| Literature DB >> 27001424 |
Anuradha Krishnan1, Jeffrey Viviano1, Yaroslav Morozov1, Venkat Venkataraman2.
Abstract
Hippocalcin is a 193 aa protein that is a member of the neuronal calcium sensor protein family, whose functions are regulated by calcium. Mice that lack the function of this protein are compromised in the long term potentiation aspect of memory generation. Recently, mutations in the gene have been linked with dystonia in human. The protein has no intrinsic enzyme activity but is known to bind to variety of target proteins. Very little information is available on how the protein executes its critical role in signaling pathways, except that it is regulated by binding of calcium. Further delineation of its function requires large amounts of pure protein. In this report, we present a single-step purification procedure that yields high quantities of the bacterially expressed, recombinant protein. The procedure may be adapted to purify the protein from inclusion bodies or cytosol in its myristoylated or non-myristoylated forms. MALDI-MS (in source decay) analyses demonstrates that the myristoylation occurs at the glycine residue. The protein is also biologically active as measured through tryptophan fluorescence, mobility shift and guanylate cyclase activity assays. Thus, further analyses of hippocalcin, both structural and functional, need no longer be limited by protein availability.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium; EF hands; Hippocalcin; Memory; Myristoylation; Neuronal calcium sensor protein
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27001424 DOI: 10.1016/j.pep.2016.03.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Expr Purif ISSN: 1046-5928 Impact factor: 1.650