| Literature DB >> 30909616 |
Tapan Kumar Mohanta1, Dhananjay Yadav2, Abdul Latif Khan3, Abeer Hashem4,5, Elsayed Fathi Abd Allah6, Ahmed Al-Harrasi7.
Abstract
Ca2+ is a universal second messenger that plays a pivotal role in diverse signaling mechanisms in almost all life forms. Since the evolution of life from an aquatic to a terrestrial environment, Ca2+ signaling systems have expanded and diversified enormously. Although there are several Ca2+ sensing molecules found in a cell, EF-hand containing proteins play a principal role in calcium signaling event in plants. The major EF-hand containing proteins are calmodulins (CaMs), calmodulin like proteins (CMLs), calcineurin B-like (CBL) and calcium dependent protein kinases (CDPKs/CPKs). CaMs and CPKs contain calcium binding conserved D-x-D motifs in their EF-hands (one motif in each EF-hand) whereas CMLs contain a D-x₃-D motif in the first and second EF-hands that bind the calcium ion. Calcium signaling proteins form a complex interactome network with their target proteins. The CMLs are the most primitive calcium binding proteins. During the course of evolution, CMLs are evolved into CaMs and subsequently the CaMs appear to have merged with protein kinase molecules to give rise to calcium dependent protein kinases with distinct and multiple new functions. Ca2+ signaling molecules have evolved in a lineage specific manner with several of the calcium signaling genes being lost in the monocot lineage.Entities:
Keywords: EF-hands; calcineurin B-like; calcium dependent protein kinases; calmodulin; calmodulin-likes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30909616 PMCID: PMC6471108 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20061476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Distribution of calcium binding protein CaMs (calmodulins), CMLs (calmodulin-like), CPKs (calcium dependent protein kinases) and CBLs (calcineurin B-like) in plants.
| Sl. No. | Name of the Species | Taxonomy | Genome Size | Total No. of Protein Coding Genes | No. of CaMs | No. of CMLs | No. of CPKs | No. of CBLs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Dicot | 306.5 | 30023 | 5 | 21 | 16 | 5 |
| 2 |
| Dicot | 135 | 27416 | 9 | 47 | 34 | 10 |
| 3 |
| Monocot | 272 | 34310 | 5 | 23 | 27 | 9 |
| 4 |
| Dicot | 283.8 | 40492 | 13 | 36 | 49 | 14 |
| 5 |
| Dicot | 134.8 | 26521 | 10 | 29 | 32 | 9 |
| 6 |
| Dicot | 135 | 27332 | 5 | 15 | 15 | 4 |
| 7 |
| Algae | 111.1 | 17741 | 6 | 3 | 14 | 2 |
| 8 |
| Dicot | 301.4 | 24533 | 8 | 19 | 26 | 7 |
| 9 |
| Dicot | 319 | 25376 | 6 | 20 | 24 | 8 |
| 10 |
| Algae | 49 | 9629 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| 11 |
| Dicot | 203 | 21491 | 6 | 21 | 18 | 7 |
| 12 |
| Dicot | 691 | 36349 | 1 | 25 | 22 | 12 |
| 13 |
| Dicot | 240 | 32831 | 5 | 19 | 14 | 6 |
| 14 |
