersburg, MD). Polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane (Immobilon P) was from Millipore
(Bedford, MA). Peroxidase-linked goat anti-rabbit and goat anti-mouse
antibodies, Supersignal Substrate (catalog #34080), and Immunopure
Immobilized Protein A/G were from Pierce (Rockford, IL). The low
molecular weight range electrophoresis protein standards were from
Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA). Muscarine, ATP, carbachol (carbamylcholine
chloride), heat-inactivated horse serum, and
poly-L-lysine hydrobromide (catalog #P9155 or
#P6282) were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). The expression vector
pcDNA3 was from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). Type I rat tail collagen was
obtained from Collaborative Research (Bedford, MA). Mouse monoclonal
anti-calmodulin antibody was from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid,
NY). Rabbit polyclonal anti-PEP-19 was kindly provided by James I. Morgan (St. Jude's Children's Hospital, Memphis, TN).
Cultured cells. Rat PC12 cells were cultured in DMEM
containing high glucose (4500 mg/ml) and 2.2 gm/l sodium bicarbonate supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated horse serum, 5%
heat-inactivated fetal calf serum, 2 mM
L-glutamine,10 U/ml penicillin, and 20 µg/ml
streptomycin. The cultures were maintained at 37°C in a humidified
95% air and 5% CO2 incubator. When indicated,
culture plates were coated using poly-L-lysine
hydrobromide in tissue culture water at 0.025 mg/ml, rinsed with water,
and air dried.
PEP-19 clone. Bluescript containing the cDNA for PEP-19 was
kindly provided by James I. Morgan (Sangameswaran et al., 1989 ). The
PEP-19 sequence was subcloned into pcDNA3.0 at the EcoRI
restriction site. Clones containing a forward and a reverse insert of
PEP-19 in the pcDNA3.0 were identified by cutting at the
EcoRV site in the PEP-19 insert and the EcoRV
site in the multiple cloning site and determining the size of the
resulting fragments by agarose gel electrophoresis. Confirmation of the
insert and orientation was obtained by sequencing through the gene and
flanking plasmid sequence.
Transfection protocol. PC12 cells were plated at 200,000 cells per 35 mM well in six-well plates.
Transfections were performed with Lipofectamine using a protocol based
on the recommendations of the manufacturer. The cells were treated with
a mixture of 2 µg of DNA and 15 µl of Lipofectamine in 1 ml of
serum-free media per well for 5 hr, and then 3 ml of complete media was
added to each well. After 3 d, the transfectants were selected by
culturing in media containing 0.6 mg/ml G418 for 3 weeks. The stable
transfectants were maintained with 0.3 mg/ml G418.
Western blots. SDS-PAGE and protein transfer to PVDF
membranes were performed as described in detail previously (Slemmon and Martzen, 1994 ). The proteins were transferred electrophoretically onto
Immobilon P membranes in 10 mM
3-(cyclohexylamino)propanesulfonic acid, pH 11.0, and 10% methanol.
Carnation nonfat dried milk (5%) in 50 mM Tris,
pH 7.2, and 150 mM NaCl was used to block the
membranes. The primary antibody, rabbit polyclonal anti-PEP-19, or
mouse monoclonal anti-CaM was incubated with the transfers overnight. The secondary antibody was goat anti-rabbit or anti-mouse conjugated with peroxidase, and the spots were detected by chemiluminescence using
Supersignal Substrate and x-ray film. The positive protein bands were
quantified by video imagery using an AlphaImager 2200 with Version 4.03 software (Alpha Innotech Corporation).
Immunoprecipitation of the calmodulin-PEP-19 complex.
PEP-19-transfected (2.5 × 107) or transfection control PC12
cells were homogenized on ice in 1 ml of lysis buffer [50
mM 3-[N-morpholino]propane- sulfonic acid
(MOPS), pH 7.3, containing 5 mM EDTA, 1 µg/ml
leupeptin, 10 µg/ml pepstatin, 1 mM PMSF, and
0.1% Triton X-100] using 20 strokes in a ground-glass homogenizer.
