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1.
2.
The rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase type 1 (ROS-GC1), originally identified in the photoreceptor outer segments, is a member of the subfamily of Ca(2+)-modulated membrane guanylate cyclases. In phototransduction, its activity is tightly regulated by its two Ca(2+)-sensor protein parts, GCAP1 and GCAP2. This study maps the GCAP2-modulatory site in ROS-GC1 through the use of multiple techniques involving surface plasmon resonance binding studies with soluble ROS-GC1 constructs, coimmunoprecipitation, functional reconstitution experiments with deletion mutants, and peptide competition assays. The findings show that the sequence motif of the core GCAP2-modulatory site is Y965-N981 of ROS-GC1. The site is distinct from the GCAP1-modulatory site. It, however, partially overlaps with the S100B-regulatory site. This indicates that the Y965-N981 motif tightly controls the Ca(2+)-dependent specificity of ROS-GC1. Identification of the site demonstrates an intriguing topographical feature of ROS-GC1. This is that the GCAP2 module transmits the Ca(2+) signals to the catalytic domain from its C-terminal side and the GCAP1 module from the distant N-terminal side.  相似文献   

3.
Duda T  Pertzev A  Sharma RK 《Biochemistry》2012,51(23):4650-4657
Photoreceptor ROS-GC1 (rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase) is a vital component of phototransduction. It is a bimodal Ca(2+) signal transduction switch, operating between 20 and ~1000 nM. Modulated by Ca(2+) sensors guanylate cyclase activating proteins 1 and 2 (GCAP1 and GCAP2, respectively), decreasing [Ca(2+)](i) from 200 to 20 nM progressively turns it "on", as does the modulation by the Ca(2+) sensor S100B, increasing [Ca(2+)](i) from 100 to 1000 nM. The GCAP mode plays a vital role in phototransduction in both rods and cones and the S100B mode in the transmission of neural signals to cone ON-bipolar cells. Through a programmed domain deletion, expression, in vivo fluorescence spectroscopy, and in vitro reconstitution experiments, this study demonstrates that the biochemical mechanisms modulated by two GCAPs in Ca(2+) signaling of ROS-GC1 activity are totally different. (1) They involve different structural domains of ROS-GC1. (2) Their signal migratory pathways are opposite: GCAP1 downstream and GCAP2 upstream. (3) Importantly, the isolated catalytic domain, translating the GCAP-modulated Ca(2+) signal into the generation of cyclic GMP, in vivo, exists as a homodimer, the two subunits existing in an antiparallel conformation. Furthermore, the findings demonstrate that the N-terminally placed signaling helix domain is not required for the catalytic domain's dimeric state. The upstream GCAP2-modulated pathway is the first of its kind to be observed for any member of the membrane guanylate cyclase family. It defines a new model of Ca(2+) signal transduction.  相似文献   

4.
Guanylate cyclase activating proteins (GCAPs) serve as neuronal Ca2+-sensor proteins in vertebrate rod and cone photoreceptor cells. Zebrafish express in their retina a variety of six different GCAPs, of which four are specific for cone cells. One isoform, zGCAP4, is mainly expressed in double cones and long single cones. We cloned the zGCAP4 gene, purified non-myristoylated and myristoylated forms of the protein after heterologous expression in Escherichia coli and studied its properties: zGCAP4 was a strong activator of membrane-bound guanylate cyclases from bovine and zebrafish retina, showing half-maximal activation at 520–570 nM free Ca2+ concentration. Furthermore, the Ca2+-sensitive activation properties of non-myristoylated and myristoylated zGCAP4 were similar, indicating no influence of the myristoyl moiety on Ca2+-sensor function. Myristoylated zGCAP4 showed low affinity for membranes and did not exhibit a Ca2+–myristoyl switch, a feature typical of some but not all neuronal Ca2+-sensor proteins. However, tryptophan fluorescence studies and Ca2+-dependent differences in protease accessibility revealed Ca2+-induced conformational changes in myristoylated and non-myristoylated zGCAP4, indicating the operation as a Ca2+ sensor. Thus, expression and biochemical properties of zGCAP4 are in agreement with its function as an efficient Ca2+-sensitive regulator of guanylate cyclase activity in cone vision.  相似文献   

