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  • Review
  • Open Access
13 Citations
6,731 Views
15 Pages

Calmodulin and Calmodulin Binding Proteins in Dictyostelium: A Primer

  • Danton H. O’Day,
  • Ryan J. Taylor and
  • Michael A. Myre

11 February 2020

Dictyostelium discoideum is gaining increasing attention as a model organism for the study of calcium binding and calmodulin function in basic biological events as well as human diseases. After a short overview of calcium-binding proteins, the struct...

  • Review
  • Open Access
38 Citations
13,324 Views
19 Pages

Calcium Signalling in Heart and Vessels: Role of Calmodulin and Downstream Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinases

  • Sofia Beghi,
  • Malgorzata Furmanik,
  • Armand Jaminon,
  • Rogier Veltrop,
  • Nikolas Rapp,
  • Kanin Wichapong,
  • Elham Bidar,
  • Annamaria Buschini and
  • Leon J. Schurgers

17 December 2022

Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of death worldwide. The success of medication and other preventive measures introduced in the last century have not yet halted the epidemic of cardiovascular disease. Although the molecular mechanisms of the...

  • Review
  • Open Access
42 Citations
7,208 Views
16 Pages

5 October 2020

The integral role of calmodulin in the amyloid pathway and neurofibrillary tangle formation in Alzheimer’s disease was first established leading to the “Calmodulin Hypothesis”. Continued research has extended our insight into the ce...

  • Review
  • Open Access
34 Citations
4,610 Views
15 Pages

Calmodulin and Its Binding Proteins in Parkinson’s Disease

  • Anastasiia Bohush,
  • Wiesława Leśniak,
  • Serge Weis and
  • Anna Filipek

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that manifests with rest tremor, muscle rigidity and movement disturbances. At the microscopic level it is characterized by formation of specific intraneuronal inclusions, called Lewy bodies (L...

  • Review
  • Open Access
14 Citations
3,797 Views
16 Pages

A multifactorial syndrome, Alzheimer’s disease is the main cause of dementia, but there is no existing therapy to prevent it or stop its progression. One of the earliest events of Alzheimer’s disease is the disruption of calcium homeostas...

  • Review
  • Open Access
6 Citations
3,422 Views
15 Pages

15 April 2023

An increasing number of plant-based herbal treatments, dietary supplements, medical foods and nutraceuticals and their component phytochemicals are used as alternative treatments to prevent or slow the onset and progression of Alzheimer’s disea...

  • Brief Report
  • Open Access
18 Citations
3,616 Views
13 Pages

21 November 2022

Neurodegeneration leads to multiple early changes in cognitive, emotional, and social behaviours and ultimately progresses to dementia. The dysregulation of calcium is one of the earliest potentially initiating events in the development of neurodegen...

  • Article
  • Open Access
7 Citations
4,052 Views
20 Pages

Calmodulin Binding to Connexin 35: Specializations to Function as an Electrical Synapse

  • Jaya Aseervatham,
  • Xiaofan Li,
  • Cheryl K. Mitchell,
  • Ya-Ping Lin,
  • Ruth Heidelberger and
  • John O’Brien

1 September 2020

Calmodulin binding is a nearly universal property of gap junction proteins, imparting a calcium-dependent uncoupling behavior that can serve in an emergency to decouple a stressed cell from its neighbors. However, gap junctions that function as elect...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
1,846 Views
27 Pages

31 October 2024

Calmodulins (CaMs) and calmodulin-like proteins (CMLs) belong to families of calcium-sensors that act as calcium ion (Ca2+) signal-decoding proteins and regulate downstream target proteins. As a tropical halophyte, Canavalia rosea shows great resista...

  • Article
  • Open Access
8 Citations
4,624 Views
16 Pages

Oxidation of Methionine 77 in Calmodulin Alters Mouse Growth and Behavior

  • Méry Marimoutou,
  • Danielle A. Springer,
  • Chengyu Liu,
  • Geumsoo Kim and
  • Rodney L. Levine

13 October 2018

Methionine 77 in calmodulin can be stereospecifically oxidized to methionine sulfoxide by mammalian methionine sulfoxide reductase A. Whether this has in vivo significance is unknown. We therefore created a mutant mouse in which wild type calmodulin-...

