[Frontiers in Bioscience 7, d671-683, March 1, 2002]

REGULATION OF CALCIUM RELEASE BY INTERDOMAIN INTERACTION WITHIN RYANODINE RECEPTORS

Noriaki Ikemoto 1, 2 and Takeshi Yamamoto 1

1 Boston Biomedical Research Institute, Watertown, MA, 2 Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Abstract
2. Excitation-contraction coupling and ryanodine receptors of skeletal and cardiac muscle
3. Various regulatory domains of the RyR
3.1. Domains involved in the interaction with the DHPR
3.2. Domains involved in the regulation of channel gating
3.3.Other important regulatory domains
4. Postulated interdomain interactions within the RyR
4.1. Global conformational change of the RyR
4.2. Local conformational changes in the II-III loop peptide-binding domain
4.3. Conformational changes in the signal transduction domains
4.4. Coordination of local conformational changes
5. Conclusions and perspectives
6. Acknowledgements
7. References

1. ABSTRACT

In excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling, various types of activation signals, which are received presumably at the bulky cytoplasmic domain of the ryanodine receptor (RyR), are translated (or transduced) into the opening of the Ca2+ release channel located in the trans-membrane domain of the RyR. In order to elucidate the detailed mechanism of the signal transduction process, it is essential (i) to identify various sub-domains of the RyR that are involved in the Ca2+ channel regulation, (ii) to characterize the events occurring in these sub-domains during the activation process, and (iii) to characterize the modes of active interactions among these sub-domains. Recent developments in the E-C coupling research have provided us with new insight into each of these aspects, as outlined in this review. Of many putative regulatory sub-domains of the RyR, two domains (designated as N-terminal domain and central domain) are particularly interesting, because disease-linked mutations that have occurred in these domains (malignant hyperthermia and central core disease in skeletal muscle, and inheritable cardiac disease) induce abnormal modes of Ca2+ channel regulation. Pieces of evidence accumulated to this date suggest the following hypothesis. The N-terminal and central domains form, at least partly, the interacting domain pair, and unzipping and zipping actions of such domain-pair are involved in the opening and closing actions of the Ca2+ channel, respectively. We also propose that there are local conformational changes in the signal reception domains (e.g. the II-III loop-binding core), and such conformational changes are coupled with the aforementioned actions of the interacting domain pair. It seems that by virtue of such a coordination of the events occurring in various regions of the RyR, the Ca2+ channel can recognize the activation signal received at the cytoplasmic region of the RyR.