5.
Light activation of guanylate cyclase at different calcium concentrations was studied in the rod outer segments of the toad retina. The enzyme becomes sensitive to calcium ions after a flash of light, showing an enhancement of its activity when Ca2+ concentration is lowered from 10(-4) M to 10(-8) M. A possible pathway of guanylate cyclase activation by light was also investigated by means of the antibody 4A to transducin. When added in excess to transducin, the antibody inhibits light activation of phosphodiesterase as well as of cyclase, suggesting a possible coupling of the two enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
Rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase (ROS-GC) transduction system is a central component of the Ca(2+)-sensitive phototransduction machinery. The system is composed of two parts: Ca(2+) sensor guanylate cyclase activating protein (GCAP) and ROS-GC. GCAP senses Ca(2+) impulses and inhibits the cyclase. This operational feature of the cyclase is considered to be unique and exclusive in the phototransduction machinery. A combination of reconstitution, peptide competition, cross-linking, and immunocytochemical studies has been used in this study to show that the GCAP1/ROS-GC1 transduction system also exists in the photoreceptor synaptic (presynaptic) termini. Thus, the presence of this system and its linkage is not unique to the phototransduction machinery. A recent study has demonstrated that the photoreceptor-bipolar synaptic region also contains a Ca(2+)-stimulated ROS-GC1 transduction system [Duda, T., et al. (2002) EMBO J. 21, 2547-2556]. In this case, S100beta senses Ca(2+) and stimulates the cyclase. The inhibitory and stimulatory Ca(2+)-modulated ROS-GC1 sites are distinct. These findings allow the formation of a new topographic model of ROS-GC1 transduction. In this model, the catalytic module of ROS-GC1 at its opposite ends is flanked by GCAP1 and S100beta modules. GCAP1 senses the Ca(2+) impulse and inhibits the catalytic module; S100beta senses the impulse and stimulates the catalytic module. Thus, ROS-GC1 acts as a bimodal Ca(2+) signal transduction switch in the photoreceptor bipolar synapse.  相似文献   

7.
Glycinergic synapses in photoreceptors are made by centrifugal feedback neurons in the network, but the function of the synapses is largely unknown. Here we report that glycinergic input enhances photoreceptor synapses in amphibian retinas. Using specific antibodies against a glycine transporter (GlyT2) and glycine receptor β subunit, we identified the morphology of glycinergic input in photoreceptor terminals. Electrophysiological recordings indicated that 10 μM glycine depolarized rods and activated voltage-gated Ca2+ channels in the neurons. The effects facilitated glutamate vesicle release in photoreceptors, meanwhile increased the spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents in Off-bipolar cells. Endogenous glycine feedback also enhanced glutamate transmission in photoreceptors. Additionally, inhibition of a Cl uptake transporter NKCC1 with bumetanid effectively eliminated glycine-evoked a weak depolarization in rods, suggesting that NKCC1 maintains a high Cl level in rods, which causes to depolarize in responding to glycine input. This study reveals a new function of glycine in retinal synaptic transmission.  相似文献   

