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KMID : 0620920200520121908
Experimental & Molecular Medicine
2020 Volume.52 No. 12 p.1908 ~ p.1925
Calsequestrin: a well-known but curious protein in skeletal muscle
Woo Jin-Seok

Jeong Seung-Yeon
Park Ji-Hee
Choi Jun-Hee
Lee Eun-Hui
Abstract
Calsequestrin (CASQ) was discovered in rabbit skeletal muscle tissues in 1971 and has been considered simply a passive Ca2+-buffering protein in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) that provides Ca2+ ions for various Ca2+ signals. For the past three decades, physiologists, biochemists, and structural biologists have examined the roles of the skeletal muscle type of CASQ (CASQ1) in skeletal muscle and revealed that CASQ1 has various important functions as (1) a major Ca2+-buffering protein to maintain the SR with a suitable amount of Ca2+ at each moment, (2) a dynamic Ca2+ sensor in the SR that regulates Ca2+ release from the SR to the cytosol, (3) a structural regulator for the proper formation of terminal cisternae, (4) a reverse-directional regulator of extracellular Ca2+ entries, and (5) a cause of human skeletal muscle diseases. This review is focused on understanding these functions of CASQ1 in the physiological or pathophysiological status of skeletal muscle.
KEYWORD
Calcium and vitamin D, Diseases, Physiology
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