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1.
G protein betagamma dimers can be phosphorylated in membranes from various tissues by GTP at a histidine residue in the beta subunit. The phosphate is high energetic and can be transferred onto GDP leading to formation of GTP. Purified Gbetagamma dimers do not display autophosphorylation, indicating the involvement of a separate protein kinase. We therefore enriched the Gbeta-phosphorylating activity present in preparations of the retinal G protein transducin and in partially purified G(i/o) proteins from bovine brain. Immunoblots, autophosphorylation, and enzymatic activity measurements demonstrated enriched nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK) B in both preparations, together with residual Gbetagamma dimers. In the retinal NDPK B-enriched fractions, a Gbeta-specific antiserum co-precipitated phosphorylated NDPK B, and an antiserum against the human NDPK co-precipitated phosphorylated Gbetagamma. In addition, the NDPK-containing fractions from bovine brain reconstituted the phosphorylation of purified Gbetagamma. For identification of the phosphorylated histidine residue, bovine brain Gbetagamma and G(t)betagamma were thiophosphorylated with guanosine 5'-O-(3-[(35)S]thio)triphosphate, followed by digestion with endoproteinase Glu-C and trypsin, separation of the resulting peptides by gel electrophoresis and high pressure liquid chromatography, respectively, and sequencing of the radioactive peptides. The sequence information produced by both methods identified specific labeled fragments of bovine Gbeta(1) that overlapped in the heptapeptide, Leu-Met-Thr-Tyr-Ser-His-Asp (amino acids 261-267). We conclude that NDPK B forms complexes with Gbetagamma dimers and contributes to G protein activation by increasing the high energetic phosphate transfer onto GDP via intermediately phosphorylated His-266 in Gbeta(1) subunits.  相似文献   

2.
cAMP receptor 1 and G-protein alpha-subunit 2 null cell lines (car1- and g alpha 2-) were examined to assess the roles that these two proteins play in cAMP stimulated adenylyl cyclase activation in Dictyostelium. In intact wild-type cells, cAMP stimulation elicited a rapid activation of adenylyl cyclase that peaked in 1-2 min and subsided within 5 min; in g alpha 2- cells, this activation did not occur; in car1- cells an activation occurred but it rose and subsided more slowly. cAMP also induced a persistent activation of adenylyl cyclase in growth stage cells that contain only low levels of cAMP receptor 1 (cAR1). In lysates of untreated wild-type, car1-, or g alpha 2- cells, guanosine 5'-O-'(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) produced a similar 20-fold increase in adenylyl cyclase activity. Brief treatment of intact cells with cAMP reduced this activity by 75% in control and g alpha 2- cells but by only 8% in the car1- cells. These observations suggest several conclusions regarding the cAMP signal transduction system. 1) cAR1 and another cAMP receptor are linked to activation of adenylyl cyclase in intact cells. Both excitation signals require G alpha 2. 2) cAR1 is required for normal adaptation of adenylyl cyclase. The adaptation reaction caused by cAR1 is not mediated via G alpha 2. 3) Neither cAR1 nor G alpha 2 is required for GTP gamma S-stimulation of adenylyl cyclase in cell lysates. The adenylyl cyclase is directly coupled to an as yet unidentified G-protein.  相似文献   

3.
Mutational replacement of glutamine-227 with a leucine residue in the GTP-binding domain of the alpha subunit of GS (Q227L alpha S) reduces its ability to hydrolyse GTP and causes constitutive activation of the mutant protein. Expression in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts of Q227L alpha S caused markedly increased basal adenylyl cyclase activity, enhanced intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation and increased mitogenic sensitivity in response to forskolin and the potent phosphodiesterase inhibitor Ro 20-1724. These results support a role for cAMP in the regulation of cell proliferation, and suggest that alterations in a G protein can directly modify the ability of cells to respond mitogenically to extracellular factors.  相似文献   