The homogenates were centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 5 min at 4°C. Twenty micrograms of anti-calmodulin monoclonal antibody
or irrelevant monoclonal antibody were added to the supernatant,
followed by an 18 hr incubation with gentle agitation at 4°C. The
immunocomplex was recovered by incubating the samples with 40 µl each
of a 1:1 suspension of Pierce Protein A/G-Agarose in homogenization
buffer. The beads were recovered by centrifuging for 2 min in a
microcentrifuge. The beads were washed twice with 1 ml of
homogenization buffer and then one time with 50 mM MOPS, pH 7.3, containing 5 mM EDTA. Material bound to the beads was released
by dilution into 1 ml of 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid in water. The
sample was enriched for SDS-PAGE by chromatography on reverse-phase
HPLC as described by Slemmon et al. (1996) . Fractions that coeluted in
the region in which PEP-19 was observed to elute were pooled and dried
for subsequent analysis by Western blotting. The PEP-19 standard for
HPLC was chromatographed after the tissue homogenates had been
processed, and the column had not been exposed to PEP-19 before these analyses.
Assay of CaM kinase II activity. The enzymatic activity was
assayed using the
Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase
Assay System according to the manufacturer's protocol. The kit used
autocamtide 3 as the substrate (Hanson and Schulman, 1992 ). The cells
in a 35 mm dish were lysed with 200 µl of extraction buffer with
phosphatase inhibitors, quickly scraped, and homogenized by three
strokes through a 0.5 ml repeat-pipetter barrel, and 20 µl of the
homogenate was added to each vial for the final assay volume of 50 µl. Unless otherwise indicated, the final ATP concentration in the
assays was 50 µM.
Stimulation of cells by ATP and high K+.
The cells were plated at high density (1.5 × 106 cells per well) on
poly-L-lysine-coated six-well plates in medium buffered with 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.3, and incubated
overnight. The media was removed, and the cells were stimulated with
ATP in HEPES-buffered saline (HBS) (10 mM HEPES,
pH 7.4, 5 mM glucose, 1 mM
MgCl2, 130 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, and 1 mM
CaCl2). When the cells were stimulated by
depolarization, the HBS was modified by increasing the KCl concentration to 56 mM and reducing the NaCl to
79 mM (MacNicol et al., 1990 ). After the time
indicated in each experiment, the stimulating buffer was rapidly
removed, and the cells were immediately lysed with 200 µl of the
extraction buffer for the CaM kinase II assay.
Intracellular free Ca2+
determination. The PC12 cells were plated at 5 × 105 cells per well onto black-masked
96-well plates (Polyfiltronics; Packard, Meridian, CT) that had been
coated with 0.125 ml of rat tail collagen per well for 1 hr (0.1 mg/ml
in sterile 0.02N acetic acid), followed by rinsing with
H2O and then Dulbecco's PBS. Cells were
stimulated with 100 µM ATP or depolarizing
buffer containing 56 mM KCl (MacNicol et al.,
1990 ). Calcium mobilization studies were conducted using Fluo 3-loaded
PC12 cells and a microtiter plate-based assay, using FLIPR (Molecular
Devices, Sunnyvale, CA) (Schroeder and Neagle, 1996 ). After allowing
the cells to adhere to the microtiter plates overnight, growth media
was removed and replaced with 1 µM Fluo-3 AM
fluorescent indicator dye (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in HBSS
with 10 mM HEPES, 200 µM
CaCl2, 0.1% BSA, and 2.5 mM probenecid. After incubation for 1 hr (37°C,
5% CO2) cells were washed three times with the
same buffer. At the initiation of the experiment, fluorescence is read
every 1 sec for 1 min and then every 3 sec for the following 1 min.
Cells were stimulated with 100 µM ATP or
depolarizing buffer containing 56 mM KCl after 10 sec, and fluorescence was monitored.
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RESULTS |
Expression of PEP-19
The PC12 cells were stably transfected with plasmids containing
the gene for rat PEP-19. Transfection controls were prepared using a
reversed insert of the PEP-19 cDNA. In addition to the use of pooled
stable-transfected PC12 cells, isolated subclones of both the
PEP-19-expressing and transfection control were established by limiting
dilution of the bulk-transfected cell populations. The expression of
PEP-19 was confirmed and quantified on Western blots (Fig.