| Dicot | 978 | 56044 | 6 | 27 | 41 | 9 |
| 15 |
| Dicot | 761.4 | 55294 | 6 | 30 | 40 | 13 |
| 16 |
| Dicot | 318.3 | 43471 | 11 | 21 | 47 | 12 |
| 17 |
| Dicot | 881.3 | 63514 | 9 | 32 | 28 | 11 |
| 18 |
| Dicot | 532.5 | 33033 | 9 | 22 | 26 | 9 |
| 19 |
| Dicot | 360 | 50894 | 4 | 24 | 11 | 11 |
| 20 |
| Algae | 22 | 10660 | 5 | 8 | 2 | 3 |
| 21 |
| Dicot | 321.7 | 28140 | 13 | 19 | 25 | 9 |
| 22 |
| Monocot | 372 | 42189 | 5 | 33 | 30 | 11 |
| 23 |
| Algae | 13.2 | 7796 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 0 |
| 24 |
| Monocot | 1358 | 102065 | 9 | 20 | 53 | 10 |
| 25 |
| Dicot | 537.2 | 27433 | 9 | 26 | 25 | 10 |
| 26 |
| Bryophyte | 480 | 32926 | 7 | 17 | 25 | 4 |
| 27 |
| Pinophyta | 1960 | 28354 | 9 | 15 | 11 | 13 |
| 28 |
| Dicot | 422.9 | 42950 | 8 | 26 | 28 | 11 |
| 29 |
| Dicot | 225.7 | 26873 | 4 | 21 | 17 | 7 |
| 30 |
| Dicot | 400 | 31221 | 4 | 8 | 15 | 8 |
| 31 |
| Pteridophyte | 212.5 | 22273 | 6 | 11 | 9/11 | 4 |
| 32 |
| Monocot | 405.7 | 34584 | 5 | 17 | 27 | 7 |
| 33 |
| Dicot | 900 | 34727 | 9 | 27 | 28 | 11 |
| 34 |
| Dicot | 723 | 39028 | 5 | 27 | 21 | 12 |
| 35 |
| Monocot | 693.9 | 35490 | 8 | 22 | 28 | 8 |
| 36 |
| Dicot | 238.5 | 26351 | 10 | 27 | 31 | 9 |
| 37 |
| Dicot | 346 | 29452 | 2 | 14 | 17 | 7 |
| 38 |
| Dicot | 487 | 26346 | 5 | 13 | 17 | 9 |
| 39 |
| Algae | 131.2 | 14247 | 4 | 4 | 6 | 0 |
| 40 |
| Monocot | 2400 | 63540 | 8 | 21 | 47 | 9 |
Figure 1Molecular structure of CaM protein. (A) Three-dimensional structure of CaM protein with Ca2+ ligands bind to the EF-hands. (B) CaM protein binding to the Ca2+ ion in the D-x-D motif. Three water molecules (vertices -X) are present adjacent to the Ca2+ ion with strong hydrogen bonding. The molecular structure of CaM protein was elucidated using calmodulin protein 1UP5 as reported by Rupp et al., (1996) [28].
Conserved motifs of calcium binding protein CaMs, CMLs, CBLs and CPKs. In CaMs and CPKs D-x-D motifs are conserved at 14th and 16th position in each EF-hand.
| EF-Hands | CaMs | CMLs | CBLs | CPKs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | D-x-D, E-x2-E | D-x3-D, F-x2-F | V-F-H-P-N | D-x-D, D-E-E-L, E-E-I, E-M-F |
| 2nd | D-x-D, D-F-x-E-F | D-x3-D | D & E | D-x-D, D-E-E-L, E-x-E |
| 3rd | D-x-D | D & E | E-E-x-D, D-D-x2-E | D-x-D, D-E-E-L, x-E-D |
| 4th | D-x-D | D-x-D-x-D, F-x-E-F | D-x-D, D-E-E-L, D/E |
Figure 2Molecular structure of CML protein. (A) Three-dimensional structure of CML protein with Ca2+ ligand binding to the EF-hands. (B) D amino acids binding with the Ca2+ ion in the EF-hand of CML protein. Four water molecules (vertices -X) are present adjacent to the Ca2+ ion with hydrogen bonding providing strong structural stability. The molecular structure of CML protein was created according to CML from protein 1UP5 from databank as reported by Rupp et al., (1996) [28].
