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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
Members of the phospholipase C-beta (PLC-beta) family of proteins are activated either by G alpha or G beta gamma subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins. To define specific regions of PLC-beta 3 that are involved in binding and activation by G beta gamma, a series of fragments of PLC-beta 3 as glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins were produced. A fragment encompassing the N-terminal pleckstrin homology (PH) domain and downstream sequence (GST-N) bound to G protein beta 1 gamma 2 in an in vitro binding assay, and binding was inhibited by G protein alpha subunit, G alpha i1. This PLC-beta 3 fragment also inhibited G beta gamma-stimulated PLC-beta activity in a reconstitution system, while having no significant effect on G alpha q-stimulated PLC-beta 3 activity. The N-terminal G beta gamma binding region was delineated further to the first 180 amino acids, and the sequence Asn150-Ser180, just distal to the PH domain, was found to be required for the interaction. Mutation of basic residues 154Arg, 155Lys, 159Lys, and 161Lys to Glu within this region reduced G beta gamma binding affinity and specifically reduced the EC50 for G beta gamma-dependent activation of the mutant enzyme 3-fold. Basal activity and G alpha q-dependent activation of the enzyme were unaffected by the mutations. While these basic residues may not directly mediate the interaction with G beta gamma, the data provide evidence for an N-terminal G beta gamma binding region of PLC-beta 3 that is involved in activation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Genetic and structural analysis of the alpha chain polypeptides of heterotrimeric G proteins defines functional domains for GTP/GDP binding, GTPase activity, effector activation, receptor contact and beta gamma subunit complex regulation. The conservation in sequence comprising the GDP/GTP binding and GTPase domains among G protein alpha subunits readily allows common mutations to be made for the design of mutant polypeptides that function as constitutive active or dominant negative alpha chains when expressed in different cell types. Organization of the effector activation, receptor and beta gamma contact domains is similar in the primary sequence of the different alpha subunit polypeptides relative to the GTP/GDP binding domain sequences. Mutation within common motifs of the different G protein alpha chain polypeptides have similar functional consequences. Thus, what has been learned with the Gs and Gi proteins and the regulation of adenylyl cyclase can be directly applied to the analysis of newly identified G proteins and their coupling to receptors and regulation of putative effector enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
The G proteins transduce hormonal and other signals into regulation of enzymes such as adenylyl cyclase and retinal cGMP phosphodiesterase. Each G protein contains an alpha subunit that binds and hydrolyzes guanine nucleotides and interacts with beta gamma subunits and specific receptor and effector proteins. Amphipathic and secondary structure analysis of the primary sequences of five different alpha chains (bovine alpha s, alpha t1 and alpha t2, mouse alpha i, and rat alpha o) predicted the secondary structure of a composite alpha chain (alpha avg). The alpha chains contain four short regions of sequence homologous to regions in the GDP binding domain of bacterial elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). Similarities between the predicted secondary structures of these regions in alpha avg and the known secondary structure of EF-Tu allowed us to construct a three-dimensional model of the GDP binding domain of alpha avg. Identification of the GDP binding domain of alpha avg defined three additional domains in the composite polypeptide. The first includes the amino terminal 41 residues of alpha avg, with a predicted amphipathic alpha helical structure; this domain may control binding of the alpha chains to the beta gamma complex. The second domain, containing predicted beta strands and alpha helices, several of which are strongly amphipathic, probably contains sequences responsible for interaction of alpha chains with effector enzymes. The predicted structure of the third domain, containing the carboxy terminal 100 amino acids, is predominantly beta sheet with an amphipathic alpha helix at the carboxy terminus. We propose that this domain is responsible for receptor binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
8.
Co-expression of the alpha(1b)-adrenoreceptor and Galpha(11) in cells derived from a Galpha(q)/Galpha(11) knock-out mouse allows agonist-mediated elevation of intracellular Ca(2+) levels that is transduced by beta/gamma released from the G protein alpha subunit. Mutation of Tyr(356) of Galpha(11) to Phe, within a receptor contact domain, had little effect on function but this was reduced greatly by alteration to Ser and virtually eliminated by conversion to Asp. This pattern was replicated following incorporation of each form of Galpha(11) into fusion proteins with the alpha(1b)-adrenoreceptor. Following a [(35)S]guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTPgammaS) binding assay, immunoprecipitation of the wild type alpha(1b)-adrenoreceptor-Galpha(11) fusion protein indicated that the agonist phenylephrine stimulated guanine nucleotide exchange on Galpha(11) more than 30-fold. Information transfer by agonist was controlled in residue 356 Galpha(11) mutants with rank order Tyr > Phe > Trp > Ile > Ala = Gln = Arg > Ser > Asp, although these alterations did not alter the binding affinity of either phenylephrine or an antagonist ligand. Mutation of a beta/gamma contact interface in the alpha(1b)-adrenoreceptor-Tyr(356) Galpha(11) fusion protein did not alter ligand binding affinity but did reduce greatly beta/gamma binding and phenylephrine stimulation of [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding. It also prevented agonist elevation of intracellular Ca(2+) levels, as did a mutation in Galpha(11) that prevents G protein subunit dissociation. These results indicate that a bulky aromatic group is required four amino acids from the C terminus of Galpha(11) to maximize information transfer from an agonist-occupied receptor and disprove the hypothesis that tyrosine phosphorylation of this residue is required for G protein activation (Umemori, H., Inoue, T., Kume, S., Sekiyama, N., Nagao, M., Itoh, H., Nakanishi, S., Mikoshiba, K., and Yamamoto, T. (1997) Science 276, 1878-1881). This is distinct from Galpha(i1), where hydrophobicity of the amino acid is the key determinant at this location. They also further demonstrate a key role for the beta/gamma complex in enhancing receptor to G protein alpha subunit information transfer.  相似文献   