1A). Video imagery and
integration of the band intensities were used to measure the amounts of
PEP-19 in the cell samples and in known amounts of PEP-19 protein
loaded on separate lanes of the same gel (data not shown). Purification
of the PEP-19 protein used as standard was described by Slemmon et al.
(1996) . It showed only one major specie on reverse-phase HPLC and
yielded a single mass of 6759 on matrix-assisted laser desorption
ionization mass spectrometry (data not shown). Therefore, the three
bands that can be observed on electrophoresis in SDS appear to be an
artifact of the technique and not processed forms of PEP-19. The
estimated amount of PEP-19 expressed in the bulk transfectants was
5 × 105 molecules per cell, and the
amounts in the subcloned PEP-19-transfected PC12 cells (subclone 1 and
subclone 2) were 1.2 × 106 and
1.1 × 106 molecules per cell,
respectively. No PEP-19 expression was detected in either the wild-type
PC12 or in the transfection controls (Figs. 1A,
2). Several efforts to express PEP-19
mutant peptides possessing changes in the calmodulin-binding domain
yielded clones with only ~10% of the expression observed with
wild-type PEP-19 (data not shown) and were therefore not used for this
study.

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Figure 1.
Expression of PEP-19 and calmodulin in PC12 cells.
Western blots of control and PEP-19-transfected PC12 cells were
performed as described in Materials and Methods. A,
Expression of PEP-19 in PC12 cells. Samples consisting of 2.5 × 105 cells per lane were separated on electrophoresis
and analyzed using rabbit anti-PEP-19 antisera. Bands were detected
using chemiluminescence with goat anti-rabbit peroxidase conjugate as
the secondary antibody. Lane 1, Control (wild-type) PC12
cells. Lane 2, PEP-19 bulk-selected transfectant PC12
cells. Lane 3, Reverse-orientation cDNA
control-transfected PC12 cells. Lane 4,
PEP-19-transfected PC12 cells, subclone 1. Lane 5,
PEP-19-transfected PC12 cells, subclone 2. PC12 cells do not normally
express PEP-19, but strong expression could be achieved after
transfection. B, Levels of calmodulin in control and
transfected PC12 cells. The sample loads were 1 × 105 cells per lane. The blocked membrane was exposed
overnight to mouse anti-CaM monoclonal antibody diluted 1500:1 and
detected using goat anti-mouse peroxidase conjugate and
chemiluminescence. The samples are as follows. Lane 1,
Control (wild-type) PC12 cells. Lane 2,
PEP-19-transfected PC12 cells. Lane 3, Reverse-cDNA
transfection control PC12 cells. Calmodulin levels appeared unchanged
in the different PC12 cell lines.
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Figure 2.
Immunoprecipitation of the calmodulin-PEP-19
complex. Calmodulin and the proteins that were associated with it were
immunoprecipitated as described in Materials and Methods. The presence
of PEP-19 in the transfected PC12 cells and in the immunoprecipitates
of the transfected cells was determined by Western blot analysis. The
samples are as follows. Lane 1, Crude lysate of PC12
cells transfected with PEP-19. Lane 2, Crude lysate of
PC12 cells transfected with reversed insert of PEP-19. Lane
3, Immunoprecipitate of calmodulin from PC12 cells transfected
with PEP-19. Lane 4, Immunoprecipitate of calmodulin
from PC12 cells transfected with reversed cDNA for PEP-19. Lane
5, Control immunoprecipitation using an irrelevant antibody
from crude lysates of PC12 cells transfected with PEP-19. Protein
standards were run in the outside lanes labeled
S. PEP-19 could be coprecipitated with calmodulin from
PC12 cells.
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Western blots for calmodulin in the wild-type PC12 cells,
PEP-19-expressing PC12 cells, and transfection control PC12 cells (Fig.
1B) showed no measurable differences in calmodulin
levels. By comparison with standards using video imagery and
integration, the calmodulin levels were estimated to be ~0.5-1 × 107 molecules per cell.
Assuming the average diameter of a PC12 cell to be 10 µm, the average
PEP-19 concentration (assuming no specific subcellular localization)
would be minimally 3 µM, whereas the concentration of
calmodulin would be ~4-10 µM. Indeed, PEP-19
expression could exceed 4 µM at localized sites.
