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1.
ADP-ribosylation of transducin by pertussis toxin   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Transducin, the guanyl nucleotide-binding regulatory protein of retinal rod outer segments that couples the photon receptor, rhodopsin, with the light-activated cGMP phosphodiesterase, can be resolved into two functional components, T alpha and T beta gamma. T alpha (39 kDa), which is [32P]ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin and [32P]NAD in rod outer segments and in purified transducin, was also labeled by the toxin after separation from T beta gamma (36 kDa and approximately 10 kDa); neither component of T beta gamma was a pertussis toxin substrate. Labeling of T alpha was enhanced by T beta gamma and was maximal at approximately 1:1 molar ratio of T alpha : T beta gamma. Limited proteolysis by trypsin of T alpha in the presence of guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) resulted in the sequential appearance of proteins of 38 and 32 kDa. The amino terminus of both 38- and 32-kDa proteins was leucine, whereas that of T alpha could not be identified and was assumed to be blocked. The 32-kDa peptide was not a pertussis toxin substrate. Labeling of the 38-kDa protein was poor and was not enhanced by T beta gamma. Trypsin treatment of [32P]ADP-ribosyl-T alpha produced a labeled 37-38-kDa doublet followed by appearance of radioactivity at the dye front. It appears, therefore, that, although the 38-kDa protein was poor toxin substrate, it contained the ADP-ribosylation site. Without rhodopsin, labeling of T alpha (in the presence of T beta gamma) was unaffected by Gpp(NH)p, guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S), GTP, GDP, and guanosine 5'-O-(thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S) but was increased by ATP. When photolyzed rhodopsin and T beta gamma were present, Gpp(NH)p and GTP gamma S decreased [32P]ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin. Thus, pertussis toxin-catalyzed [32P]ADP-ribosylation of T alpha was affected by nucleotides, rhodopsin and light in addition to T beta gamma. The amino terminus of T alpha, while it does not contain the pertussis toxin ADP-ribosylation site, appeared critical to its reactivity.  相似文献   

2.
Transducin (T alpha beta gamma), the heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein that interacts with photoexcited rhodopsin (Rh*) and the cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) in retinal rod cells, is sensitive to cholera (CTx) and pertussis toxins (PTx), which catalyze the binding of an ADP-ribose to the alpha subunit at Arg174 and Cys347, respectively. These two types of ADP-ribosylations are investigated with transducin in vitro or with reconstituted retinal rod outer-segment membranes. Several functional perturbations inflicted on T alpha by the resulting covalent modifications are studied such as: the binding of T alpha to T beta gamma to the membrane and to Rh*; the spontaneous or Rh*-catalysed exchange of GDP for GTP or guanosine 5-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[gamma S]), the conformational switch and activation undergone by transducin upon this exchange, the activation of T alpha GDP by fluoride complexes and the activation of the PDE by T alpha GTP. ADP-ribosylation of transducin by CTx requires the GTP-dependent activation of ADP-ribosylation factors (ARF), takes place only on the high-affinity, nucleotide-free complex, Rh*-T alpha empty-T beta gamma and does not activate T alpha. Subsequent to CTx-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation the following occurs: (a) addition of GDP induces the release from Rh* of inactive CTxT alpha GDP (CTxT alpha, ADP-ribosylated alpha subunit of transducin) which remains associated to T beta gamma; (b) CTxT alpha GDP-T beta gamma exhibits the usual slow kinetics of spontaneous exchange of GDP for GTP[gamma S] in the absence of Rh*, but the association and dissociation of fluoride complexes, which act as gamma-phosphate analogs, are kinetically modified, suggesting that the ADP-ribose on Arg174 specifically perturbs binding of the gamma-phosphate in the nucleotide site; (c) CTxT alpha GDP-T beta gamma can still couple to Rh* and undergo fast nucleotide exchange; (d) CTxT alpha GTP[gamma S] and CTxT alpha GDP-AlFx (AlFx, Aluminofluoride complex) activate retinal cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE) with the same efficiency as their unmodified counterparts, but the kinetics and affinities of fluoride activation are changed; (e) CTxT alpha GTP hydrolyses GTP more slowly than unmodified T alpha GTP, which entirely accounts for the prolonged action of CTxT alpha GTP on the PDE; (f) after GTP hydrolysis, CTxT alpha GDP reassociates to T beta gamma and becomes inactive. Thus, CTx catalyzed ADP-ribosylation only perturbs in T alpha the GTP-binding domain, but not the conformational switch nor the domains of contact with the T beta gamma subunit, with Rh* and with the PDE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The first stage of amplification in the cyclic GMP cascade in bovine retinal rod is carried out by transducin, a guanine nucleotide regulatory protein consisting of two functional subunits, T alpha (Mr approximately 39,000) and T beta gamma (Mr approximately 36,000 and approximately 10,000). Limited trypsin digestion of the T beta gamma subunit converted the beta polypeptide to two stable fragments (Mr approximately 26,000 and approximately 14,000). The GTPase and Gpp(NH)p binding activities were not significantly affected by the cleavage. Trypsin digestion of the T alpha subunit initially removed a small segment from the polypeptide terminus and resulted in the formation of a single 38,000-Da fragment. When this fragment was recombined with the intact T beta gamma subunit in the presence of membranes containing photolyzed rhodopsin, the reconstituted transducin exhibited greatly reduced GTPase and Gpp(NH)p binding activities. The loss in activities was due to the inability of the cleaved T alpha to bind to the photolyzed rhodopsin. Prolonged digestion converted the 38,000-Da fragment to a transient 32,000-Da fragment and then to two stable 23,000-Da and 12,000-Da fragments. The cleavage of the 32,000-Da fragment, however, can be blocked by bound Gpp(NH)p. The 32,000-Da fragment contains the Gpp(NH)p binding site and retains the ability to activate phosphodiesterase. These results indicate that the guanine nucleotide binding and rhodopsin binding sites are located in topologically distinct regions of the T alpha subunit and proved evidence that a large conformational transition of the molecule occurs upon the conversion of the bound GDP to GTP.  相似文献   