9.
G proteins are active as long as GTP is bound to the alpha subunit. Activation ends when GTP is cleaved to GDP that then stays bound to the active site. Agonist-liganded receptors allow formation of the active state by decreasing the affinity of alpha subunits for GDP allowing exchange of GDP for GTP. Since receptors interact with the C terminus of the alpha subunits, we tested whether deletion of the C terminus could mimic activation by receptors. Three deletions and one point mutation at the C terminus of alpha o were engineered in alpha o cDNA by the polymerase chain reaction, transcribed into RNA, and translated in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate. The ability of in vitro synthesized protein to bind guanine nucleotide was inferred from analysis of native tryptic cleavage patterns, while the ability of the proteins to associate with beta gamma was measured by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Deletion of 14 amino acids, alpha oD[341], from the C terminus causes a large decrease in GDP affinity, with little or no change in guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate affinity. When GTP is present, alpha oD[341] remains in the activated conformation because exchange of GTP for GDP is rapid. Deletion of 10 amino acids, alpha oD[345], lowers GDP affinity, but less dramatically than in alpha oD[341]. Deletion of 5 amino acids, alpha oD[350], or mutation of Arg-349 to proline alpha oR[349P] has no detectable effects on GDP affinity. Deletion of up to 10 amino acids from the C terminus does not prevent formation of alpha beta gamma heterotrimers. We propose that the C terminus of the alpha subunit is a mobile region that blocks dissociation of GDP. Agonist-liganded receptors may move it aside to allow release of GDP, exchange for GTP, and activation of the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

10.
A mutant F(1)-ATPase alpha(3)beta(3)gamma subcomplex from the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 was constructed, in which 111 amino acid residues (Val(92) to Phe(202)) from the central region of the gamma subunit were replaced by the 148 amino acid residues of the homologous region from spinach chloroplast F(1)-ATPase gamma subunit, including the regulatory stretch, and were designated as alpha(3)beta(3)gamma((TCT)) (Thermophilic-Chloroplast-Thermophilic). By the insertion of this regulatory region into the gamma subunit of thermophilic F(1), we could confer the thiol modulation property to the thermophilic alpha(3)beta(3)gamma subcomplex. The overexpressed alpha(3)beta(3)gamma((TCT)) was easily purified in large scale, and the ATP hydrolyzing activity of the obtained complex was shown to increase up to 3-fold upon treatment with chloroplast thioredoxin-f and dithiothreitol. No loss of thermostability compared with the wild type subcomplex was found, and activation by dithiothreitol was functional at temperatures up to 80 degrees C. alpha(3)beta(3)gamma((TCT)) was inhibited by the epsilon subunit from chloroplast F(1)-ATPase but not by the one from the thermophilic F(1)-ATPase, indicating that the introduced amino acid residues from chloroplast F(1)-gamma subunit are important for functional interaction with the epsilon subunit.  相似文献   

