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1.
S C Tsai  R Adamik  Y Kanaho  J L Halpern  J Moss 《Biochemistry》1987,26(15):4728-4733
Guanyl nucleotide binding proteins couple agonist interaction with cell-surface receptors to an intracellular enzymatic response. In the adenylate cyclase system, inhibitory and stimulatory effects are mediated through guanyl nucleotide binding proteins, Gi and Gs, respectively. In the visual excitation complex, the photon receptor rhodopsin is linked to its target, cGMP phosphodiesterase, through transducin (Gt). Bovine brain contains another guanyl nucleotide binding protein, Go. The proteins are heterotrimers of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits; the alpha subunits catalyze receptor-stimulated GTP hydrolysis. To examine the interaction of Go alpha with beta gamma subunits and rhodopsin, the proteins were reconstituted in phosphatidylcholine vesicles. The GTPase activity of Go alpha purified from bovine brain was stimulated by photolyzed, but not dark, rhodopsin and was enhanced by bovine retinal Gt beta gamma or by rabbit liver G beta gamma. Go alpha in the presence of G beta gamma is a substrate for pertussis toxin catalyzed ADP-ribosylation; the modification was inhibited by photolyzed rhodopsin and enhanced by guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate). ADP-Ribosylation of Go alpha by pertussis toxin inhibited photolyzed rhodopsin-stimulated, but not basal, GTPase activity. It would appear from this and prior studies that Go alpha is similar to Gt alpha and Gi alpha; all three proteins exhibit photolyzed rhodopsin-stimulated GTPase activity, are pertussis toxin substrates, and functionally couple to Gt beta gamma. Go alpha (39K) can be distinguished from Gi alpha (41K) but not from Gt alpha (39K) by molecular weight.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
We have examined the ability of the beta gamma subunits of guanine nucleotide binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) to support the pertussis toxin (PT) catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of G protein alpha subunits. Substoichiometric amounts of the beta gamma complex purified from either bovine brain G proteins or the bovine retinal G protein, Gt, are sufficient to support the ADP-ribosylation of the alpha subunits of Gi (the G protein that mediates inhibition of adenylyl cyclase) and Go (a G protein of unknown function) by PT. This observation indicates that ADP-ribosylated G protein oligomers can dissociate into their respective alpha and beta gamma subunits in the absence of activating regulatory ligands, i.e., nonhydrolyzable GTP analogues or fluoride. Additionally, the catalytic support of ADP-ribosylation by bovine brain beta gamma does not require Mg2+. Although the beta gamma subunit complexes purified from bovine brain G proteins and the beta gamma complex of Gt support equally the ADP-ribosylation of alpha subunits by PT, there is a marked difference in their abilities to interact with Gs alpha. The enhancement of deactivation of fluoride-activated Gs alpha requires 25-fold more beta gamma from Gt than from brain G proteins to produce a similar response. This difference in potency of beta gamma complexes from the two sources was also observed in the ability of beta gamma to produce an increase in the activity of recombinant Gs alpha produced in Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

3.
Two GTP-binding proteins which can be ADP-ribosylated by islet-activating protein, pertussis toxin, were purified from the cholate extract of bovine lung membranes. Both proteins had the same heterotrimeric structure (alpha beta gamma), but the alpha subunits were dissociated from the beta gamma when they were purified in the presence of AlCl3, MgCl2 and NaF. The molecular mass of the alpha subunit of the major protein (designated GLu, with beta gamma) was 40 kDa and that of the minor one was 41 kDa. The results of peptide mapping analysis of alpha subunits with a limited proteolysis indicated that GLu alpha was entirely different from the alpha of brain Gi or Go, while the 41-kDa polypeptide was identical with the alpha of bovine brain Gi. The kinetics of guanosine 5'-[3-O-thio]triphosphate (GTP[gamma S]) binding to GLu was similar to that to lung Gi but quite different from that to brain Go. On the other hand, incubation of GLu alpha at 30 degrees C caused a rapid decrease of GTP[gamma S] binding, the inactivation curve being similar to that of Go alpha but different from that of Gi alpha. The alpha subunits of lung Gi and GLu did not react with the antibodies against the alpha subunit of bovine brain Go. The antibodies were raised in rabbits against GLu alpha and were purified with a GLu alpha-Sepharose column. The purified antibodies reacted not only with GLu alpha but also with the 41-kDa protein and purified brain Gi alpha. However, the antibodies adsorbed with brain Gi alpha reacted only with GLu alpha, indicating antisera raised with GLu alpha contained antibodies that recognize both Gi alpha and GLu alpha, and those specific to GLu alpha. These results further indicate that GLu is different from Gi or Go. Anti-GLu alpha antibodies reacted with the 40-kDa proteins in the membranes of bovine brain and human leukemic (HL-60) cells. The beta gamma subunits were also purified from bovine lung. The beta subunit was the doublet of 36-kDa and 35-kDa polypeptides. The lung beta gamma could elicit the ADP-ribosylation of GLu alpha by islet-activating protein, increase the GTP[gamma S] binding to GLu and protect the thermal denaturation of GLu alpha. The antibodies raised against brain beta gamma cross-reacted with lung beta but not with lung gamma.  相似文献   