Therefore, PEP-19 expression in the transfected cells paralleled
physiological levels (Slemmon et al., 1996 ), and calmodulin was within
the expected concentration range (Klee and Vanaman, 1982 ).
Interaction of PEP-19 with calmodulin
To confirm the ability of PEP-19 to bind the calmodulin in PC12
cells, calmodulin was immunoprecipitated by treating the cell homogenates with mouse anti-calmodulin antibody. Western blots using
anti-PEP-19 antibody showed that PEP-19 specifically coprecipitated with the calmodulin in the cell line that expressed PEP-19 (Fig. 2). A
control immunoprecipitation of the PEP-19-containing cell homogenate
with an irrelevant monoclonal antibody was negative (Fig. 2). These
results demonstrate the interaction of PEP-19 with calmodulin from PC12 cells.
Modulation of CaM kinase II by PEP-19
CaM kinase II activity in PC12 cells has been characterized
extensively (MacNicol et al., 1990 ; MacNicol and Schulman, 1992a ,b ). Resting cells demonstrate a calcium-independent basal activity of CaM
kinase II (referred to as autonomous activity) that is ~5-10% of
the total activity that can be obtained with saturating levels of
calcium and calmodulin. When PC12 cells were depolarized in 56 mM K+, the wild-type cells and
pooled stable transfectant control cells showed a twofold to threefold
increase in the calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity. In
contrast, the pooled stable transfectant cells that expressed PEP-19
did not show an increase in calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity
(Fig. 3). Additionally, two subclones
derived from the PEP-19-expressing pooled stable transfectants also
showed the same failure to activate CaM kinase II after depolarization (Fig. 3). The subclones from the pooled stable transfectant control cells showed the same level of calcium-independent CaM kinase II
activity as the wild-type PC12 cells after depolarization (Fig. 3).

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Figure 3.
Effect of PEP-19 expression on CaM kinase II
activation. The PC12 cells in individual 35 mm wells were stimulated by
exposure to the high K+ depolarizing buffer for the
number of seconds indicated and then immediately assayed for
calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity (see Materials and Methods).
Calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity was defined as the
calcium-independent enzyme activity in the cell lysate expressed as a
percent of the total enzyme activity obtained in the presence of
saturating calcium and calmodulin. The PC12 cell lines tested were as
follows: , control (wild-type); , control bulk-transfected; ,
transfection control, subclone 1; , transfection control, subclone
2; , PEP-19 bulk-transfected; , PEP-19-expressing subclone 1;
, PEP-19-expressing subclone 2. Each point represents the mean of
three determinations, and the error bars are SD. CaM kinase II in
PEP-19-expressing cells failed to activate after depolarization.
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To test for whether the changed response was universal or limited to
specific signaling pathways, the cells were stimulated with 200 µM ATP. The peak response of calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity in the PEP-19-expressing cells was not significantly different from the responses by the wild-type and the nonexpressing control transfectants (Fig. 4). However,
a trend toward a more rapid decrease in calcium-independent CaM kinase
II activity in the PEP-19-expressing cells after 2 min of ATP
stimulation was apparent. The absolute difference can vary between
experiments, but the trend suggests that PEP-19 may of had an effect on
how long CaM kinase II was active.

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Figure 4.
CaM kinase II responses after ATP stimulation. The
cells in each 35 mm well were stimulated with 200 µM ATP
in HBS for the number of seconds indicated and then immediately assayed
for calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity (see Materials and
Methods). The ATP concentration in these CaM kinase II assays was 450 µM. The 0 sec time point was measured using a 10 sec
exposure to HBS without ATP. The cell lines tested were as follow: ,
control (wild-type) PC12; , transfection control; ,
PEP-19-expressing PC12, subclone 1; , PEP-19-expressing PC12,
subclone 2. Each point represents the mean of three determinations, and
the error bars are SD. Although maximal activation of CaM kinase
II was similar in the different PC12 cell lines, the PEP-19-expressing
cells showed a more rapid return toward basal activity.