4.
The Gs protein alpha subunit, alpha s, stimulates the activity of adenylyl cyclase. The sequence 223Asp-Val-Gly-Gly-Gln227 in the alpha s polypeptide is predicted to interact with the gamma-phosphate of GTP and mediate the conformational change involved in alpha s activation. Mutation of the alpha s polypeptide within this region at Gly225----Thr had two demonstrative phenotypic effects when expressed in COS-1 cells: the mutant alpha s chain was ineffective in activating adenylyl cyclase and inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner the beta-adrenergic receptor stimulation of cAMP synthesis. Thus, the Gly225----Thr mutation alters the ability of GTP to activate the alpha s chain and when overexpressed the mutant polypeptide exerts a dominant negative phenotype. Mutation at the amino terminus which creates a constitutively active alpha s rescued the inhibited state of the Gly225----Thr mutant when both mutations were encoded in the same polypeptide. This finding defines the amino terminus as a functional regulatory domain controlling the properties of the GTP/GDP binding site of G protein alpha subunit polypeptide chains.  相似文献   

5.
β-adrenoceptors (βAR) play a central role in the regulation of cAMP synthesis and cardiac contractility. Nucleoside diphosphate kinase B (NDPK B) regulates cAMP signalling by complex formation with Gβγ dimers thereby activating and stabilizing heterotrimeric Gs proteins, key transducer of βAR signals into the cell. Here, we explored the requirement of NDPK B for basal and βAR-stimulated cAMP synthesis and analysed the underlying mechanisms by comparing wild-type NDPK B (WT) and its catalytically inactive H118N mutant. Stable overexpression of both WT- and H118N-NDPK B in cardiomyocyte derived H10 cells increased the plasma membrane content of Gs and caveolin-1 and thus enhanced the isoproterenol (ISO)-stimulated cAMP-synthesis by about 2-fold. Conversely, the loss of NDPK B in embryonic fibroblasts from NDPK A/B-depleted mice was associated with a severe reduction in membranous Gs protein and carveolin-1 content causing a marked decrease in basal and ISO-induced cAMP formation. Re-expression of NDPK B, but not of NDPK A, was able to rescue this phenotype. Both, re-expression of WT- and H118N-NDPK B induced the re-appearance of Gs and caveolin-1 at the plasma membrane to a similar extent. Accordingly, WT- and H118N-NDPK B similarly enhanced ISO-induced cAMP formation. In contrast, the catalytically inactive H118N-NDPK B was less potent and less effective in rescuing basal cAMP production. Identical results were obtained in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes after siRNA-induced knockdown and adenoviral re-expression of NDPK B.Our data reveal that NDPK B regulates Gs function by two different mechanisms. The complex formation of NDPK B with Gs is required for the stabilization of the G protein content at the plasma membrane. In addition, the NDPK B-dependent phosphotransfer reaction, which requires the catalytic activity, specifically allows a receptor-independent, basal Gs activation.  相似文献   

