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1.
There is considerable evidence which suggests that the gamma-subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE gamma) is a multifunctional protein which may interact directly with both the catalytic subunits of PDE (PDE alpha beta) and the alpha-subunit of transducin (T alpha) (Whalen, M., and Bitensky, M. (1989) Biochem. J. 259, 13-19; Griswold-Prenner, I., Young, J. H., Yamane, H. K., and Fung, B. K.-K. (1988) Invest. Ophthalmol. & Visual Sci. 29, (Suppl.) 218). To determine the region of interaction between the multifunctional PDE gamma and T alpha, and to determine the significance of this interaction, peptides corresponding to various regions of PDE gamma were synthesized and tested for their ability to inhibit the GTPase activity of T alpha. One of these peptides, PDE gamma-3 (bovine amino acid residues 31-45), inhibited the GTPase activity of T alpha with an I50 of 450 microM. The peptide (PDE gamma-3) was found to inhibit the GTPase activity of T alpha by inducing the binding of transducin to the rod outer segment membrane and by altering the GTP/GDP exchange. Analogs of PDE gamma-3 were synthesized to determine the required structure of the PDE gamma-3 region needed for the interaction of PDE gamma with T alpha. The results of these studies indicated that the removal of the positively charged amino acids or any of the potential hydrogen-bonding amino acids increased the I50 for the inhibition of the GTPase activity of T alpha Substitution of the hydrophobic amino acids had no effect. These results indicate the hydrophilic interactions may be essential for the binding of PDE gamma to T alpha and for the inhibition of the GTPase activity of T alpha by PDE gamma. The observed effects of PDE gamma-3 on T alpha and on PDE suggest that PDE gamma is a multifunctional protein which may play more than one role in the deactivation of the retinal transduction cascade.  相似文献   

2.
J W Erickson  R A Cerione 《Biochemistry》1991,30(29):7112-7118
Resonance energy-transfer approaches have been used to directly monitor the interactions of the GTP gamma S-bound alpha subunit of transducin (alpha T GTP gamma S) with the retinal cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). The PDE was labeled with 5-(iodoacetamido) fluorescein (IAF-PDE) and served as the fluorescence donor in these experiments while the alpha T GTP gamma S was labeled with eosin-5-isothiocyanate (EITC-alpha T GTP gamma S) and served as the energy acceptor. The EITC-alpha T GTP gamma S species was able to quench a significant percentage of the IAF-PDE fluorescence (typically greater than or equal to 30%) due to resonance energy transfer between the IAF and EITC moieties. The quenching by the EITC-alpha T GTP gamma S species was dose-dependent, saturable (Kd = 21 nM), and specific for the GTP gamma S-bound form of the alpha T subunit. Limited trypsin treatment of the IAF-PDE, which selectively removes a fluorescein-labeled gamma subunit (gamma PDE), completely eliminates the quenching of the IAF fluorescence by the EITC-alpha T GTP gamma S complex. Although the EITC-alpha T GTP gamma S complex competes with the unlabeled alpha T GTP gamma S for a binding site on the IAF-PDE, as well as for a site on the native PDE, it is not able to stimulate PDE activity. Thus, the modification of a single EITC-reactive residue on the alpha T GTP gamma S complex prevents this subunit from eliciting a key activation event within the retinal effector enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Previously, we have domain-mapped the 87 amino acid PDE gamma inhibitory subunit of the retinal phosphodiesterase (PDE) alpha beta gamma 2 complex using synthetic peptides. The PDE gamma subunit has a binding domain for transducin-alpha (T alpha) and for PDE alpha/beta within residues # 24-45 and an inhibitory region for PDE alpha/beta within residues # 80-87. In order to establish the role of individual amino acids in the function of the PDE gamma inhibitory subunit, peptides of PDE gamma # 63-87 and mutant peptides were synthesized and utilized in PDE inhibition assays. The following peptides exhibited a decreased ability to inhibit PDE alpha/beta: All were from PDE gamma # 63-87; PDE gamma Tyr 84----Gly, PDE gamma Phe 73----Gly and PDE gamma Gln 83----Gly.  相似文献   