8.
cGMP mediates vertebrate phototransduction by directly gating cationic channels on the plasma membrane of the photoreceptor outer segment. This second messenger is produced by a guanylate cyclase and hydrolyzed by a light-activated cGMP-phosphodiesterase. Both of these enzyme activities are Ca2+ sensitive, the guanylate cyclase activity being inhibited and the light-activated phosphodiesterase being enhanced by Ca2+. Changes in these activities due to a light-induced decrease in intracellular Ca2+ are involved in the adaptation of photoreceptors to background light. We describe here experiments to characterize the guanylate cyclase activity and its modulation by Ca2+ using a truncated rod outer segment preparation, in order to evaluate the enzyme's role in light adaptation. The outer segment of a tiger salamander rod was drawn into a suction pipette to allow recording of membrane current, and the remainder of the cell was sheared off with a probe to allow internal dialysis. The cGMP-gated channels on the surface membrane were used to monitor conversion of GTP, supplied from the bath, into cGMP by the guanylate cyclase in the outer segment. At nominal 0 Ca2+, the cyclase activity had a Km of 250 microM MgGTP and a Vmax of 25 microM cGMP s-1 in the presence of 1.6 mM free Mg2+; in the presence of 0.5 mM free Mg2+, the Km was 310 microM MgGTP and the Vmax was 17 microM cGMP s-1. The stimulation by Mg2+ had an EC50 of 0.2 mM Mg2+ for MgGTP at 0.5 mM. Ca2+ inhibited the cyclase activity. In a K+ intracellular solution, with 0.5 mM free Mg2+ and 2.0 mM GTP, the cyclase activity was 13 microM cGMP s-1 at nominal 0 Ca2+; Ca2+ decreased this activity with a IC50 of approximately 90 nM and a Hill coefficient of approximately 2.0.  相似文献   

9.
Guanylate cyclase regulator protein (GCAP)-2 is a Ca2+-binding protein that regulates photoreceptor outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase (RetGC) in a Ca2+-sensitive manner. GCAP-2 activates RetGC at free Ca2+ concentrations below 100 nM, characteristic of light-adapted photoreceptors, and inhibits RetGC when free Ca2+ concentrations are above the 500 nM level, characteristic of dark-adapted photoreceptors. We have mapped functional domains in GCAP-2 by using deletion mutants and chimeric proteins in which parts of GCAP-2 were substituted with corresponding fragments of other closely related recoverin-like proteins that do not regulate RetGC. We find that in addition to the EF-hand Ca2+-binding centers there are three regions that contain GCAP-2-specific sequences essential for regulation of RetGC. 1) The region between Phe78 and Asp113 determines whether GCAP-2 activates outer segment RetGC in low or high Ca2+ concentrations. Substitution of this domain with the corresponding region from neurocalcin causes a paradoxical behavior of the chimeric proteins. They activate RetGC only at high and not at low Ca2+ concentrations. 2) The amino acid sequence of GCAP-2 between Lys29 and Phe48 that includes the EF-hand-related motif EF-1 is essential both for activation of RetGC at low Ca2+ and inhibition at high Ca2+ concentrations. Most of the remaining N-terminal region can be substituted with recoverin or neurocalcin sequences without loss of GCAP-2 function. 3) Region Val171-Asn189, adjacent to the C-terminal EF-4 contributes to activation of RetGC, but it is not essential for the ability of Ca2+-loaded GCAP-2 to inhibit RetGC. Other regions of the molecule can be substituted with the corresponding fragments from neurocalcin or recoverin, or even partially deleted without preventing GCAP-2 from regulating RetGC. Substitution of these three domains in GCAP-2 with corresponding neurocalcin sequences also affects activation of individual recombinant RetGC-1 and RetGC-2 expressed in HEK293 cells.  相似文献   

10.
Guanylate cyclase (GTP pyrophosphate-lyse (cyclizing), EC 4.6.1.2.) of bovine retinal rod outer segments is almost completely particulate, i.e. associated with rod outer segment membranes. In contrast to particulate guanylate cyclase in other tissues, treatment of rod outer segments with Triton X-100 does not solublize the enzyme but inhibits it. Enzyme activity is dependent on the presence of divalent cation, especially Mn2+ with only poor activation by Mg2+ (10-fold lower) and no activation seen with other cation. Ezpression of maximal activity required Nm2+ and GTP in equimolar concentrations with an apparent Km of 8 . 10(-4) M and V of 10 nmol/min per mg protein. Excess of Mn2+ over that required for the formation of the Mn . GTP complex was inhibitory. Ca2+, Ba2+ and Co2+ inhibited enzyme activity when assayed with the Mn . GTP substrate complex. In the presence of a fixed concentration of 1mM Mn2+, the enzyme exhibited strong negative cooperative interactions with GTP, characterized by an intermediary plateau region in the substrate vs. enzyme activity curve, a curve of downward concavity in the double reciprocal plot and a Hill coefficient of 0.5. Nucleotides such as ITP, ATP and UTP at higher concentrations (1 mM) stimulates activity by 40%. NaN3 has no effect on the guanylate cyclase. It is thus possible that the guanylate cyclase may be regulated in vivo by both the metal : GTP substrate ratio and the free divalent cation concentration as well as by the ATP concentration and thus play an important but yet undefined role in the visual process.  相似文献   

