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Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias

Human ryanodine receptor 2 (hRyR2) mediates calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, enabling cardio­myocyte contraction. The N-terminal region of hRyR2 (amino acids 1–606) is the target of >30 arrhythmogenic mutations and contains a binding site for phosphoprotein phosphatase 1. Here, th...

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Autores principales: Borko, Ľubomír, Bauerová-Hlinková, Vladena, Hostinová, Eva, Gašperík, Juraj, Beck, Konrad, Lai, F. Anthony, Zahradníková, Alexandra, Ševčík, Jozef
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25372681
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1399004714020343
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author Borko, Ľubomír
Bauerová-Hlinková, Vladena
Hostinová, Eva
Gašperík, Juraj
Beck, Konrad
Lai, F. Anthony
Zahradníková, Alexandra
Ševčík, Jozef
author_facet Borko, Ľubomír
Bauerová-Hlinková, Vladena
Hostinová, Eva
Gašperík, Juraj
Beck, Konrad
Lai, F. Anthony
Zahradníková, Alexandra
Ševčík, Jozef
author_sort Borko, Ľubomír
collection PubMed
description Human ryanodine receptor 2 (hRyR2) mediates calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, enabling cardio­myocyte contraction. The N-terminal region of hRyR2 (amino acids 1–606) is the target of >30 arrhythmogenic mutations and contains a binding site for phosphoprotein phosphatase 1. Here, the solution and crystal structures determined under near-physiological conditions, as well as a homology model of the hRyR2 N-terminal region, are presented. The N-terminus is held together by a unique network of interactions among its three domains, A, B and C, in which the central helix (amino acids 410–437) plays a prominent stabilizing role. Importantly, the anion-binding site reported for the mouse RyR2 N-terminal region is notably absent from the human RyR2. The structure concurs with the differential stability of arrhythmogenic mutations in the central helix (R420W, I419F and I419F/R420W) which are owing to disparities in the propensity of mutated residues to form energetically favourable or unfavourable contacts. In solution, the N-terminus adopts a globular shape with a prominent tail that is likely to involve residues 545–606, which are unresolved in the crystal structure. Docking the N-terminal domains into cryo-electron microscopy maps of the closed and open RyR1 conformations reveals C(α) atom movements of up to 8 Å upon channel gating, and predicts the location of the leucine–isoleucine zipper segment and the interaction site for spinophilin and phosphoprotein phosphatase 1 on the RyR surface.
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spelling pubmed-42209732014-11-13 Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias Borko, Ľubomír Bauerová-Hlinková, Vladena Hostinová, Eva Gašperík, Juraj Beck, Konrad Lai, F. Anthony Zahradníková, Alexandra Ševčík, Jozef Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr Research Papers Human ryanodine receptor 2 (hRyR2) mediates calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, enabling cardio­myocyte contraction. The N-terminal region of hRyR2 (amino acids 1–606) is the target of >30 arrhythmogenic mutations and contains a binding site for phosphoprotein phosphatase 1. Here, the solution and crystal structures determined under near-physiological conditions, as well as a homology model of the hRyR2 N-terminal region, are presented. The N-terminus is held together by a unique network of interactions among its three domains, A, B and C, in which the central helix (amino acids 410–437) plays a prominent stabilizing role. Importantly, the anion-binding site reported for the mouse RyR2 N-terminal region is notably absent from the human RyR2. The structure concurs with the differential stability of arrhythmogenic mutations in the central helix (R420W, I419F and I419F/R420W) which are owing to disparities in the propensity of mutated residues to form energetically favourable or unfavourable contacts. In solution, the N-terminus adopts a globular shape with a prominent tail that is likely to involve residues 545–606, which are unresolved in the crystal structure. Docking the N-terminal domains into cryo-electron microscopy maps of the closed and open RyR1 conformations reveals C(α) atom movements of up to 8 Å upon channel gating, and predicts the location of the leucine–isoleucine zipper segment and the interaction site for spinophilin and phosphoprotein phosphatase 1 on the RyR surface. International Union of Crystallography 2014-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4220973/ /pubmed/25372681 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1399004714020343 Text en © Borko et al. 2014 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.
spellingShingle Research Papers
Borko, Ľubomír
Bauerová-Hlinková, Vladena
Hostinová, Eva
Gašperík, Juraj
Beck, Konrad
Lai, F. Anthony
Zahradníková, Alexandra
Ševčík, Jozef
Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
title Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
title_full Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
title_fullStr Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
title_full_unstemmed Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
title_short Structural insights into the human RyR2 N-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
title_sort structural insights into the human ryr2 n-terminal region involved in cardiac arrhythmias
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25372681
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1399004714020343
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