Structural and biochemical characterization of CIB1 delineates a new family of EF-hand-containing proteins.

Article Details

Citation

Gentry HR, Singer AU, Betts L, Yang C, Ferrara JD, Sondek J, Parise LV

Structural and biochemical characterization of CIB1 delineates a new family of EF-hand-containing proteins.

J Biol Chem. 2005 Mar 4;280(9):8407-15. Epub 2004 Dec 1.

PubMed ID
15574431 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

CIB1 (CIB) is an EF-hand-containing protein that binds multiple effector proteins, including the platelet alphaIIbbeta3 integrin and several serine/threonine kinases and potentially modulates their function. The crystal structure for Ca(2+)-bound CIB1 has been determined at 2.0 A resolution and reveals a compact alpha-helical protein containing four EF-hands, the last two of which bind calcium ions in the standard fashion seen in many other EF-hand proteins. CIB1 shares high structural similarity with calcineurin B and the neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) family of EF-hand-containing proteins. Most importantly, like calcineurin B and NCS proteins, which possess a large hydrophobic pocket necessary for ligand binding, CIB1 contains a hydrophobic pocket that has been implicated in ligand binding by previous mutational analysis. However, unlike several NCS proteins, Ca(2+)-bound CIB1 is largely monomeric whether bound to a relevant peptide ligand or ligand-free. Differences in structure, oligomeric state, and phylogeny define a new family of CIB1-related proteins that extends from arthropods to humans.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Calcium and integrin-binding protein 1Q99828Details