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GAP-43 Augmentation of G Protein-Mediated Signal Transduction Is Regulated by Both Phosphorylation and Palmitoylation
Authors:Fumio Nakamura  Philipp Strittmatter   Stephen M. Strittmatter
Affiliation:Departments of Neurology and Neurobiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract: The neuronal protein GAP-43 is concentrated at the growth cone membrane, where it is thought to amplify the signal transduction process. As a model for its neuronal effects, GAP-43 protein injection into Xenopus laevis oocytes strongly augments the calcium-sensitive chloride current evoked by the G protein-coupled receptor stimulation. We have now examined a series of GAP-43 mutants in this system and determined those regions of GAP-43 required for this increase in current flux. As expected, palmitoylation inhibits signal amplification in oocytes by blocking G protein activation. Unexpectedly, a second domain of GAP-43 (residues 35–50) containing a protein kinase C phosphorylation site at residue 41 is also necessary for augmentation of G protein-coupled signals in oocytes. This region is not required for activation of isolated Go but is necessary for GAP-43 binding to isolated calmodulin and to isolated protein kinase C. Substitution of Asp for Ser41 inactivates GAP-43 as a signal facilitator in oocytes. This mutation blocks GAP-43 binding to both protein kinase C and calmodulin. Thus, GAP-43 regulates an oocyte signaling cascade via coordinated, simultaneous G protein activation and interaction with either calmodulin or protein kinase C.
Keywords:GAP-43    GTP-binding protein    Calmodulin    Protein kinase C    Palmitoylation
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