4.
Photoexcitation of retinal rod photoreceptor cells involves the activation of cGMP enzyme cascade in which sequential activation of rhodopsin, transducin, and the cGMP phosphodiesterase in the rod outer segment constitutes the signal amplification mechanism. Phosducin, a 33-kDa phosphoprotein, has been shown to form a tight complex with the T beta gamma subunit of transducin. In this study, we examined the interaction of phosducin-T beta gamma and the possible regulatory role of phosducin on the cGMP cascade. Addition of phosducin to photolyzed rod outer segment (ROS) membrane reduced the GTP hydrolysis activity of transducin as well as the subsequent activation of the cGMP phosphodiesterase. Phosducin also inhibited the pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of transducin, indicating that the interaction between the T alpha and T beta gamma subunits of transducin was interrupted upon binding of phosducin. The inhibitory effects of phosducin were reversed by the addition of exogenous T beta gamma. These results suggest that phosducin is capable of regulating the amount of T beta gamma available to interact with T alpha to form the active transducin complex and thereby functions as a negative regulator of the cGMP cascade. The phosducin-induced alteration of the subunit organization of transducin was examined by chemical cross-linking method using para-phenyl dimaleimide as cross-linker. It was found that the cross-linking among T alpha and T beta gamma was blocked in the presence of phosducin. This result implies that T beta gamma may undergo a conformational change upon phosducin binding which leads to the release of T alpha. Since phosducin is a soluble protein, the interaction with transducin only occurs when transducin is dissociated from ROS disc membrane. Indeed, phosducin failed to dissociate membrane-bound transducin and did not inhibit the initial cycle of transducin activation as measured by the presteady state GTP hydrolysis. However, phosducin interacts effectively with transducin released into solution after the initial activation and blocks the re-binding of T alpha. T beta gamma to ROS membrane by forming a tight complex with T beta gamma. This interaction may play an important role in regulating the turnover of the cGMP cascade in photoreceptor cells.  相似文献   