  • Article
  • Open Access
36 Citations
4,331 Views
18 Pages

The Effect of Abiotic Stress Conditions on Expression of Calmodulin (CaM) and Calmodulin-Like (CML) Genes in Wild-Growing Grapevine Vitis amurensis

  • Alexandra S. Dubrovina,
  • Olga A. Aleynova,
  • Zlata V. Ogneva,
  • Andrey R. Suprun,
  • Alexey A. Ananev and
  • Konstantin V. Kiselev

13 December 2019

Plant calmodulins (CaMs) and calmodulin-like proteins (CMLs) are important plant Ca2+-binding proteins that sense and decode changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration arising in response to environmental stimuli. Protein Ca2+ sensors are presen...

  • Review
  • Open Access
17 Citations
6,201 Views
38 Pages

Pleiotropic Roles of Calmodulin in the Regulation of KRas and Rac1 GTPases: Functional Diversity in Health and Disease

  • Francesc Tebar,
  • Albert Chavero,
  • Neus Agell,
  • Albert Lu,
  • Carles Rentero,
  • Carlos Enrich and
  • Thomas Grewal

Calmodulin is a ubiquitous signalling protein that controls many biological processes due to its capacity to interact and/or regulate a large number of cellular proteins and pathways, mostly in a Ca2+-dependent manner. This complex interactome of cal...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
3,047 Views
17 Pages

9 May 2023

Calmodulins (CaMs) and Calmodulin-like proteins (CMLs) are vital in plant growth, development, and stress responses. However, CaMs and CMLs have not been fully identified and characterized in brown algae, which has been evolving independently of the...

  • Review
  • Open Access
10 Citations
3,878 Views
14 Pages

Anatomical and electrophysiological evidence that gap junctions and electrical coupling occur between neurons was initially confined to invertebrates and nonmammals and was thought to be a primitive form of synaptic transmission. More recent studies...

  • Article
  • Open Access
9 Citations
3,416 Views
14 Pages

Calmodulin is a small protein that binds Ca2+ ions via four EF-hand motifs. The Ca2+/calmodulin complex as well as Ca2+-free calmodulin regulate the activities of numerous enzymes and ion channels. Here, we used genetic and pharmacological tools to s...

  • Communication
  • Open Access
18 Citations
4,725 Views
9 Pages

Study on a Plasmonic Tilted Fiber Grating-Based Biosensor for Calmodulin Detection

  • Xiaoyong Chen,
  • Jie Jiang,
  • Nan Zhang,
  • Wenwei Lin,
  • Pin Xu and
  • Jinghua Sun

14 June 2021

Tilted fiber Bragg grating, which has the advantages of both fiber Bragg grating and long-period fiber grating, has been widely studied for sensing in many fields, especially in the field of biochemistry. Calmodulin, which has a wide distribution in...

  • Article
  • Open Access
7 Citations
4,146 Views
18 Pages

Calmodulin as Ca2+-Dependent Interactor of FTO Dioxygenase

  • Michał Marcinkowski,
  • Tomaš Pilžys,
  • Damian Garbicz,
  • Jan Piwowarski,
  • Kaja Przygońska,
  • Maria Winiewska-Szajewska,
  • Karolina Ferenc,
  • Oleksandr Skorobogatov,
  • Jarosław Poznański and
  • Elżbieta Grzesiuk

8 October 2021

FTO is an N6-methyladenosine demethylase removing methyl groups from nucleic acids. Several studies indicate the creation of FTO complexes with other proteins. Here, we looked for regulatory proteins recognizing parts of the FTO dioxygenase region. I...

  • Proceeding Paper
  • Open Access
2,260 Views
4 Pages

Calmodulin Antagonists as Potential Therapeutic Agents for Cancer Treatment “Breast Cancer”

  • Falah A. M. Salih,
  • Ahmad Zaidi Tani,
  • Vijay Kumar,
  • Janan Hadi and
  • David Mutanjun

6 December 2018

Although cancer research undergone a rapid expansion, there is no potential cure and the disease remains one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide. Breast cancer continues as the female malignancy and a major cause of death in middle-aged wome...

