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Query: EC:4.6.1.2 (
guanylate cyclase
)
8,497
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mammalian retina contains at least two guanylyl cyclases (GC1 and GC2) and two
guanylyl cyclase
-activating proteins (GCAP1 and GCAP2). Here we present evidence of the presence of a new photoreceptor-specific
GCAP
, termed GCAP3, which is closely related to GCAP1. The sequence similarity of GCAP3 with GCAP1 and GCAP2 is 57 and 49%, respectively. Recombinant GCAP3 and GCAP2 stimulate GC1 and GC2 in low [Ca2+]free and inhibit GCs when [Ca2+]free is elevated, unlike GCAP1, which only stimulates GC1. GCAP3 is encoded by a distinct gene present in other mammalian species but could not be detected by genomic Southern blotting in rodents, amphibians, and lower vertebrates. The intron/exon arrangement of the GCAP3 gene is identical to that of the other
GCAP
genes. While the GCAP1 and GCAP2 genes are arranged in a tail-to-tail array on chromosome 6p in human, the GCAP3 gene is located on 3q13.1, suggesting an ancestral gene duplication/translocation event. The identification of multiple Ca2+-binding proteins that interact with GC is suggestive of complex regulatory mechanisms for photoreceptor GC.
...
PMID:Molecular characterization of a third member of the guanylyl cyclase-activating protein subfamily. 1003 46
Guanylate cyclase activating proteins,
GCAP
-1 and
GCAP
-2, have a pivotal role in the activation of
guanylate cyclase
in phototransduction. Previous studies on the localization of
GCAP
-1 and
GCAP
-2 are contradictory. In this study, we tried to avoid possible artifacts accompanied by immunocytochemistry. Immunolabeling of a
GCAP
was carried out using antibodies pre-adsorbed with a different type of
GCAP
. In addition, immunolabeling was performed using three different animal species under different fixation and embedding. Electron microscopic immunocytochemistry was also performed to reveal subcellular localization of GCAPs as well as confirming data obtained by light microscopy. All data indicate that anti-
GCAP
-1 antibody binding sites were found predominantly in cone outer segments, in particular, in disk membrane regions. Sparse labeling was observed in rod outer segments, but the labeling was much lower than that seen in cone outer segments. Less labeling is also found in synaptic regions and inner segments of cones. No labeling was detected in connecting cilia and its cytoplasmic extensions. Such labeling patterns were similar among human, monkey and bovine retinas. The localization of
GCAP
-1 is consistent with the pattern of a recently reported human cone-specific degeneration. Anti-
GCAP
-2 antibody binding sites were detected in both inner and outer segments of rods and cones of all three animals although the labeling density was slightly different among species. Cryo-immuno-labeling of
GCAP
-2 in bovine retinas revealed that labeling sites were more concentrated in rods than those of cones, and that synaptic regions were also labeled. The different localization of GCAPs suggest that roles of
GCAP
-1 and
GCAP
-2 may be different.
...
PMID:Detailed localization of photoreceptor guanylate cyclase activating protein-1 and -2 in mammalian retinas using light and electron microscopy. 1019 4
Guanylyl cyclase activating protein-2 (GCAP-2) is a Ca2+-sensitive regulator of phototransduction in retinal photoreceptor cells.
GCAP
-2 activates retinal guanylyl cyclases at low Ca2+ concentration (<100 nM) and inhibits them at high Ca2+ (>500 nM). The light-induced lowering of the Ca2+ level from approximately 500 nM in the dark to approximately 50 nM following illumination is known to play a key role in visual recovery and adaptation. We report here the three-dimensional structure of unmyristoylated
GCAP
-2 with three bound Ca2+ ions as determined by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of recombinant, isotopically labeled protein.
GCAP
-2 contains four EF-hand motifs arranged in a compact tandem array like that seen previously in recoverin. The root mean square deviation of the main chain atoms in the EF-hand regions is 2.2 A in comparing the Ca2+-bound structures of
GCAP
-2 and recoverin. EF-1, as in recoverin, does not bind calcium because it contains a disabling Cys-Pro sequence.
GCAP
-2 differs from recoverin in that the calcium ion binds to EF-4 in addition to EF-2 and EF-3. A prominent exposed patch of hydrophobic residues formed by EF-1 and EF-2 (Leu24, Trp27, Phe31, Phe45, Phe48, Phe49, Tyr81, Val82, Leu85, and Leu89) may serve as a target-binding site for the transmission of calcium signals to
guanylyl cyclase
.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional structure of guanylyl cyclase activating protein-2, a calcium-sensitive modulator of photoreceptor guanylyl cyclases. 1038 44
Mutations in the photoreceptor membrane
guanylyl cyclase
RetGC-1 have been linked to autosomal dominant cone-rod dystrophy. Three mutations were identified that alter strictly conserved residues within the RetGC-1 dimerization domain, a region predicted to form an amphipathic alpha-helical coil. Here we report on a biochemical characterization of one of the mutations, a substitution of cysteine for arginine at residue 838. We generated this mutation in vitro and measured its catalytic activity and sensitivity to
guanylyl cyclase
activating protein 1 (GCAP-1) and
GCAP
-2. The R838C substitution has several effects. It reduces the overall catalytic ability of RetGC-1 and dramatically reduces stimulation by
GCAP
-2, although
GCAP
-2 still appears to interact with the protein. The R838C substitution also increases the apparent affinity of RetGC-1 for
GCAP
-1 and alters the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the
GCAP
-1 response, allowing the mutant to be stimulated by
GCAP
-1 at higher Ca(2+) concentrations than wild type. The diminished response to
GCAP
-2, which we propose is not likely the cause of cone-rod degeneration in these patients, is interesting mechanistically because it separates the ability to bind a specific
GCAP
from the ability to be stimulated by it, and it also discriminates between the mechanisms of activation of
GCAP
-1 vs.
