Noncatalytic cGMP-binding sites of amphibian rod cGMP phosphodiesterase control interaction with its inhibitory gamma-subunits. A putative regulatory mechanism of the rod photoresponse
The cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of retinal rods plays a central role in phototransduction. Illumination leads to its activation by a rod G-protein (Gt, transducin), thus causing a decrease in intracellular cGMP concentration, closure of plasma membrane cationic channels gated by cGMP, and developme...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1992-12, Vol.267 (34), p.24501-24507 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) of retinal rods plays a central role in phototransduction. Illumination leads to its activation
by a rod G-protein (Gt, transducin), thus causing a decrease in intracellular cGMP concentration, closure of plasma membrane
cationic channels gated by cGMP, and development of the photoresponse. The PDE holoenzyme is an alpha beta gamma 2 tetramer.
The alpha- and beta-subunits each contain one catalytic and one, or possibly two, noncatalytic cGMP-binding sites. Two identical
gamma-subunits serve as protein inhibitors of the enzyme. Their inhibition is removed when they bind to Gt-GTP during PDE
activation. Here we report that the noncatalytic cGMP-binding sites regulate the binding of PDE alpha beta with PDE gamma
and as a result determine the mechanism of PDE activation by Gt. If the noncatalytic sites are empty, Gt-GTP physically removes
PDE gamma from PDE alpha beta upon activation. Alternatively, if the noncatalytic sites are occupied by cGMP, Gt-GTP releases
PDE gamma inhibitory action but remains bound in a complex with the PDE heterotetramer. The kinetic parameters of activated
PDE in these two cases are indistinguishable. This mechanism appears to have two implications for the physiology of photoreceptor
cells. First, the tight binding of PDE gamma with PDE alpha beta when the noncatalytic sites are occupied by cGMP may be responsible
for the low level of basal PDE activity observed in dark-adapted cells. Second, occupancy of the noncatalytic sites ultimately
controls the rate of PDE inactivation (cf. Arshavsky, V. Yu., and Bownds, M. D. (1992) Nature 357, 416-417), for the GTPase
activity that terminates PDE activity is slower when these sites are occupied and Gt stays in a complex with PDE holoenzyme.
In contrast GTPase acceleration is maximal when the noncatalytic sites are empty and Gt-PDE gamma dissociates from PDE alpha
beta. Because cGMP levels are known to decrease upon illumination over a concentration range corresponding to the binding
constants of the noncatalytic sites, the binding might be involved in determining the lifetime of activated PDE, after a single
flash and/or during dark adaptation. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0021-9258(18)35793-4 |