  • Review
  • Open Access
35 Citations
5,795 Views
22 Pages

The Crossroad of Ion Channels and Calmodulin in Disease

  • Janire Urrutia,
  • Alejandra Aguado,
  • Arantza Muguruza-Montero,
  • Eider Núñez,
  • Covadonga Malo,
  • Oscar Casis and
  • Alvaro Villarroel

Calmodulin (CaM) is the principal Ca2+ sensor in eukaryotic cells, orchestrating the activity of hundreds of proteins. Disease causing mutations at any of the three genes that encode identical CaM proteins lead to major cardiac dysfunction, revealing...

  • Perspective
  • Open Access
11 Citations
5,047 Views
10 Pages

Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses: Connecting Calcium Signalling through Calmodulin

  • Sabateeshan Mathavarajah,
  • Danton H. O’Day and
  • Robert J. Huber

29 October 2018

Despite the increased focus on the role of calcium in the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs, also known as Batten disease), links between calcium signalling and the proteins associated with the disease remain to be identified. A central protein in...

  • Review
  • Open Access
10 Citations
3,607 Views
21 Pages

Interaction of Calmodulin with TRPM: An Initiator of Channel Modulation

  • Kristyna Vydra Bousova,
  • Monika Zouharova,
  • Katerina Jiraskova and
  • Veronika Vetyskova

13 October 2023

Transient receptor potential melastatin (TRPM) channels, a subfamily of the TRP superfamily, constitute a diverse group of ion channels involved in mediating crucial cellular processes like calcium homeostasis. These channels exhibit complex regulati...

  • Article
  • Open Access
18 Citations
5,465 Views
17 Pages

Ca2+–Calmodulin Dependent Wound Repair in Dictyostelium Cell Membrane

  • Md. Shahabe Uddin Talukder,
  • Mst. Shaela Pervin,
  • Md. Istiaq Obaidi Tanvir,
  • Koushiro Fujimoto,
  • Masahito Tanaka,
  • Go Itoh and
  • Shigehiko Yumura

23 April 2020

Wound repair of cell membrane is a vital physiological phenomenon. We examined wound repair in Dictyostelium cells by using a laserporation, which we recently invented. We examined the influx of fluorescent dyes from the external medium and monitored...

  • Article
  • Open Access
6 Citations
2,866 Views
15 Pages

30 September 2020

Mechanobiology studies the means by which physical forces and mechanical properties change intra- or inter- biological macromolecules. Calmodulin (CaM) is involved in physiological activities and various metabolic processes in eukaryotic cells. Altho...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
873 Views
16 Pages

Plasma Calmodulin as a Biomarker of Subclinical Cardiovascular Disease in Pediatric Chronic Kidney Disease

  • Hsin-Jung Lee,
  • Wei-Ting Liao,
  • Chien-Ning Hsu,
  • You-Lin Tain and
  • Pei-Chen Lu

Background: Calmodulin is a calcium-signaling protein implicated in cardiac remodeling and could be released extracellularly. It was previously identified as differentially expressed in hypertensive pediatric chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study...

  • Review
  • Open Access
9 Citations
4,543 Views
15 Pages

11 November 2023

Seven major neurodegenerative diseases and their variants share many overlapping biomarkers that are calmodulin-binding proteins: Alzheimer’s disease (AD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), frontotemporal lobar dementia (FTD), Huntington&rsq...

  • Article
  • Open Access
9 Citations
3,460 Views
19 Pages

4 June 2022

Calmodulins (CAMs) and calmodulin-like proteins (CMLs) can participate in the regulation of various physiological processes via sensing and decoding Ca2+ signals. To reveal the characteristics of the CAM/CML family in Ginkgo biloba, a comprehensive a...

  • Review
  • Open Access
9 Citations
3,647 Views
27 Pages

2 December 2021

In the past four decades numerous findings have indicated that gap junction channel gating is mediated by intracellular calcium concentrations ([Ca2+i]) in the high nanomolar range via calmodulin (CaM). We have proposed a CaM-based gating model based...

  • Review
  • Open Access
16 Citations
6,925 Views
28 Pages

Regulation of Cardiac Cav1.2 Channels by Calmodulin

  • Masaki Kameyama,
  • Etsuko Minobe,
  • Dongxue Shao,
  • Jianjun Xu,
  • Qinghua Gao and
  • Liying Hao

Cav1.2 Ca2+ channels, a type of voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channel, are ubiquitously expressed, and the predominant Ca2+ channel type, in working cardiac myocytes. Cav1.2 channels are regulated by the direct interactions with calmodulin (CaM), a Ca2+-...