5.
The properties and functions of the sulfhydryl groups of transducin were examined by 5,5' -dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) titration and N-ethylmaleimide modification. The T beta gamma subunit of transducin contained a total of six free sulfhydryl groups and two were reactive under native conditions. Both reactive sulfhydryl groups were located in the beta polypeptide. The functions of transducin were not affected by the modification of these two sulfhydryl groups. The T alpha subunit of transducin contained three accessible sulfhydryl groups under both native and denaturing conditions. When 1.3 sulfhydryl groups were covalently modified by N-ethylmaleimide, the GTPase activity, the guanosine 5' -(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) uptake, and the rhodopsin-binding property of transducin were inhibited. The binding of Gpp(NH)p to T alpha blocked two of the three sulfhydryl groups from chemical modification and increased the reactivity of the remaining one. Modification of this specific sulfhydryl group of T alpha -Gpp(NH)p inhibited the exchange of the bound Gpp(NH)p for GTP. However, the modified T alpha-Gpp(NH)p was able to activate cGMP phosphodiesterase in solution and on positively charged liposomes. These findings demonstrated that a conformational change of T alpha occurs upon the binding of Gpp(NH)p and a specific sulfhydryl group of T alpha plays an important role in the activation of transducin in retinal rod outer segments.  相似文献   

6.
V N Hingorani  Y Ho 《Biochemistry》1987,26(6):1633-1639
Fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC) was used to modify the lysine residues of bovine transducin (T), a GTP-binding protein involved in phototransduction of rod photoreceptor cells. The incorporation of FITC showed a stoichiometry of approximately 1 mol of FITC/mol of transducin. The labeling was specific for the T alpha subunit. There was no significant incorporation on the T beta gamma subunit. The modification had no effect on the transducin-rhodopsin interaction or on the binding of guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) [Gpp(NH)p] to transducin in the presence of photolyzed rhodopsin. The dissociation of the FITC-transducin-Gpp(NH)p complex from rhodopsin membrane remained unchanged. However, the intrinsic GTPase activity of T alpha and its ability to activate the cGMP phosphodiesterase were diminished by FITC modification. The rate of FITC labeling of the transducin-Gpp(NH)p complex was about 3-fold slower than that of transducin. Limited tryptic digestion and peptide mapping were used to localize the FITC labeling site. The majority of the FITC label was on the 23-kilodalton fragment, and a minor amount was on the 9-kilodalton fragment of the T alpha subunit. These results indicate that FITC labeling does not alter the activation of transducin by photolyzed rhodopsin but does affect the GTP hydrolytic activity as well as the GTP-induced conformational change of T alpha, which ultimately leads to the activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

7.
In the presence of guanyl nucleotides and rhodopsin-containing retinal rod outer segment membranes, transducin stimulates the light-sensitive cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase 5.5-7 times. The activation constant (Ka) for GTP and Gpp(NH)p is 0.25 microM, that for GDP and GDP beta S is 14 and 110 microM, respectively. GDP purified from other nucleotide contaminations at concentrations up to 1 mM does not stimulate phosphodiesterase but binds to transducin and inhibits the Gpp(NH)p-dependent activation of phosphodiesterase. The mode of transducin interaction with bleached rhodopsin also depends on the nature of the bound guanyl nucleotide: in the presence of GDP rhodopsin-containing membranes bind 70-100% of transducin, whereas in the presence of Gpp(NH)p the membranes bind only 13% of the protein. The experimental results suggest that GDP and GTP convert transducin into two different functional states, i.e., the transducin X GTP complex binds to phosphodiesterase causing its stimulation, while the transducin X GDP complex is predominantly bound to rhodopsin.  相似文献   

8.
The visual excitation system of the retinal rod outer segments and the hormone-sensitive adenylate cyclase complex are regulated through guanine nucleotide-binding proteins, transducin in the former and inhibitory and stimulatory regulatory components, Gi and Gs, in the latter. These proteins are functionally and structurally similar; all are heterotrimers composed of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits and exhibit guanosine triphosphatase activity stimulated by light-activated rhodopsin or the agonist-receptor complex. Adenylate cyclase can be stimulated by vanadate, which, like NaF, probably acts through Gs. Effects of vanadate on the function of a guanine nucleotide-binding protein were investigated in a reconstituted model system consisting of purified transducin subunits (T alpha, T beta gamma) and rhodopsin in phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Vanadate (decameric) inhibited [3H]GTP binding to T alpha and noncompetitively inhibited GTP hydrolysis in a concentration-dependent manner with maximal inhibition of approximately 90% at 3-5 mM. Vanadate also inhibited release of bound GDP but did not affect the rate of hydrolysis of bound GTP (single turnover rate), indicating that vanadate did not interfere with the intrinsic GTPase activity of T alpha. Binding of T alpha to rhodopsin and the ADP-ribosylation of T alpha by pertussis toxin, both of which are enhanced in the presence of T beta gamma, were inhibited by vanadate. These findings are consistent with the conclusion that vanadate can cause the dissociation of T alpha from T beta gamma, resulting in the inhibition of GDP-GTP exchange and thereby GTP hydrolysis. Adenylate cyclase activation could result from a similar effect of vanadate on Gs.  相似文献   