N-terminal myristoylation and palmitoylation sites of calcium binding proteins CaM, CML, CBL and CPKs. The presence of palmitoylation and myristoylation sites were studied using CSS palm2.0 software.
| Calcium Binding Proteins | Myristoylation Sites | Palmitoylation Sites |
|---|---|---|
| CaM | Not present | Not present |
| CML | M-G-F, M-G-G, M-G-A | Not present |
| CBL | M-G-C | M-G-C, M-L-Q-C |
| CPK | MGN, MGC, QFG, MGL, MGS, MGI, MGQ, MGV, | M-G-N-C, M-G-N-C-C, M-G-C, M-G-N-T-C-V, Q-F-G-T-T-Y-L-C, M-G-N-C-C-R, M-G-L-C, M-G-G-C, M-G-N-N-C, M-G-S-C, M-G-N-S-C, Q-F-G-T-T-F-L-C, M-G-I-C, M-G-N-C-N-A-C, M-G-Q-C, M-G-N-A-C, Q-F-G-T-T-Y-Q-C, M-G-N-V-C, M-G-V-C, M-G-N-Q-C, Q-F-G-I-T-Y-L-C, M-G-N-C-N-T-C, M-E-L-C |
Figure 3Molecular structure of CBL protein. (A) Three-dimensional structure of CBL protein with Ca2+ ligands binding to the EF-hands. (B) D amino acids binding to the to the Ca2+ ion in the EF-hand of CBL protein. One water molecule (vertices -X) provides structural stability to the Ca2+ ion in the EF-hand region of the CBL protein. The molecular structure of CPK protein was created according to A. thaliana CBL from protein databank as reported by Akaboshi et al., (2008) [35].
Figure 4Molecular structure of CPK protein. (A) Three-dimensional structure of CBL protein with Ca2+ ligands marked in arrow. (B) D-x-D motif binding Ca2+ ion in the EF-hand of CPK protein. No water molecule was found to be associated with the Ca2+ ion in the EF-hand domain of CPK protein. The molecular structure of CPK protein was created according to A. thaliana CPK from protein databank as reported by Chandran et al., (2005) [36].
Figure 5Interactome network of CaM proteins. The major interacting partners of CaM proteins are MPK8, TPC1, CDPK1, NOA1, UBP, HOT5 and others. The interactome network was constructed using the CaM proteins of model plant A. thaliana. String database was used to construct the interactome network [44,45].
Table showing the interacting partners of CaMs, CMLs, CBLs and CPKs. CBL protein majorly interacts with CIPKs (CBL-interacting protein kinases) whereas majority of CPKs are interacts with CPKs themselves.
| Gene Name | Interacting Proteins |
|---|---|
|
| |
| CaM8 | APRR2, TPC1, At2g01210, NOA1, At2g20050, At1g73440, CUTA, GRIK2, GRIK1, CAMS1 |
