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1.
Ung MU  Lu B  McCammon JA 《Biopolymers》2006,81(6):428-439
The active site of the mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (C-subunit) has a cluster of nonconserved acidic residues-Glu127, Glu170, Glu203, Glu230, and Asp241-that are crucial for substrate recognition and binding. Studies have shown that the Glu230 to Gln mutant (E230Q) of the enzyme has physical properties similar to the wild-type enzyme and has decreased affinity for a short peptide substrate, Kemptide. However, recent experiments intended to crystallize ternary complex of the E230Q mutant with MgATP and protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) could only obtain crystals of the apo-enzyme of E230Q mutant. To deduce the possible mechanism that prevented ternary complex formation, we used the relaxed-complex method (Lin, J.-H., et al. J Am Chem Soc 2002, 24, 5632-5633) to study PKI binding to the E230Q mutant C-subunit. In the E230Q mutant, we observed local structural changes of the peptide binding site that correlated closely to the reduced PKI affinity. The structural changes occurred in the F-to-G helix loop and appeared to hinder PKI binding. Reduced electrostatic potential repulsion among Asp241 from the helix loop section and the other acidic residues in the peptide binding site appear to be responsible for the structural change.  相似文献   

2.
The active site of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit harbors a cluster of acidic residues-Asp 127, Glu 170, Glu 203, Glu 230, and Asp 241-that are not conserved throughout the protein kinase family. Based on crystal structures of the catalytic subunit, these amino acids are removed from the site of phosphoryl transfer and are implicated in substrate recognition. Glu 230, the most buried of these acidic residues, was mutated to Ala (rC[E230A]) and Gln (rC[E230Q]) and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. In contrast to the mostly insoluble and destabilized rC[E230A], rC[E230Q] is largely soluble, purifies like wild-type enzyme, and displays wild-type-like thermal stability. The mutation in rC[E230Q] causes an order of magnitude decrease in the affinity for a heptapeptide substrate, Kemptide. In addition, two independent kinetic techniques were used to dissect phosphoryl transfer and product release steps in the reaction pathway. Viscosometric and pre-steady-state quench-flow analyses revealed that the phosphoryl transfer rate constant decreases by an order of magnitude, whereas the product release rate constant remains unperturbed. Electrostatic alterations in the rC[E230Q] active site were assessed using modeling techniques that provide molecular interpretations for the substrate affinity and phosphoryl transfer rate decreases observed experimentally. These observations indicate that subsite recognition elements in the catalytic subunit make electrostatic contributions that are important not only for peptide affinity, but also for catalysis. Protein kinases may, therefore, discriminate substrates by not only binding them tightly, but also by only turning over ones that complement the electrostatic character of the active site.  相似文献   

3.
For optimal activity the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase requires a phosphate on Thr-197. This phosphate anchors the activation loop in the proper conformation and contributes to catalytic efficiency by enhancing the phosphoryl transfer rate and increasing the affinity for ATP (1). The crystal structure of the catalytic subunit bound to ATP, and the inhibitor peptide, IP20, highlights the contacts made by the Thr-197 phosphate as well as the role adjacent residues play in contacting the substrate peptide. Glu-203 and Tyr-204 interact with arginines in the consensus sequence of PKA substrates at the P-6 and P-2 positions, respectively. To assess the contribution that each residue makes to peptide recognition, the kinetic properties of three mutant proteins (E203A, Y204A, and Y204F) were monitored using multiple peptide substrates. The canonical peptide substrate, Kemptide, as well as a longer 9-residue peptide and corresponding peptides with alanine substitutions at the P-6 and P-2 positions were used. While the effect of Glu-203 is more localized to the P-6 site, Tyr-204 contributes to global peptide recognition. An aromatic hydrophobic residue is essential for optimal peptide recognition and is conserved throughout the protein kinase family.  相似文献   

