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1.
Subunit stoichiometry of retinal rod cGMP phosphodiesterase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase of the retinal rod is composed of three distinct types of polypeptides: alpha (90 kDa), beta (86 kDa), and gamma (10 kDa). The gamma subunit has been shown to inhibit phosphodiesterase activity associated with alpha and beta. To investigate the subunit stoichiometry of the retinal phosphodiesterase, we have developed a panel of monoclonal and peptide antibodies that recognize individual phosphodiesterase subunits. By quantitative and immunochemical analysis of the purified subunits, we have shown that each phosphodiesterase molecule contains one copy each of alpha and beta subunit and two copies of gamma subunit. Moreover, gamma can be chemically cross-linked to both alpha and beta, but not to itself, suggesting that alpha and beta may each bind one gamma. The phosphodiesterase is fully activated when both copies of gamma were removed by proteolysis with trypsin. Upon recombination of the purified gamma subunit with the trypsin-activated phosphodiesterase containing alpha beta, the alpha beta gamma 2 stoichiometry is once again restored, with concomitant total inhibition of activity. Our results suggest that at least two activated transducin molecules are required to fully activate one molecule of phosphodiesterase in retinal rods.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Work in several laboratories has shown that Gi, the inhibitory guanyl nucleotide-binding protein of the adenylate cyclase system, is similar in many ways to transducin, the guanyl nucleotide-binding protein of the retinal light-activated cGMP phosphodiesterase system. Separated subunits of purified transducin, T alpha (approximately 39 kDa) and T beta gamma (approximately 35 and approximately 10 kDa), do not exhibit GTPase activity; GTPase activity is observed when the subunits are combined in the presence of rhodopsin ( Fung , B. K.-K. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10495-10502). Subunits of Gi, Gi alpha (approximately 41 kDa), and Gi beta gamma (approximately 35 and approximately 10 kDa) were prepared from rabbit liver membranes. It was found that Gi beta gamma could replace T beta gamma in reconstituting the rhodopsin-stimulated GTPase activity of T alpha. Gi alpha exhibited rhodopsin-stimulated GTPase activity when reconstituted with Gi beta gamma or T beta gamma. GTPase activity was a function of Gi alpha concentration when Gi beta gamma or T beta gamma was constant, and the GTPase activity of a given amount of Gi alpha was dependent on Gi beta gamma concentration. These studies demonstrate that the GTPase activity of Gi resides in Gi alpha and further establish that Gi alpha and Gi beta gamma are functionally analogous to T alpha and T beta gamma, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
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   

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

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 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   

8.
Visual excitation in cones is thought to involve a cone-specific G protein (cone transducin) that transduces the light signal detected by the cone visual pigment into an increase in the enzymatic activity of a cGMP phosphodiesterase. In the preceding paper, we have shown that the G beta 3 isoform of G proteins is specifically localized in bovine cone photoreceptors and proposed that it might be a component of cone transducin. We reported here the purification from bovine retinal extract of a cone-specific T beta 3 gamma complex (where T is transducin), which is composed of a G beta 3 subunit and an immunochemically distinct G gamma subunit. Our purification of this complex is based on a two-stage procedure; the first stage consists of a series of column chromatographies that yield a mixture of purified T beta gamma substantially enriched in T beta 3 gamma, and the second stage involves the removal of all of the rod-specific T beta 1 gamma from the mixture using an affinity column of immobilized monoclonal antibodies directed against the rod T gamma subunit of transducin. Using this procedure, we were able to obtain sufficient amounts of T beta 1 gamma and T beta 3 gamma to begin a comparative study of their properties. We showed that T beta 3 gamma is distinguishable from T beta 1 gamma by isoelectric focusing under nondenaturing conditions. The G beta 3 polypeptide of T beta 3 gamma also migrates slightly slower than the G beta 1 polypeptide of T beta 1 gamma on denaturing polyacrylamide gels. Analysis of the interactions of T beta 3 gamma with other retinal proteins indicated that it has a lower affinity for the T alpha subunit of rod transducin but appears to complex with a phosducin-like protein. The differences in the intrinsic biochemical properties of T beta 3 gamma as compared to T beta 1 gamma may partially account for the lower light sensitivity of cones.  相似文献   