| CaM1 | ZW1, CDPK1, NTL9, At2g01210, DSPTP1, CRCK, GAD, At5g62570, At5g28300, AS1 |
| CaM2 | UBP6, ZWI, At3g07670, At5g14260, CIP111, At1g24610, At5g53920, IQD20, SD1-13 |
| CaM3 | PP7, ZWI, UBP6, MPK8, TPC1, CRK1, SD1-13, AGL24, At3g07670, At5g14260 |
| CaM5 | MPK8, At2g19750, TPC1, EDA39, CRK1, NOA1, PP7, CRLK1, At2g02970 |
| CaM4 | HOT5, CNBT1, At4g33080, ACA11, TPC1, PP7, MPK8, At2g01820, LP1, CaM1 |
| CaM7 | At5g57110, MPK8, HY5, CNBT1, BI1, TPC1, At2g18750, NOA1, TSO1-like |
| CaM8 | APRR2, TPC1, At2g01210, NOA1, At2g20050, At1g73440, CUTA, GRIK2, GRIK1, CAMS1 |
| CaM9 | APRR2, At1g73440, TPC1, ATG8H, APG8A, At2g27480, TSO1-like |
|
| |
| CML15: AT1G18530 | ACOS5, TPC1, LAP6, At2g27480, LAP5, GDSL, TKPR1, NHX1, CYP704B1 |
| CML25: AT1G24620 | CCP3, HSP81-3, ARP2, HSP81-4, DEK1, PHS2, LOS1, PGSIP4, HSP90.1 |
| CML14: AT1G62820 | CML43, CML42, TPC1, LRR, ZWI, NOA1, BIP2 |
| CML23: AT1G66400 | TCH2, MSS3, ARP2, DEK1, PHS2, LOS1, HSP81.3, HSP81.4, HSP90.1 |
| CML39: AT1G76640 | At1g54850, IDL3, TPC1, NOA1 |
| CML38: AT1G76650 | WRKY40, SZF1, STZ, BAP1, TPC1, RHL41, |
| CML30: AT2G15680 | ARP2, DEK1, PHS2, LOS1, HSP81, ROC1 |
| CML10: AT2G41090 | At3g19100, CPK30, CDPK6, CPK31, CPK29, CPK16, CPK18, CPK4, CPK28, CPK15 |
| CML5: AT2G43290 | TCH2, CML23, ARP2, DEK1, PHS2, LOS1, At2g41410, At1g07940 |
| CML3: AT3G07490 | HSP70, ARP2, DEK1, PHS2, LOS1, PGSIP4, HSP81 |
| CML36: AT3G10190 | At1g62820, ARP2, DEK1, LOS1, HSP81, HSP90, CML30 |
| CML16: AT3G25600 | At4g27280, At3g10300, TPC1, At4g26470, SYP122, GILP, NHL3 |
| CML20: AT3G50360 | RAD4, RAD23B, RAD23A, RAD23D, RAD23C, DDB1B, DDB1A, GTF2H2, SAC3B |
| CML41: AT3G50770 | At5g43260, TPC1, BGLU28, TI1, MDHAR, BT2, NOA1, ST2A |
| CML9: AT3G51920 | APRR2, TPC1, ATG8H, APG8A, CDPK19, |
| CML4: AT3G59440 | F5M15.5, ARP2, DEK1, PHS2, LOS1, HSP81, HSP90, ROC1 |
| CML42: AT4G20780 | TPC1, PPI3A, CYP86A |
| CML19: AT4G37010 | RAD4, RAD23B, RAD23A, RAD23D, RAD23C, DDB2, SAC3B, At5g16090, CUL4, GTF2H2 |
| CML37: AT5G42380 | WRKY46, RHL41, BAP1, WRKY40, TPC1, GILP |
| CML43: AT5G44460 | TPC1, CYP86A1, WRKY27, NOA1, CIPK26, CIPK3 |
|
| |
| CBL1 | CIPK23, AKT1, SOS2, CIPK1, CIPK7, At2g20050, CIPK15, CIPK8, CIPK26 |
| CBL2 | CIPK14, SIP4, At2g20050, CIPK23, At3g51390, SOS2, SIP3, CIPK12, CIPK18, MTN1 |