4.
We have recorded (13)C NMR spectra of [3-(13)C]Ala-labeled wild-type bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and its mutants at Arg(82), Asp(85), Glu(194), and Glu(204) along the extracellular proton transfer chain. The upfield and downfield displacements of the single carbon signals of Ala(196) (in the F-G loop) and Ala(126) (at the extracellular end of helix D), respectively, revealed conformational differences in E194D, E194Q, and E204Q from the wild type. The same kind of conformational change at Ala(126) was noted also in the Y83F mutant, which lacks the van der Waals contact between Tyr(83) and Ala(126) present in the wild type. The absence of a negative charge at Asp(85) in the site-directed mutant D85N induced global conformational changes, as manifested in displacements or suppression of peaks from the transmembrane helices, cytoplasmic loops, etc., as well as the local changes at Ala(126) and Ala(196) seen in the other mutants. Unexpectedly, no conformational change at Ala(126) was observed in R82Q (even though Asp(85) is protonated at pH 6) or in D85N/R82Q. The changes induced in the Ala(126) signal when Asp(85) is uncharged could be interpreted therefore in terms of displacement of the positive charge of Arg(82) toward Tyr(83), where Ala(126) is located. It is possible that disruption of the proton transfer chain after protonation of Asp(85) in the photocycle could cause the same kind of conformational change we detect at Ala(196) and Ala(126). If so, the latter change would be also the result of rearrangement of the side chain of Arg(82).  相似文献   

5.
The catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase has served as a paradigm for the entire kinase family. In the course of studying the structure-function relationship of the P+1 loop (Leu198-Leu205) of the kinase, we have solved the crystal structure of the Tyr204 to Ala mutant in complexes with Mg.ATP and an inhibitory peptide at 1.26A, with overall structure very similar to that of the wild-type protein. However, at the nucleotide binding site, ATP was found largely hydrolyzed, with the products ADP-PO(4) retained in the structure. High-resolution refinement suggests that 26% of the molecules contain the intact ATP, whereas 74% have the hydrolyzed products. The observation of the substrate and product states in the same structure adds significant information to our understanding of the phosphoryl transfer process. Structural examination of the mutation site substantiates and extends the emerging concept that the hydrophobic core in the large lobe of the kinase might serve as a stable platform for anchoring key segments involved in catalysis. We propose that Tyr204 is critical for anchoring the P+1 loop to the core. Further analysis has highlighted two major connections between the P+1 loop and the catalytic loop (Arg165-Asn171). One emphasizes the hydrophobic packing of Tyr204 and Leu167 mediated through residues from the alphaF-helix, recently recognized as a signal integration motif, which together with the alphaE-helix forms the center of the hydrophobic core network. The other connection is mediated by the hydrogen bond interaction between Thr201 and Asp166, in a substrate-dependent manner. We speculate that the latter interaction may be important for the kinase to sense the presence of substrate and prepare itself for the catalytic reaction. Thus, the P+1 loop is not merely involved in substrate binding; it mediates the communication between substrate and catalytic residues.  相似文献   

6.
The two isoforms (RI and RII) of the regulatory (R) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase or protein kinase A (PKA) are similar in sequence yet have different biochemical properties and physiological functions. To further understand the molecular basis for R-isoform-specificity, the interactions of the RIIβ isoform with the PKA catalytic (C) subunit were analyzed by amide H/2H exchange mass spectrometry to compare solvent accessibility of RIIβ and the C subunit in their free and complexed states. Direct mapping of the RIIβ-C interface revealed important differences between the intersubunit interfaces in the type I and type II holoenzyme complexes. These differences are seen in both the R-subunits as well as the C-subunit. Unlike the type I isoform, the type II isoform complexes require both cAMP-binding domains, and ATP is not obligatory for high affinity interactions with the C-subunit. Surprisingly, the C-subunit mediates distinct, overlapping surfaces of interaction with the two R-isoforms despite a strong homology in sequence and similarity in domain organization. Identification of a remote allosteric site on the C-subunit that is essential for interactions with RII, but not RI subunits, further highlights the considerable diversity in interfaces found in higher order protein complexes mediated by the C-subunit of PKA.  相似文献   