4.
The GTP-binding proteins involved in signal transduction now constitute a large family of so called 'G proteins'. Among them, Gs and Gi mediate the stimulation and inhibition of adenyl cyclase, respectively. Recently, another G protein (Go) abundant in brain was purified, but its function is still unknown. Like other G proteins, Go is a heterotrimer (alpha, beta, gamma) and the beta-gamma subunits seem to be identical to those of Gs and Gi. The alpha subunit of Go (Go-alpha) has a molecular weight of 39 kDa lower than those of Gi (41 kDa) or Gs (45-52 kDa). A positive immunoreativity with antibodies against Go-alpha was found in peripheral nervous tissues, adrenal medulla, heart, adenohypophysis and adipocytes. Go ressembles Gi in its ability to be ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin, and sequence analysis reveals a 68% homology between their alpha subunits. The GTPase activity of Go is several times higher than that of Gi. The affinity of the beta-gamma entity is about 3 times higher for Gi than for Go. In reconstitution studies, Go does not mimic the inhibitory effect of Gi on adenyl cyclase-stimulated by Gs. On the contrary, Go is as efficient as Gi in reconstituting the functional coupling with the muscarinic, alpha 2-adrenergic and chemotactic agent f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP), receptors. Recent studies seem to rule out Go as the coupling G protein of phospholipase C, the enzyme involved in phosphatidyl inositol trisphosphate hydrolysis. However, Go remains a putative candidate for transduction mechanisms coupled to a potassium channel or to a voltage-dependent calcium channel.  相似文献   

5.
Existence of two gamma subunits of the G proteins in brain   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Although amino acid sequences have been determined for the alpha and beta subunits of Gs, Gi, and Go, sequences have not been reported for the gamma subunits of these G proteins. In the present paper, we determined the sequences of peptides prepared by partial proteolysis of two different forms of the gamma subunit of Gs, Gi, and Go from bovine brain. Using oligonucleotide probes based on the sequences of two of these peptides, a cDNA clone was isolated from a bovine adrenal cDNA library. This clone contained a 0.9-kilobase cDNA insert that included an open reading frame of 213 bases encoding a 71-amino acid polypeptide with an estimated Mr of 7850. The amino acid sequence predicted for the adrenal cDNA clone was identical to that determined for one form of the gamma subunit from brain. In addition, an antibody to a peptide based on the predicted amino acid sequence of this cDNA clone reacted specifically with one of the brain gamma subunits, indicating the adrenal cDNA clone encodes a gamma subunit present in both adrenal gland and brain. Also, evidence is presented, demonstrating the existence of a second, structurally distinct, form of the gamma subunit of Gs, Gi, and Go in brain.  相似文献   

