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  4. High-affinity and low-affinity calcium binding and stability of the multidomain extracellular 40-kDa basement membrane glycoprotein (BM-40/SPARC/osteonectin)
 
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High-affinity and low-affinity calcium binding and stability of the multidomain extracellular 40-kDa basement membrane glycoprotein (BM-40/SPARC/osteonectin)

Date Issued
1992-01-01
Author(s)
MAURER, P
MAYER, U
BRUCH, M
JENO, P  
MANN, K
LANDWEHR, R
ENGEL, J
TIMPL, R
DOI
10.1111/j.1432-1033.1992.tb16773.x
Abstract
Reversible binding of calcium ions to a single high-affinity binding site in the 40-kDa basement membrane protein (BM-40) caused a 33% increase of alpha-helicity, an about 60% change in intrinsic fluorescence and a dramatic increase of the rate of cleavage by alpha-chymotrypsin. All these effects exhibited identical dependencies on calcium concentration from which a dissociation constant Kd = 0.6 microM was determined. Calcium release was accompanied by an increase of the frictional ratio in solution but not by denaturation which occurred at about equal guanidine.HCl concentration for both calcium-saturated and calcium-depleted protein (midpoint 1.5 M). The cleavage sites for alpha-chymotrypsin are located in or near to the EF-hand domain IV of calcium-depleted BM-40 (also known as SPARC, i.e. secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine, and osteonectin). These and other data indicate that binding occurs in the EF-hand domain from which a large conformational change is transmitted. Low-affinity calcium-binding sites in the N-terminal glutamic-acid-rich domain I of BM-40 were identified by human leukocyte elastase which was found to cleave very specifically in the middle of this domain. From the increase of cleavage rate with increasing calcium concentration a Kd greater than or equal to 10 mM was estimated. It is suggested that variations of calcium levels in the extracellular space in this range may regulate functions of BM-40 such as collagen binding and that high-affinity binding is important for stabilization, folding and secretion during biosynthesis.
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