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1.
The major signalling entity of the receptors for the haemopoietic cytokines granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interleukin-3 (IL-3) and interleukin-5 (IL-5) is the shared beta(c) receptor, which is activated by ligand-specific alpha receptors. The beta(c) subunit is a stable homodimer whose extracellular region consists of four fibronectin domains and appears to be a duplication of the cytokine receptor homology module. No four domain structure has been determined for this receptor family and the structure of the beta(c) subunit remains unknown. We have expressed the extracellular domain in insect cells using the baculovirus system, purified it to homogeneity and determined its N-terminal sequence. N-glycosylation at two sites was demonstrated. Crystals of the complete domain have been obtained that are suitable for X-ray crystallographic studies, following mutagenesis to remove one of the N-glycosylation sites. The rhombohedral crystals of space group R3, with unit cell dimensions 186.1 A and 103.5 A, diffracted to a resolution of 2.9 A using synchrotron radiation. Mutagenesis was also used to engineer cysteine substitution mutants which formed isomorphous Hg derivatives in order to solve the crystallographic phase problem. The crystal structure will help to elucidate how the beta(c) receptor is activated by heterodimerization with the respective alpha/ligand complexes.  相似文献   

2.
The catalytic alpha subunit of the (Na,K)- and (H,K)-ATPases needs to be coexpressed with a beta subunit in order to produce cation transport activity. Although the isoform of the beta subunit is known to influence the functional characteristics of the Na,K pump, the role of the different domains of the beta subunit is not fully understood. We have studied the function of a Na,K pump resulting from the expression of a wild-type alpha subunit with a N-terminally truncated mutant of the beta subunit using the two-electrode voltage clamp and the cut-open oocyte techniques. While the maximal activity, measured as the K+-activated outward current, was not significantly altered, the beta N-terminal truncation induced an ouabain-sensitive conductance in the absence of extracellular K+. The voltage dependence of the ouabain-sensitive charge distribution indicated that in the Na/Na exchange conditions, the E1-E2 conformation equilibrium was shifted towards the E2 conformation, a change resulting from alteration of both the forward and the backward reaction rate. Removal of the intracellular domain of the beta subunit modifies several aspects of the whole enzyme function by a mechanism that must imply the state of the extracellular and/or transmembrane parts of the alpha/beta subunit complex.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The 44-amino-acid E5 protein of bovine papillomavirus is a dimeric transmembrane protein that exists in a stable complex with the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) β receptor, causing receptor activation and cell transformation. The transmembrane domain of the PDGF β receptor is required for complex formation, but it is not known if the two proteins contact one another directly. Here, we studied a PDGF β receptor mutant containing a leucine-to-isoleucine substitution in its transmembrane domain, which prevents complex formation with the wild-type E5 protein in mouse BaF3 cells and inhibits receptor activation by the E5 protein. We selected E5 mutants containing either a small deletion or multiple substitution mutations that restored binding to the mutant PDGF β receptor, resulting in receptor activation and growth factor independence. These E5 mutants displayed lower activity with PDGF β receptor mutants containing other transmembrane substitutions in the vicinity of the original mutation, and one of them cooperated with a receptor mutant containing a distal mutation in the juxtamembrane domain. These results provide strong genetic evidence that the transmembrane domains of the E5 protein and the PDGF β receptor contact one another directly. They also demonstrate that different mutations in the E5 protein allow it to tolerate the same mutation in the PDGF β receptor transmembrane domain and that a mutation in the E5 protein can allow it to tolerate different mutations in the PDGF β receptor. Thus, the rules governing direct interactions between transmembrane helices are complex and not restricted to local interactions.  相似文献   

5.
The bovine papillomavirus E5 protein is a 44-amino-acid transmembrane protein that transforms cells by binding to the transmembrane region of the cellular platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) beta receptor, resulting in sustained receptor signaling. However, there are published reports that certain mutants with amino acid substitutions in the membrane-spanning segment of the E5 protein transform cells without activating the PDGF beta receptor. We re-examined several of these transmembrane mutants, and here we present five lines of evidence that these mutants do in fact activate the PDGF beta receptor, resulting in cellular signaling and transformation.  相似文献   