4.
The gamma-subunit of retinal rod-outer-segment phosphodiesterase (PDE-gamma) is a multifunctional protein which interacts directly with both of the catalytic subunits of PDE (PDE alpha/beta) and the alpha-subunit of the retinal G (guanine-nucleotide-binding)-protein transducin alpha (T alpha). We have previously reported that the PDE gamma binds to T alpha at residue nos. 24-45 [Morrison. Rider & Takemoto (1987) FEBS Lett. 222, 266-270]. In vitro this results in inhibition of T alpha GTP/GDP exchange [Morrison, Cunnick, Oppert & Takemoto (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 11671-11681]. We now report that the inhibitory region of PDE gamma for PDE alpha/beta occurs at PDE gamma residues 54-87. This binding results in inhibition of either trypsin-solubilized or membrane-bound PDE alpha/beta. PDE gamma which has been treated with carboxypeptidase Y, removing the C-terminus, does not inhibit PDE alpha/beta, but does inhibit T alpha GTP/GDP exchange. Inhibition by PDE gamma can be removed by T alpha-guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) addition to membranes. This results in a displacement of PDE gamma, but not in removal of this subunit from the membrane [Whalen, Bitensky & Takemoto (1990) Biochem. J. 265, 655-658]. These results suggest that low levels of T alpha-GTP[S] can result in displacement of PDE gamma from the membrane in vitro as a GTP[S]-T alpha-PDE gamma complex. Further activation by high levels of T alpha-GTP[S] occurs by displacement of PDE gamma from its inhibitory site on PDE alpha/beta, but not in removal from the membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to various regions of the light-activated guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase (PDE) gamma-subunit (PDE gamma) from bovine retinal rod outer segments were synthesized and tested for their ability to inhibit PDE activity, and GTPase activity of transducin. One of these peptides, corresponding to PDE gamma residues 31-45, inhibited PDE activity and GTPase activity in a dose-dependent manner. The GTPase activity was inhibited by PDE gamma-3 non-competitively. This region of the PDE gamma subunit may be involved in the direct interaction of transducin and PDE alpha beta with PDE gamma.  相似文献   

6.
The rod outer segments of the bovine and frog retina possess a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) that is composed of two larger subunits, alpha and beta (P alpha beta), which contain the catalytic activity and a smaller gamma (P gamma) subunit which inhibits the catalytic activity. We studied the binding of P gamma to P alpha beta in both the bovine and frog rod outer segment membranes. Analysis of these data indicates that there are two classes of P gamma binding sites per P alpha beta in both species. The activation of PDE by the guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate form of the alpha subunit of transducin, T alpha.GTP gamma S, was also studied. These data indicate that the two classes of P gamma binding sites contribute to the formation of two classes of binding sites for T alpha.GTP gamma S. We demonstrate solubilization of a portion of the P gamma by T alpha.GTP gamma S in both species. There is also present, in both species, a second class of P gamma which is not solubilized even when it is dissociated from its inhibitory site on P alpha beta by T alpha.GTP gamma S. The amount of full PDE activity which results from release of the solubilizable P gamma is about 50% in the frog PDE but only approx. 17% in the bovine PDE. We also show that activation of frog rod outer segment PDE by trypsin treatment releases the PDE from the membranes. This type of release by trypsin has already been demonstrated in bovine rod outer segments [Wensel & Stryer (1986) Proteins: Struct. Funct. Genet. 1, 90-99].  相似文献   

7.
Previously, we have domain-mapped the 87 amino acid PDE gamma inhibitory subunit of the retinal phosphodiesterase (PDE) alpha beta gamma 2 complex using synthetic peptides (1). The PDE gamma subunit has a binding domain for transducin-alpha (T alpha) and for PDE alpha/beta within residues #24-45. An inhibitory region for PDE alpha/beta is within residues #80-87. In order to establish the role of individual amino acids in the function of the PDE gamma inhibitory subunit, mutants were synthesized and utilized in PDE inhibition assays. The following mutants exhibited a decreased ability to inhibit PDE alpha/beta: Tyr84----Gly; Arg24----Gly; and Arg33----Pro. Sequence comparisons with cone PDE gamma indicate that there is identity within these functional regions.  相似文献   