9.
The cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase of retinal rods is composed of three distinct polypeptides: alpha (90 kDa), beta (86 kDa), and gamma (10 kDa). In this multimeric form, the enzyme is inhibited. Its activity is stimulated by the interaction with the GTP-bound form of the T alpha subunit of transducin and reversed upon the recombination of the inhibitory gamma subunit with the catalytic alpha beta subunit. We show here by a novel coimmunoprecipitation technique that the gamma subunit, but not the alpha beta subunit, forms a 1:1 complex with T alpha. The binding of gamma to T alpha is nucleotide-dependent and is facilitated by GTP gamma S or Gpp(NH)p. This study provides convincing evidence that the T alpha-GTP subunit of transducin stimulates phosphodiesterase activity by binding to gamma and physically carrying it away from alpha beta.  相似文献   

10.
The bacterial toxins, choleragen and pertussis toxin, inhibit the light-stimulated GTPase activity of bovine retinal rod outer segments by catalysing the ADP-ribosylation of the alpha-subunit (T alpha) of transducin [Abood, Hurley, Pappone, Bourne & Stryer (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 10540-10543; Van Dop, Yamanaka, Steinberg, Sekura, Manclark, Stryer & Bourne (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 23-26]. Incubation of retinal rod outer segments with NAD+ and a purified NAD+:arginine ADP-ribosyltransferase from turkey erythrocytes resulted in approx. 60% inhibition of GTPase activity. Inhibition was dependent on both enzyme and NAD+, and was potentiated by the non-hydrolysable GTP analogues guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-imido]triphosphate (p[NH]ppG) and guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-methylene]triphosphate (p[CH2]ppG). The transferase ADP-ribosylated both the T alpha and T beta subunits of purified transducin. T alpha (39 kDa), after ADP-ribosylation, migrated as two distinct peptides with molecular masses of 42 kDa and 46 kDa on SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. T beta (36 kDa), after ADP-ribosylation, migrated as a 38 kDa peptide. With purified transducin subunits, it was observed that the GTPase activity of ADP-ribosylated T alpha, reconstituted with unmodified T beta gamma and photolysed rhodopsin, was decreased by 80%; conversely, reconstitution of T alpha with ADP-ribosyl-T beta gamma resulted in only a 19% inhibition of GTPase. Thus ADP-ribosylation of T alpha, the transducin subunit that contains the guanine nucleotide-binding site, has more dramatic effects on GTPase activity than does modification of the critical 'helper subunits' T beta gamma. To elucidate the mechanism of GTPase inhibition by transferase, we studied the effect of ADP-ribosylation on p[NH]pp[3H]G binding to transducin. It was shown previously that modification of transducin by choleragen, which like transferase ADP-ribosylates arginine residues, did not affect guanine nucleotide binding. ADP-ribosylation by the transferase, however, decreased p[NH]pp[3H]G binding, consistent with the hypothesis that choleragen and transferase inhibit GTPase by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of pertussis toxin on GTP-binding protein of bovine rod cell outer segments (transducin) was studied. Pertussis toxin was shown to ADP ribosylate either alpha subunit of free transducin or transducin-GDP complex, whereas GTP and its analogue Gpp(NH)p strongly inhibit ADP ribosylation of transducin. Pertussis toxin inhibits rod outer segment membrane GTPase and GTPase of homogeneous transducin by 40% and 70-80%, respectively. Activation of rod cell cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase by transducin is reduced after its preincubation with pertussis toxin. In transducin modified by pertussis toxin, 83% of GDP becomes tightly bound and cannot be exchanged with Gpp(NH)p. The stabilization of complex transducin-GDP after ADP ribosylation can explain the inhibitory effect of pertussis toxin on GTP hydrolysis by transducin, and on phosphodiesterase activation by guanyl nucleotides.  相似文献   