9.
The bifunctional reagents para-phenyldimaleimide and maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester were used to chemically cross-link the subunits of the transducin and cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) complexes of bovine rod photoreceptor cells. The cross-linked products were identified by Western immunoblotting using antisera against purified subunits of transducin (T alpha and T beta gamma) and PDE. Oligomeric cross-linked products of transducin subunits as large as (T alpha beta gamma)3 were observed in the latent form of transducin with bound GDP. In addition to the expected T alpha beta and T beta gamma cross-linked products, a (T alpha gamma)2 structure was detected. The close proximity of T alpha and T gamma suggests that T gamma may play a role in conferring the specificity of the interaction between T alpha and rhodopsin. Most of the oligomeric cross-linked structures between T alpha and T beta gamma were diminished in the activated form of transducin, with guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) (Gpp(NH)p) bound. However, cross-linking between T beta and T gamma was not altered. These results suggest that transducin exists as an oligomer in solution which dissociates upon the binding of Gpp(NH)p. To identify the possible interacting domains between the T alpha, T beta, and T gamma subunits, the cross-linked products were subjected to limited tryptic proteolysis. Several cross-linked tryptic peptides of transducin subunits were found and include the cross-linked products of the N terminus 15-kDa fragment of T beta and the C terminus 5-kDa fragment of T alpha, T gamma and the 12-kDa fragment of T alpha, T gamma and the 15-kDa as well as the 23-kDa fragments of T beta, and an intra-T alpha cross-linked product of the 2- and 21-kDa fragments. These results have allowed the construction of a topographical model for the transducin subunits. The organization of the subunits of PDE (P alpha, P beta, and P gamma) was also studied. The formation of the high molecular size cross-linked products of PDE resulted in the concurrent loss of the P beta and P gamma subunits, suggesting that they are in close proximity. Finally, the interaction between transducin and PDE was examined by chemical cross-linking of transducin-Gpp(NH)p and PDE. Two additional cross-linked products of 180 and 210 kDa were obtained which could be due to the cross-linking of T alpha or T beta with P alpha beta subunits.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
J Bigay  P Deterre  C Pfister    M Chabre 《The EMBO journal》1987,6(10):2907-2913
Fluoride activation of G proteins requires the presence of aluminium or beryllium and it has been suggested that AIF4- acts as an analogue of the gamma-phosphate of GTP in the nucleotide site. We have investigated the action of AIF4- or of BeF3- on transducin (T), the G protein of the retinal rods, either indirectly through the activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase, or more directly through their effects on the conformation of transducin itself. In the presence of AIF4- or BeF3-, purified T alpha subunit of transducin activates purified cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) in the absence of photoactivated rhodopsin. Activation is totally reversed by elution of fluoride or partially reversed by addition of excess T beta gamma. Activation requires that GDP or a suitable analogue be bound to T alpha: T alpha-GDP and T alpha-GDP alpha S are activable by fluorides, but not T alpha-GDP beta S, nor T alpha that has released its nucleotide upon binding to photoexcited rhodopsin. Analysis of previous works on other G proteins and with other nucleotide analogues confirm that in all cases fluoride activation requires that a GDP unsubstituted at its beta phosphate be bound in T alpha. By contrast with alumino-fluoride complexes, which can adopt various coordination geometries, all beryllium fluoride complexes are tetracoordinated, with a Be-F bond length of 1.55 A, and strictly isomorphous to a phosphate group. Our study confirms that fluoride activation of transducin results from a reversible binding of the metal-fluoride complex in the nucleotide site of T alpha, next to the beta phosphate of GDP, as an analogue of the gamma phosphate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
T G Wensel  L Stryer 《Biochemistry》1990,29(8):2155-2161
The cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of vertebrate retinal rod outer segments (ROS) is kept inactive in the dark by its gamma subunits and is activated following illumination by the GTP form of the alpha subunit of transducin (T alpha-GTP). Recent studies have shown that the stoichiometry of the inhibited holoenzyme is alpha beta gamma 2. T alpha-GTP and gamma act reciprocally. We have investigated the activation mechanism using fluorescein-labeled gamma subunit (gamma F) as a probe. gamma F containing a single covalently attached fluorescein was prepared by reaction of PDE with 5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein and purification by reversed-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). gamma F, like native gamma, inhibits the catalytic activity of trypsin-activated PDE and transducin-activated PDE. Inhibition by gamma F was overcome by further addition of T alpha-GTP. gamma F binds very weakly to ROS membranes stripped of PDE and other peripheral membrane proteins. gamma F added to ROS membranes became incorporated into a component that could be extracted with a low ionic strength buffer. HPLC gel filtration showed that gamma F became part of the PDE holoenzyme. Incorporation occurred in less than 1 min in the presence of light and GTP, but much more slowly (t1/2 approximately 500 s) in the absence of GTP. This result indicates that transducin activates PDE by binding to the holoenzyme and accelerating the dissociation of gamma from the inhibitory sites. The binding of gamma F to trypsin-activated PDE alpha beta was monitored by steady-state emission anisotropy measurements and compared with PDE activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
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   