8.
J A Malinski  T G Wensel 《Biochemistry》1992,31(39):9502-9512
To clarify the role of phospholipids in G protein-effector interactions of vertebrate phototransduction, transducin activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) has been reconstituted on the surface of well-defined phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles, using purified proteins from bovine rod outer segments (ROS). PC vesicles enhanced PDE stimulation by the GTP-gamma S-bound transducin alpha subunit (T alpha-GTP gamma S) as much as 17-fold over activation in the absence of membranes. In the presence of 3.5 microM accessible PC in the form of large (100 nm) unilamellar vesicles, 500 nM T alpha-GTP gamma S stimulated PDE activity to more than 70% of the maximum activity induced by trypsin. Activation required PC, PDE, and T alpha-GTP gamma S, but did not require prior incubation of any of the components, and occurred within 4 s of mixing. The PC vesicles were somewhat more efficient than urea-washed ROS membranes in enhancing PDE activation. Half-maximal activation occurred at accessible phospholipid concentrations of 3.8 microM for PC vesicles, and 13 microM for ROS membranes. Titrations of PDE with T alpha-GTP gamma S in the presence of membranes indicated a high-affinity (Kact less than 250 pM) activation of PDE by a small fraction (0.5-5%) of active T alpha-GTP gamma S, as did titrations of ROS with GTP gamma S. When activation by PC vesicles was compared to PDE binding to membranes, the results were consistent with activation enhancement resulting from formation of a T alpha-GTP gamma S-dependent PDE-membrane complex with half-maximal binding at phospholipid concentrations in the micromolar range. The value of the apparent dissociation constant, KPL, associated with the activation enhancement was estimated to be in the range of 2.5 nM (assuming an upper limit value of 1600 phospholipids/site) to 80 nM (for a lower limit value of 50 phospholipids/site). Another component of membrane binding was more than 100-fold weaker and was not correlated with activation by T alpha-GTP gamma S. Low ionic strength disrupted the ability of ROS membranes, but not PC vesicles, to bind and activate PDE. Removal of PDE's membrane-binding domain by limited trypsin digestion eliminated both the binding of PDE to vesicles and the ability of PDE to be activated by T alpha-GTP gamma S and membranes. These results suggest that ROS membrane stimulation of PDE activation by T alpha-GTP gamma S is due almost exclusively to the phospholipids in the disk membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Cross-linking of the different subunits of the retinal cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) with its activator G alpha GTP gamma S (alpha subunit of the retinal G-protein transducin with GTP gamma S (guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) bound) has been investigated using purified proteins, with a N-hydroxysuccinimide homobifunctional cross-linker, bis(sulfosuccinimidyl)suberate (BS3) and its cleavable analog 3,3'-dithiobis(sulfosuccinimidylpropionate) (DTSSP). Interaction of purified G-protein and PDE is achieved in the presence of lecithin vesicles, at protein concentrations sufficient for full PDE activation. Protein subunits linked with DTSSP are separated by cleavage of the disulfide bridge and identified by electrophoresis. Complexes of PDE alpha (PDE beta) with 1 and 2 molecules of activator G alpha GTP gamma S are observed, providing direct evidence for an interaction or at least a close proximity between 2 molecules of activator G alpha and each of the catalytic PDE subunits in the activated state of PDE. The results also reveal symmetrical roles of PDE alpha and PDE beta, with the existence of one site for PDE gamma and one site for G alpha on each catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

