Specific and effective interaction of a guanine nucleotide analogue with small G proteins
G proteins are molecular switches that use a cycle of GTP binding and hydrolysis to regulate a wide variety of cellular biochemical processes. Because the functional state of these proteins is allosterically determined by bound guanine nucleotides, a nucleotide analogue with protein specificity migh...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular pharmacology 1996-01, Vol.49 (1), p.156-164 |
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Zusammenfassung: | G proteins are molecular switches that use a cycle of GTP binding and hydrolysis to regulate a wide variety of cellular biochemical
processes. Because the functional state of these proteins is allosterically determined by bound guanine nucleotides, a nucleotide
analogue with protein specificity might have pharmacological or biochemical value. The binding of [alpha-32P]GTP to four small
G proteins immobilized on nitrocellulose was competed by a series of analogues with modifications at multiple sites. One analogue,
N2-(p-n-butylphenyl)guanosine 5'-(beta,gamma-difluoromethylene)triphosphate, had a approximately 40-fold higher affinity for
one small G protein than for two of the others. Systematic analysis of each modification in the synthetic nucleotide revealed
that specificity was conferred by the carbon substitution in the beta,gamma-phosphoanhydride bond. These observations were
then extended to purified proteins of known sequence in solution by filtration binding studies with H-ras and rab5. Ras was
9-fold more discriminant between guanosine-5'-(beta,gamma-difluoromethylene)triphosphate and guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate)
than was rab5, and the Q79L GTPase-defective mutant of rab5 was 6-fold more discriminant than wild-type rab5. Guanosine-5'-(beta,gamma-difluoromethylene)triphosphate
protected a 20-kDa fragment of rab5 from tryptic proteolysis with greater efficacy than guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate)
or guanosine-5'-(beta,gamma-imido)triphosphate despite its lower affinity, and GMP stabilized a conformation indistinguishable
from apo-rab5. These results identify a synthetic guanine nucleotide analogue with differential affinity for closely related
G proteins, determine the atomic substitution in the analogue that confers specificity, demonstrate discrimination by the
analogue between wild-type and a point-mutant G protein, and establish efficacy of the analogue in inducing conformational
change of a target protein disproportionate to the affinity of the interaction. |
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ISSN: | 0026-895X 1521-0111 |