12.
The visual transduction cascade of the retinal rod outer segment responds to light by decreasing membrane current. This ion channel is controlled by cyclic GMP which is, in turn, controlled by its synthesis and degradation by guanylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase, respectively. When light bleaches rhodopsin there is an induced exchange of GTP for GDP bound to the alpha subunit of the retinal G-protein, transducin (T). The T alpha.GTP then removes the inhibitory constraint of a small inhibitory subunit (PDE gamma) on the retinal cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). This results in activation of the PDE and in hydrolysis of cGMP. Recently both low and high affinity binding sites have been identified for PDE gamma on the PDE alpha/beta catalytic subunits. The discovery of two PDE gamma subunits, each with different binding affinities, suggests that a tightly regulated shut-off mechanism may be present.  相似文献   

13.
Transducin, a retinal G-protein, has been shown to exist as heterotrimers of alpha (39,000), beta (36,000), and gamma (approximately 7,000) subunits. Blue Sepharose CL-6B column chromatography of a transducin preparation extracted with a metal-free, low salt buffer containing GTP showed three distinct alpha and two distinct beta gamma activities in frog (Rana catesbeiana) rod outer segment. The binding of a hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog in these alpha fractions was proportional to the amount of the M(r) 39,000 protein. The first alpha was eluted in a complex with an inhibitory subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase, but alpha subunits in the second and the third fractions were not complexed with any proteins. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and characterization with regard to the interaction with the inhibitory subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase suggested that the first and the second alpha s were the same protein; however, the third alpha showed different characters as follows. We designated alpha in the first two fractions as alpha 1, and alpha in the third fraction as alpha 2. Nonlinear regression analysis for the binding of a hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog to both alpha subunits revealed a single class of GTP binding sites with an apparent stoichiometry of 1 mol of GTP/mol of alpha. Compared with alpha 1, alpha 2 required larger amounts of rhodopsin and beta gamma for the binding of a hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog. alpha 2 also showed less binding with the inhibitory subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase. Both alpha 1 and alpha 2 complexed with beta gamma or beta delta (described below) were substrates for pertussis toxin-dependent ADP-ribosylation. The protein profiles of two beta gamma fractions revealed that the main fraction was composed of a beta gamma complex; however, the second active fraction was composed of beta complexed with delta (M(r) 12,000). Compared with beta gamma, beta delta stimulated GTP binding to alpha 1 at approximately 10-fold higher concentration. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed five beta and two gamma isoforms in beta gamma. Only one beta isoform was present in beta delta. The diversity of transducin subunits may reflect different signaling pathways in visual signal transduction.  相似文献   

14.
L Ramdas  R M Disher  T G Wensel 《Biochemistry》1991,30(50):11637-11645
Transducin, the signal coupling protein of retinal rod photoreceptor cells, is one of a family of G proteins that can be inactivated by pertussis toxin. We have investigated the nature of this inactivation in order to determine (1) whether it requires the toxin-catalyzed transfer of ADP-ribose from NAD+ to cysteine-347 of the alpha subunit and (2) whether it involves locking the alpha subunit in the inactive conformation characteristic of its GDP-bound state, or is limited to disruption of binding to photoexcited rhodopsin (R*). Our results indicate that all observed effects of pertussis toxin treatment, including a shift in the electrophoretic mobility of transducin's alpha subunit and functional inactivation, require NAD+ and that the appearance of the shift parallels incorporation of ADP-ribose. We have also found that, apart from interactions with photoexcited rhodopsin, the functional properties of ADP-ribosylated transducin are essentially the same as those of unmodified transducin. Normal spontaneous nucleotide exchange kinetics and the ability to activate cGMP phosphodiesterase are preserved following quantitative ADP-ribosylation, as are the abilities to hydrolyze GTP, to bind to a dye affinity column, and to display enhanced fluorescence upon addition of Al3+ and F-. Thus, ADP-ribosylation merely blocks catalysis of transducin nucleotide exchange by R* and does not lock transducin in an inactive state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
In bullfrog (Rana catesbiana) rods the activity of cyclic GMP (cGMP) phosphodiesterase was stimulated 10 times by washing disc membranes with an isotonic, GTP-containing buffer. This stimulation was maintained following hydrolysis of GTP and after removal of guanine nucleotides. At least 60-70% of the inhibitory gamma subunit of cGMP phosphodiesterase (P gamma) was physically released from membranes by these washing procedures. When cGMP phosphodiesterase was activated by a hydrolysis-resistant GTP analogue, P gamma was found in the supernatant complexed with the transducin alpha subunit (T alpha) using three chromatography systems. When GTP was used to activate cGMP phosphodiesterase, P gamma was also found in the supernatant complexed with GDP.T alpha. This complex was also isolated using the same three chromatography systems, indicating that P gamma remained tightly bound to T alpha even after bound GTP was hydrolyzed. Interaction with the beta,gamma subunits of transducin, which remained associated with disc membranes, was required for the release of P gamma from the GDP.T alpha complex, which resulted in the deactivation of active cGMP phosphodiesterase. We conclude that during activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase, P gamma is complexed with T alpha (both GTP and GDP forms) in the supernatant and that, following GTP hydrolysis, beta,gamma subunits of transducin are necessary for the release of P gamma from the complex and the resulting inactivation of cGMP phosphodiesterase in frog photoreceptors.  相似文献   