6.
H Tamir  A B Fawzi  A Tamir  T Evans  J K Northup 《Biochemistry》1991,30(16):3929-3936
Signal-transducing G-proteins are heterotrimers composed of GTP-binding alpha subunits in association with a tightly bound complex of beta and gamma subunits. While the alpha subunits are recognized as a family of diverse structures, beta and gamma subunits have also been found as heterogeneous isoforms. To investigate the diversity and tissue specificity of the beta gamma complexes, we have examined homogeneous oligomeric G-proteins from a variety of sources. The beta and gamma subunits isolated from the major-abundance G-proteins from bovine brain, bovine retina, rabbit liver, human placenta, and human platelets were purified and subjected to biochemical and immunological analysis. Protease mapping and immune recognition revealed an identical profile for each of the two distinctly migrating beta isoforms (beta 36 and beta 35) regardless of tissue or G-protein origin. Digestion with V8 protease revealed four distinct, clearly resolved terminal fragments for beta 36 and two for beta 35. Trypsin and chymotrypsin digestion yielded numerous bands, but again each form had a unique profile with no tissue specificity. Tryptic digestion was found to be conformationally specific with the most resistant structure being the native beta gamma complex. With increasing trypsin, the complex was digested but in a pattern distinct from that for denatured beta. In contrast to the two highly homologous beta structures, examination of this set of proteins revealed at least six distinct gamma peptides. Two unique gamma peptides were found in bovine retinal Gt and three gamma peptides in samples of bovine brain derived Go/Gi. Human placental and platelet Gi samples each contained a unique gamma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The steady-state levels of mRNAs for the G-proteins Gi alpha 2, Go alpha, and the G beta-subunits common to each were established in rat adipose, heart and liver. Uniformly-radiolabeled, single-stranded antisense probes were constructed from cDNAs or assembled from oligonucleotides. Direct comparison of the steady-state levels of the G-protein mRNAs was performed under identical assay conditions, and on a molar basis. In adipose, liver and heart, Gs alpha mRNA was more abundant than mRNA for Go alpha, Gi alpha, and G beta. In adipose tissue, mRNA levels were as follows: 19.4, 7.6, 7.0, and 2.3 amol mRNA per micrograms total cellular RNA for Gs alpha, G beta, Gi alpha 2, and Go alpha, respectively. In heart Gs alpha mRNA was less abundant than in adipose, but the relative trend among the G-protein subunits was the same. In liver, G beta mRNA was more abundant than either Go alpha or Gi alpha 2. Go alpha mRNA levels ranged from 1.2 to 2.3 amol/micrograms total RNA in liver and adipose, respectively. The present work demonstrates the many advantages of this strategy when applied to the study of a family of homologous, low-abundance proteins and establishes for the first time the molar levels of Gi alpha 2, Gs alpha, Go alpha, and G beta-subunit mRNAs in several mammalian tissues.  相似文献   

8.
The beta gamma subunits of G-proteins are composed of closely related beta 35 and beta 36 subunits tightly associated with diverse 6-10 kDa gamma subunits. We have developed a reconstitution assay using rhodopsin-catalyzed guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) binding to resolved alpha subunit of the retinal G-protein transducin (Gt alpha) to quantitate the activity of beta gamma proteins. Rhodopsin facilitates the exchange of GTP gamma S for GDP bound to Gt alpha beta gamma with a 60-fold higher apparent affinity than for Gt alpha alone. At limiting rhodopsin, G-protein-derived beta gamma subunits catalytically enhance the rate of GTP gamma S binding to resolved Gt alpha. The isolated beta gamma subunit of retinal G-protein (beta 1, gamma 1 genes) facilitates rhodopsin-catalyzed GTP gamma S exchange on Gt alpha in a concentration-dependent manner (K0.5 = 254 +/- 21 nM). Purified human placental beta 35 gamma, composed of beta 2 gene product and gamma-placenta protein (Evans, T., Fawzi, A., Fraser, E.D., Brown, L.M., and Northup, J.K. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 176-181), substitutes for Gt beta gamma reconstitution of rhodopsin with Gt alpha. However, human placental beta 35 gamma facilitates rhodopsin-catalyzed GTP gamma S exchange on Gt alpha with a higher apparent affinity than Gt beta gamma (K0.5 = 76 +/- 54 nM). As an alternative assay for these interactions, we have examined pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of the Gt alpha subunit which is markedly enhanced in rate by beta gamma subunits. Quantitative analyses of rates of pertussis modification reveal no differences in apparent affinity between Gt beta gamma and human placental beta 35 gamma (K0.5 values of 49 +/- 29 and 70 +/- 24 nM, respectively). Thus, the Gt alpha subunit alone does not distinguish among the beta gamma subunit forms. These results clearly show a high degree of functional homology among the beta 35 and beta 36 subunits of G-proteins for interaction with Gt alpha and rhodopsin, and establish a simple functional assay for the beta gamma subunits of G-proteins. Our data also suggest a specificity of recognition of beta gamma subunit forms which is dependent both on Gt alpha and rhodopsin. These results may indicate that the recently uncovered diversity in the expression of beta gamma subunit forms may complement the diversity of G alpha subunits in providing for specific receptor recognition of G-proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Antisera were raised in rabbits against the alpha subunit of a GTP-binding protein, Go. Because the antisera cross-reacted weakly with the alpha subunit of inhibitory GTP-binding protein of adenylate cyclase (Gi), they were purified with a Go alpha-coupled Sepharose column. Purified antibodies reacted only with Go alpha and did not cross-react with the Gi alpha subunit or beta gamma subunits in an immunoblot assay. Using these purified antibodies, a highly sensitive enzyme immunoassay method for the quantification of bovine brain Go alpha was developed. The assay system consisted of polystyrene balls with immobilized antibody F(ab')2 fragments and the same antibody Fab' fragments labeled with beta-D-galactosidase from Escherichia coli. The minimal detection limit of the assay was 0.1 fmol, or 4 pg. The assay was specific for Go alpha, and it did not cross-react with Gi alpha or beta gamma. Samples from various regions of bovine brain were solubilized with 2% sodium cholate and 1 M NaCl, and the concentrations of Go alpha were determined. Go alpha was detected in all the regions, and the highest concentration was observed in the cerebral cortex. The immunohistochemical study showed that the neuropil was rich in Go alpha.  相似文献   