11.
G proteins transmit a variety of extracellular signals into intracellular responses. The Galpha and Gbetagamma subunits are both known to regulate effectors. Interestingly, the Galpha subunit also determines subtype specificity of Gbetagamma effector interactions. However, in light of the common paradigm that Galpha and Gbetagamma subunits dissociate during activation, a plausible mechanism of how this subtype specificity is generated was lacking. Using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based assay developed to directly measure mammalian G protein activation in intact cells, we demonstrate that fluorescent Galpha(i1,2,3), Galpha(z), and Gbeta(1)gamma(2) subunits do not dissociate during activation but rather undergo subunit rearrangement as indicated by an activation-induced increase in FRET. In contrast, fluorescent Galpha(o) subunits exhibited an activation-induced decrease in FRET, reflecting subunit dissociation or, alternatively, a distinct subunit rearrangement. The alpha(B/C)-region within the alpha-helical domain, which is much more conserved within Galpha(i1,2,3) and Galpha(z) as compared with that in Galpha(o), was found to be required for exhibition of an activation-induced increase in FRET between fluorescent Galpha and Gbetagamma subunits. However, the alpha(B/C)-region of Galpha(il) alone was not sufficient to transfer the activation pattern of Galpha(i) to the Galpha(o) subunit. Either residues in the first 91 amino acids or in the C-terminal remainder (amino acids 93-354) of Galpha(il) together with the alpha(B/C)-helical region of Galpha(i1) were needed to transform the Galpha(o)-activation pattern into a Galpha(i1)-type of activation. The discovery of subtype-selective mechanisms of G protein activation illustrates that G protein subfamilies have specific mechanisms of activation that may provide a previously unknown basis for G protein signaling specificity.  相似文献   

12.
Mg2+ interacts with the alpha subunits of guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) in the presence of guanosine-5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP-gamma S) to form a highly fluorescent complex from which nucleotide dissociates very slowly. The apparent Kd for interaction of G alpha X GTP gamma S with Mg2+ is approximately 5 nM, similar to the Km for G protein GTPase activity X G beta gamma increases the rate of dissociation of GTP gamma S from G alpha X GTP gamma S or G alpha X GTP gamma S X Mg2+ at low concentrations of Mg2+. When the concentration of Mg2+ exceeds 1 mM, G beta gamma dissociates from G beta gamma X G alpha X GTP gamma S X Mg2+. Compared with the dramatic effect of Mg2+ on binding of GTP gamma S to G alpha, the metal has relatively little effect on the binding of GDP. However, G beta gamma increases the affinity of G alpha for GDP by more than 100-fold. High concentrations of Mg2+ promote the dissociation of GDP from G beta gamma X G alpha X GDP, apparently without causing subunit dissociation. The steady-state rate of GTP hydrolysis is strictly correlated with the rate of dissociation of GDP from G alpha under all conditions examined. Thus, there are at least two sites for interaction of Mg2+ with G protein-nucleotide complexes. Furthermore, binding of G beta gamma and GTP gamma S to G alpha is negatively cooperative, while the binding interaction between G beta gamma and GDP is strongly positive.  相似文献   