6.
The activation of heterotrimeric G proteins induced by G protein coupled receptors (GPCR) is generally believed to occur by a GDP/GTP exchange at the G protein α -subunit. Nevertheless, nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK) and the β-subunit of G proteins (Gβ) participate in G protein activation by phosphate transfer reactions leading to the formation of GTP from GDP. Recent work elucidated the role of these reactions. Apparently, the NDPK isoform B (NDPK B) forms a complex with β; γ; dimers in which NDPK B acts as a histidine kinase phosphorylating G#x03B2; at His266. Out of this high energetic phosphoamidate bond the phosphate can be transferred specifically onto GDP. The formed GTP binds to the G protein α -subunit and thus activates the respective G protein. Evidence is presented, that this process occurs independent of the classical GPCR-induced GTP/GTP exchange und thus contributes, e.g. to the regulation of basal cAMP synthesis in cells.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Progesterone induces the resumption of meiosis (maturation) in Xenopus oocytes through a nongenomic mechanism involving inhibition of an oocyte adenylyl cyclase and reduction of intracellular cAMP. However, progesterone action in Xenopus oocytes is not blocked by pertussis toxin, and this finding indicates that the inhibition of the oocyte adenylyl cyclase is not mediated by the alpha subunits of classical G(i)-type G proteins. RESULTS: To investigate the possibility that G protein betagamma subunits, rather than alpha subunits, play a key role in regulating oocyte maturation, we have employed two structurally distinct G protein betagamma scavengers (G(t)alpha and betaARK-C(CAAX)) to sequester free Gbetagamma dimers. We demonstrated that the injection of mRNA encoding either of these Gbetagamma scavengers induced oocyte maturation. The Gbetagamma scavengers bound an endogenous, membrane-associated Gbeta subunit, indistinguishable from Xenopus Gbeta1 derived from mRNA injection. The injection of Xenopus Gbeta1 mRNA, together with bovine Ggamma2 mRNA, elevated oocyte cAMP levels and inhibited progesterone-induced oocyte maturation. CONCLUSION: An endogenous G protein betagamma dimer, likely including Xenopus Gbeta1, is responsible for maintaining oocyte meiosis arrest. Resumption of meiosis is induced by Gbetagamma scavengers in vitro or, naturally, by progesterone via a mechanism that suppresses the release of Gbetagamma.  相似文献   

8.
In a yeast two-hybrid screen of mouse brain cDNA library, using the N-terminal region of human type V adenylyl cyclase (hACV) as bait, we identified G protein beta2 subunit as an interacting partner. Additional yeast two-hybrid assays showed that the Gbeta(1) subunit also interacts with the N-terminal segments of hACV and human type VI adenylyl cyclase (hACVI). In vitro adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity assays using membranes of Sf9 cells expressing hACV or hACVI showed that Gbetagamma subunits enhance the activity of these enzymes provided either Galpha(s) or forskolin is present. Deletion of residues 77-151, but not 1-76, in the N-terminal region of hACVI obliterated the ability of Gbetagamma subunits to conditionally stimulate the enzyme. Likewise, activities of the recombinant, engineered, soluble forms of ACV and ACVI, which lack the N termini, were not enhanced by Gbetagamma subunits. Transfection of the C terminus of G protein receptor kinase 2 to sequester endogenous Gbetagamma subunits attenuated the ability of isoproterenol to increase cAMP accumulation in COS-7 cells overexpressing hACVI even when G(i) was inactivated by pertussis toxin. Therefore, we conclude that the N termini of human hACV and hACVI are necessary for interactions with, and regulation by, Gbetagamma subunits both in vitro and in intact cells. Moreover, Gbetagamma subunits derived from a source(s) other than G(i) are necessary for the full activation of hACVI by isoproterenol in intact cells.  相似文献   

9.
The Dictyostelium discoideum developmental program is initiated by starvation and its progress depends on G-protein-regulated transmembrane signaling. Disruption of the Dictyostelium G-protein alpha-subunit G alpha 3 (g alpha 3-) blocks development unless the mutant is starved in the presence of artificial cAMP pulses. The function of G alpha 3 was investigated by examining the expression of several components of the cAMP transmembrane signaling system in the g alpha 3- mutant. cAMP receptor 1 protein, cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase, phosphodiesterase inhibitor, and aggregation-stage adenylyl cyclase mRNA expression were absent or greatly reduced when cells were starved without exogenously applied pulses of cAMP. However, cAMP receptor 1 protein and aggregation-stage adenylyl cyclase mRNA expression were restored by starving the g alpha 3- cells in the presence of exogenous cAMP pulses. Adenylyl cyclase activity was also reduced in g alpha 3- cells starved without exogenous cAMP pulses compared with similarly treated wild-type cells but was elevated to a level twofold greater than wild-type cells in g alpha 3- cells starved in the presence of exogenous cAMP pulses. These results suggest that G alpha 3 is essential in early development because it controls the expression of components of the transmembrane signaling system.  相似文献   

