Literature DB >> 8863834

Carboxyl-terminal mutations of Gq alpha and Gs alpha that alter the fidelity of receptor activation.

B R Conklin1, P Herzmark, S Ishida, T A Voyno-Yasenetskaya, Y Sun, Z Farfel, H R Bourne.   

Abstract

The carboxyl terminus of the G protein alpha subunit is a key determinant of the fidelity of receptor activation. We have previously shown that the Gq alpha subunit (alpha q) can be made to respond to alpha i-coupled receptors by replacing its carboxyl terminus with the corresponding alpha i2, alpha o, alpha z residues. We now extend these findings in three ways: 1) carboxyl-terminal mutations of alpha q/alpha i chimeras show that the critical amino acids are in the -3 and -4 positions, 2) exchange of carboxyl termini between alpha q and alpha z allows activation by receptors appropriate to the carboxyl-terminal residues, and 3) we identify receptors that either do or do not activate the expected carboxyl-terminal chimeras (alpha q/alpha i, alpha q/alpha s, alpha s/alpha q). Replacement of the five carboxyl-terminal amino acids of alpha q with the alpha s sequence permitted an alpha s-coupled receptor (the V2 vasopressin receptor but not the beta 2-adrenergic receptor) to stimulate phospholipase C. Replacement of the five carboxyl-terminal amino acids of alpha z with residues of alpha q permitted certain alpha q-coupled receptors (bombesin and V1a vasopressin receptors but not the oxytocin receptor) to stimulate adenylyl cyclase. Thus, the relative importance of the G alpha carboxyl terminus in permitting coupling to a new receptor depends on the receptor with which it is paired. These studies refine our understanding and provide new tools with which to study the fidelity of receptor/G alpha activation.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8863834

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Pharmacol        ISSN: 0026-895X            Impact factor:   4.436


  38 in total

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4.  Interaction with caveolin-1 modulates G protein coupling of mouse β3-adrenoceptor.

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5.  Computational design of orthogonal membrane receptor-effector switches for rewiring signaling pathways.

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6.  Detection of G protein-selective G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) conformations in live cells.

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7.  Selectivity and evolutionary divergence of metabotropic glutamate receptors for endogenous ligands and G proteins coupled to phospholipase C or TRP channels.

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8.  Structural features of parathyroid hormone receptor coupled to Galpha(s)-protein.

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9.  Functional histamine H3 and adenosine A2A receptor heteromers in recombinant cells and rat striatum.

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10.  Identification of a stretch of six divergent amino acids on the alpha5 helix of Galpha16 as a major determinant of the promiscuity and efficiency of receptor coupling.

Authors:  Maurice K C Ho; Jasmine H P Chan; Cecilia S S Wong; Yung H Wong
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  2004-06-01       Impact factor: 3.857

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