11.
Rod and cone cells of the mammalian retina harbor two types of a membrane bound guanylate cyclase (GC), rod outer segment guanylate cyclase type 1 (ROS-GC1) and ROS-GC2. Both enzymes are regulated by small Ca2+-binding proteins named GC-activating proteins that operate as Ca2+ sensors and enable cyclases to respond to changes of intracellular Ca2+after illumination. We determined the expression level of ROS-GC2 in bovine ROS preparations and compared it with the level of ROS-GC1 in ROSs. The molar ratio of a ROS-GC2 dimer to rhodopsin was 1 : 13 200. The amount of ROS-GC1 was 25-fold higher than the amount of ROS-GC2. Heterologously expressed ROS-GC2 was differentially activated by GC-activating protein 1 and 2 at low free Ca2+ concentrations. Mutants of GC-activating protein 2 modulated ROS-GC2 in a manner different from their action on ROS-GC1 indicating that the Ca2+ sensitivity of the Ca2+ sensor is controlled by the mode of target–sensor interaction.  相似文献   

12.
When the crude mitochondrial fraction of rat brain was homogenized with distilled water and centrifuged, most of guanylate cyclase activity was detected in the soluble fraction. The total guanylate cyclase activity recovered in the soluble fraction was 5- to 8-fold higher than that of the crude mitochondrial fraction. The greater recovery of guanylate cyclase activity was found to be due to a release of an endogenous activating factor for guanylate cyclase. The activating factor was partially purified by acid extraction followed by a gel filtration and ion exchange resin columns. The factor was a dialyzable small molecule. The molecular weight was estimated to be between 300 and 600 by a Sephadex G-15 column and Diaflo ultrafilter membranes. It was stable in dilute acids, but labile in alkaline solution. It was readily soluble in water, but insoluble in organic solvents. Treatment with various enzymes, so far as tested, failed to abolish the activity. The activating factor stimulated the initial velocity of the reaction. It altered neither the Km value for GTP nor the dependency of the enzyme on divalent metals. The activation by the factor was due to an increase in the Vmax of the reaction. The activation was prevented by lysolecithin, Lubrol PX, hydroxylamine, methylhydroxylamine, or hemoglobin.  相似文献   

13.
The resynthesis of cGMP in vertebrate photoreceptors by guanylate cyclase is one of the key events leading to the reopening of cGMP-gated channels after photoexcitation. Guanylate cyclase activity in vertebrate rod outer segments is dependent on the free calcium concentration. The basal activity of the enzyme observed at high concentrations of free calcium (greater than 0.5 microM) increases when the free calcium concentration is lowered into the nanomolar range (less than 0.1 microM). This effect of calcium is known to be mediated by a soluble calcium-sensitive protein in a highly cooperative way. We here show that this soluble protein, i.e. the modulator of photoreceptor guanylate cyclase, is a 26 kd protein. Reconstitution of the purified 26 kd protein with washed rod outer segment membranes containing guanylate cyclase revealed a 3- to 4-fold increase of cyclase activity when the free calcium concentration was lowered in the physiological range from 0.5 microM to 4 nM. Guanylate cyclase in whole rod outer segments was stimulated 10-fold in the same calcium range. The activation process in the reconstituted system was similar to the one in the native rod outer segment preparation, it showed a high cooperativity with a Hill coefficient n between 1.4 and 3.5. The half-maximal activation occurred between 110 and 220 nM free calcium. The molar ratio of the modulator to rhodopsin is 1:76 +/- 32. The protein is a calcium binding protein as detected with 45Ca autoradiography. Partial amino acid sequence analysis revealed a 60% homology to visinin from chicken cones.  相似文献   