10.
H Shinohara  K Kato  T Asano 《Acta anatomica》1992,144(2):167-171
The immunohistochemical localization of proteins Gi1 (plus Gi3). Gi2 and Go was studied in the olfactory epithelium and the main olfactory bulb of rats, using purified antibodies to the respective alpha subunits and beta gamma subunits of these G proteins. In the olfactory epithelium, only a restricted population of olfactory cells was immunopositive for Gi2 alpha, but others were not. The immunoreactivity for Gi1 alpha/Gi3 alpha was not observed. The olfactory epithelium was immunopositive for both Go alpha and beta gamma, but its apical surface was immunopositive only for beta gamma. In the main olfactory bulb, all layers were intensely immunopositive for Go alpha and beta gamma but weakly for Gi2 alpha. In contrast to the negative or weak immunostainings in the olfactory nerve fiber layer and glomeruli, the molecular and the internal granular layers were intensely immunopositive for Gi1 alpha/Gi3 alpha. These findings suggest the functional difference among Gi1/Gi3, Gi2 and Go in the signal transduction in the olfactory system.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) consist of a nucleotide-binding alpha subunit and a high-affinity complex of beta and gamma subunits. There is molecular heterogeneity of beta and gamma, but the significance of this diversity is poorly understood. Different G protein beta and gamma subunits have been expressed both singly and in combinations in Sf9 cells. Although expression of individual subunits is achieved in all cases, beta gamma subunit activity (support of pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of rGi alpha 1) is detected only when beta and gamma are expressed concurrently. Of the six combinations of beta gamma tested (beta 1 or beta 2 with gamma 1, gamma 2, or gamma 3), only one, beta 2 gamma 1, failed to generate a functional complex. Each of the other five complexes has been purified by subunit exchange chromatography using Go alpha-agarose as the chromatographic matrix. We have detected differences in the abilities of the purified proteins to support ADP-ribosylation of Gi alpha 1; these differences are attributable to the gamma component of the complex. When assayed for their ability to inhibit calmodulin-stimulated type-I adenylylcyclase activity or to potentiate Gs alpha-stimulated type-II adenylylcyclase, recombinant beta 1 gamma 1 and transducin beta gamma are approximately 10 and 20 times less potent, respectively, than the other complexes examined. Prenylation and/or further carboxyl-terminal processing of gamma are not required for assembly of the beta gamma subunit complex but are indispensable for high affinity interactions of beta gamma with either G protein alpha subunits or adenylylcyclases.  相似文献   