10.
The 5-HT1A receptor is implicated in depression and anxiety. This receptor couples to G(i) proteins to inhibit adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity but can stimulate AC in tissues (e.g. hippocampus) that express ACII. The role of ACII in receptor-mediated stimulation of cAMP formation was examined in HEK-293 cells transfected with the 5-HT1A receptor, which mediated inhibition of basal and G(s)-induced cAMP formation in the absence of ACII. In cells cotransfected with 5-HT1A receptor and ACII plasmids, 5-HT1A agonists induced a 1. 5-fold increase in cAMP level. Cotransfection of 5-HT1A receptor, ACII, and Galpha(i2), but not Galpha(i1), Galpha(i3), or Galpha(o), resulted in an agonist-independent 6-fold increase in the basal cAMP level, suggesting that G(i2) preferentially coupled the receptor to ACII. The 5-HT1B receptor also constitutively activated ACII. Constitutive activity of the 5-HT1A receptor was blocked by pertussis toxin and the Gbetagamma antagonist, betaCT, suggesting an important role for Gbetagamma-mediated activation of ACII. The Thr-149 --> Ala mutation in the second intracellular domain of the 5-HT1A receptor disrupted Gbetagamma-selective activation of ACII. Spontaneous 5-HT1A receptor activity was partially attenuated by 5-HT1A receptor partial agonists with anxiolytic activity (e.g. buspirone and flesinoxan) but was not altered by full agonists or antagonists. Thus, anxiolytic activity may involve inhibition of spontaneous 5-HT1A receptor activity.  相似文献   

11.
A Ser to Asn mutation at position 54 of the alpha subunit of G(s) (designated N54-alpha(s)) was characterized after transient expression of it with various components of the receptor-adenylyl cyclase pathway in COS-1, COS-7, and HEK 293 cells. Previous studies of the N54-alpha(s) mutant revealed that it has a conditional dominant negative phenotype that prevents hormone-stimulated increases in cAMP without interfering with the regulation of basal cAMP levels (Cleator, J. H., Mehta, N. D., Kurtz, D. K., Hildebrandt, J. D. (1999) FEBS Lett. 243, 205-208). Experiments reported here were conducted to localize the mechanism of the dominant negative effect of the mutant. Competition studies conducted with activated alpha(s)* (Q212L) showed that the N54 mutant did not work down-stream by blocking the interaction of endogenous alpha(s) with adenylyl cyclase. The co-expression of wild type or N54-alpha(s) along with the thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) receptor and adenylyl cyclase isotypes differing with respect to betagamma stimulation (AC II or AC III) revealed that the phenotype of the mutant is not dependent upon the presence of adenylyl cyclase isoforms regulated by betagamma. These studies ruled out a downstream site of action of the mutant. To investigate an upstream site of action, N54-alpha(s) was co-expressed with either the TSH receptor that activates both alpha(s) and alpha(q) or with the alpha(1B)-adrenergic receptor that activates only alpha(q). N54-alpha(s) failed to inhibit alpha(1B)-adrenergic receptor stimulation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate production but did inhibit TSH stimulation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate. These results show that G(s) and G(q) compete for activation by the TSH receptor. They also indicate that the N54 protein has a dominant negative phenotype by blocking upstream receptor interactions with normal G proteins. This phenotype is different from that seen in analogous mutants of other G protein alpha subunits and suggests that either regulation or protein-protein interactions differ among G protein alpha subunits.  相似文献   