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The decrease in the calcium-dependent activation of CaM kinase II in
the PEP-19-expressing cells is not a result of less total CaM kinase II
activity in these cells. When the total
Ca2+/calmodulin-stimulated CaM kinase II
activity was determined, the specific activity in the PEP-19-expressing
transfected cells was actually slightly higher than the activity in the
wild-type and transfection control cells (Fig.
5A). The 16% increase in the
PEP-19-expressing PC12 cells was significant at the 0.05 level and may
reflect compensatory responses by the cell for the losses in CaM kinase
II stimulation.

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Figure 5.
Specific activity of CaM kinase II and maximal
in vitro activation. A, The specific
activity of total CaM kinase II in wild-type, transfection control, and
pooled transfectant PEP-19-expressing PC12 cells was compared. The
enzyme levels were similar, although PEP-19-expressing PC12 cells
showed a modest 16% elevation in activity that was significant at the
p = 0.05 level. Each bar represents the mean of
four determinations, and the error bars are SD. B,
Percent calcium-independent CaM kinase II activity in the PC12 cells
after in vitro stimulation. Homogenates were stimulated
with 3 µM calmodulin-400 µM
CaCl2 for the time indicated and then diluted 2.5-fold into
the enzyme assay, which contained either excess 2 mM EGTA
or 2 mM CaCl2. The cell lines were as follows:
, control (wild-type) PC12; , PEP-19-expressing PC12; ,
transfection control PC12. Each point represents four determinations,
and the error bars are SD. No differences were observed for the amount
of calcium-independent activity that could be generated in the
different PC12 cells.
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To assess the maximal level of calcium-independent enzyme activity that
could be attained, CaM kinase II was activated in vitro with
excess calcium and calmodulin and then assayed immediately (Fig.
5B). Activated enzyme assayed in excess EGTA to remove free calcium yielded ~27-35% of the activity seen when the sample was assayed in the presence of calcium. Because the stimulation of intact
PC12 cells generated ~22-25% calcium-independent CaM kinase II
(Fig. 3), it appeared that ~70-75% of the calcium-independent CaM
kinase II activity present in the PC12 cells is stimulated after
depolarization or stimulation with agonist. This indicated that the
majority of the available CaM kinase II was activated by both types of stimuli.
Intracellular free Ca2+ transients
after stimulation
The intracellular free Ca2+ responses
after depolarization by high K+ or
stimulation by 200 µM ATP stimulation are shown in Figure 6. No observable differences were
apparent in the levels of free calcium mobilization in the three cell
lines in response to either depolarization in high
K+ or ATP stimulation. Therefore, it
appeared that the effect of PEP-19 on CaM kinase II activation was not
a result of a block on calcium flux.

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Figure 6.
Measurement of intracellular free
Ca2+ transients after stimulation of PC12 cells.
PC12 cells in 96-well black-walled plates were stimulated with 56 mM KCl depolarization buffer or with 100 µM
ATP. The intracellular calcium transients obtained by FLIPR analysis
after depolarization in high K+ as described in
Materials and Methods were as follows: A, PC12 wild-type
cells; B, PEP-19-expressing PC12; C,
transfection control. The free calcium transients after stimulation
with 100 µM ATP were as follows: D,
wild-type PC12 cells; E, PEP-19-expressing PC12 cells;
F, transfection control PC12 cells. Calcium mobilization
maximums appeared similar in the different PC12 cell lines with both
high K+ and ATP stimulation. Although the decay of
the signal sometimes appeared to be different, we were unable to
observe a consistent difference across multiple determinations.
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DISCUSSION |
Calmodulin is a widespread transducer of intracellular calcium
signaling, and it shows very few changes in its amino acid sequence
from simple to complex organisms (Klee and Vanaman, 1982 ). This lack of
diversity is surprising in light of how calmodulin often impacts
different types of signaling simultaneously, such as phosphorylation
and dephosphorylation (Klee, 1991 ). Therefore, it would not have been
unexpected for calmodulin to have evolved into a number of functionally
distinct isoforms that bind calcium with different affinities or
recognize different target enzymes. How then is diverse signaling
through this regulator directed so that many targets can be controlled
in a differential manner? One way appears to be through the different
affinities that targets can have for calmodulin, but this may not
always be sufficient for the rapid or reversible action observed in
most calcium signaling cascades. Additionally, the activation of
calmodulin may be controlled by peptides that stabilize the inactive
form. The best characterized examples to date for such peptides are
neuromodulin, neurogranin, and PEP-19 (Gerendasy and Sutcliffe, 1997 ).