13.
Membrane and cytosolic fractions prepared from ventricular myocardium of young (21-day-old) hypo- or hyperthyroid rats and adult (84-day-old) previously hypo- or hyperthyroid rats were analyzed by immunoblotting with specific anti-G-protein antibodies for the relative content of Gs alpha, Gi alpha/Go alpha, Gq alpha/G11 alpha, and G beta. All tested G protein subunits were present not only in myocardial membranes but were at least partially distributed in the cytosol, except for Go alpha2, and G11 alpha. Cytosolic forms of the individual G proteins represented about 5-60% of total cellular amounts of these proteins. The long (Gs alpha-L) isoform of Gs alpha prevailed over the short (Gs alpha-S) isoform in both crude myocardial membranes and cytosol. The Gs alpha-L/Gs alpha-S ratio in membranes as well as in cytosol increased during maturation due to a substantial increase in Gs alpha-L. Interestingly, whereas the amount of membrane-bound Gi alpha/Go alpha and Gq alpha/G11 alpha proteins tend to lower during postnatal development, cytosolic forms of these G proteins mostly rise. Neonatal hypothyroidism reduced the amount of myocardial Gs alpha and increased that of Gi alpha/Go alpha proteins. By contrast, neonatal hyperthyroidism increased expression of Gs alpha and decreased that of Gi alpha and G11 alpha in young myocardium. Changes in G protein content induced by neonatal hypo- and hyperthyroidism in young rat myocardium were restored in adulthood. Alterations in the membrane-cytosol balance of G protein subunits associated with maturation or induced by altered thyroid status indicate physiological importance of cytosolic forms of these proteins in the rat myocardium.  相似文献   

14.
Somatostatin (SRIF) induces its biological effects by interacting with membrane-bound receptors that are linked to cellular effector systems via G proteins. We have studied SRIF receptor-G protein associations by solubilizing the SRIF receptor from rat brain and AtT-20 cells and immunoprecipitating the receptor-G protein complex with peptide-directed antisera against the different subunits of the G protein heterotrimer. Antiserum 8730, which selectively interacts with all Gi alpha subtypes, maximally and specifically immunoprecipitated SRIF receptor-Gi alpha complexes. To identify the subtypes of Gi alpha that are coupled to SRIF receptors, the subtype-selective antisera 3646, 1521, and 1518, which specifically interact with Gi alpha 1, Gi alpha 2, and Gi alpha 3, respectively, were used to immunoprecipitate SRIF receptor-Gi alpha complexes. Antiserum 3646 immunoprecipitated SRIF receptor-Gi alpha 1 complexes from both brain and AtT-20 cells. Antiserum 1521 immunoprecipitated Gi alpha 2 from both brain and AtT-20 cells but did not immunoprecipitate SRIF receptors from these tissues. Antiserum 1518 immunoprecipitated AtT-20 cell SRIF receptors but uncoupled brain SRIF receptor-G protein complexes. This result was confirmed with another peptide-selective antiserum, SQ, directed against Gi alpha 3. The findings from these studies indicate that Gi alpha 1 and Gi alpha 3 are coupled to SRIF receptors, whereas Gi alpha 2 is not. Even though brain and AtT-20 cell SRIF receptors were both coupled to Gi alpha, the receptors from these tissues differed in their coupling to Go alpha. Antiserum 2353, which is directed against Go alpha, immunoprecipitated SRIF receptors from AtT-20 cells, but did not immunoprecipitate or uncouple SRIF receptor-G protein complexes from rat brain. To determine the beta subunits associated with the SRIF receptor, antisera directed against G beta 36 and G beta 35 were used to immunoprecipitate SRIF receptor-G protein complexes from brain. Peptide-directed antiserum against G beta 36 selectively immunoprecipitated solubilized brain SRIF receptors. However, antiserum directed against the G beta 35 subunit did not immunoprecipitate brain SRIF receptors, suggesting that brain SRIF receptors may preferentially associate with G beta 36. In addition to coimmunoprecipitating with Gi alpha and G beta, brain SRIF receptors coimmunoprecipitated the G protein gamma subunits, G gamma 2 and G gamma 3. These results provide the first evidence that SRIF receptors are coupled to different subunits of G proteins and suggest that selectivity exists in the association of different G protein subunits with the SRIF receptor.  相似文献   

