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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 259, Issue 13, 8041-8044, Jul, 1984
YC Lee and J Wolff
Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) binds calmodulin with a
stoichiometry approaching 1-1.5 mol of calmodulin/mol of MAP2 in the
presence of calcium ion. The calmodulin-binding domain(s) of MAP2 were
probed by cross-linking 125I-calmodulin with partially digested MAP2, by
limited digestion of the preformed 125I-calmodulin-MAP2 adduct, and by
cross-linking 125I-calmodulin with the projection- and assembly- promoting
portions of MAP2. Cross-linking 125I-calmodulin with partially digested
MAP2 resulted in radioactive adducts of approximately 300, approximately
235, approximately 205, approximately 58, and approximately 40 kDa. The
radioactive adducts with smaller molecular mass became prominent with
increasing time of digestion concomitant with loss of those with higher
molecular size. Limited chymotryptic digestion of preformed
125I-calmodulin-MAP2 adducts also produced a approximately 58-kDa
radioactive band followed later by a approximately 40-kDa band. Brief
chymotryptic digestion and subsequent centrifugation of microtubules
preformed with pure tubulin and MAP2 permitted separation of
microtubule-bound MAP2 fragments (molecular mass = approximately 215,
approximately 180, and approximately 36 kDa) from unbound fragments
(molecular mass = approximately 240, approximately 180, and approximately
140 kDa). 125I-Calmodulin cross- linked only with the microtubule-bound
MAP2 fragments (forming mainly the approximately 58-kDa adduct) and not
with unbound MAP2 fragments. Since the apparent molecular size of
calmodulin is approximately 21 kDa on these sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, the results indicate that partial digestion of
MAP2 by chymotrypsin produces a approximately 37-kDa fragment which can be
further degraded to a approximately 20-kDa fragment. The approximately
37-kDa fragment that is labeled corresponds to the previously identified
assembly-promoting fragment that attaches to the microtubule.
The calmodulin-binding domain on microtubule-associated protein 2
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