| CBL3 | CIPK23, At2g20050, SIP3, CIPK9, MTN1, CIPK1, MTN2, At3g51390, SOS2, CIPK14 |
| CBL4 | SOS2, SOS1, SIP3, NHX1, AKT1, At2g20050, At1g61575, CIPK8, CIPK14 |
| CBL5 | At2g20050, FKBP12, AKT1, CIPK1, CIPK23, SOS2, SIP4, CIPK14, TPC1, At3g59440 |
| CBL6 | VSR2, MTN1, FKBP12, CIPK9, CIPK1, TPC1, At4g10170 |
| CBL7 | GLR2.8, SOS2, CIPK3, CIPK26, CIPK9, FIBP12 |
| CBL8 | CIPK23, FKBP12, CIPK14, HAK5, TPC1, CIPK9, AKT1, SOS2, CIPK12 |
| CBL9 | CIPK23, AKT1, CIPK1, SIP3, CIPK8, SOS2, CIPK9, CIPK3, CIPK14 |
| CBL10 | SOS2, AKT1, CIPK23, SIP3, SOS1, FKBP12, CIPK8, TPC1, AVP1 |
|
| |
| At5g24430 | CPK1, At2g45300, CDPK1, CPK6, CPK9, At2g41090, CPK19, CPK24, CPK28, CPK32 |
| CDPK1 | CPK1, CPK4, CPK5, CPK6, CPK9, CPK28, CPK29, At5g34430, CPK32, At2g41090 |
| CPK30 | At2g41090, CRK1, CPK6, CPK9, CPK16, CPK18, CPK28, CDPK2, At5g24430, CPK23 |
| CPK9 | At2g41090, ABI2, CRK1, CPK4, At3g49370, At5g24430, CPK23, CPK28, CPK31, CPK32 |
| CPK19 | At2g41090, At5g24430, CRK1, CPK5, CPK9, CPK16, CPK21, CPK28, F5M15.5, |
| CPK7 | CPK1, CPK4, CPK6, CPK9, CPK16, CPK18, CPK28, CPK29, CDPK1, At2g41090 |
| CPK1 | CDPK1, CDPK6, CPK28, CPK6, CPK4, CPK9, At2g41090, CPK32, CPK7, At5g24430 |
| CPK18 | At2g41090, CPK14, CPK19, CPK7, CDPK1, CPK5, CPK13, CPK32, CPK24, CPK30 |
| CDPK6 | At2g41090, ORP2A, CPK1, CPK9, CPK6, CDPK1, OZS1, CPK28, CPK18, CPK16 |
| CPK15 | At2g41090, CPK18, CPK16, CPK28, CPK24, CPK14, At3g49370, At5g24430, CPK30, CPK7 |
| CPK4 | ABF1, CPK28, CPK29, At2g41090, CPK1, CPK32, CPK6, CPK9, RBOHD |
| CPK31 | At2g41090, CPK27, CRK1, At3g49370, CPK16, CPK18, CPK32, CPK25, CPK14, CPK13 |
| CPK32 | CPK28, ABF4, CPK6, CPK4, CDPK1, CPK9, CPK1, At2g41090, CPK9, CPK16 |
| CPK2 | At2g41090, CPK16, CPK19, CPK18, CPK5, At3g49370, At5g24430, CRK1, CPK1, At3g56760 |
| CPK14 | CPK24, CPK16, At2g41090, CPK20, CPK28, CPK18, CPK31, CPK29, CPK15, CPK19 |
| CPK6 | OZS1, CDPK1, CPK9, CPK28, CPK32, At5g24430, CPK29, CPK1, CPK4, CPK5 |
Reactome, functional and Pfam pathway of calcium binding CaM, CML, CBL and CPK proteins. These proteins are involved in diverse cellular events. More specifically CMLs are involved in excision and DNA damage, CaM are involved in CaM induced signaling and CPKs are involved in abscisic acid signaling, oxidative burst and reactive oxygen species homeostasis. No reactome pathway was found for CBL proteins.