12.
Gill A  Hammes SR 《Steroids》2007,72(2):117-123
In nearly every vertebrate species, elevated intracellular cAMP maintains oocytes in prophase I of meiosis. Prior to ovulation, gonadotropins trigger various intra-ovarian processes, including the breakdown of gap junctions, the activation of EGF receptors, and the secretion of steroids. These events in turn decrease intracellular cAMP levels in select oocytes to allow meiotic progression, or maturation, to resume. Studies suggest that cAMP levels are kept elevated in resting oocytes by constitutive G protein signaling, and that the drop in intracellular cAMP that accompanies maturation may be due in part to attenuation of this inhibitory G protein-mediated signaling. Interestingly, one of these G protein regulators of meiotic arrest is the Galpha(s) protein, which stimulates adenylyl cyclase to raise intracellular cAMP in two important animal models of oocyte development: Xenopus leavis frogs and mice. In addition to G(alpha)(s), constitutive Gbetagamma activity similarly stimulates adenylyl cyclase to raise cAMP and prevent maturation in Xenopus oocytes; however, the role of Gbetagamma in regulating meiosis in mouse oocytes has not been examined. Here we show that Gbetagamma does not contribute to the maintenance of murine oocyte meiotic arrest. In fact, contrary to observations in frog oocytes, Gbetagamma signaling in mouse oocytes reduces cAMP and promotes oocyte maturation, suggesting that Gbetagamma might in fact play a positive role in promoting oocyte maturation. These observations emphasize that, while many general concepts and components of meiotic regulation are conserved from frogs to mice, specific differences exist that may lead to important insights regarding ovarian development in vertebrates.  相似文献   

13.
Platelet responses at sites of vascular injury are regulated by intracellular cAMP levels, which rise rapidly when prostacyclin (PGI(2)) is released from endothelial cells. Platelet agonists such as ADP and epinephrine suppress PGI(2)-stimulated cAMP formation by activating receptors coupled to G(i) family members, four of which are present in platelets. To address questions about the specificity of receptor:G protein coupling, the regulation of cAMP formation in vivo and the contribution of G(i)-mediated pathways that do not involve adenylyl cyclase, we studied platelets from mice that lacked the alpha subunits of one or more of the three most abundantly expressed G(i) family members and compared the results with platelets from mice that lacked the PGI(2) receptor, IP. As reported previously, loss of G(i2)alpha or G(z)alpha inhibited aggregation in response to ADP and epinephrine, respectively, producing defects that could not be reversed by adding an adenylyl cyclase inhibitor. Platelets that lacked both G(i2)alpha and G(z)alpha showed impaired responses to both agonists, but the impairment was no greater than in the individual knockouts. Loss of G(i3)alpha had no effect either alone or in combination with G(z)alpha. Loss of either G(z)alpha or G(i2)alpha impaired the ability of ADP and epinephrine to inhibit PGI(2)-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity and caused a 40%-50% rise in basal cAMP levels, whereas loss of G(i3)alpha did not. Conversely, deletion of IP abolished responses to PGI(2) and caused cAMP levels to fall by 30%, effects that did not translate into enhanced responsiveness to agonists ex vivo. From these results we conclude that 1) cAMP levels in circulating platelets reflect ongoing signaling through G(i2), G(z), and IP, but not G(i3); 2) platelet epinephrine (alpha(2A)-adrenergic) and ADP (P2Y12) receptors display strong preferences among G(i) family members with little evidence of redundancy; and 3) these receptor preferences do not extend to G(i3). Finally, the failure of ADP and epinephrine to inhibit basal, as opposed to PGI(2)-stimulated, cAMP formation highlights the need during platelet activation for G(i) signaling pathways that involve effectors other than adenylyl cyclase.  相似文献   

