Sequence comparison of the 63-, 61-, and 59-kDa calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases
- 13 August 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 30 (32) , 7940-7947
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00246a010
Abstract
Partial protein sequences from the 59-kDa bovine heart and the 63-kDa bovine brain calmodulin-dependent phosphodiesterases (CaM-PDEs) were determined and compared to the sequence of the 61-kDa isozyme reported by Charbonneau et al. [Charbonneau, H., Kumar, S., Novack, J. P., Blumenthal, D. K., Griffin, P. R., Shabanowitz, J., Hunt, D. F., Beavo, J. A. & Walsh, K. A. (1991) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. Only a single segment (34 residues) at the N-terminus of the 59-kDa isozyme lacks identity with the 61-kDa isozyme; all other assigned sequence is identical in the two isozymes. Peptides from the 59-kDa isozyme that correspond to residues 23-41 of the 61-kDa protein bind calmodulin with high affinity. The C-terminal halves of these calmodulin-binding peptides are identical to the corresponding 59-kDa sequence; the N-terminal halves differ. The localization of sequence differences within this single segment suggests that the 61- and 59-kDa isozymes are generated from a single gene by tissue-specific alternative RNA splicing. In contrast, partial sequence from the 63-kDa bovine brain CaM-PDE isozyme displays only 67% identity with the 61-kDa isozyme. The differences are dispersed throughout the sequence, suggesting that the 63- and 61-kDa isozymes are encoded by separate but homologous genes.Keywords
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