Unconventional binding of Calmodulin to CHK2 kinase inhibits catalytic activity
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Abstract
ABSTRACT Calmodulin (CaM) serves an essential role in eukaryotic cells as a Ca 2+ sensor. Ca 2+ binding leads to conformation changes in CaM that enable engagement of a repertoire of enzymes and the regulation of their catalytic activities. Classically, Ca 2+ -CaM binds to an inhibitory pseudosubstrate sequence C-terminal to the kinase domain in members of the Ca 2+ -CaM dependent protein kinase (CAMK) family, and relieves inhibition to promote catalytic activity. Here, we report an unexpected mechanism by which CaM can bind CHK2 kinase to inhibit its kinase activity. Using biochemical, biophysical, structural mass spectrometry, and cellular approaches, we identify a direct interaction of Ca 2+ -CaM with the CHK2 kinase domain that suppresses CHK2 catalytic activity in vitro and is crucial for cell proliferation in human cells following DNA damage. Our findings add direct suppression of kinase activity to the repertoire of CaM’s functions, complementing the paradigmatic mechanism of promoting kinase activity through autoinhibitory domain sequestration.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00