  • Review
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,032 Views
29 Pages

Calmodulin in Paramecium: Focus on Genomic Data

  • Eduardo Villalobo,
  • Gabriel Gutiérrez and
  • Antonio Villalobo

Calcium (Ca2+) is a universal second messenger that plays a key role in cellular signaling. However, Ca2+ signals are transduced with the help of Ca2+-binding proteins, which serve as sensors, transducers, and elicitors. Among the collection of these...

  • Review
  • Open Access
19 Citations
6,866 Views
17 Pages

10 September 2021

Calmodulin (CaM) is a small protein that acts as a ubiquitous signal transducer and regulates neuronal plasticity, muscle contraction, and immune response. It interacts with ion channels and plays regulatory roles in cellular electrophysiology. CaM m...

  • Review
  • Open Access
13 Citations
4,009 Views
25 Pages

The Calmodulin-Cork gating model is based on evidence for the direct role of calmodulin (CaM) in channel gating. Indeed, chemical gating of cell-to-cell channels is sensitive to nanomolar cytosolic calcium concentrations [Ca2+]i. Calmodulin inhibitor...

  • Review
  • Open Access
87 Citations
9,591 Views
18 Pages

Ca2+ ions play a key role in a wide variety of environmental responses and developmental processes in plants, and several protein families with Ca2+-binding domains have evolved to meet these needs, including calmodulin (CaM) and calmodulin-like prot...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
4,883 Views
17 Pages

PIRT the TRP Channel Regulating Protein Binds Calmodulin and Cholesterol-Like Ligands

  • Nicholas J. Sisco,
  • Dustin D. Luu,
  • Minjoo Kim and
  • Wade D. Van Horn

21 March 2020

Transient receptor potential (TRP) ion channels are polymodal receptors that have been implicated in a variety of pathophysiologies, including pain, obesity, and cancer. The capsaicin and heat sensor TRPV1, and the menthol and cold sensor TRPM8, have...

  • Review
  • Open Access
22 Citations
3,985 Views
20 Pages

Intraneuronal amyloid β (Aβ) oligomer accumulation precedes the appearance of amyloid plaques or neurofibrillary tangles and is neurotoxic. In Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-affected brains, intraneuronal Aβ oligomers can derive from Aβ peptide production...

  • Review
  • Open Access
15 Citations
3,213 Views
20 Pages

31 January 2024

Calcium dyshomeostasis is an early critical event in neurodegeneration as exemplified by Alzheimer’s (AD), Huntington’s (HD) and Parkinson’s (PD) diseases. Neuronal calcium homeostasis is maintained by a diversity of ion channels, b...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
7,626 Views
13 Pages

14 December 2011

Film bulk acoustic resonators (FBAR) are mass sensitive, label-free biosensors that allow monitoring of the interaction between biomolecules. In this paper we use the FBAR to measure the binding of calcium and the CaMKII peptide to calmodulin. Becaus...

  • Review
  • Open Access
36 Citations
5,919 Views
12 Pages

19 February 2020

Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous intracellular Ca2+ sensing protein that modifies gating of numerous ion channels. CaM has an extraordinarily high level of evolutionary conservation, which led to the fundamental assumption that mutation would be leth...

  • Article
  • Open Access
27 Citations
3,325 Views
13 Pages

Further Evidence of the Melatonin Calmodulin Interaction: Effect on CaMKII Activity

  • Jesús Argueta,
  • Héctor Solís-Chagoyán,
  • Rosa Estrada-Reyes,
  • Luis A. Constantino-Jonapa,
  • Julián Oikawa-Sala,
  • Javier Velázquez-Moctezuma and
  • Gloria Benítez-King

24 February 2022

Melatonin (MEL) is a pleiotropic indolamine that reaches multiple intracellular targets. Among these, MEL binds to calmodulin (CaM) with high affinity. In presence of Ca2+, CaM binds to CaM-dependent kinase II (CaMKII). The Ca2+-CaM/CaMKII pathway re...

  • Review
  • Open Access
22 Citations
7,413 Views
9 Pages

The ubiquitous calcium transducer calmodulin (CaM) plays a pivotal role in many cellular processes, regulating a myriad of structurally different target proteins. Indeed, it is unquestionable that CaM is the most relevant transductor of calcium signa...