7.
Although extensive structural and biochemical studies have provided molecular insights into the mechanism of cAMP-dependent activation of protein kinase A (PKA), little is known about signal termination and the role of phosphodiesterases (PDEs) in regulatory feedback. In this study we describe a novel mode of protein kinase A-anchoring protein (AKAP)-independent feedback regulation between a specific PDE, RegA and the PKA regulatory (RIα) subunit, where RIα functions as an activator of PDE catalysis. Our results indicate that RegA, in addition to its well-known role as a PDE for bulk cAMP in solution, is also capable of hydrolyzing cAMP-bound to RIα. Furthermore our results indicate that binding of RIα activates PDE catalysis several fold demonstrating a dual function of RIα, both as an inhibitor of the PKA catalytic (C) subunit and as an activator for PDEs. Deletion mutagenesis has localized the sites of interaction to one of the cAMP-binding domains of RIα and the catalytic PDE domain of RegA whereas amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry has revealed that the cAMP-binding site (phosphate binding cassette) along with proximal regions important for relaying allosteric changes mediated by cAMP, are important for interactions with the PDE catalytic domain of RegA. These sites of interactions together with measurements of cAMP dissociation rates demonstrate that binding of RegA facilitates dissociation of cAMP followed by hydrolysis of the released cAMP to 5'AMP. cAMP-free RIα generated as an end product remains bound to RegA. The PKA C-subunit then displaces RegA and reassociates with cAMP-free RIα to regenerate the inactive PKA holoenzyme thereby completing the termination step of cAMP signaling. These results reveal a novel mode of regulatory feedback between PDEs and RIα that has important consequences for PKA regulation and cAMP signal termination.  相似文献   

8.
Batkin M  Schvartz I  Shaltiel S 《Biochemistry》2000,39(18):5366-5373
A set of 45 mutants of the carboxyl terminal tail of the PKA catalytic subunit was prepared and used to assess the contribution of this tail to the structure and function of the kinase. Ala substitutions of Asp 323, Phe 327, Glu 333, and Phe 350 resulted in a complete loss of enzymatic activity. Other replacements by Ala (Phe 314, Tyr 330, Glu 332, and Phe 347) brought about either a drop in activity to less than 10% of the wild-type enzyme or a reduction of affinity toward ATP (Lys 317, Lys 319, Tyr 330, and Glu 332) or toward Kemptide (Ile 315, Tyr 330, Val 337, Ile 339, Lys 345, and Glu 346). Mutations of Ser 338, a major autophosphorylation site of PKA, by Ala, Glu, Asp, Gln, and Asn showed that the kinetic parameters of these mutants are similar to those of the wild-type. The contribution of each of these tail mutations to the structure and stability of the kinase was assessed by monitoring its effect on the heat stability (when measurable) or by determining the susceptibility of the mutant kinase to cleavage by the Kinase Splitting Membranal Proteinase/Meprin beta. Here we show that the tail of PKA has a key role in creating the active conformation of the kinase. It does so by means of specific amino acid residues, which act as "snapping points" to embrace the two lobes of the kinase and orient them in the correct juxtaposition for substrate docking, biorecognition, and catalysis.  相似文献   