6.
Within each hemidesmosome, alpha6beta4 integrin plays a crucial role in hemidesmosome assembly by binding to laminin-5 in the basement membrane zone of epithelial tissue. Recent analyses have implicated "specificity-determining loops" (SDLs) in the I-like domain of beta integrin in regulating ligand binding. Here, we investigated the function of an SDL-like motif within the extracellular I-like domain of beta4 integrin. We generated point mutations within the SDL of beta4 integrin tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP-beta4K150A and GFP-beta4Q155L). We also generated a mutation within the I-like domain of the beta4 integrin, lying outside the SDL region (GFP-beta4V284E). We transfected constructs encoding the mutated beta4 integrins and a GFP-conjugated wild type beta4 integrin (GFP-beta4WT) into 804G cells, which assemble hemidesmosomes, and human endothelial cells, which express little endogenous beta4 integrin. In transfected 804G cells, GFP-beta4WT and GFP-beta4V284E colocalize with hemidesmosome proteins, whereas hemidesmosomal components in cells expressing GFP-beta4K150A and GFP-beta4Q155L are aberrantly localized. In endothelial cells, GFP-beta4WT and mutant proteins are co-expressed at the cell surface with alpha6 integrin. When transfected endothelial cells are plated onto laminin-5 matrix, GFP-beta4WT and GFP-beta4V284E localize with laminin-5, whereas GFP-beta4K150A and GFP-beta4Q155L do not. GFP-beta4WT and GFP-beta4V284E expressed in endothelial cells associate with the adaptor protein Shc when the cells are stimulated with laminin-5. However, GFP-beta4K150A and GFP-beta4Q155L fail to associate with Shc even when laminin-5 is present, thus impacting downstream signaling. These results provide evidence that the SDL segment of the beta4 integrin subunit is required for ligand binding and is involved in outside-in signaling.  相似文献   

7.
The type IIA voltage-gated sodium Na(+) channel from rat brain is composed of a large, pore-forming alpha subunit and the auxiliary subunits beta1 and beta2. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, the beta1 subunit modulates the gating properties of the type IIA alpha subunit, resulting in acceleration of both inactivation and recovery from inactivation and in a negative shift in the voltage dependence of fast inactivation. The beta1 subunit is composed of an extracellular domain with a single immunoglobulin-like fold, a single transmembrane segment, and a small intracellular domain. A series of chimeras with exchanges of domains between the Na(+) channel beta1 and beta2 subunits and between beta1 and the structurally related protein myelin P0 were constructed and analyzed by two-microelectrode voltage clamp in Xenopus oocytes. Only chimeras containing the beta1 extracellular domain were capable of beta1-like modulation of Na(+) channel gating. Neither the transmembrane segment nor the intracellular domain was required for modulation, although mutation of Glu(158) within the transmembrane domain altered the voltage dependence of steady-state inactivation. A truncated beta1 subunit was engineered in which the beta1 extracellular domain was fused to a recognition sequence for attachment of a glycosylphosphatidylinositol membrane anchor. The beta1(ec)-glycosylphosphatidylinositol protein fully reproduced modulation of Na(+) channel inactivation and recovery from inactivation by wild-type beta1. Our findings demonstrate that extracellular domain of the beta1 subunit is both necessary and sufficient for the modulation of Na(+) channel gating.  相似文献   