10.
We have produced a recombinant transducin alpha subunit (rT alpha) in sf9 cells, using a baculovirus system. Deletion of the myristoylation site near the N-terminal increased the solubility and allowed the purification of rT alpha. When reconstituted with excess T beta gamma on retinal membrane, rT alpha displayed functional characteristics of wild-type T alpha vis à vis its coupled receptor, rhodopsin and its effector, cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). We further mutated a tryptophan, W207, which is conserved in all G proteins and is suspected to elicit the fluorescence change correlated to their activation upon GDP/GTP exchange or aluminofluoride (AlFx) binding. [W207F]T alpha mutant displayed high affinity receptor binding and underwent a conformational switch upon receptor-catalysed GTP gamma S binding or upon AlFx binding, but this did not elicit any fluorescence change. Thus W207 is the only fluorescence sensor of the switch. Upon the switch the mutant remained unable to activate the PDE. To characterize better its effector-activating interaction we measured the affinity of [W207F]T alpha GDP-AlFx for PDE gamma, the effector subunit that binds most tightly to T alpha. [W207F]T alpha still bound in an activation-dependent way to PDE gamma, but with a 100-fold lower affinity than rT alpha. This suggests that W207 contributes to the G protein effector binding.  相似文献   

11.
Using synthetic peptides, the identification of the retinal cyclic-GMP phosphodiesterase (cGMP PDE) interaction sites for the inhibitory gamma-subunit in the catalytic alpha-subunit were recently localized to residues #16-30 and 78-90 in the alpha-subunit (1). In this study, a binding radioimmunoassay (RIA) showed a weak interaction between PDE gamma and PDE beta subunits in PDE beta residues #15-34, and stronger interaction sites were found in residues #91-110 and 211-230. Sequence comparison between PDE alpha and PDE beta illustrate some differences in these regions, particularly in PDE alpha 16-30 and PDE beta 15-34 regions. Differences in interaction sites in PDE alpha and PDE beta for PDE gamma may account for the differences in affinities observed between PDE gamma and the catalytic subunits.  相似文献   

12.
Purified G-protein (transducin) activated with the nonhydrolyzable analog guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) and cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) from retinal rods are added to protein-stripped disc membranes. Specific binding of the mainly soluble alpha subunit of G-protein with GTP gamma S bound (G alpha GTP gamma S, activator of the PDE) to the disc membrane in the presence of PDE is measured from gel scans or experiments with labeled G-protein alpha subunit (G alpha). Its variation as a function of G concentration matches the theoretical variation of G alpha involved in the activation of PDE calculated with previously estimated dissociation constants (Bennett, N., and Clerc, A. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7418-7424), and the G alpha bound/PDE ratio at saturation is close to 2. No increase of G alpha binding to the membrane is observed when purified inhibitory subunit of PDE (PDE gamma) is added together with or instead of total PDE, and excess PDE gamma remains soluble. These results suggest that activated PDE is a complex with the activator G alpha GTP rather than PDE from which the inhibitory subunits have been removed. A method for purifying PDE gamma with a high yield of recovery and activity is described.  相似文献   

13.
Retinal rod outer segment phosphodiesterase (PDE) consists of two similar catalytic subunits (alpha and beta) and two identical inhibitory subunits (gamma 2). A trypsin-activated soluble PDE exhibiting the ability to be reinhibited by PDE gamma was shown by peptide antisera to retain both N and C termini. Synthetic peptides corresponding to residues 16-30, 78-90, 389-403, and 535-563 of PDE alpha used in a PDE activity assay with trypsin-activated PDE partially prevented inhibition by exogenous PDE gamma; however, only competitions by peptides 16-30 and 78-90 (corresponding to PDE alpha 16-30 and 78-90) were concentration-dependent below 100 nmol of peptide. Binding studies using radio-immunoassays and PDE alpha peptides confirmed that peptides 16-30 and 78-90 (corresponding to PDE alpha 16-30 and 78-90, respectively) were able to bind PDE gamma. Additionally, peptides corresponding to the PDE alpha region 453-534 bound PDE gamma in the binding assay. This suggests that several regions on PDE alpha interact with the PDE gamma inhibitor. While some regions may be involved in binding to PDE gamma, other sites may be involved in PDE gamma inhibition of catalytic activity. Our results suggest that the major regions of PDE alpha that interact with PDE gamma reside within the N terminus (16-30 and 78-90), with weaker interaction regions within or near the hypothesized catalytic domain (453-563). Sequence analysis of three retinal phosphodiesterases (rod outer segment alpha, beta, and cone outer segment alpha') revealed the highest region of dissimilarity in the N and C termini.  相似文献   