14.
Studies of the properties of synaptic transmission have been carried out at only a few synapses. We analyzed exocytosis from rod photoreceptors with a combination of physiological and ultrastructural techniques. As at other ribbon synapses, we found that rods exhibited rapid kinetics of release, and the number of vesicles in the releasable pool is comparable to the number of vesicles tethered at ribbon-style active zones. However, unlike other previously studied neurons, we identified a highly Ca(2+)-sensitive pool of releasable vesicles with a relatively shallow relationship between the rate of exocytosis and [Ca(2+)](i) that is nearly linear over a presumed physiological range of intraterminal [Ca(2+)]. The low-order [Ca(2+)] dependence of release promotes a linear relationship between Ca(2+) entry and exocytosis that permits rods to relay information about small changes in illumination with high fidelity at the first synapse in vision.  相似文献   

15.
The stereochemical course of the reaction catalyzed by guanylate cyclase from bovine retinal rod outer segments was investigated using phosphorothioate analogs of GTP as chiral probes. (Sp)-Guanosine 5'-O-(1-thiotriphosphate) (Sp-GTP alpha S) is a substrate, whereas (Rp)-GTP alpha S is a competitive inhibitor (K1 = 0.1 mM), but not a substrate. (Sp)-GTP alpha S is converted into (Rp)-guanosine 3':5'-monophosphorothioate, showing that the reaction proceeds with inversion of configuration at the alpha-phosphorus atom. Km and Vmax for (Sp)-GTP alpha S (at low [Ca2+], 20 nM) are 3.7 mM and 1.1 nmol/min/mg of rhodopsin, respectively, compared with 1.1 mM and 23.1 nmol/min/mg of rhodopsin for GTP. Vmax for the cyclization of (Sp)-GTP alpha S, as for GTP, increases 10-20-fold when the calcium level is lowered. This activity change is centered at approximately 90 nM and has a Hill coefficient of 4.8. The configuration of the metal-substrate complex was determined by measuring the effectiveness of the Sp and Rp isomers of GTP alpha S and guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiotriphosphate) (GTP beta S) in the presence of Mg2+ or Mn2+. (Sp)-GTP alpha S is a substrate with either Mg2+ or Mn2+, whereas (Rp)-GTP beta S is a substrate with only Mn2+. These findings suggest that the substrate is a metal-beta, gamma-bidentate complex with delta screwsense. We also found that the cyclization reaction catalyzed by the membrane-bound guanylate cyclase from sea urchin sperm proceeds with inversion of configuration at the alpha-phosphorus atom. The stereochemical course of the reactions catalyzed by all prokaryotic and eukaryotic adenylate cyclases and guanylate cyclases studied thus far is the same.  相似文献   

16.
To date, the calcium-regulated membrane guanylate cyclase Rod Outer Segment Guanylate Cyclase type 1 (ROS-GC1) transduction system in addition to photoreceptors is known to be expressed in three other types of neuronal cells: in the pinealocytes, mitral cells of the olfactory bulb and the gustatory epithelium of tongue. Very recent studies from our laboratory show that expression of ROS-GC1 is not restricted to the neuronal cells; the male gonads and the spermatozoa also express ROS-GC1. In this presentation, the authors review the existing information on the localization and function of guanylate cyclase with special emphasis on Ca2+-modulated membrane guanylate cyclase, ROS-GC1, in the testes. The role of ROS-GC1 and its Ca2+-sensing modulators in the processes of spermatogenesis and fertilization are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
We examined whether localized increases in cytosolic cGMP have distinct regulatory effects on the concentration of cytosolic free Ca(2+) in ECV304 cells. Stimulation of the particulate guanylate cyclase by brain-type natriuretic peptide in fura-2-loaded cells caused a profound potentiation of the ATP-stimulated and thapsigargin-stimulated rise in cytosolic free Ca(2+). This effect is mediated by the inhibition of Ca(2+) extrusion via the plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase pump. Furthermore, the addition of brain-type natriuretic peptide caused the partial inhibition of cation influx in ATP-stimulated cells. In contrast, elevation of cytosolic cGMP by activation of the soluble guanylate cyclase induced by the addition of sodium nitroprusside causes an increased reuptake of Ca(2+) into the intracellular stores without affecting cation influx or Ca(2+) efflux. Thus, localized pools of cGMP play distinct regulatory roles in the regulation of Ca(2+) homeostasis within individual cells. We define a new role for natriuretic peptides in the inhibition of Ca(2+) efflux that leads to the potentiation of agonist-evoked increases in cytosolic free Ca(2+).  相似文献   