8.
The EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor; ErbB1) is frequently the subject of genetic changes in human tumours which contribute to the malignant phenotype by altering EGFR signalling. Examples of such genetic changes include overexpression, extracellular domain deletions and point mutations, and small deletions in the tyrosine kinase domain. We hypothesized that a point mutation in one of the EGFR ligand-binding domains would increase the affinity of EGFR for NRG2beta (neuregulin-2beta), which is not a potent stimulus of signalling by EGFR-Wt (wild-type EGFR). This mutation would permit NRG2beta stimulation of EGFR signalling in settings in which NRG2beta does not normally do so. To test this hypothesis, we have generated and evaluated various EGFR alleles containing mutations at Val441 and Ser442. NRG2beta is a much more potent stimulus of the EGFR-S442F mutant than of EGFR-Wt. Furthermore, the affinity of NRG2beta for the EGFR-S442F mutant is greater than the affinity of NRG2beta for EGFR-Wt. Finally, the EGFR-S442F mutant constitutively suppresses apoptosis via phosphoinositide 3-kinase and Akt signalling but is not highly tyrosine phosphorylated in the absence of ligand. These results suggest that mutations in the EGFR ligand-binding domain in tumours may permit potent stimulation of EGFR signalling by ligands that are not normally potent EGFR agonists, thereby providing for a novel mechanism by which EGFR signalling may be deregulated. These results also suggest that novel EGFR mutations and signalling activities may be responsible for deregulated EGFR signalling in tumour cells.  相似文献   

9.
The bovine papillomavirus E5 gene encodes a 44-amino-acid, homodimeric transmembrane protein that is the smallest known transforming protein. The E5 protein transforms cultured fibroblasts by forming a stable complex with the endogenous platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) beta receptor through transmembrane and juxtamembrane interactions, leading to sustained receptor activation. Aspartic acid 33 in the extracellular juxtamembrane region of the E5 protein is important for cell transformation and interaction with the PDGF beta receptor. A. N. Meyer et al. (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci USA 91:4634-4638, 1994) speculated that this residue interacted with lysine 499 on the receptor. We constructed E5 mutants containing all possible substitutions at position 33, as well as several double mutants containing substitutions at aspartic acid 33 and at glutamic acid 36, and we examined the ability of these mutants to transform C127 mouse fibroblasts and to bind to and induce activation of the PDGF beta receptor. There was an excellent correlation between the transformation activities of the various mutants and their ability to bind to and activate the PDGF beta receptor. Analysis of the mutants demonstrated that a juxtamembrane negative charge on the E5 protein was required for cell transformation and for productive interaction with the PDGF beta receptor and indicated that aspartic acid 33 was more important for these activities than was glutamic acid 36. These results are consistent with the existence of an essential juxtamembrane salt bridge between lysine 499 on the PDGF beta receptor and an acidic residue in the C terminus of the E5 protein and lend support to our proposed model for the complex between the E5 dimer and the PDGF beta receptor.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Sixteen mutants of Escherichia coli defective in H+-ATPase (proton-translocating ATPase) were tested for their ability to recombine with hybrid plasmids carrying various portions of the beta subunit cistron. Twelve mutations were mapped within the carboxyl half of the cistron corresponding to amino acid residues 279 to 459 (domain II), while four mutations were mapped within residues 17 to 278 (domain I). The biochemical properties of these mutants were analyzed in terms of the proton permeability of their membranes and the assembly properties of their F1F0 complex. The mutants were classified according to the properties into three types, I, II, and III. In 12 mutants of type I, proton conduction in membrane vesicles was blocked and little F1 was released from the membranes under conditions in which F1 could be released from wild-type membranes, suggesting that assembly of the F1F0 complex is structurally and functionally defective. F1 was partially purified with very low recovery from one of the type I mutants, KF16. ATPase activity was reconstituted from this F1 with the beta subunit of the wild type, confirming the genetic results. Only one mutant, KF38, was classified as type II. Its membranes were partially leaky to protons and its F1 was releasable, suggesting that the interaction of its F1 and F0 was unstable. Type III mutants, KF11 and KF43, had an F1F0 complex with very low activity, in which the structure of F1 was relatively similar to that of the wild type. F1 was purified as a single complex from KF43 in this study and from KF11 previously (H. Kanazawa, Y. Horiuchi, M. Takagi, Y. Ishino, and M. Futai (1980) J. Biochem. 88, 695-703). Reconstitution experiments in vitro showed that the F1's of both mutants were defective in the beta subunit. The properties of the altered F1 of KF43 differed from those of F1 of KF11, suggesting that the mutation sites of KF43 and KF11 were different. From the results of mapping mutation sites and the biochemical properties of the mutants, the correlation of structural domains with function of the beta subunit is discussed. Most type I and type II mutations except that of KF39 were mapped in domain II, while the type III mutations were mapped in domain I, suggesting that domain II is more important than domain I for the function of the beta subunit, especially in terms of proper assembly of the F1F0 complex.  相似文献   

