Calponin

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Calponin Homology Domain
File:1WYP.png
CH domain from H.Sapiends Calponin 1. PDB 1wyp
Identifiers
SymbolCH
PfamPF00307
Pfam clanCL0188
InterProIPR001715
calponin 1, basic, smooth muscle
File:1WYP.png
Solution structure of the CH domain of human Calponin 1. Rainbow colored cartoon (N-terminus = blue, C-terminus = red).[1]
Identifiers
SymbolCNN1
Entrez1264
HUGO2155
OMIM600806
PDB1WYP
RefSeqNM_001299
UniProtP51911
Other data
LocusChr. 19 p13.2-13.1
calponin 2
Identifiers
SymbolCNN2
Entrez1265
HUGO2156
OMIM602373
RefSeqNM_004368
UniProtQ99439
Other data
LocusChr. 21 q11.1
calponin 3, acidic
Identifiers
SymbolCNN3
Entrez1266
HUGO2157
OMIM602374
RefSeqNM_001839
UniProtQ6FHA7
Other data
LocusChr. 1 p22-p21

Calponin is a calcium binding protein. Calponin tonically inhibits the ATPase activity of myosin in smooth muscle. Phosphorylation of calponin by a protein kinase, which is dependent upon calcium binding to calmodulin, releases the calponin's inhibition of the smooth muscle ATPase.

Structure and function

Calponin is mainly made up of α-helices with hydrogen bond turns. It is a binding protein and is made up of three domains. These domains in order of appearance are Calponin Homology (CH), regulatory domain (RD), and Click-23, domain that contains the calponin repeats. At the CH domain calponin binds to α-actin and filamin and binds to actin within the RD domain. Calmodulin, when activated by calcium may bind weakly to the CH domain and inhibit calponin binding with α-actin.[2] Calponin is responsible for binding many actin binding proteins, phospholipids, and regulates the actin/myosin interaction. Calponin is also thought to negatively affect the bone making process due to being expressed in high amounts in osteoblasts.[3]

References

  1. PDB: 1WYP​; Tomizawa T, Kigawa T, Koshiba S, Inoue M, Yokoyama S. "RCSB PDB - 1WYP Structure Summary". RCSB Protein Data Bank. doi:10.2210/pdb1wyp/pdb.
  2. Ferjani, I; Fattoum, A; Manai, M; Benyamin, Y; Roustan, C; Maciver, SK (September 2010). "Two distinct regions of calponin share common binding sites on actin resulting in different modes of calponin-actin interaction". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. 1804 (9): 1760–7. doi:10.1016/j.bbapap.2010.05.012. PMID 20595006.
  3. Maciver S. "The Calponin Family". Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 2011-04-25.

External links