9.
Hirata A  Adachi M  Utsumi S  Mikami B 《Biochemistry》2004,43(39):12523-12531
The optimum pH of Bacillus cereus beta-amylase (BCB, pH 6.7) differs from that of soybean beta-amylase (SBA, pH 5.4) due to the substitution of a few amino acid residues near the catalytic base residue (Glu 380 in SBA and Glu 367 in BCB). To explore the mechanism for controlling the optimum pH of beta-amylase, five mutants of BCB (Y164E, Y164F, Y164H, Y164Q, and Y164Q/T47M/Y164E/T328N) were constructed and characterized with respect to enzymatic properties and X-ray structural crystal analysis. The optimum pH of the four single mutants shifted to 4.2-4.8, approximately 2 pH units and approximately 1 pH unit lower than those of BCB and SBA, respectively, and their k(cat) values decreased to 41-3% of that of the wild-type enzyme. The X-ray crystal analysis of the enzyme-maltose complexes showed that Glu 367 of the wild type is surrounded by two water molecules (W1 and W2) that are not found in SBA. W1 is hydrogen-bonded to both side chains of Glu 367 and Tyr 164. The mutation of Tyr 164 to Glu and Phe resulted in the disruption of the hydrogen bond between Tyr 164 Oeta and W1 and the introduction of two additional water molecules near position 164. In contrast, the triple mutant of BCB with a slightly decreased pH optimum at pH 6.0 has no water molecules (W1 and W2) around Glu 367. These results suggested that a water-mediated hydrogen bond network (Glu 367...W1...Tyr 164...Thr 328) is the primary requisite for the increased pH optimum of wild-type BCB. This strategy is completely different from that of SBA, in which a hydrogen bond network (Glu 380...Thr 340...Glu 178) reduces the optimum pH in a hydrophobic environment.  相似文献   

10.
Ya Ha  Norma M. Allewell 《Proteins》1998,33(3):430-443
Tyr 165 in the catalytic subunit of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase, EC 2.1.3.2) forms an intersubunit hydrogen bond in the T state with Glu 239 in the 240s loop of a second catalytic subunit, which is broken in the T to R transition. Substitution of Tyr 165 by Phe lowers substrate affinity by approximately an order of magnitude and alters the pH profile for enzyme function. We have determined the crystal structure of Y165F at 2.4 Å resolution by molecular replacement, using a wild-type T state structure as the probe, and refined it to an R value of 25.2%. The Y165F mutation induces a global conformational change that is in the opposite direction to the T to R transition and therefore results in an extreme T state. The two catalytic trimers move closer by ∼0.14 Å and rotate by ∼0.2°, in the opposite direction to the T→R rotation; the two domains of each catalytic chain rotate by ∼2.1°, also in the opposite direction to the T→R transition; and the 240s loop adopts a new conformation. Residues 229 to 236 shift by ∼2.4 Å so that the active site is more open. Residues 237 to 244 rotate by ∼24.1°, altering interactions within the 240s loop and at the C1-C4 and C1-R4 interfaces. Arg 167, a key residue in domain closure and interactions with L-Asp, swings out from the active site to interact with Tyr 197. This crystal structure is consistent with the functional properties of Y165F, expands our knowledge of the conformational repertoire of ATCase, and indicates that the canonical T state does not represent an extreme. Proteins 33:430–443, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Protein kinases play a critical role in the integration of signaling networks in eukaryotic cells. cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) serves as a prototype for this large and highly diverse enzyme family. The catalytic subunit of PKA provides the best example of how a protein kinase recognizes its substrates, as well as inhibitors, and also show how the enzyme moves through the steps of catalysis. Many of the relevant conformational states associated with the catalytic cycle which have been captured in a crystal lattice are summarized here. From these structures, we can begin to appreciate the molecular events of catalysis as well as the intricate orchestration of critical residues in the catalytic subunit that contribute to catalysis. The entire molecule participates. To fully understand signaling by PKA, however, requires an understanding of a large set of related proteins, not just the catalytic subunit. This includes the regulatory subunits that serve as receptors for cAMP and the A kinase anchoring proteins (AKAPs) that serve as scaffolds for PKA. The AKAPs localize PKA to specific sites in the cell by docking to the N-terminus of the regulatory subunits, thus creating microenvironments for PKA signaling. To fully appreciate the diversity and integration of these molecules, one needs not only high-resolution structures but also an appreciation of how these molecules behave in solution. Thus, in addition to obtaining high-resolution structures by X-ray crystallography and NMR, we have used fluorescent tools and also hydrogen/deuterium exchange coupled with mass spectrometry to probe the dynamic properties of these proteins and how they interact with one another. The molecular features of these molecules are described. Finally, we describe a new recombinantly expressed PKA reporter that allows us to monitor PKA activity in living cells.  相似文献   