14.
The alpha subunit polypeptides of the G proteins Gs and Gi2 stimulate and inhibit adenylyl cyclase, respectively. The alpha s and alpha i2 subunits are 65% homologous in amino acid sequence but have highly conserved GDP/GTP binding domains. Previously, we mapped the functional adenylyl cyclase activation domain to a 122 amino acid region in the COOH-terminal moiety of the alpha s polypeptide (Osawa et al: Cell 63:697-706, 1990). The NH2-terminal half of the alpha s polypeptide encodes domains regulating beta gamma interactions and GDP dissociation. A series of chimeric cDNAs having different lengths of the NH2- or COOH-terminal coding sequence of alpha s substituted with the corresponding alpha i2 sequence were used to introduce multi-residue non-conserved mutations in different domains of the alpha s polypeptide. Mutation of either the amino- or carboxy-terminus results in an alpha s polypeptide which constitutively activates cAMP synthesis when expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells. The activated alpha s polypeptides having mutations in either the NH2- or COOH-terminus demonstrate an enhanced rate of GTP gamma S activation of adenylyl cyclase. In membrane preparations from cells expressing the various alpha s mutants, COOH-terminal mutants, but not NH2-terminal alpha s mutants markedly enhance the maximal stimulation of adenylyl cyclase by GTP gamma S and fluoride ion. Neither mutation at the NH2- nor COOH-terminus had an effect on the GTPase activity of the alpha s polypeptides. Thus, mutation at NH2- and COOH-termini influence the rate of alpha s activation, but only the COOH-terminus appears to be involved in the regulation of the alpha s polypeptide activation domain that interacts with adenylyl cyclase.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Synthesis in Escherichia coli of GTPase-deficient mutants of Gs alpha   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
We have reduced the GTPase activity of the alpha subunit of Gs, the guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein that stimulates adenylyl cyclase, by introduction of point mutations analogous to those described in p21ras. Mutants G49V and Q227L differ from the wild type protein in the substitution of Val for Gly49 and Leu for Gln227, respectively (analogous to positions 12 and 61 in p21ras). Wild type and mutant proteins were synthesized in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized. The rate constants for dissociation of GDP from G49V recombinant Gs alpha (rGs alpha) (0.47/min) and Q227L rGs alpha (0.23/min) differ by no more than 2-fold from that observed for the wild type protein (0.5/min). In marked contrast, the rate constants for hydrolysis of GTP by G49V rGs alpha (0.78/min) and Q227L rGs alpha (0.03-0.06/min) are 4-fold and roughly 100-fold slower than that for wild type rGs alpha (3.5/min). These reductions in the rate of hydrolysis of GTP result in significant fractional occupancy of these proteins by GTP in the presence of the nucleotide, 0.37 for G49V rGs alpha and 0.78 for Q227L rGs alpha, compared to 0.05 for wild type rGs alpha. When reconstituted with cyc- (Gs alpha-deficient) S49 cell membranes or purified adenylyl cyclase, both mutant proteins stimulate adenylyl cyclase activity in the presence of GTP to a much greater extent than does wild type Gs alpha; their maximal ability to activate the enzyme is largely unaltered. The fractional ability of a given Gs alpha polypeptide to active adenylyl cyclase in the presence of GTP correlates well with the fractinal occupancy of the protein by the nucleotide. The mutant subunits appear to interact normally with G protein beta gamma subunits, and their ability to activate adenylyl cyclase is enhanced by interaction with beta-adrenergic receptors. These results indicate that the structural analogy that has been inferred between the guanine nucleotide-binding domains of G proteins and the p21ras family is at least generally correct. They also provide confirmation of the kinetic model of G protein function and document mutations that permit the expression in vivo of constitutively activated G protein alpha subunits.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Progesterone-induced oocyte maturation is thought to involve the inhibition of an oocyte adenylyl cyclase and reduction of intracellular cAMP. Our previous studies demonstrated that injection of inhibitors of G protein betagamma complex induces hormone-independent oocyte maturation. In contrast, over-expression of Xenopus Gbeta1 (xGbeta1), alone or together with bovine Ggamma2, elevates oocyte cAMP and inhibits progesterone-induced oocyte maturation. To further investigate the mechanism of Gbetagamma-induced oocyte maturation, we generated a mutant xGbeta1, substituting Asp-228 for Gly (D228G). An equivalent mutation in the mammalian Gbeta1 results in the loss of its ability to activate adenylyl cyclases. Indeed, co-injection of xGbeta1D228G with Ggamma2 failed to increase oocyte cAMP or inhibit progesterone-induced oocyte maturation. To directly demonstrate that oocytes contained a Gbetagamma-regulated adenylyl cyclase, we analyzed cAMP formation in vitro by using oocyte membrane preparations. Purified brain Gbetagamma complexes significantly activated membrane-bound adenylyl cyclase activities. Multiple adenylyl cyclase isoforms were identified in frog oocytes by PCR using degenerate primers corresponding to highly conserved catalytic amino acid sequences. Among these we identified a partial Xenopus adenylyl cyclase 7 (xAC7) that was 65% identical in amino acid sequence to human AC7. A dominant-negative mutant of xAC7 induced hormone-independent oocyte maturation and accelerated progesterone-induced oocyte maturation. Theses findings suggest that xAC7 is a major component of the G2 arrest mechanism in Xenopus oocytes.  相似文献   