15.
GTP-binding proteins which participate in signal transduction share a common heterotrimeric structure of the alpha beta gamma-type. In the activated state, the alpha subunit dissociates from the beta gamma complex but remains anchored in the membrane. The alpha subunits of several GTP-binding proteins, such as Go and Gi, are myristoylated at the amino terminus (Buss, J. E., S. M. Mumby, P. J. Casey, A. G. Gilman, and B. M. Sefton. 1987. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 84:7493-7497). This hydrophobic modification is crucial for their membrane attachment. The absence of fatty acid on the alpha subunit of Gs (Gs alpha), the protein involved in adenylate cyclase activation, suggests a different mode of anchorage. To characterize the anchoring domain of Gs alpha, we used a reconstitution model in which posttranslational addition of in vitro-translated Gs alpha to cyc- membranes (obtained from a mutant of S49 cell line which does not express Gs alpha) restores the coupling between the beta-adrenergic receptor and adenylate cyclase. The consequence of deletions generated by proteolytic removal of amino acid sequences or introduced by genetic removal of coding sequences was determined by analyzing membrane association of the proteolyzed or mutated alpha chains. Proteolytic removal of a 9-kD amino-terminal domain or genetic deletion of 28 amino-terminal amino acids did not modify the anchorage of Gs alpha whereas proteolytic removal of a 1-kD carboxyterminal domain abolished membrane interaction. Thus, in contrast to the myristoylated alpha subunits which are tethered through their amino terminus, the carboxy-terminal residues of Gs alpha are required for association of this protein with the membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Pertussis toxin abolishes hormonal inhibition of adenylate cyclase, hormonal stimulation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate accumulation in rat fat-cells, and catalyses the ADP-ribosylation of two peptides, of Mr 39,000 and 41,000 [Malbon, Rapiejko & Mangano (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 2558-2564]. The 41,000-Mr peptide is the alpha-subunit of the G-protein, referred to as Gi, that is believed to mediate inhibitory control of adenylate cyclase by hormones. The nature of the 39,000-Mr substrate for pertussis toxin was investigated. The fat-cell 39,000-Mr peptide was compared structurally and immunologically with the alpha-subunits of two other G-proteins, Gt isolated from the rod outer segments of bovine retina and Go isolated from bovine brain. After radiolabelling in the presence of pertussis toxin and [32P]NAD+, the electrophoretic mobilities of the fat-cell 39,000-Mr peptide and the alpha-subunits of Go and Gt were nearly identical. Partial proteolysis of these ADP-ribosylated proteins generates peptide patterns that suggest the existence of a high degree of homology between the fat-cell 39,000-Mr peptide and the alpha-subunit of Go. Antisera raised against purified G-proteins and their subunits were used to probe immunoblots of purified Gt, Gi, Go, and fat-cell membrane proteins. Although recognizing the 36,000-Mr beta-subunit band of Gt, Gi, Go and a 36,000-Mr fat-cell peptide, antisera raised against Gt failed to recognize either the 39,000- or the 41,000-Mr peptides of fat-cells or the alpha-subunits of Go and Gi. Antisera raised against the alpha-subunit of Go, in contrast, recognized the 39,000-Mr peptide of rat fat-cells, but not the alpha-subunit of either Gi or Gt. These data establish the identity of Go, in addition to Gi, in fat-cell membranes and suggest the possibility that either Go or Gi alone, or both, may mediate hormonal regulation of adenylate cyclase and phospholipase C.  相似文献   

17.
Proteolytic experiments performed on transducin and Go alpha subunit strongly suggest that the amino-terminal residues of the alpha chain are involved in the interaction with beta gamma subunits. To test the possibility that the same region in Gs may fulfill a similar function, we introduced a deletion in the amino-terminal domain of Gs alpha. The properties of the wild type and the deleted alpha chains were characterized on in vitro translated proteins or after reconstitution of cyc- membranes by in vitro-translated alpha subunits. The mutant (delta 2-29) Gs alpha could still bind guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate, as revealed by its resistance to trypsin proteolysis and was still able to interact with the membrane. However, (delta 2-29) Gs alpha was not ADP-ribosylated by cholera toxin. In contrast to Gs alpha, addition of beta gamma subunits did not increase the rate of sedimentation of (delta 2-29) Gs alpha in sucrose gradients. Binding experiments on reconstituted membranes showed that the coupling to beta-adrenergic receptors was very low with (delta 2-29) Gs alpha. Finally, the mutant did not restore activation of adenylate cyclase of cyc- membranes. We propose that the primary functional defect is the loss of interaction with beta gamma subunits, which secondarily impairs beta gamma-dependent properties such as receptor coupling and cholera toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation. However, it remains to be established that the lack of adenylate cyclase activation also results from this impaired interaction with beta gamma subunits.  相似文献   