12.
Banavali NK  Roux B 《Proteins》2009,74(2):378-389
Regulated activity of Src kinases is critical for cell growth. Src kinases can be activated by trans-phosphorylation of a tyrosine located in the central activation loop of the catalytic domain. However, because the required exposure of this tyrosine is not observed in the down-regulated X-ray structures of Src kinases, transient partial opening of the activation loop appears to be necessary for such processes. Umbrella sampling molecular dynamics simulations are used to characterize the free energy landscape of opening of the hydrophilic part of the activation loop in the Src kinase Hck. The loop prefers a partially open conformation where Tyr416 has increased accessibility, but remains partly shielded. An asymmetric distribution of the charged residues in the sequence near Tyr416, which contributes to shielding, is found to be conserved in Src family members. A conformational equilibrium involving exchange of electrostatic interactions between the conserved residues Glu310 and Arg385 or Arg409 affects activation loop opening. A mechanism for access of unphosphorylated Tyr416 into an external catalytic site is suggested based on these observations.  相似文献   

13.
CK2 is an essential, ubiquitous, and highly pleiotropic protein kinase whose catalytic subunits (alpha and alpha') and holoenzyme (composed by two catalytic and two regulatory beta-subunits) are both constitutively active, a property that is suspected to contribute to its pathogenic potential. Extensive interactions between the N-terminal segment and the activation loop are suspected to underlie the high constitutive activity of the isolated catalytic subunit. Here we show that a number of point mutations (Tyr(26) --> Phe, Glu(180) --> Ala, Tyr(182) --> Phe) and deletions (Delta 2-6, Delta 2-12, Delta 2-18, Delta 2-24, Delta 2-30) expected to affect these interactions are more or less detrimental to catalytic activity of the alpha-subunit of human CK2, the deleted mutants Delta 2-24 and Delta 2-30 being nearly inactive under normal assay conditions. Kinetic analyses showed that impaired catalytic activity of mutants Delta 2-12, Delta 2-18, Delta 2-24, and Y182F is mainly accounted for by dramatic increases in the K(m) values for ATP, whereas a drop in K(cat) with K(m) values almost unchanged was found with mutants Y26F and E180A. Holoenzyme reconstitution restored the activity of mutants Delta 2-12, Delta 2-18, Y26F, E180A, and Y182F to wild type level and also conferred catalytic activity to the intrinsically inactive mutants, Delta 2-24 and Delta 2-30. These data demonstrate that specific interactions between the N-terminal segment and the activation loop are essential to provide a fully active conformation to the catalytic subunits of CK2; they also show that these interactions become dispensable upon formation of the holoenzyme, whose constitutive activity is conferred by the beta-subunit through a different mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
The changes in backbone hydrogen/deuterium (H/2H) exchange in the regulatory subunit (R(I)alpha(94-244)) of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) were probed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The three naturally occurring states of the regulatory subunit were studied: (1) free R(I)alpha(94-244), which likely represents newly synthesized protein, (2) R(I)alpha(94-244) bound to the catalytic (C) subunit, or holoenzyme, and (3) R(I)alpha(94-244) bound to cAMP. Protection from amide exchange upon C-subunit binding was observed for the helical subdomain, including the A-helix and B-helix, pointing to regions adjacent to those shown to be important by mutagenesis. In addition, C-subunit binding caused changes in observed amide exchange in the distal cAMP-binding pocket. Conversely, cAMP binding caused protection in the cAMP-binding pocket and increased exchange in the helical subdomain. These results suggest that the mutually exclusive binding of either cAMP or C-subunit is controlled by binding at one site transmitting long distance changes to the other site.  相似文献   

