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The RGS proteins add to the diversity of soybean heterotrimeric G-protein signaling
Authors:Swarup Roy Choudhury  Corey S. Westfall  Sona Pandey
Affiliation:1.Donald Danforth Plant Science Center; St. Louis, MO USA;2.Department of Biology; Washington University; St. Louis, MO USA
Abstract:Regulator of G-protein signaling (RGS) proteins are a family of highly diverse, multifunctional proteins that function primarily as GTPase accelerating proteins (GAPs). RGS proteins increase the rate of GTP hydrolysis by Gα proteins and essentially regulate the duration of active signaling. Recently, we have identified two chimeric RGS proteins from soybean and reported their distinct GAP activities on individual Gα proteins. A single amino acid substitution (Alanine 357 to Valine) of RGS2 is responsible for differential GAP activity. Surprisingly, most monocot plant genomes do not encode for a RGS protein homolog. Here we discuss the soybean RGS proteins in the context of their evolution in plants, their relatedness to non-plant RGS protein homologs and the effect they might have on the heterotrimeric G-protein signaling mechanisms. We also provide experimental evidence to show that the interaction interface between plant RGS and Gα proteins is different from what is predicted based on mammalian models.
Keywords:RGS proteins   heterotrimeric G-proteins   soybean   protein-protein interaction   G-protein evolution
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