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Published March 1998 | public
Journal Article

Characterization of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II activity in the nervous system of the lobster, Panulirus interruptus.

Abstract

Nervous system tissue from Panulirus interruptus has an enzyme activity that behaves like calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM KII) This activity phosphorylates known targets of CaM KII, such as synapsin I and autocamtide 3. It is inhibited by a CaM KII-specific autoinhibitory domain peptide. In addition, this lobster brain activity displays calcium-independent activity after autophosphorylation, another characteristic of CaM KII. A cDNA from the lobster nervous system was amplified using polymerase chain reaction. The fragment was cloned and found to be structurally similar to CaM KII. Serum from rabbits immunized with a fusion protein containing part of this sequence immunoprecipitated a CaM KII enzyme activity and a family of phosphoproteins of the appropriate size for CaM KII subunits. Lobster CaM KII activity is found in the brain and stomatogastric nervous system including the commissural ganglia, commissures, stomatogastric ganglion and stomatogastric nerve. Immunoblot analysis of these same regions also identifies bands at an apparent molecular weight characteristic of CaM KII.

Additional Information

© 1998 Springer Verlag. Accepted 22 June 1998. T his work was initiated under the auspices of a Cornelius Wiersma Visiting Professorship to E.M. at Caltech in 1994. Research supported by a McKnight Foundation Development Award (EM), NS17813 (EM), GM54408 (LG), NS17660 (MK), and an Individual NRSA postdoctoral fellowship NS10356 (MW).

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023