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  • Title: cDNA cloning and expression of the cardiac Na+/Ca2+ exchanger from Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) reveal a teleost membrane transporter with mammalian temperature dependence.
    Author: Marshall CR, Pan TC, Le HD, Omelchenko A, Hwang PP, Hryshko LV, Tibbits GF.
    Journal: J Biol Chem; 2005 Aug 12; 280(32):28903-11. PubMed ID: 15937330.
    Abstract:
    The complete cDNA sequence of the tilapia cardiac Na(+)/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX-TL1.0) was determined. The 3.1-kb transcript encodes a protein 957 amino acids in length, with a predicted signal peptide cleaved at residue 31 and two potential N-glycosylation sites in the extracellular N terminus. Hydropathy analysis and sequence comparison predicted a mature protein with nine transmembrane-spanning segments, consistent with the structural topologies of other known mammalian and teleost NCX isoforms. Overall sequence comparison shows high identity to both trout NCX-TR1.0 ( approximately 81%) and mammalian NCX1.1 ( approximately 73%), and phylogenetic analyses confirmed its identity as a member of the NCX1 gene family, expressing exons A, C, D, and F in the alternative splice site. Sequence identity is even higher in the alpha-repeats, the exchanger inhibitory peptide (XIP) site, and Ca(2+)-binding domains, which is reflected in the functional and regulatory properties of tilapia NCX-TL1.0. When NCX-TL1.0 was expressed in Xenopus oocytes and the currents were measured in giant excised patches, they displayed both positive regulation by Ca2+ and Na(+)-dependent inactivation in a manner similar to trout NCX-TR1.0. However, tilapia NCX-TL1.0 exhibited a relatively high sensitivity to temperature compared with trout NCX-TR1.0. Whereas trout NCX-TR1.0 currents displayed activation energies of approximately 7 kJ/mol, tilapia NCX-TL1.0 currents showed mammal-like temperature dependence, with peak and steady-state current activation energies of 53 +/- 9 and 67 +/- 21 kJ/mol, respectively. Using comparative sequence analysis, we highlighted 10 residue positions in the N-terminal domain of the NCX that, in combination, may confer exchanger temperature dependence through subtle changes in protein flexibility. Tilapia NCX-TL1.0 represents the first non-mammalian NCX to exhibit a mammalian temperature dependence phenotype and will prove to be a useful model in defining the interplay between molecular flexibility and stability in NCX function.
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