16.
Transducin, the guanyl nucleotide-binding protein of the retinal light-activated cGMP phosphodiesterase system, is structurally and functionally similar to the inhibitory and stimulatory guanyl nucleotide-binding proteins, Gi and Gs, of the adenylate cyclase complex. All are heterotrimers composed of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits. Gs and Gi can be activated by NaF with AlCl3 as well as by agonists acting through specific receptors. The effects of NaF and AlCl3 on transducin were investigated in a reconstituted system consisting of the purified subunits of transducin (T alpha, T beta, gamma) and rhodopsin. NaF noncompetitively inhibited the GTPase activity of T alpha in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. Inhibition by NaF was enhanced synergistically by AlCl3 which alone only slightly inhibited GTPase activity. None of the other anions tested reproduced the effect of fluoride. Fluoride inhibited [3H]guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate binding to T alpha and release of bound GDP. The ADP-ribosylation of T alpha by pertussis toxin and binding of T alpha to rhodopsin, both of which are enhanced in the presence of T beta gamma, were inhibited by NaF and AlCl3. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that fluoride enhances the dissociation of T alpha from T beta gamma, resulting in the inhibition of GTP-GDP exchange, and therefore, GTP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

17.
Transducin is a multi-subunit guanine-nucleotide-binding protein that mediates signal coupling between rhodopsin and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase in retinal rod outer segments. Whereas the T alpha subunit of transducin binds guanine nucleotides and is the activator of the phosphodiesterase, the T beta gamma subunit may function to link physically T alpha with photolysed rhodopsin. In order to determine the binding sites of rhodopsin to transducin, we have synthesized eight peptides (Rhod-1 etc.) that correspond to the C-terminal regions of rhodopsin and to several external and one internal loop region. These peptides were tested for their inhibition of restored GTPase activity of purified transducin reconstituted into depleted rod-outer-segment disc membranes. A marked inhibition of GTPase activity was observed when transducin was pre-incubated with peptides Rhod-1, Rhod-2 and Rhod-3. These peptides correspond to opsin amino acid residues 332-339, 324-331 and 317-321 respectively. Peptides corresponding to the three external loop regions or to the C-terminal residues 341-348 did not inhibit reconsituted GTPase activity. Likewise, Rhod-8, a peptide corresponding to an internal loop region of rhodopsin, did not inhibit GTPase activity. These findings support the concept that these specific regions of the C-terminus of rhodopsin serve as recognition sites for transducin.  相似文献   