The ability of these peptides to bind calmodulin in vitro is
well studied, but there is very little information that suggests how
this may function in intact cells. The results of this study
demonstrated that PEP-19 is a regulator of CaM kinase II in
situ and that this regulation is selective because it does not
impact all of the pathways by which the enzyme becomes activated.
The effect of PEP-19 expression on the activation of CaM kinase II in
PC12 cells was dependent on how calcium was mobilized. Whereas the
cells expressing PEP-19 displayed a tight inhibition of CaM kinase II
activation upon depolarization in high K+,
the mobilization of calcium through ATP in these same cells showed
normal enzyme activation. Therefore, PEP-19 expression does not inhibit
all CaM kinase II activation within the cell, but rather its regulation
appeared restricted to specific signaling pathways. It was also
apparent from the results that PEP-19 expression yielded a robust and
stable phenotype in regards to its inhibition of CaM kinase II in PC12
cells upon depolarization, because both pooled stable transfectants and
several clonal lines yielded an identical result. Although PEP-19
expression showed little effect on the activation of CaM kinase II
after stimulation with ATP, there was a noticeable deactivation after 2 min. Hence, in addition to inhibiting enzyme activation in some
situations, PEP-19 may also have the ability to hasten enzyme
deactivation. This last possibility will require further studies to
adequately characterize the effect.
The reason why PEP-19 selectively inhibits the activation of CaM kinase
II associated with voltage-sensitive calcium influx but not ATP
stimulation is unknown. There could be different pools of CaM kinase II
that are differentially activated by high
K+ and ATP. However, this seems less
likely because the majority of the available CaM kinase II is activated
after stimulation with ATP or high K+.
PEP-19 may inhibit the ability of CaM kinase II to perform calmodulin trapping (Meyer et al., 1992 ; Rich and Schulman, 1998 ). It could increase the off rate of trapped calmodulin when calcium levels are
low, thereby inhibiting enzyme activation. It could also hasten the
deactivation of the enzyme by a similar process. A more speculative alternative would require that purinergic receptors activate a different set of kinases and phosphatases than stimulation by depolarization. For PEP-19 to inhibit CaM kinase II activation upon
depolarization, it could either impede calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of the enzyme or promote phosphatase activity that
returns activated CaM kinase II to its resting state. In contrast, purinergic receptors could fail to sufficiently induce the
inhibitory phosphatase activity such that the equilibrium would favor
the generation of active CaM kinase II.
The direct regulation of calmodulin itself may also be responsible for
changes in its activity. At least six phosphorylation sites on
calmodulin, which include serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues,
have been demonstrated in Chinese hamster ovary cells after stimulation
of the insulin receptor (Joyal et al., 1997 ). Neurogranin and
neuromodulin can be phosphorylated within the IQ motifs by protein
kinase C (Baudier et al., 1989 , 1991 ), which results in the inhibition
of calmodulin binding. The IQ motif in PEP-19 is not a protein kinase C
substrate, and this mechanism does not pertain (Slemmon et al., 1996 ).
However, directly phosphorylating calmodulin may interrupt PEP-19
binding and result in the activation of CaM kinase II. Because there
are multiple potential mechanisms, understanding how PEP-19
differentially affects CaM kinase II activation as a function of
stimulus must await additional studies.
