A neurodevelopmental disorder mutation locks G proteins in the transitory pre-activated state

Many neurotransmitter receptors activate G proteins through exchange of GDP for GTP. The intermediate nucleotide-free state has eluded characterization, due largely to its inherent instability. Here we characterize a G protein variant associated with a rare neurological disorder in humans. Gα o K46E...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-08, Vol.15 (1), p.6643-18, Article 6643
Hauptverfasser: Knight, Kevin M., Krumm, Brian E., Kapolka, Nicholas J., Ludlam, W. Grant, Cui, Meng, Mani, Sepehr, Prytkova, Iya, Obarow, Elizabeth G., Lefevre, Tyler J., Wei, Wenyuan, Ma, Ning, Huang, Xi-Ping, Fay, Jonathan F., Vaidehi, Nagarajan, Smrcka, Alan V., Slesinger, Paul A., Logothetis, Diomedes E., Martemyanov, Kirill A., Roth, Bryan L., Dohlman, Henrik G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many neurotransmitter receptors activate G proteins through exchange of GDP for GTP. The intermediate nucleotide-free state has eluded characterization, due largely to its inherent instability. Here we characterize a G protein variant associated with a rare neurological disorder in humans. Gα o K46E has a charge reversal that clashes with the phosphate groups of GDP and GTP. As anticipated, the purified protein binds poorly to guanine nucleotides yet retains wild-type affinity for G protein βγ subunits. In cells with physiological concentrations of nucleotide, Gα o K46E forms a stable complex with receptors and Gβγ, impeding effector activation. Further, we demonstrate that the mutant can be easily purified in complex with dopamine-bound D2 receptors, and use cryo-electron microscopy to determine the structure, including both domains of Gα o , without nucleotide or stabilizing nanobodies. These findings reveal the molecular basis for the first committed step of G protein activation, establish a mechanistic basis for a neurological disorder, provide a simplified strategy to determine receptor-G protein structures, and a method to detect high affinity agonist binding in cells. Many neurotransmitters act on receptors coupled to GTP-binding G proteins. Here authors report the structure and activity of a mutant that locks the nucleotide-free and receptor-bound state of the G protein, leading to a rare neurological disorder.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-50964-z