15.
The "non-hydrolyzing" bacterial UDP-N-acetylglucosamine 2-epimerase catalyzes the reversible interconversion of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine (UDP-GlcNAc) and UDP-N-acetylmannosamine (UDP-ManNAc). This homodimeric enzyme is allosterically activated by its substrate, UDP-GlcNAc, and it is thought that one subunit plays a regulatory role, while that of the other plays a catalytic role. In this work, five active site mutants were prepared (D95N, E117Q, E131Q, K15A, and H213N) and analyzed in terms of their effects on binding, catalysis, and allosteric regulation. His213 appears to play a role in UDP binding and may also assist in catalysis and/or regulation, but is not a key catalytic residue. Lys15 appears to be quite important for binding. All three of the carboxylate mutants showed dramatic decreases in the value of k(cat) but relatively unaffected values of K(M). Thus, these residues are playing key roles in catalysis and/or regulation. In the case of E117Q, the reaction intermediates are released into solution at a rate comparable to that of the overall catalysis. This may indicate that Glu117 plays the role as an acid/base catalyst in the second step of the UDP-GlcNAc epimerization reaction. All three carboxylate mutants were found to exhibit impaired allosteric control.  相似文献   

16.
The purification and functional characterization of protein kinase A catalytic subunit (PKAcat) from bovine lens cytosol has been described. Purification to homogeneity has been achieved by using 100 kDa cut-off membrane filtration followed by Sephacryl S-300 chromatography and finally fractionating on High Q anion exchange column. The purified protein migrates as a single band of molecular mass ∼41 kDa on 12.5% SDS-PAGE. Proteomic data from ion trap LC-MS when analyzed through NCBI blast program reveals significant homology (52%) with bovine zeta-crystallin and also some homology with pig casein kinase I alpha chain (38%) and SLA-DR1 beta 1 domain (38%). The search does not indicate homology with any known catalytic subunit of PKA. Inspite of the significant homology with the zeta-crystallin, our protein is different from it in terms of molecular mass. pI value of the kinase (5.3) obtained from 2D analysis is also different from zeta-crystallin (8.5). The protein is found to contain 17% α-helix, 26.5% β-sheet, 21.4% turn and 34.7% random coil. The active catalytic subunit of the bovine lens cAMP-dependent kinase belongs to Type I Cα subtype. The enzyme shows maximum activity at 30 min incubation in presence of 5 mM MgCl2 and 50 μM ATP. The kinase shows broad substrate specificity. It prefers Ser over Thr as phosphorylating residue. Phosphorylation of crystallin proteins, major protein fraction of bovine lens and phosphorylation of chaperone protein α crystallin by the kinase suggests that the kinase plays some crucial role in regulation of chaperone function within lens.  相似文献   

17.
The cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA I and II) and the cAMP-stimulated GDP exchange factors (Epac1 and -2) are major cAMP effectors. The cAMP affinity of the PKA holoenzyme has not been determined previously. We found that cAMP bound to PKA I with a K(d) value (2.9 microM) similar to that of Epac1. In contrast, the free regulatory subunit of PKA type I (RI) had K(d) values in the low nanomolar range. The cAMP sites of RI therefore appear engineered to respond to physiological cAMP concentrations only when in the holoenzyme form, whereas Epac can respond in its free form. Epac is phylogenetically younger than PKA, and its functional cAMP site has presumably evolved from site B of PKA. A striking feature is the replacement of a conserved Glu in PKA by Gln (Epac1) or Lys (Epac2). We found that such a switch (E326Q) in site B of human RIalpha led to a 280-fold decreased cAMP affinity. A similar single switch early in Epac evolution could therefore have decreased the high cAMP affinity of the free regulatory subunit sufficiently to allow Epac to respond to physiologically relevant cAMP levels. Molecular dynamics simulations and cAMP analog mapping indicated that the E326Q switch led to flipping of Tyr-373, which normally stacks with the adenine ring of cAMP. Combined molecular dynamics simulation, GRID analysis, and cAMP analog mapping of wild-type and mutated BI and Epac1 revealed additional differences, independent of the Glu/Gln switch, between the binding sites, regarding space (roominess), hydrophobicity/polarity, and side chain flexibility. This helped explain the specificity of current cAMP analogs and, more importantly, lays a foundation for the generation of even more discriminative analogs.  相似文献   

