Scientific Reports (Sep 2024)

Mint/X11 PDZ domains from non-bilaterian animals recognize and bind CaV2 calcium channel C-termini in vitro

  • Alicia N. Harracksingh,
  • Anhadvir Singh,
  • Tatiana D. Mayorova,
  • Brian Bejoy,
  • Jillian Hornbeck,
  • Wassim Elkhatib,
  • Gregor McEdwards,
  • Julia Gauberg,
  • Abdul Taha,
  • Ishrat Maliha Islam,
  • Ted Erclik,
  • Mark A. Currie,
  • Marcus Noyes,
  • Adriano Senatore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-70652-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 27

Abstract

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Abstract PDZ domain mediated interactions with voltage-gated calcium (CaV) channel C-termini play important roles in localizing membrane Ca2+ signaling. The first such interaction was described between the scaffolding protein Mint-1 and CaV2.2 in mammals. In this study, we show through various in silico analyses that Mint is an animal-specific gene with a highly divergent N-terminus but a strongly conserved C-terminus comprised of a phosphotyrosine binding domain, two tandem PDZ domains (PDZ-1 and PDZ-2), and a C-terminal auto-inhibitory element that binds and inhibits PDZ-1. In addition to CaV2 chanels, most genes that interact with Mint are also deeply conserved including amyloid precursor proteins, presenilins, neurexin, and CASK and Veli which form a tripartite complex with Mint in bilaterians. Through yeast and bacterial 2-hybrid experiments, we show that Mint and CaV2 channels from cnidarians and placozoans interact in vitro, and in situ hybridization revealed co-expression in dissociated neurons from the cnidarian Nematostella vectensis. Unexpectedly, the Mint orthologue from the ctenophore Hormiphora californiensis strongly bound the divergent C-terminal ligands of cnidarian and placozoan CaV2 channels, despite neither the ctenophore Mint, nor the placozoan and cnidarian orthologues, binding the ctenophore CaV2 channel C-terminus. Altogether, our analyses suggest that the capacity of Mint to bind CaV2 channels predates bilaterian animals, and that evolutionary changes in CaV2 channel C-terminal sequences resulted in altered binding modalities with Mint.