18.
The exchange-inert Cr(III) beta, gamma-bidentate guanine nucleotide complexes Cr(III)GTP and Cr(III)Gpp(NH)p were used to probe the role of transducin in activating the retinal cGMP cascade. The Cr(III) nucleotide complexes were found to have lower binding affinity for transducin as compared to the Mg2+ complexes. However, the rate of hydrolysis of the transducin-bound Cr(III)GTP was similar to that of Mg(II)GTP. Cr(III)Gpp(NH)p activated the cGMP phosphodiesterase of photolyzed rod outer segment membranes up to 75% of the Mg(II)Gpp(NH)p level but lacked the ability to dissociated the transducin subunits from the rod outer segment membrane. This result implies that the activation of the phosphodiesterase by transducin-GTP complex is a membrane-associated event and the formation of a soluble complex of transducin-GTP with the inhibitory peptide of the phosphodiesterase may not be an obligatory step. Both the delta and lambda screw sense stereoisomers of Cr(III)Gpp(NH)p were capable of activating the cGMP cascade with no apparent stereoselectivity. The nature of the interaction of the metal ion and GTP at the nucleotide-binding site of transducin is discussed together with the results from previous studies using the phosphorothioate GTP analogues [Yamanaka, G., Eckstein, F., & Stryer, L. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 8094-8101] and is compared to the site found in homologous GTP-binding proteins such as elongation factor Tu [Jurnak, F. (1985) Science (Washington, D.C.) 230, 32-36; la Cour, T.F.M., Nyborg, J., Thirup, S., & Clark, B.F.C. (1985) EMBO J. 4, 2385-2388]. The implications of the observed results on the molecular mechanism of visual signal transduction are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
For reconstitution studies with rhodopsin and cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE), all three subunits of heterotrimeric transducin (T alpha beta gamma) were simultaneously expressed in Sf9 cells at high levels using a baculovirus expression system and purified to homogeneity. Light-activated rhodopsin catalyzed the loading of purified recombinant T alpha with GTP gamma S. In vitro reconstitution of rhodopsin, recombinant transducin, and PDE in detergent solution resulted in cGMP hydrolysis upon illumination, demonstrating that recombinant transducin was able to activate PDE. The rate of cGMP hydrolysis by PDE as a function of GTP gamma S-loaded recombinant transducin (T(*)) concentration gave a Hill coefficient of approximately 2, suggesting that the activation of PDE by T(*) was cooperatively regulated. Furthermore, the kinetic rate constants for the activation of PDE by T(*) suggested that only the complex of PDE with two T(*) molecules, PDE. T(2)(*), was significantly catalytically active under the conditions of the assay. We conclude that the model of essential coactivation best describes the activation of PDE by T(*) in a reconstituted vertebrate visual cascade using recombinant heterotrimeric transducin.  相似文献   

20.
A panel of monoclonal antibodies has been developed against the T alpha, T beta and T gamma subunits of bovine transducin. Two anti-T alpha antibodies from this panel (TF15 and TF16) and a third one (4A) against frog T alpha (Witt, P. L., Hamm, H. E., and Bownds, M. D. (1984) J. Gen. Physiol. 84, 251-263) were characterized. Each of these monoclonal antibodies recognizes a different region of T alpha and has a specific effect on the function of transducin. The binding of TF15 is reversibly enhanced by treating T alpha with either 1 M guanidinium chloride or, to a smaller extent, by the removal of bound guanine nucleotide. Its epitope is located in a 12-kDa tryptic fragment containing the binding site for the guanine moiety of GTP. Taken together, these results support previous observations that the conformation of T alpha is modulated by the occupancy of the guanine nucleotide binding site. In contrast to TF15, TF16 recognizes only the native form of T alpha. Its epitope resides within the central portion of the T alpha molecule. While T alpha-bound TF16 does not inhibit either pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation, rhodopsin binding, or transducin subunit interaction, it blocks both the light-activated uptake of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) and the GTP-dependent elution of transducin from photolyzed rhodopsin. These effects are unlikely to be caused by the occupation of the guanine nucleotide binding site by TF16 because this antibody quantitatively precipitates T alpha-GTP gamma S. We propose that bound TF16 locks T alpha in a conformation that prevents the entrance of guanine nucleotide and favors T beta gamma association. In contrast to TF16, the epitope of 4A was mapped to the amino-terminal region of T alpha. This monoclonal antibody blocks pertussis toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation, GTP gamma S uptake, and T alpha-T beta gamma association. Moreover, the binding site for 4A becomes inaccessible when transducin binds to photolyzed rhodopsin. These results suggest that the inhibitory effects of 4A are due to a simultaneous steric blockage of both the interaction of T alpha with T beta gamma and their binding to photolyzed rhodopsin. The results obtained from these studies are correlated with the structure and function of T alpha.  相似文献   

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