19.
The heterotrimeric G protein, G2, from the eukaryotic organism Dictyostelium discoideum participates in signal transduction pathways which are essential to Dictyostelium's developmental life cycle. G2 is activated by cell surface cAMP receptors and in turn is required for the activation of a host of effectors, including adenylyl cyclase, guanylyl cyclase, and phospholipase C. Myristoylation of G protein alpha-subunits is known to affect alpha-subunit association with the beta gamma subunits and membrane localization. The putative site for N-terminal myristoylation of G alpha 2 was mutated from Gly to Ala (G2A) and expressed in the g alpha 2-null cell line, MYC2. Transformants expressing G alpha 2-G2A exhibit physiological and biochemical changes from wild-type cells. G alpha 2-G2A expressing cells fail to rescue the aggregation-minus phenotype of MYC2 cells on developmental agar plates. G alpha 2-G2A expressing cells are also not chemotactic to cAMP in a standard drop assay. G alpha 2-WT is found in both the pellet and supernatant fractions following lysis of the cells. G alpha 2-G2A however is found almost exclusively in the lysate supernatant. G alpha 2 is radiolabeled upon incubation of cells in [3H]myristate, while G alpha 2-G2A is not labeled. Examination of activation of the effectors adenylyl cyclase and guanylyl cyclase reveals that G alpha 2-G2A expressing cells partially activate adenylyl cyclase but show no cAMP-stimulation of guanylyl cyclase. The physiological deviations from wild-type can be explained by the variations in effector activation, possibly due to improper localization of the non-myristoylated G alpha 2-G2A to the cytosol.  相似文献   

20.
Mutational replacements of specific residues in the GTP-binding pocket of the 21-kDa ras proteins (p21ras) reduce their GTPase activity. To test the possibility that the cognate regions of G protein alpha chains participate in GTP binding and hydrolysis, we compared signaling functions of normal and mutated alpha chains (termed alpha s) of Gs, the stimulatory regulator of adenylyl cyclase. alpha s chains were expressed in an alpha s-deficient S49 mouse lymphoma cell line, cyc-. alpha s in which leucine replaces glutamine 227 (corresponding to glutamine 61 of p21ras) constitutively activates adenylyl cyclase and reduces the kcat for GTP hydrolysis more than 100-fold. There is a smaller reduction in GTPase activity in another mutant in which valine replaces glycine 49 (corresponding to glycine 12 of p21ras). This mutant alpha s is a poor activator of adenylyl cyclase. Moreover, the glycine 49 protein, unlike normal alpha s, is not protected against tryptic cleavage by hydrolysis resistant GTP analogs; this finding suggests impairment of the mutant protein's ability to attain the active (GTP-bound) conformation. We conclude that alpha s residues near glutamine 227 and glycine 49 participate in binding and hydrolysis of GTP, although the GTP binding regions of alpha s and p21ras are not identical.  相似文献   

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