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

15.
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   

16.
T G Wensel  L Stryer 《Proteins》1986,1(1):90-99
The switching on of the cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) in retinal rod outer segments by activated transducin (T alpha-GTP) is a key step in visual excitation. The finding that trypsin activates PDE (alpha beta gamma) by degrading its gamma subunit and the reversal of this activation by gamma led to the proposal that T alpha-GTP activates PDE by relieving an inhibitory constraint imposed by gamma (Hurley and Stryer: J. Biol. Chem. 257:11094-11099, 1982). We report here studies showing that the addition of gamma subunit also reverses the activation of PDE by T alpha-GTP-gamma S. A procedure for preparing gamma in high yield (50-80%) is presented. Analyses of SDS polyacrylamide gel slices confirmed that inhibitory activity resides in the gamma subunit. Nanomolar gamma blocks the activation of PDE by micromolar T alpha-GTP gamma S. The degree of activation of PDE depends reciprocally on the concentrations of gamma and T alpha-GTP gamma S. gamma remains bound to the disk membrane during the activation of PDE by transducin. The binding of gamma to the alpha beta subunits of native PDE is very tight; the dissociation constant is less than 10 pM, indicating that fewer than 1 in 1,700 PDE molecules in rod outer segments are activated in the absence of T alpha-GTP.  相似文献   

17.
Transducin, a guanine nucleotide-binding protein consisting of two subunits (T alpha and T beta gamma), mediates the signal coupling between rhodopsin and a membrane-bound cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase in retinal rod outer segments. The T alpha subunit is an activator of the phosphodiesterase, and the function of the T beta gamma subunit is to physically link T alpha with photolyzed rhodopsin. In this study, the mechanism of cholera toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of T alpha has been examined in a reconstituted system consisting of purified transducin and stripped rod outer segment membranes. Limited proteolysis of the labeled T alpha with trypsin indicated that the inserted ADP-ribose is located exclusively on a single proteolytic fragment with an apparent molecular weight of 23,000. Maximal incorporation of ADP-ribose was achieved when guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imido)triphosphate (Gpp(NH)p) and T beta gamma were present at concentrations equal to that of T alpha and when rhodopsin was continuously irradiated with visible light in the 400-500 nm region. The stimulating effect of illumination was related to the direct interaction of the retinal chromophore with opsin. These findings strongly suggest that a transient protein complex consisting of T alpha X Gpp(NH)p, T beta gamma, and a photointermediate of rhodopsin is the required substrate for cholera toxin. Single turnover kinetic measurements demonstrated that the ADP-ribosylation of T alpha coincided with the appearance of a population of transducin molecules having a very slow rate of GTP hydrolysis. The hydrolysis rate of the bound GTP for this population was 1.1 X 10(-3)/s, which was 22-fold slower than the rate for the unmodified transducin.  相似文献   

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

19.
The 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   

20.
The GTP-induced dissociation of T alpha from T beta gamma initiates the release of transducin from photolyzed rhodopsin and the subsequent activation of the cGMP phosphodiesterase. In this study, site-specific proteolysis and immunoprecipitation were used to map the domain of T alpha that interacts with T beta gamma. We found that Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease rapidly removes a small fragment from T alpha under native conditions, resulting in the formation of a single 38-kDa polypeptide (T alpha'). Under the same conditions, T beta gamma remains intact. A 4.5-fold decrease in the rate of T alpha cleavage by S. aureus protease was observed in the presence of T beta gamma, suggesting T beta gamma binding blocks the protease-sensitive site on T alpha. Amino acid sequence analysis indicated that T alpha' is derived from the cleavage of T alpha at Glu-21. The ability of T alpha' to interact with and activate the retinal phosphodiesterase is not diminished. However, T alpha' is unable to participate in T beta gamma-dependent activities such as the light-stimulated binding of guanine nucleotides, binding to photoexcited rhodopsin, and ADP-ribosylation catalyzed by pertussis toxin. Moreover, the anti-T alpha monoclonal antibody TF16 was able to precipitate T beta gamma in the presence of T alpha, but not with either T alpha' or T alpha-guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate). We conclude that the amino-terminal region of T alpha participates in T beta gamma interaction and discuss our results with respect to the known structure and function of transducin.  相似文献   

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