14.
The cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase (PDE) of vertebrate retinal rod outer segments (ROS) is a peripheral enzyme activated in vivo by transducin. In vitro artificial activation can be achieved using trypsin. This was described as resulting from degradation of the inhibitory gamma subunit (2 copies/PDE molecule), leaving intact the alpha beta catalytic core. It was, however, observed that trypsin could induce the release of PDE (or solubilization) from the ROS membranes before its activation [Wensel, T. G. & Stryer, L. (1986) Proteins Struct. Funct. Genet. 1, 90-99]. Studying the time course of this solubilization, we were able to purify a trypsin-solubilized PDE still completely inhibited (i.e. with its two gamma subunits bound). The tryptic solubilization of PDE is therefore complete before any functional degradation of the gamma subunits occurs. It was recently suggested that this solubilization could coincide with the cleavage of a C-terminal fragment of the alpha subunit, which can be labeled by methylation of a terminal cysteine residue [Ong, O. C., Ota, I. M., Clarke, S. & Fung, B. K. K. (1989) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 86, 9238-9242]. We present the following evidence indicating that the C-terminus of the PDE beta subunit is mainly responsible for PDE anchorage to the ROS membrane. (a) The trypsin-solubilized PDE alpha beta gamma 2 has intact blocked N-termini. (b) It is still methylated on PDE alpha. (c) The C-terminus of PDE beta can also be labeled by methylation and its tryptic cleavage coincides well with the PDE solubilization. (d) Sequential cleavage of the alpha and beta polypeptides can also be detected by high-resolution gel electrophoresis: the first cleavage appears on the beta subunit and is completed when cleavage of the alpha subunit begins. The time course for cleavage of the gamma subunits appears to be slower than for the beta subunit and comparable to that of the alpha subunit. Upon longer trypsinization, a 70-kDa polypeptide appears which seems to be a degradation product of PDE beta. Gel-filtration analysis, however, shows that this 70-kDa fragment does not dissociate from the catalytic core.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of cGMP to the noncatalytic sites on two isoforms of the phosphodiesterase (PDE) from mammalian rod outer segments has been characterized to evaluate their role in regulating PDE during phototransduction. Nonactivated, membrane-associated PDE (PDE-M, alpha beta gamma2) has one exchangeable site for cGMP binding; endogenous cGMP remains nonexchangeable at the second site. Non-activated, soluble PDE (PDE-S, alpha beta gamma2 delta) can release and bind cGMP at both noncatalytic sites; the delta subunit is likely responsible for this difference in cGMP exchange rates. Removal of the delta and/or gamma subunits yields a catalytic alphabeta dimer with identical catalytic and binding properties for both PDE-M and PDE-S as follows: high affinity cGMP binding is abolished at one site (KD >1 microM); cGMP binding affinity at the second site (KD approximately 60 nM) is reduced 3-4-fold compared with the nonactivated enzyme; the kinetics of cGMP exchange to activated PDE-M and PDE-S are accelerated to similar extents. The properties of nonactivated PDE can be restored upon addition of gamma subunit. Occupancy of the noncatalytic sites by cGMP may modulate the interaction of the gamma subunit with the alphabeta dimer and thereby regulate cytoplasmic cGMP concentration and the lifetime of activated PDE during visual transduction in photoreceptor cells.  相似文献   

