Ca2+/calmodulin regulates trafficking of Ca(V)1.2 Ca2+ channels in cultured hippocampal neurons.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
As the Ca2+-sensor for Ca2+-dependent inactivation, calmodulin (CaM) has been proposed, but never definitively demonstrated, to be a constitutive Ca(V)1.2 Ca2+ channel subunit. Here we show that CaM is associated with the Ca(V)1.2 pore-forming alpha1C subunit in brain in a Ca2+-independent manner. Within its CaM binding pocket, alpha1C has been proposed to contain a membrane targeting domain. Because ion channel subunits assemble early during channel biosynthesis, we postulated that this association with CaM could afford the opportunity for Ca2+-dependent regulation of membrane targeting. We showed that the isolated domain functioned as a Ca2+/CaM regulated trafficking determinant for CD8 (a model transmembrane protein) using fluorescent-activated cell sorting analysis and, using green fluorescent protein-tagged alpha1C subunits expressed in cultured hippocampal neurons, that Ca2+/CaM interaction with this domain accelerated trafficking of Ca(V)1.2 channels to distal regions of the dendritic arbor. Furthermore, this Ca2+/CaM-accelerated trafficking was activity dependent. Thus, CaM imparts Ca2+-dependent regulation not only to mature Ca(V)1.2 channels at the cell surface but also to steps during channel biosynthesis.