These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Asymmetric interaction between rod cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase gamma subunits and alphabeta subunits. Author: Guo LW, Grant JE, Hajipour AR, Muradov H, Arbabian M, Artemyev NO, Ruoho AE. Journal: J Biol Chem; 2005 Apr 01; 280(13):12585-92. PubMed ID: 15668239. Abstract: Rod phosphodiesterase (PDE6) is the central effector enzyme in vertebrate visual transduction. Holo-PDE6 consists of two similar catalytic subunits (Palphabeta) and two identical inhibitory subunits (Pgamma). Palphabeta is the only heterodimer in the PDE superfamily, yet its significance for the function of PDE6 is poorly understood. An unequal interaction of Pgamma with Pbeta as compared with Palpha in the PDE6 complex has not been reported. We investigated the interaction interface between full-length Pgamma and Palphabeta, by differentiating Pgamma interaction with each individual Palphabeta subunit through radiolabel transfer from various positions throughout the entire Pgamma molecule. The efficiency of radiolabel transfer indicates that the close vicinity of serine 40 on Pgamma makes a major contribution to the interaction with Palphabeta. In addition, a striking asymmetry of interaction between the Pgamma polycationic region and the Palphabeta subunits was observed when the stoichiometry of Pgamma versus the Palphabeta dimer was below 2. Preferential photolabeling on Pbeta from Pgamma position 40 and on Palpha from position 30 increased while lowering the Pgamma/Palphabeta ratio, but diminished when the Pgamma/Palphabeta ratio was over 2. Our finding leads to the conclusion that two classes of Pgamma binding sites exist on Palphabeta, each composed of GAF domains in both Palpha and Pbeta, differing from the conventional models suggesting that each Pgamma binds only one of the Palphabeta catalytic subunits. This new model leads to insight into how the unique Palphabeta heterodimer contributes to the sophisticated regulation in visual transduction through interaction with Pgamma.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]