13.
In this study, we have examined the interactions of the beta gamma subunit complex of the retinal GTP-binding protein transducin (beta gamma T) with its alpha subunit (alpha T) using fluorescence spectroscopic approaches. The beta gamma T subunit complex was covalently labeled with 2-(4'-maleimidylanilino)napthalene-6-sulfonic acid (MIANS), an environmentally sensitive fluorescent cysteine reagent. The formation of the MIANS beta gamma T complexes (two to five MIANS adducts per beta gamma T) resulted in 2-3-fold enhancements in the MIANS fluorescence, and 20-25-nm blue shifts in the fluorescence emission maxima, relative to the emission for identical concentrations of MIANS-labeled MIANS complexes. The addition of alpha T.GDP to these MIANS beta gamma T complexes resulted in an additional enhancement in the MIANS fluorescence (typically ranging from 20 to 40%) and a 5-10-nm blue shift in the wavelength for maximum emission. These fluorescence changes were specifically elicited by the GDP-bound form of alpha T and were not observed upon the addition of purified alpha T.guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) complexes to the MIANS beta gamma T species. Conditions which resulted in the activation of the alpha T.GDP subunit (i.e. the addition of AlF4- or the addition of rhodopsin-containing vesicles and GTP gamma S) resulted in a reversal of the alpha T.GDP-induced enhancement of the MIANS beta gamma T fluorescence. Thus the MIANS beta gamma T fluorescence provided a spectroscopic monitor for transducin-subunit association and transducin-activation. Based on the results from studies using this spectroscopic read-out, it appears that the association of the alpha T.GDP species with the beta gamma T subunit complex to form the holotransducin molecule is rapid and does not limit the rate of the rhodopsin-stimulated activation of holotransducin. However, either the dissociation of the activated alpha T subunit from the beta gamma T complex, or a conformational change in beta gamma T which occurs as a result of the subunit dissociation event, appears to be slow relative to the G protein-subunit association event.  相似文献   

14.
Mechanisms for heterotrimeric G protein activation that do not rely on G protein coupled receptor activation are becoming increasingly apparent. We recently identified beta gamma subunit-binding peptides that we proposed bound to a "hot spot" on beta gamma subunits, stimulating G protein dissociation without stimulating nucleotide exchange and activating G protein signaling in intact cells. AGS3, a member of the activators of G protein signaling family of proteins, also activates G protein signaling in a nucleotide exchange-independent manner, and AGS3 homologues are involved in asymmetric cell division during development. Here we demonstrate that a consensus G protein regulatory (GPR) peptide from AGS3 and related proteins is sufficient to induce G protein subunit dissociation and that both the GPR and hot spot-binding peptides promote dissociation to extents comparable with a known G protein activator, AMF. Peptides derived from adenylyl cyclase 2 and GRK2 prevented formation of the heterotrimeric complex but did not alter the rate of alpha subunit dissociation from beta gamma subunits. These data indicate that these nucleotide exchange-independent G protein activator peptides do not simply compete for alpha interactions with beta gamma subunits, but actively promote subunit dissociation. Thus, we propose two novel mechanisms for nucleotide exchange independent activation of G protein signaling, one that involves conformational changes in the alpha subunit and one that involves conformational changes in the beta gamma subunits.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding proteins are composed of alpha and beta gamma subunits and couple a variety of cell-surface receptors to intracellular enzymes or ion channels. The heterotrimer dissociates into alpha and beta gamma subunits when the alpha subunit is activated by guanine nucleoside triphosphates. Several lines of evidence show that the amino terminus of the alpha subunit is important for the interaction with the beta gamma subunit (Neer, E. J., Pulsifer, L., and Wolf, L. G. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8996-9000; Fung, B. K.-K., and Nash, C. R. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10503-10510). We have mutagenized the amino terminus of alpha o to dissect the relative contributions of amino-terminal myristoylation and specific amino acid sequences to subunit interaction. Wild-type and mutant alpha o cDNAs were translated in vitro in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate. All proteins were able to bind guanosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate and to achieve the necessary conformation for protection from tryptic digestion. Two assays of alpha o beta gamma interactions were used: sucrose density gradients to look for stable heterotrimer formation and ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin to detect weak or transient alpha o beta gamma interactions. Our results indicate that myristoylation is essential for stable heterotrimer formation, but that nonmyristoylated proteins are also capable of interacting with the beta gamma subunit. Amino acids 7-10 have an important role in alpha o beta gamma interactions whether alpha o is myristoylated or not. Deletion of this region diminishes the ability of alpha o to interact with the beta gamma subunit, but substitutions at this position indicate that other amino acids can be tolerated without affecting subunit interaction.  相似文献   

