Effects of trifluoperazine on calcium binding by calmodulin. A microcalorimetric study.
Microcalorimetric titrations of calmodulin with Ca2+ and trifluoperazine (TFP) at various molar ratios have been carried out at 25 degrees C and at pH 7. 0. Ca2+ binding to calmodulin produces heat (-delta H) in the presence of TFP, while heat is absorbed in the absence of TFP. The total heat produced by Ca2+ binding to all four sites is increased at increasing TFP-to-calmodulin ratios, attaining a plateau at about 7. These results indicate that at the higher ratios, the enthalpy changes (delta H) associated with Ca2+ binding are affected by TFP molecules bound at both high- and low-affinity sites. In addition, the Ca2+ binding reaction of the calmodulin-TFP complex is driven solely by a favorable enthalpy change of -27 kJ/ mol of site; the entropy change (delta S) is -35 J/ mol/K. These thermodynamic changes are opposite to those for TFP-free calmodulin and distinctly different from other Ca2+ binding proteins such as skeletal and cardiac troponin C and parvalbumin, where the reaction is driven by favorable changes of entropy as well as enthalpy.[1]References
- Effects of trifluoperazine on calcium binding by calmodulin. A microcalorimetric study. Tanokura, M., Yamada, K. J. Biol. Chem. (1985) [Pubmed]
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