The ability of PEP-19 to alter intracellular calcium signaling is
consistent with its presence in neurons that can display resistance to
some forms of degeneration. It is highly expressed by granule cells in
the dentate gyrus (Sangameswaran et al., 1989 ). These cells resist
insult both from ischemic damage (Kirino, 1982 ) and exposure to
excitatory amino acids (Mattson and Kater, 1989 ). PEP-19 is also
abundant in Purkinje cells of the cerebellum (Berrebi et al., 1991 ), a
brain region that is generally resistant to neurodegenerative disease
(West et al., 1994 ). PEP-19 has the capacity for providing cellular
resistance to degeneration by directly modulating CaM kinase II because
this enzyme has been shown to mediate signal transduction in apoptosis
(Wright et al., 1997 ). Alternatively, PEP-19 may affect the activation
of other calmodulin targets that are linked to cell death, such as
nitric oxide synthase (Samdani et al., 1997 ). In support of a role for
PEP-19 in neuronal protection, recent results have shown that PEP-19
expression in PC12 cells reduces the levels of apoptosis observed after
staurosporine treatment or UV irradiation (J. A. Erhardt, R. A. Johanson, J. R. Slemmon, and X. Wang, unpublished
observations). In contrast, Huntington's disease tissue has been shown
to express lowered levels of PEP-19 (Utal et al., 1998 ), which
may be a contributing factor to the dysfunction that leads to the
pathophysiology of that disease. Understanding how PEP-19 serves to
alter Ca+2/calmodulin signaling in the
nervous system may prove a valuable tool for identifying targets that
can be antagonized in an effort to offer protection against degeneration.
PEP-19 expression in the nervous system is selective. Thus, it is
notable that two of the neuronal subtypes that express the highest
levels of PEP-19, cerebellar Purkinje cells and hippocampal granule
cells, are both in neurophysiological pathways in which long-term
potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) have been
characterized extensively. Cerebellar Purkinje cells undergo LTD
(Daniel et al., 1998 ), and hippocampal granule cell neurons are
upstream participants in LTD and LTP as part of the perforant pathway
through the hippocampus (Eccles, 1983 ). Consistent with a role for
PEP-19, several Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent
enzymes are required to propagate LTP and LTD, including CaM kinase II
(Pettit et al., 1994 ; Mayford et al., 1995 ; Giese et al., 1998 ),
neuronal nitric oxide synthase (Lev-Ram et al., 1997 ), calcineurin
(Mulkey et al., 1994 ), and adenyl cyclase type I (Weisskopf et al.,
1994 ). Additionally, PEP-19 has already been characterized as a
regulator of neuronal nitric oxide synthase in vitro
(Slemmon et al., 1996 ). Consequently, regulation of
calmodulin-dependent signaling through PEP-19 could affect the
establishment of LTP or LTD.
That the expression of PEP-19 did not alter the levels of calmodulin in
the cell is significant. First, it indicated that PEP-19 expression did
not change the activation of CaM kinase II by decreasing the levels of
calmodulin. It also demonstrated that the micromolar expression of a
peptide that binds the inactive form of calmodulin need not cause an
increase in calmodulin expression. An alternate possibility had been
that the sequestration of calmodulin would be counteracted by increased
gene expression for calmodulin. Although not well understood, an
increase in the expression of calmodulin-dependent target proteins may
cause an increase in the expression of calmodulin, because tissues such
as brain contain the highest levels of calmodulin-dependent proteins
and they also express the highest levels of calmodulin (Klee and
Vanaman, 1982 ). The regulation of calmodulin through peptides such as
PEP-19 might provide a mechanism by which the cell can avoid a
compensatory increase in calmodulin expression that could negate the
original action of the regulator.
The results of this study demonstrated that PEP-19 is able to affect
the activation of calmodulin-dependent targets within intact cells.
They further demonstrated that the regulation was conditional on the
type of stimulus used. As a consequence, calmodulin-binding peptides
such as PEP-19 may play an important role in determining when specific
signaling pathways can activate
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent enzymes. Such a
function could have broad significance in the pathophysiology of
nervous system disease and a potential role in learning and memory.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 28, 1999; revised Feb. 16, 2000; accepted Feb. 23, 2000.
This work and R.A.J. were supported by National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke and National Institutes of Health
Grant R01 NS33299 to J.R.S. We thank Dr. James I. Morgan (St. Jude's
Children's Hospital, Memphis, TN) for supplying the rat PEP-19 cDNA
and the antibodies against rat PEP-19.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. J. Randall Slemmon,
Department of Protein Biochemistry, UE0433, Biopharmaceutical Research
and Development, SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals, 709 Swedeland
Road, P.O. Box 1539, King of Prussia, PA 19406-0939. E-mail:
j_randall_slemmon{at}sbphrd.com.
 |
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