18.
Bovine peripheral neutrophils contain high levels of a 40-kDa pertussis toxin substrate, which was found highly enriched in a light membrane fraction upon subcellular fractionation of neutrophil homogenates. The 40-kDa pertussis toxin substrate, referred to as alpha n, was purified to near homogeneity from this fraction by sequential ion-exchange, gel-filtration and hydrophobic chromatography. Purified alpha n was shown to interact with beta gamma subunits, undergo ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin, and bind guanine nucleotides with high affinity. The mobility of purified alpha n on SDS/polyacrylamide gels was intermediate between those of the alpha subunits of Gi and Go, purified from bovine brain, and slightly lower than the mobility of the alpha subunit of transducin (Gt). Several polyclonal antisera against the alpha subunits of bovine Gt and Go did not react with alpha n on immunoblots. CW 6, a polyclonal antiserum reactive against the bovine alpha i, reacted only minimally with alpha n. These results suggest that the major pertussis toxin substrate of bovine neutrophils, designated Gn, is structurally different from previously identified pertussis toxin substrates and may represent a novel guanine-nucleotide-binding protein.  相似文献   

19.
In many tissues, inwardly rectifying K channels are coupled to seven- helix receptors via the Gi/Go family of heterotrimeric G proteins. This activation proceeds at least partially via G beta gamma subunits. These experiments test the hypothesis that G beta gamma subunits activate the channel even if released from other classes of heterotrimeric G proteins. The G protein-gated K channel from rat atrium, KGA/GIRK1, was expressed in Xenopus oocytes with various receptors and G proteins. The beta 2-adrenergic receptor (beta 2AR), a Gs-linked receptor, activated large KGA currents when the alpha subunit, G alpha s, was also overexpressed. Although G alpha s augmented the coupling between beta 2AR and KGA, G alpha s also inhibited the basal, agonist-independent activity of KGA. KGA currents stimulated via beta 2AR activated, deactivated, and desensitized more slowly than currents stimulated via Gi/Go-linked receptors. There was partial occlusion between currents stimulated via beta 2AR and the m2 muscarinic receptor (a Gi/Go-linked receptor), indicating some convergence in the mechanism of activation by these two receptors. Although stimulation of beta 2AR also activates adenylyl cyclase and protein kinase A, activation of KGA via beta 2AR is not mediated by this second messenger pathway, because direct elevation of intracellular cAMP levels had no effect on KGA currents. Experiments with other coexpressed G protein alpha and beta gamma subunits showed that (a) a constitutively active G alpha s mutant did not suppress basal KGA currents and was only partially as effective as wild type G alpha s in coupling beta 2AR to KGA, and (b) beta gamma subunits increased basal KGA currents. These results reinforce present concepts that beta gamma subunits activate KGA, and also suggest that beta gamma subunits may provide a link between KGA and receptors not previously known to couple to inward rectifiers.  相似文献   

20.
Gs and Gi, respectively, activate and inhibit the enzyme adenylyl cyclase. Regulation of adenylyl cyclase by the heterotrimeric Gs and Gi proteins requires the dissociation of GDP and binding of GTP to the alpha s or alpha i subunit. The beta gamma subunit complex of Gs and Gi functions, in part, to inhibit GDP dissociation and alpha subunit activation by GTP. Multiple beta and gamma polypeptides are expressed in different cell types, but the functional significance for this heterogeneity is unclear. The beta gamma complex from retinal rod outer segments (beta gamma t) has been shown to discriminate between alpha i and alpha s subunits (Helman et al: Eur J Biochem 169:431-439, 1987). beta gamma t efficiently interacts with alpha i-like G protein subunits, but poorly recognizes the alpha s subunit. beta gamma t was, therefore, used to define regions of the alpha i subunit polypeptide that conferred selective regulation compared to the alpha s polypeptide. A series of alpha subunit chimeras having NH2-terminal alpha i and COOH-terminal alpha s sequences were characterized for their regulation by beta gamma t, measured by the kinetics of GTP gamma S activation of adenylyl cyclase. A 122 amino acid NH2-terminal region of the alpha i polypeptide encoded within an alpha i/alpha s chimera was sufficient for beta gamma t to discriminate the chimera from alpha s. A shorter 54 amino acid alpha i sequence substituted for the corresponding NH2-terminal region of alpha s was insufficient to support the alpha i-like interaction with beta gamma t. The findings are consistent with our previous observation (Osawa et al: Cell 63:697-706, 1990) that a region in the NH2-terminal moiety functions as an attenuator domain controlling GDP dissociation and GTP activation of the alpha subunit polypeptide and that the attenuator domain is involved in functional recognition and regulation by beta gamma complexes.  相似文献   

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