12.
A short sequence motif rich in glycine residues, Gly-X-X-X-X-Gly-Lys-Thr/Ser, has been found in many nucleotide-binding proteins including the beta subunit of Escherichia coli H(+)-ATPase (Gly-Gly-Ala-Gly-Val-Gly-Lys-Thr, residues 149-156). The following mutations were introduced in this region of the cloned E. coli unc operon carried by a plasmid pBWU1: Ala-151----Pro or Val; insertion of a Gly residue between Lys-155 and Thr-156; and replacement of the region by the corresponding sequence of adenylate kinase (Gly-Gly-Pro-Gly-Ser-Gly-Lys-Gly-Thr) or p21 ras protein (ras) (Gly-Ala-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly-Lys-Ser). All F0F1 subunits were synthesized in the deletion strain of the unc operon-dependent on pBWU1 with mutations, and essentially the same amounts of H(+)-ATPase with these mutant beta subunits were found in membranes. The adenylate kinase and Gly insertion mutants showed no oxidative phosphorylation or ATPase activity, whereas the Pro-151 mutants had higher ATPase activity than the wild-type, and the Val-151 and ras mutants had significant activity. It is striking that the enzyme with the ras mutation (differing in three amino acids from the beta sequence) had about half the membrane ATPase activity of the wild-type. These results together with the simulated three-dimensional structures of the wild-type and mutant sequences suggest that in mutant beta subunits with no ATPase activity projection of Thr-156 residues was opposite to that in the wild-type, and that the size and direction of projection of residue 151 are important for the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

13.
Subunit E is a component of the peripheral stalk(s) that couples membrane and peripheral subunits of the V-ATPase complex. In order to elucidate the function of subunit E, site-directed mutations were performed at the amino terminus and carboxyl terminus. Except for S78A and D233A/T202A, which exhibited V(1)V(o) assembly defects, the function of subunit E was resistant to mutations. Most mutations complemented the growth phenotype of vma4Delta mutants, including T6A and D233A, which only had 25% of the wild-type ATPase activity. Residues Ser-78 and Thr-202 were essential for V(1)V(o) assembly and function. The mutation S78A destabilized subunit E and prevented assembly of V(1) subunits at the membranes. Mutant T202A membranes exhibited 2-fold increased V(max) and about 2-fold less of V(1)V(o) assembly; the mutation increased the specific activity of V(1)V(o) by enhancing the k(cat) of the enzyme 4-fold. Reduced levels of V(1)V(o) and V(o) complexes at T202A membranes suggest that the balance between V(1)V(o) and V(o) was not perturbed; instead, cells adjusted the amount of assembled V-ATPase complexes in order to compensate for the enhanced activity. These results indicated communication between subunit E and the catalytic sites at the A(3)B(3) hexamer and suggest potential regulatory roles for the carboxyl end of subunit E. At the carboxyl end, alanine substitution of Asp-233 significantly reduced ATP hydrolysis, although the truncation 229-233Delta and the point mutation K230A did not affect assembly and activity. The implication of these results for the topology and functions of subunit E within the V-ATPase complex are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Nappi VM  Petti LM 《Journal of virology》2002,76(16):7976-7986
The bovine papillomavirus E5 protein activates the cellular platelet-derived growth factor beta receptor (PDGFbetaR) tyrosine kinase in a ligand-independent manner. Evidence suggests that the small transmembrane E5 protein homodimerizes and physically interacts with the transmembrane domain of the PDGFbetaR, thereby inducing constitutive dimerization and activation of this receptor. Amino acids in the receptor previously found to be required for the PDGFbetaR-E5 interaction are a transmembrane Thr513 and a juxtamembrane Lys499. Here, we sought to determine if these are the only two receptor amino acids required for an interaction with the E5 protein. Substitution of large portions of the PDGFbetaR transmembrane domain indicated that additional amino acids in both the amino and carboxyl halves of the receptor transmembrane domain are required for a productive interaction with the E5 protein. Indeed, individual amino acid substitutions in the receptor transmembrane domain identified roles for the extracellular proximal transmembrane residues in the interaction. These data suggest that multiple amino acids within the transmembrane domain of the PDGFbetaR are required for a stable interaction with the E5 protein. These may be involved in direct protein-protein contacts or may support the proper transmembrane alpha-helical conformation for optimal positioning of the primary amino acid requirements.  相似文献   

