Identification of a secretory granule-binding protein as caldesmon

Abstract
Stimulation of adrenal chromaffin cells results in a rise in the concentration of intracellular free calcium which initiates catecholamine secretion by exocytosis. An understanding of the molecular basis of exocytosis will require knowledge of the sites of action of calcium. A role for calmodulin has been implicated in secretion from chromaffin cells, and isolated granule membranes bind both calmodulin and a series of cytosolic proteins in a calcium-dependent fashion. Here, we demonstrate that one of the cytosolic granule-binding proteins with a relative molecular mass (Mr) of 70,000 (70K) is a form of the calmodulin-regulated actin-binding protein caldesmon, first isolated from smooth muscle. Cytoplasmic gels assembled from an adrenal medullary extract in the absence of Ca2+ contained actin and the 70K protein. The association of both of these proteins with the cytoplasmic gel was inhibited by a micromolar concentration of Ca2+. In addition, we have demonstrated that the 70K protein is localized at the periphery of chromaffin cells. These results are consistent with the notion that 70K protein (caldesmon) has a role in regulating the organization of actin filaments of the cell periphery during the secretory process.