18.
Kim C  Cheng CY  Saldanha SA  Taylor SS 《Cell》2007,130(6):1032-1043
Protein kinase A (PKA) holoenzyme is one of the major receptors for cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), where an extracellular stimulus is translated into a signaling response. We report here the structure of a complex between the PKA catalytic subunit and a mutant RI regulatory subunit, RIalpha(91-379:R333K), containing both cAMP-binding domains. Upon binding to the catalytic subunit, RI undergoes a dramatic conformational change in which the two cAMP-binding domains uncouple and wrap around the large lobe of the catalytic subunit. This large conformational reorganization reveals the concerted mechanism required to bind and inhibit the catalytic subunit. The structure also reveals a holoenzyme-specific salt bridge between two conserved residues, Glu261 and Arg366, that tethers the two adenine capping residues far from their cAMP-binding sites. Mutagenesis of these residues demonstrates their importance for PKA activation. Our structural insights, combined with the mutagenesis results, provide a molecular mechanism for the ordered and cooperative activation of PKA by cAMP.  相似文献   

19.
In addition to its cGMP-selective catalytic site, cGMP-binding cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase (PDE5) contains two allosteric cGMP-binding sites and at least one phosphorylation site (Ser92) on each subunit [Thomas, M.K., Francis, S.H. & Corbin, J.D. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 14971-14978]. In the present study, prior incubation of recombinant bovine PDE5 with a phosphorylation reaction mixture [cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) or catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), MgATP, cGMP, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine], shown earlier to produce Ser92 phosphorylation, caused a 50-70% increase in enzyme activity and also increased the affinity of cGMP binding to the allosteric cGMP-binding sites. Both effects were associated with increases in its phosphate content up to 0.6 mol per PDE5 subunit. Omission of any one of the preincubation components caused loss of stimulation of catalytic activity. Addition of the phosphorylation reaction mixture to a crude bovine lung extract, which contains PDE5, also produced a significant increase in cGMP PDE catalytic activity. The increase in recombinant PDE5 catalytic activity brought about by phosphorylation was time-dependent and was obtained with 0.2-0.5 microM PKG subunit, which is approximately the cellular level of this enzyme in vascular smooth muscle. Significantly greater stimulation was observed using cGMP substrate concentrations below the Km value for PDE5, although stimulation was also seen at high cGMP concentrations. Considerably higher concentration of the catalytic subunit of PKA than of PKG was required for activation. There was no detectable difference between phosphorylated and unphosphorylated PDE5 in median inhibitory concentration for the PDE5 inhibitors, sildenafil, or zaprinast 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Phosphorylation reduced the cGMP concentration required for half-maximum binding to the allosteric cGMP-binding sites from 0.13 to 0.03 microM. The mechanism by which phosphorylation of PDE5 by PKG could be involved in physiological negative-feedback regulation of cGMP levels is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) forms an inactive heterotetramer of two regulatory (R; with two cAMP-binding domains A and B each) and two catalytic (C) subunits. Upon the binding of four cAMP molecules to the R dimer, the monomeric C subunits dissociate. Based on sequence analysis of cyclic nucleotide-binding domains in prokaryotes and eukaryotes and on crystal structures of cAMP-bound R subunit and cyclic nucleotide-free Epac (exchange protein directly activated by cAMP), four amino acids were identified (Leu203, Tyr229, Arg239 and Arg241) and probed for cAMP binding to the R subunits and for R/C interaction. Arg239 and Arg241 (mutated to Ala and Glu) displayed no differences in the parameters investigated. In contrast, Leu203 (mutated to Ala and Trp) and Tyr229 (mutated to Ala and Thr) exhibited up to 30-fold reduced binding affinity for the C subunit and up to 120-fold reduced binding affinity for cAMP. Tyr229Asp showed the most severe effects, with 350-fold reduced affinity for cAMP and no detectable binding to the C subunit. Based on these results and structural data in the cAMP-binding domain, a switch mechanism via a hydrophobic core region is postulated that is comparable to an activation model proposed for Epac.  相似文献   

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