| Reactome Pathway | Functional Pathway | Pfam Pathway | GO Component |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| DNA Repair | Calcium ion binding | EF-hand domain | GO:0005623→cell |
| DNA Damage Recognition in GG-NER | Binding | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0005622→intracellular |
| Formation of Incision Complex in GG-NER | Metal ion binding | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0044464→cell part |
| Nucleotide Excision Repair | Ion binding | EF hand | GO:0044424→intracellular part |
| Calmodulin induced events | Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase activity | EF hand | GO:0005634→nucleus |
| Ca-dependent events | Calcium-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase activity | XPC-binding domain | GO:0043229→intracellular organelle |
| CaM pathway | Damaged DNA binding | WD domain, G-beta repeat | GO:0043227→membrane-bounded organelle |
| DAG and IP3 signaling | Calmodulin binding | UBA/TS-N domain | GO:0005737→cytoplasm |
| Activation of CaMK IV | Protein binding | WRKY DNA -binding domain | GO:0043231→intracellular membrane-bounded organelle |
| Opioid Signaling | Hsp90 protein binding | TPR repeat | GO:0080008→Cul4-RING E3 ubiquitin ligase complex |
| G-protein mediated events | Organic cyclic compound binding | Kinase-like | GO:0031461→cullin-RING ubiquitin ligase complex |
| PLC beta mediated events | Heterocyclic compound binding | Tetratricopeptide repeat | GO:1990234→transferase complex |
| Intracellular signaling by second messengers | Proteasome binding | Sulfotransferase family | GO:0005829→cytosol |
| G2/M DNA damage checkpoint | Polyubiquitin modification-dependent protein binding | Ubiquitin family | GO:0005886→plasma membrane |
| G alpha (i) signaling events | Preprotein binding | Hsp90 protein | GO:0044444→cytoplasmic part |
| Signaling by GPCR | Ubiquitin binding | CPSF A subunit region | GO:0071944→cell periphery |
| GPCR downstream signaling | Protein serine/threonine kinase activity | 3-Oxoacyl-[acyl-carrier-protein (ACP)] synthase III | GO:0005773→vacuole |
| Recruitment and ATM-mediated phosphorylation of repair and signaling proteins at DNA double strand breaks | Tetraketide alpha-pyrone synthase activity | Mono-functional DNA-alkylating methyl methanesulfonate N-term | GO:0016020→membrane |
| Neutrophil degranulation | Nucleic acid binding | Secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine Ca binding region | GO:0032991→protein-containing complex |
| Immune System | Protein-containing complex binding | Tetratricopeptide repeat | GO:0034399→nuclear periphery |
| Post-translational protein modification | DNA binding | Protein kinase domain | GO:0098805→whole membrane |
| Josephin domain DUBs | Anion binding | Protein tyrosine kinase | GO:0005777→peroxisome |
| Metabolism of proteins | Purine ribonucleotide triphosphate binding | Chalcone and stilbene synthases, N-terminal domain | GO:0012505→endomembrane system |
| Dual Incision in GG-NER | Purine ribonucleotide binding | Tetratricopeptide repeat | |
| Signal Transduction | Serine-type endopeptidase inhibitor activity | Histidine kinase-, DNA gyrase B- and HSP90-like ATPase | |
| Neddylation | Drug binding | Sulfotransferase domain | |
| Formation of TC-NER Pre-Incision Complex | Small molecule binding | Tetratricopeptide repeat | |
| Dual incision in TC-NER | Nucleotide binding | Chalcone and stilbene synthases, C-terminal domain | |
| Gap-filling DNA repair synthesis and ligation in TC-NER | ATP binding | NAF domain | |
| HSP90 chaperone cycle for steroid hormone receptors (SHR) | Sulfotransferase activity | Histidine kinase-, DNA gyrase B- and HSP90-like ATPase | |
| N-glycan trimming in the ER and Calnexin/Calreticulin cycle | Transferase activity | Ubiquitin-2 like Rad60 SUMO-like | |
| Recognition of DNA damage by PCNA-containing replication complex | Enzyme binding | Lipopolysaccharide kinase (Kdo/WaaP) family | |
| Cellular responses to external stimuli | Sequence-specific DNA binding | C2H2-type zinc finger | |
| Cellular responses to stress | Transcription regulator activity | ||
| Glycogen breakdown (glycogenolysis) | Catalytic activity, acting on a protein | ||
| Protein methylation | Ras GTPase binding | ||