18.
Heterotrimeric G-proteins relay signals between membrane-bound receptors and downstream effectors. Little is known, however, about the regulation of Galpha subunit localization within the natural endogenous environment of a specialized signaling cell. Here we show, using live Drosophila flies, that light causes massive and reversible translocation of the visual Gqalpha to the cytosol, associated with marked architectural changes in the signaling compartment. Molecular genetic dissection together with detailed kinetic analysis enabled us to characterize the translocation cycle and to unravel how signaling molecules that interact with Gqalpha affect these processes. Epistatic analysis showed that Gqalpha is necessary but not sufficient to bring about the morphological changes in the signaling organelle. Furthermore, mutant analysis indicated that Gqbeta is essential for targeting of Gqalpha to the membrane and suggested that Gqbeta is also needed for efficient activation of Gqalpha by rhodopsin. Our results support the 'two-signal model' hypothesis for membrane targeting in a living organism and characterize the regulation of both the activity-dependent Gq localization and the cellular architectural changes in Drosophila photoreceptors.  相似文献   

19.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a receptor for endogenous and exogenous nitric oxide (NO) and is activated many fold upon its binding, making it a core enzyme in the nitric oxide signal transduction pathway. Much effort has been made to understand the link between binding of NO at the sGC heme and activation of the cyclase activity. We report here the first direct evidence for the role of conformational changes in transmitting the signal between the heme and cyclase domains. Using both circular dichroism (CD) and fluorescence spectroscopies, we have probed the effect that the sGC activators NO and 3-(5'-hydroxymethyl-2'-furyl)-1-benzyl-indazole (YC-1) and the inhibitor 1H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo-[4,3-a]-quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) have on the structure of the protein. Surprisingly, binding of either ODQ or YC-1 to NO-bound sGC cause virtually identical changes in the far-UV CD spectra of sGC, reflecting a perturbation in the secondary structure of the enzyme. This change is absent upon binding of NO, YC-1 or ODQ alone. Using this and previous data, we propose a working model for the mechanism of activation of sGC by NO and YC-1 and inhibition by ODQ.  相似文献   

20.
In rod phototransduction, cyclic GMP synthesis by membrane bound guanylate cyclase ROS-GC1 is under Ca(2+)-dependent negative feedback control mediated by guanylate cyclase-activating proteins, GCAP-1 and GCAP-2. The cellular concentration of GCAP-1 and GCAP-2 approximately sums to the cellular concentration of a functional ROS-GC1 dimer. Both GCAPs increase the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of ROS-GC1. However, the presence of a myristoyl group in GCAP-1 has a strong impact on the regulation of ROS-GC1, this is in contrast to GCAP-2. Catalytic efficiency of ROS-GC1 increases 25-fold when it is reconstituted with myristoylated GCAP-1, but only by a factor of 3.4 with nonmyristoylated GCAP-1. In contrast to GCAP1, myristoylation of GCAP-2 has only a minor effect on kcat/Km. The increase with both myristoylated and nonmyristoylated GCAP-2 is 10 to 13-fold. GCAPs also confer different Ca(2+)-sensitivities to ROS-GC1. Activation of the cyclase by GCAP-1 is half-maximal at 707 nM free [Ca(2+)], while that by GCAP-2 is at 100 nM. The findings show that differences in catalytic efficiency and Ca(2+)-sensitivity of ROS-GC1 are conferred by GCAP-1 and GCAP-2. The results further indicate the concerted operation of two 'GCAP modes' that would extend the dynamic range of cyclase regulation within the physiological range of free cytoplasmic Ca(2+) in photoreceptor cells.  相似文献   

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