16.
We previously have demonstrated that intramolecular interactions between alpha beta-alpha beta subunits are necessary for insulin-dependent activation of the protein kinase domain within a single alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric insulin-receptor complex (Wilden, P. A., Morrison, B. D., and Pessin, J. E. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 785-792). To evaluate the role of the beta subunit transmembrane domain in the insulin-dependent signalling mechanism, mutant human insulin receptors containing a series of nested transmembrane domain deletions (amino acids 941-945) were generated and stable Chinese hamster ovary-transfected cell lines were obtained. In addition, a substitution of Val-938 for Glu (E/V938) similar to the oncogenic mutation found in the neu transmembrane domain was also introduced into the insulin receptor. Scatchard analysis of insulin binding to the stable Chinese hamster ovary cell lines expressing either wild type or mutant insulin receptors indicated equivalent receptor number (2-4 x 10(6)/cell) and similar high affinity binding constants (Kd 0.1-0.3 nM). 125I-Insulin affinity cross-linking demonstrated that all of the expressed insulin receptors were assembled and processed into alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetrameric complexes. Surprisingly, all the mutant insulin receptors retained insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation both in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, endogenous substrate phosphorylation in vivo as well as insulin-stimulated thymidine incorporation into DNA were unaffected by the transmembrane domain mutations. These data demonstrate that marked structural alterations in the insulin receptor transmembrane domain do not interfere with insulin-dependent signal transduction.  相似文献   

17.
Growth factor receptors are typically activated by the binding of soluble ligands to the extracellular domain of the receptor, but certain viral transmembrane proteins can induce growth factor receptor activation by binding to the receptor transmembrane domain. For example, homodimers of the transmembrane 44-amino acid bovine papillomavirus E5 protein bind the transmembrane region of the PDGF beta receptor tyrosine kinase, causing receptor dimerization, phosphorylation, and cell transformation. To determine whether it is possible to select novel biologically active transmembrane proteins that can activate growth factor receptors, we constructed and identified small proteins with random hydrophobic transmembrane domains that can bind and activate the PDGF beta receptor. Remarkably, cell transformation was induced by approximately 10% of the clones in a library in which 15 transmembrane amino acid residues of the E5 protein were replaced with random hydrophobic sequences. The transformation-competent transmembrane proteins formed dimers and stably bound and activated the PDGF beta receptor. Genetic studies demonstrated that the biological activity of the transformation-competent proteins depended on specific interactions with the transmembrane domain of the PDGF beta receptor. A consensus sequence distinct from the wild-type E5 sequence was identified that restored transforming activity to a non-transforming poly-leucine transmembrane sequence, indicating that divergent transmembrane sequence motifs can activate the PDGF beta receptor. Molecular modeling suggested that diverse transforming sequences shared similar protein structure, including the same homodimer interface as the wild-type E5 protein. These experiments have identified novel proteins with transmembrane sequences distinct from the E5 protein that can activate the PDGF beta receptor and transform cells. More generally, this approach may allow the creation and identification of small proteins that modulate the activity of a variety of cellular transmembrane proteins.  相似文献   