| Cytosolic sulfonation of small molecules | |||
| Asparagine N-linked glycosylation | |||
|
| |||
| Calmodulin induced events | Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase activity | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0005634 nucleus |
| Ca-dependent events | Calcium-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase activity | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0005886 Plasma membrane |
| CaM pathway | Calmodulin binding | EF hand | GO:0016020 membrane |
| DAG and IP3 signaling | Calcium ion binding | EF-hand domain | GO:0043231 Intracellular membrane bound organelle |
| Activation of CaMK IV | Protein binding | EF hand | GO:0005737 cytoplasm |
| G2/M DNA damage checkpoint | ATP binding | Protein kinase domain | GO:0071944 cell periphery |
| Opioid Signaling | Metal ion binding | Protein tyrosine kinase | GO:0005622 intracellular |
| G-protein mediated events | Heterocyclic compound binding | Lipopolysaccharide kinase (Kdo/WaaP) family | GO:0005623 cell |
| PLC beta mediated events | Organic cyclic compound binding | Secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine Ca binding region | GO:0044464 cell part |
| Intracellular signaling by second messengers | Binding | Kinase-like | GO:0005829 cytosol |
| G alpha (i) signaling events | Catalytic activity | bZIP transcription factor | |
| Recruitment and ATM-mediated phosphorylation of repair and signaling proteins at DNA double strand breaks | Protein phosphatase binding | Basic region leucine zipper | |
| Signaling by GPCR | Peroxidase activity | ||
| GPCR downstream signaling | |||
| Signal Transduction | |||
|
| |||
| Neurotransmitter receptors and postsynaptic signal transmission | Calmodulin binding | Cytoskeletal-regulatory complex EF hand | GO:0005622 Intracellular |
| Post NMDA receptor activation events | Calcium ion binding | EF hand | GO:0005623 Cell |
| CREB phosphorylation through the activation of CaMKK | Binding | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0044464 Cell Part |
| Activation of NMDA receptors and postsynaptic events | Protein binding | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0044424 Intracellular part |
| Transmission across Chemical Synapses | Ion binding | EF hand | GO:0043229 Intracellular organelle |
| Neuronal System | Metal ion binding | EF-hand domain | GO:0005737 Cytoplasm |
| Ion channel transport | Protein serine/threonine kinase activity | EF-hand domain | GO:0043227 Membrane bound organelle |
| Opioid Signaling | Purine ribonucleotide binding | Lipopolysaccharide kinase (Kdo/WaaP) family | GO:0005874 Microtubule |
| Calmodulin induced events | Adenyl ribonucleotide binding | Autophagy protein Atg8 ubiquitin like | GO:0015630 Microtubule cytoskeleton |
| Ca-dependent events | Small molecule binding | Ubiquitin-like autophagy protein Apg12 | GO:0043231 Intracellular membrane bound organelle |
| CaM pathway | Anion binding | Protein kinase domain | GO:0005634 Nucleus |
| G-protein mediated events | Drug binding | Protein tyrosine kinase | GO:0044446 Intracellular organelle part |
| PLC beta mediated events | Purine ribonucleoside triphosphate binding | Ion transport protein | GO:0000421 Autophagosome membrane |
| DAG and IP3 signaling | Organic cyclic compound binding | Kinase-like | GO:0005886 Plasma membrane |
| Signal Transduction | Heterocyclic compound binding | GO:0071944 Cell periphery | |
| Activation of CaMK IV | ATP binding | GO:0005776 Autophagosome | |
| G2/M DNA damage checkpoint | Catalytic activity, acting on a protein | GO:0043232 Intracellular non-membrane bound organelle | |
| Intracellular signaling by second messengers | Voltage-gated cation channel activity | GO:0016020 Membrane | |
| G alpha (i) signaling events | Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase activity | GO:0098805 Whole membrane | |
| Recruitment and ATM-mediated phosphorylation of repair and signaling proteins at DNA double strand breaks | Calcium-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase activity | GO:0005774 Vacuolar membrane | |
| Signaling by GPCR | Transcription regulatory region DNA binding | GO:0005773 Vauole | |
| GPCR downstream signaling | Calcium ion transmembrane transporter activity | ||