  • Review
  • Open Access
57 Citations
7,938 Views
26 Pages

Structural Aspects and Prediction of Calmodulin-Binding Proteins

  • Corey Andrews,
  • Yiting Xu,
  • Michael Kirberger and
  • Jenny J. Yang

30 December 2020

Calmodulin (CaM) is an important intracellular protein that binds Ca2+ and functions as a critical second messenger involved in numerous biological activities through extensive interactions with proteins and peptides. CaM’s ability to adapt to...

  • Review
  • Open Access
4 Citations
1,356 Views
20 Pages

6 August 2025

Tauopathies are a diverse group of neurodegenerative diseases characterized by the presence of Tau inclusions in neurons and glia. Rather than the classic steps in the transformation of Tau into neurofibrillary tangles, as first studied in Alzheimer&...

  • Review
  • Open Access
75 Citations
11,824 Views
42 Pages

Calmodulin (CaM) is the principal Ca2+ sensor protein in all eukaryotic cells, that upon binding to target proteins transduces signals encoded by global or subcellular-specific changes of Ca2+ concentration within the cell. The Ca2+/CaM complex as we...

  • Review
  • Open Access
9 Citations
3,465 Views
17 Pages

Overexpression and mutations of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR/ErbB1/HER1) and other tyrosine kinase receptors of the ErbB family (ErbB2/HER2, ErbB3/HER3 and ErbB4/HER4) play an essential role in enhancing the proliferation, the migratory...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,995 Views
17 Pages

9 February 2021

Calmodulin (CaM) is an essential calcium-binding protein within eukaryotes. CaM binds to calmodulin-binding proteins (CaMBPs) and influences a variety of cellular and developmental processes. In this study, we used immunoprecipitation coupled with ma...

  • Article
  • Open Access
18 Citations
5,906 Views
12 Pages

The Amino-Terminal Domain of GRK5 Inhibits Cardiac Hypertrophy through the Regulation of Calcium-Calmodulin Dependent Transcription Factors

  • Daniela Sorriento,
  • Gaetano Santulli,
  • Michele Ciccarelli,
  • Angela Serena Maione,
  • Maddalena Illario,
  • Bruno Trimarco and
  • Guido Iaccarino

We have recently demonstrated that the amino-terminal domain of G protein coupled receptor kinase (GRK) type 5, (GRK5-NT) inhibits NFκB activity in cardiac cells leading to a significant amelioration of LVH. Since GRK5-NT is known to bind calmodulin,...

  • Review
  • Open Access
33 Citations
6,080 Views
37 Pages

Evidence that neighboring cells uncouple from each other as one dies surfaced in the late 19th century, but it took almost a century for scientists to start understanding the uncoupling mechanism (chemical gating). The role of cytosolic free calcium...

  • Article
  • Open Access
7 Citations
2,689 Views
13 Pages

Calmodulin as a Key Regulator of Exosomal Signal Peptides

  • Kenji Ono,
  • Mikio Niwa,
  • Hiromi Suzuki,
  • Nahoko Bailey Kobayashi,
  • Tetsuhiko Yoshida and
  • Makoto Sawada

30 December 2022

Signal peptides (SPs) and their fragments play important roles as biomarkers and substances with physiological functions in extracellular fluid. We previously reported that SP fragments were released into extracellular fluid via exosomes and bound to...

  • Proceeding Paper
  • Open Access
381 Views
9 Pages

LIFE.PTML Model Development Targeting Calmodulin Pathway Proteins

  • Maider Baltasar-Marchueta,
  • Naia López,
  • Sonia Arrasate,
  • Matthew M. Montemore and
  • Humberto González-Díaz

3 December 2025

Developing predictive models for drug efficacy is challenged by the complexity and heterogeneity of bioassay data. Here, we present LIFE.PTML, which is a methodology integrating drug Lifecycle (L), Information Fusion (IF), Encoding (E), Perturbation...

  • Review
  • Open Access
4 Citations
3,010 Views
10 Pages

16 November 2022

Retinal cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) ion channels bind to intracellular cGMP and mediate visual phototransduction in photoreceptor rod and cone cells. Retinal rod CNG channels form hetero-tetramers comprised of three CNGA1 and one CNGB1 protein subu...

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