16.
The functional interactions of the retinal G protein, transducin, with the cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) have been examined using the different purified subunit components of transducin and the native and trypsin-treated forms of the effector enzyme. The limited trypsin treatment of the PDE removes the low molecular weight gamma subunit (Mr approximately 14,000) of the enzyme, yielding a catalytic moiety comprised of the two larger molecular subunits (alpha, Mr approximately 85,000-90,000; beta, Mr approximately 85,000-90,000), which is insensitive to the addition of either the pure alpha T.GTP gamma S species or the pure beta gamma T subunit complex. However, the addition of the pure alpha T.GDP species to the trypsin-treated PDE (tPDE) results in a significant (90-100%) inhibition of the enzyme activity. This inhibition can be reversed by excess beta gamma T, suggesting that the holotransducin molecule does not (functionally) interact with the tPDE. However, the inhibition by alpha T.GDP is not reversed by the alpha T.GTP gamma S complex, over a range of [alpha T.GTP gamma S] which elicits a marked stimulation of the native enzyme activity, suggesting that the activated alpha T species does not effectively bind to the tPDE. The alpha T.GDP complex also is capable of inhibiting the alpha T.GTP gamma S-stimulated cyclic GMP hydrolysis by the native PDE. This inhibition can be reversed by excess alpha T.GTP gamma S, as well as by beta gamma T, indicating that the binding site for the activated alpha T species is in close proximity and/or overlaps the binding site for the alpha T.GDP complex on the enzyme. Overall, these results are consistent with a scheme where (a) both the small and larger molecular weight subunits of PDE participate in alpha T-PDE interactions, (b) the activation of PDE by the alpha T.GTP gamma S (or alpha T.GTP) species does not result in the complete dissociation of the gamma subunit from the enzyme, and (c) the deactivation of this signal transduction system results from a direct interaction between the alpha T.GDP species and the catalytic moiety of the effector enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
A novel member of the S100 protein family, present in human placenta, has been characterized by protein sequencing, cDNA cloning, and analysis of Ca(2+)-binding properties. Since the placenta protein of 95 amino acid residues shares about 50% sequence identity with the brain S100 proteins alpha and beta, we proposed the name S100P. The cDNA was expressed in Escherichia coli and recombinant S100P was purified in high yield. S100P is a homodimer and has two functional EF hands/polypeptide chain. The low-affinity site (Kd = 800 microM), which, in analogy to S100 beta, seems to involve the N-terminal EF hand, can be followed by the Ca(2+)-dependent decrease in tyrosine fluorescence. The high-affinity site, provided by the C-terminal EF hand, influences the reactivity of the sole cysteine which is located in the C-terminal extension (Cys85). Binding to the high-affinity site (Kd = 1.6 microM) can be monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy of S100P labelled at Cys85 with 6-proprionyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (Prodan). The Prodan fluorescence shows a Ca(2+)-dependent red shift of the maximum emission wavelength from 485 nm to 502 nm, which is accompanied by an approximately twofold loss in integrated fluorescence intensity. This indicates that Cys85 becomes more exposed to the solvent in Ca(2+)-bound S100P, making this region of the molecule, the so-called C-terminal extension, an ideal candidate for a putative Ca(2+)-dependent interaction with a cellular target. In p11, a different member of the S100 family, the C-terminal extension which contains a corresponding cysteine (Cys82 in p11), is involved in a Ca(2+)-independent complex formation with the protein ligand annexin II. The combined results support the hypothesis that S100 proteins interact in general with their targets after a Ca(2+)-dependent conformational change which involves hydrophobic residues of the C-terminal extension.  相似文献   