18.
The gamma-aminobutyric acid, type A (GABA(A)) receptor is a chloride-conducting receptor composed of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits assembled in a pentameric structure forming a central pore. Each subunit has a large extracellular agonist binding domain and four transmembrane domains (M1-M4), with the second transmembrane (M2) domain lining the pore. Mutation of five amino acids in the M1-M2 loop of the beta(3) subunit to the corresponding amino acids of the alpha(7) nicotinic acetylcholine subunit rendered the GABA(A) receptor cation-selective upon co-expression with wild type alpha(2) and gamma(2) subunits. Similar mutations in the alpha(2) or gamma(2) subunits did not lead to such a change in ion selectivity. This suggests a unique role for the beta(3) subunit in determining the ion selectivity of the GABA(A) receptor. The pharmacology of the mutated GABA(A) receptor is similar to that of the wild type receptor, with respect to muscimol binding, Zn(2+) and bicuculline sensitivity, flumazenil binding, and potentiation of GABA-evoked currents by diazepam. There was, however, an increase in GABA sensitivity (EC(50) = 1.3 microm) compared with the wild type receptor (EC(50) = 6.4 microm) and a loss of desensitization to GABA of the mutant receptor.  相似文献   

19.
In the present study, the functional role of suggested phosphorylation of the conserved threonines in the cytoplasmic domain of integrin subunit beta1 was investigated. Mutants mimicking phosphorylated and unphosphorylated forms of beta1 were expressed in beta1 deficient GD25 cells. T788 in beta1 was identified as a site with major influence on integrin function. The mutation to A788 strongly reduced beta1-dependent cell attachment and exposure of the extracellular 9EG7 epitope, whereas replacement of T789 with alanine did not interfere with the ligand-binding ability. Talin has been shown to mediate integrin activation, but the talin head domain bound equally well to the wild-type beta1 and the mutants indicating that the T788A mutation caused defect integrin activation by another mechanism. The phosphorylation-mimicking mutation T788D was fully active in promoting cell adhesion. GD25 cells expressing beta1T788D accumulated increased number of focal contacts and migrated slowly compared to GD25 beta1 wild-type. An analogous phenotype is seen when focal adhesion kinase activation is abrogated. However, neither the beta1T788D nor the beta1T788A mutation failed to induce tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase. The results suggest that phosphorylation of T788 in integrin beta1 promotes inside-out receptor activation, as well as focal contact accumulation.  相似文献   

20.
Loo TW  Bartlett MC  Clarke DM 《Biochemistry》2007,46(32):9328-9336
P-Glycoprotein (P-gp, ABCB1) transports a variety of structurally unrelated cytotoxic compounds out of the cell. Each homologous half of P-gp has a transmembrane (TM) domain containing six TM segments and a nucleotide-binding domain (NBD) and is joined by a linker region. It has been postulated that binding of two ATP molecules at the NBD interface to form a "nucleotide sandwich" induces drug efflux by altering packing of the TM segments that make up the drug-binding pocket. To test if ATP binding alone could alter packing of the TM segments, we introduced catalytic carboxylate mutations (E556Q in NBD1 and E1201Q in NBD2) into double-cysteine mutants that exhibited ATP-dependent cross-linking so that the mutants could bind but not hydrolyze ATP. It was found that ATP binding alone could alter disulfide cross-linking between the TM segments. For example, ATP inhibited cross-linking of mutant L339C(TM6)/V982C(TM12)/E556Q(NBD1)/E1201Q(NBD2) but promoted cross-linking of mutant F343C(TM6)/V982C(TM12)/E556Q(NBD1)/E1201Q(NBD2). Cross-linking of some mutants, however, appeared to require ATP hydrolysis as introduction of the catalytic carboxylate mutations into mutant L332C(TM6)/L975C(TM12) inhibited ATP-dependent cross-linking. Cross-linking between cysteines in the TM segments also could be altered via introduction of a single catalytic carboxylate mutation into mutant L332C(TM6)/L975C(TM12) or by using the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, AMP.PNP. The results show that the TM segments are quite sensitive to changes within the ATP-binding sites because different conformations could be detected in the presence of ATP, AMP.PNP, during ATP hydrolysis or through mutation of the catalytic carboxylates.  相似文献   

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