Calmodulin binding is required for calcium mediated TRPA1 desensitization

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Abstract

Calcium (Ca 2+ ) ions affect nearly all aspects of biology. Excessive Ca 2+ entry is cytotoxic and Ca 2+ - mobilizing receptors have evolved diverse mechanisms for tight regulation that often include Calmodulin (CaM). TRPA1, an essential Ca 2+ -permeable ion channel involved in pain signaling and inflammation, exhibits complex Ca 2+ regulation with initial channel potentiation followed by rapid desensitization. The molecular mechanisms of TRPA1 Ca 2+ regulation and whether CaM plays a role remain elusive. We find that TRPA1 binds CaM best at basal Ca 2+ concentration, that they co-localize in resting cells, and that CaM suppresses TRPA1 activity. Combining biochemical, biophysical, modeling, NMR spectroscopy, and functional approaches, we identify an evolutionarily conserved, high-affinity CaM binding element in the distal TRPA1 C-terminus (DCTCaMBE). Genetic or biochemical perturbation of Ca 2+ /CaM binding to the TRPA1 DCTCaMBE yields hyperactive channels that exhibit drastic slowing of desensitization with no effect on potentiation. Ca 2+ /CaM TRPA1 regulation does not require the N-lobe, raising the possibility that CaM is not the Ca 2+ sensor, per se . Higher extracellular Ca 2+ can partially rescue slowed desensitization suggesting Ca 2+ /CaM binding to the TRPA1 DCTCaMBE primes an intrinsic TRPA1 Ca 2+ binding site that, upon binding Ca 2+ , triggers rapid desensitization. Collectively, our results identify a critical regulatory element in an unstructured TRPA1 region highlighting the importance of these domains, they reveal Ca 2+ /CaM is an essential TRPA1 auxiliary subunit required for rapid desensitization that establishes proper channel function with implications for all future TRPA1 work, and they uncover a mechanism for receptor regulation by Ca 2+ /CaM that expands the scope of CaM biology.

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