18.
R L Brown 《Biochemistry》1992,31(25):5918-5925
In the dark, the activity of the cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of retinal rod outer segments is held in check by its two inhibitory gamma subunits. Following illumination, gamma is rapidly removed from its inhibitory site by transducin, the G-protein of the visual system. In order to probe the functional roles of specific regions in the PDE gamma primary sequence, 10 variants of PDE gamma have been produced by site-specific mutagenesis and expression in bacteria and their properties compared to those of protein containing the wild-type bovine PDE gamma amino acid sequence. Three questions were asked about each mutant: What is its affinity for the alpha beta catalytic subunit of PDE? Does it inhibit catalytic activity? If so, can transducin relieve this inhibition? Binding to PDE alpha beta was determined directly using fluorescein-labeled gamma by measuring the increase in emission anisotropy that occurs when gamma binds to alpha beta. Inhibition of PDE alpha beta was measured by reconstitution of the gamma variants with gamma-free PDE generated by limited digestion with trypsin or endoproteinase Arg-C. Unlike trypsin, the latter enzyme did not remove PDE's ability to bind membranes and be activated by transducin, so that transducin activation of PDE containing specific gamma variants could be assayed directly. The results indicate that mutations in many regions of gamma affect its binding to alpha beta. A mutant missing the last five carboxy-terminal residues (83-87) was totally lacking in inhibitory activity. However, it still bound to PDE alpha beta tightly, although with a 100-fold lower dissociation constant (approximately 5 nM) than that of wild-type gamma (approximately 50 pM).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The bifunctional reagents para-phenyldimaleimide and maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester were used to chemically cross-link the subunits of the transducin and cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) complexes of bovine rod photoreceptor cells. The cross-linked products were identified by Western immunoblotting using antisera against purified subunits of transducin (T alpha and T beta gamma) and PDE. Oligomeric cross-linked products of transducin subunits as large as (T alpha beta gamma)3 were observed in the latent form of transducin with bound GDP. In addition to the expected T alpha beta and T beta gamma cross-linked products, a (T alpha gamma)2 structure was detected. The close proximity of T alpha and T gamma suggests that T gamma may play a role in conferring the specificity of the interaction between T alpha and rhodopsin. Most of the oligomeric cross-linked structures between T alpha and T beta gamma were diminished in the activated form of transducin, with guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) (Gpp(NH)p) bound. However, cross-linking between T beta and T gamma was not altered. These results suggest that transducin exists as an oligomer in solution which dissociates upon the binding of Gpp(NH)p. To identify the possible interacting domains between the T alpha, T beta, and T gamma subunits, the cross-linked products were subjected to limited tryptic proteolysis. Several cross-linked tryptic peptides of transducin subunits were found and include the cross-linked products of the N terminus 15-kDa fragment of T beta and the C terminus 5-kDa fragment of T alpha, T gamma and the 12-kDa fragment of T alpha, T gamma and the 15-kDa as well as the 23-kDa fragments of T beta, and an intra-T alpha cross-linked product of the 2- and 21-kDa fragments. These results have allowed the construction of a topographical model for the transducin subunits. The organization of the subunits of PDE (P alpha, P beta, and P gamma) was also studied. The formation of the high molecular size cross-linked products of PDE resulted in the concurrent loss of the P beta and P gamma subunits, suggesting that they are in close proximity. Finally, the interaction between transducin and PDE was examined by chemical cross-linking of transducin-Gpp(NH)p and PDE. Two additional cross-linked products of 180 and 210 kDa were obtained which could be due to the cross-linking of T alpha or T beta with P alpha beta subunits.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Our previous study has shown that P gamma, the regulatory subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE), is ADP-ribosylated by endogenous ADP-ribosyltransferase when P gamma is free or complexed with the catalytic subunits of PDE in amphibian rod photoreceptor membranes. The P gamma domain containing ADP-ribosylated arginines was shown to be involved in its interaction with T alpha, a key interaction for PDE activation. In this study, we describe a possible function of the P gamma ADP-ribosylation in the GTP/T alpha-dependent PDE activation. When rod membranes were preincubated with or without NAD and washed with a buffer containing GTP, the PDE activity of NAD-preincubated membranes was increased by the GTP-washing only to approximately 50% of that of membranes preincubated without NAD. The P gamma release by the GTP-washing from these NAD-preincubated membranes was also suppressed to approximately 50% of that preincubated without NAD. Taking into consideration that approximately 50% of P gamma is ADP-ribosylated under these conditions, these observations suggest that the ADP-ribosylated P gamma cannot interact with GTP/T alpha. We have also shown that a soluble fraction of ROS contains an enzyme(s) to release the radioactivity of [32P]ADP-ribosylated P gamma in concentration- and time-dependent manners, suggesting that the P gamma ADP-ribosylation is reversible. Rod ADP-ribosyltransferase solubilized from membranes by phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C was separated into two fractions by ion-exchange columns. Biochemical characterization of these two fractions, including measurement of the Km for NAD and P gamma, estimation of their molecular masses, ADP-ribosylation of P gamma arginine mutants, effects of ADP-ribosyltransferase inhibitors on the P gamma ADP-ribosylation, and effects of salts and pH on the P gamma ADP-ribosylation, indicates that rod ADP-ribosyltransferase contains two isozymes, and that these two isozymes have similar properties for the P gamma ADP-ribosylation. Our observations strongly suggest that the negative regulation of PDE through the reversible P gamma ADP-ribosylation may function in the phototransduction mechanism.  相似文献   

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