17.
Adenylylcyclase cannot be activated by hormones or guanine nucleotide analogs in membranes from cells that express the G226A mutant form Gs alpha instead of the wild-type protein. The mutant Gs alpha protein appears incapable of undergoing the conformational change necessary for guanine nucleotide-induced dissociation of the G protein alpha subunit from the beta gamma subunit complex (Miller, R.T., Masters, S.B., Sullivan, K.A., Beiderman, B., and Bourne, H.R. (1988) Nature 334, 712-715). G226A Gs alpha was synthesized in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized. Examination of the kinetics of dissociation of guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) suggests that G226A Gs alpha is incapable of assuming the conformation necessary for high affinity binding of Mg2+ to the alpha subunit-GTP gamma S complex. Associated changes include the failure of Mg2+ and GTP gamma S to confer resistance to tryptic proteolysis upon the protein, to enhance intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, or to cause dissociation of alpha from beta gamma. However, the GTPase activity of the mutant protein is near normal (at high Mg2+ concentrations), and the protein is capable of activating adenylylcyclase. A similar defect is present in G49V Gs alpha. Failure of G protein subunit dissociation appears to be the explanation for the phenotypic properties of cells that express G226A Gs alpha, and this mutation thus highlights the crucial nature of this reaction as a component of G protein action.  相似文献   

18.
Origin of the gamma polypeptide of the Na+/K+-ATPase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The Na+/K+-ATPase purified from lamb kidney contains a gamma polypeptide fraction which is a collection of fragments derived from the alpha and beta polypeptides of the enzyme. This fraction has the solubility characteristics of a proteolipid and was isolated either by high performance liquid chromatography (size exclusion chromatography) in 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate or by sequential organic extraction of purified lamb kidney Na+/K+-ATPase. Formation of gamma polypeptide(s) from detergent solubilized holoenzyme was accelerated by sulfhydryl containing reagents and was unaffected by addition of inhibitors of proteolytic enzymes. Treatment of the holoenzyme with the photoaffinity reagent N-(2-nitro-4-azidophenyl)[3H]ouabain ([3H]NAP-ouabain) labeled the alpha polypeptide and the gamma polypeptide fraction but not the beta polypeptide. Amino acid sequence analysis of one gamma polypeptide preparation revealed homology of one component of this fraction with the N-terminus of the beta subunit of the Na+/K+-ATPase. Amino acid analysis of two preparations of proteolipid showed similar amino acid compositions with a peptide derived from the alpha subunit. The insolubility and complexity of the gamma polypeptide(s)/proteolipid fraction appears to preclude a conclusive sequence analysis of all components of this fraction.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Scg1, the product of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SCG1 (also called GPA1) gene, is homologous to the alpha subunits of G proteins involved in signal transduction in mammalian cells. Scg1 negatively controls the pheromone response pathway in haploid cells. Either pheromonal activation or an scg1 null mutation relieves the negative control and leads to an arrest of cell growth in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Expression of rat G alpha s was previously shown to complement the growth defect of scg1 null mutants while not allowing mating. We have extended this analysis to examine the effects of the short form of G alpha s (which lacks 15 amino acids present in the long form), G alpha i2, G alpha o, and Scg1-mammalian G alpha hybrids. In addition, we have found that constructs able to complement scg1 are also able to inhibit the response to pheromone and mating when expressed in a wild-type SCG1 strain. Overexpression of Scg1 has a similar inhibitory effect. These results are consistent with a model proposed for the action of Scg1 as the alpha component of a heterotrimeric G protein in which the beta gamma component (Ste4/Ste18) activates the pheromone response after dissociation from Scg1. They suggest that the G alpha constructs able to complement scg1 can interact with beta gamma to prevent activation of the pathway but are unable to interact with pheromone receptors to activate the pathway.  相似文献   

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