| Metal ion transmembrane transporter activity | |||
| Identical protein binding | |||
| RNA polymerase II regulatory region sequence-specific DNA binding | |||
|
| |||
| NA | Calcium ion binding | NAF domain | GO:0005623 Cell |
| Protein serine/threonine kinase activity | Kinase-like | GO:0044464 Cell part | |
| Ion binding | EF hand | GO:0005886 Plasma membrane | |
| Binding | Protein kinase domain | GO:0005622 Intracellular | |
| Catalytic activity, acting on a protein | Protein tyrosine kinase | GO:0000325 Plant-type vacuole | |
| Drug binding | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0071944 Cell periphery | |
| ATP binding | EF-hand domain pair | GO:0005737 Cytoplasm | |
| Metal ion transmembrane transporter activity | Phosphorylase superfamily | GO:0005774 Vacuolar membrane | |
| Potassium ion transmembrane transporter activity | Ion transport protein | GO:0016020 Membrane | |
| Cation channel activity | EF hand | GO:0005773 Vacuole | |
| Adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase activity | GO:0009705 Plant-type vacuole membrane | ||
| Methylthioadenosine nucleosidase activity | GO:0043231 Intracellular membrane bound organelle | ||
| Metal ion binding | GO:0005634 Nucleus | ||
| Ion gated channel activity | GO:0044444 Cytoplasmic part | ||
| Sodium ion transmembrane transporter activity | |||
| Catalytic activity | |||
| Transmembrane transporter activity | |||
| Ligand-gated ion channel activity | |||
| Voltage-gated cation channel activity | |||
| Calcium channel activity | |||
| Potassium channel activity | |||
| Organic cyclic compound binding | |||
| Heterocyclic compound binding | |||
| Active transmembrane transporter activity | |||
Figure 6Interactome network of CML proteins. The major interacting partners of CML proteins are CLU4, MDHAR, WRKY transcription factor, CPKs, NHX, DDB1, RAD23A, RAD23C, RAD23D and others. The interactome network was constructed using the CML proteins of model plant A. thaliana. String database was used to construct the interactome network [44,45].
Figure 7Interactome network of CBL proteins. The major interacting partners of CBL proteins are CIPKs. In addition, CBLs also interact with NHX1, MTN1, MTN2, SOS2 and other proteins. The interactome network was constructed using the CBL proteins of model plant A. thaliana. String database was used to construct the interactome network [44,45].
Figure 8Interactome map of CPK proteins. The interactome map shows CPK proteins are interact with other CPKs proteins of the same protein family. However, CPKs are also interact with other proteins including ORP2A, RBOHD, ABF1, ABF4, OZS1 and F5M15.5. The interactome network was constructed using the CPK proteins of model plant A. thaliana. String database was used to construct the interactome network [44,45].
Figure 9Phylogenetic tree of calcium sensor proteins. Phylogenetic tree of CaMs, CMLs, CBLs and CPKs resulted into five clusters. Cluster I contain CPKs (red) and CBLs (navy), cluster II contain CMLs (fuchsia) and CaMs (aqua), cluster III contain CMLs (fuchsia), cluster IV contain CaM (aqua) and CML (fuchsia) and cluster V contain CBL (aqua) and CML (fuchsia). Phylogenetic tress shows that CMLs are the primitive EF-hand containing calcium sensing proteins and evolved from monophyletic common ancestor [19]. Evolutions of CMLs were followed by the evolution of CaMs, CBLs and CPKs through gene duplication and subsequent expansion. Phylogenetic tree was constructed by maximum likelihood method and LG (Le & Gascuel) model using 1000 bootstrap replicates. Phylogenetic tree was constructed by MEGA6 software using the amino acid sequences of calcium sensor proteins.
Figure 10Duplication and loss event of calcium sensor proteins. A species tree was constructed to study the duplication and loss events of calcium binding sensor proteins. Result shows that, duplication event predominates the loss event during the evolution. Gene duplication events confirm the evolution of calcium sensing proteins through expansion. Duplicated genes in dicot plants are sometimes lost in the monocot lineage, suggesting the lineage specific evolution of calcium sensing genes. No conditional duplication was found during this study. The study was conducted using Notung software 2.9.