GCAP
-2. We suggest that the gain-of-function effects of R838C on RetGC-1 stimulated by
GCAP
-1, which are dominant in vitro and may cause an abnormal increase in cGMP synthesis in dark-adapted photoreceptors, may be the cause of the cone-rod degeneration.
...
PMID:Biochemical analysis of a dimerization domain mutation in RetGC-1 associated with dominant cone-rod dystrophy. 1043 Aug 91
ROS-GC represents a membrane
guanylate cyclase
subfamily whose distinctive feature is that it transduces diverse intracellularly generated Ca(2+) signals into the production of the second messenger cyclic GMP. An intriguing feature of the first subfamily member, ROS-GC1, is that it is both stimulated and inhibited by these signals. The inhibitory signals are processed by the cyclase activating proteins, GCAPs. The only known stimulatory signal is by the Ca(2+)-dependent guanylate cyclase activating protein, CD-
GCAP
. There are two GCAPs, 1 and 2, which link the cyclase with phototransduction, and one CD-
GCAP
, which is predicted to link ROS-GC1 with its retinal synaptic activity. Individual switches for these GCAPs and CD-
GCAP
have been respectively defined as CRM1, CRM3, and CRM2. This report defines the identity of a new ROS-GC1 regulator: neurocalcin. A surprising feature of the regulator is that it structurally is a
GCAP
but functionally behaves as a CD-
GCAP
. Recombinant neurocalcin stimulates ROS-GC1 in a dose-dependent fashion; the stimulation is Ca(2+)-dependent with an EC(50) of 20 microM; and the modulated domain resides at the C-terminal segment, between amino acids 731 and 1054. Previously, the residence of CRM2 has also been defined in this segment of the cyclase. However, the present study shows that the neurocalcin-regulated domain is distinct from CRM2. This is now designated as CRM4. Thus, the signal transduction mechanisms of neurocalcin and CD-
GCAP
are different, occurring through different modules of ROS-GC1. Neurocalcin signaling of ROS-GC1 is highly specific. It does not influence the activity of its second subfamily member, ROS-GC2, and of the other retinal
guanylate cyclase
, atrial natriuretic factor-receptor
guanylate cyclase
. In conclusion, the findings extend the concept of ROS-GC1's sensing diverse Ca(2+) signals, reveal the identity of its unexpected new Ca(2+) regulator, and show that the regulator acts through its specific cyclase domain. This represents an additional transduction mechanism of Ca(2+) signaling via ROS-GC1.
...
PMID:A second calcium regulator of rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase, ROS-GC1: neurocalcin. 1050 30
Recent evidence indicates the presence of a novel alpha(2D/A)-adrenergic receptor (alpha(2D/A)-AR) linked membrane
guanylate cyclase
signal transduction system in the pineal gland. This system operates via a Ca(2+)-driven rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase (ROS-GC). In the present study, this transduction system has been characterized via molecular, immunohistochemical, and biochemical approaches. The two main components of the system are ROS-GC1 and its Ca(2+) regulator, S100B. Both components coexist in pinealocytes where the signaling component alpha(2D/A)-AR also resides. The presence of ROS-GC2 was not detected in the pineal gland. Thus, transduction components involved in processing alpha(2D/A)-AR-mediated signals are Ca(2+), S100B, and ROS-GC1. During this investigation, an intriguing observation was made. In certain pinealocytes, ROS-GC1 coexisted with its other Ca(2+) modulator, guanylate cyclase activating protein type 1 (GCAP1). In these pinealocytes, S100B was not present. The other
GCAP
protein, GCAP2, which is also a known modulator of ROS-GC in photoreceptors, was not present in the pineal gland. The results establish the identity of an alpha(2D/A)-AR-linked ROS-GC1 transduction system in pinealocytes. Furthermore, the findings show that ROS-GC1, in a separate subpopulation of pinealocytes, is associated with an opposite Ca(2+) signaling pathway, which is similar to phototransduction in retina. Thus, like photoreceptors, pinealocytes sense both positive and negative Ca(2+) signals, where ROS-GC1 plays a pivotal role; however, unlike photoreceptors, the pinealocyte is devoid of the ROS-GC2/GCAP2 signal transduction system.
...
PMID:Rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase type 1-linked stimulatory and inhibitory calcium signaling systems in the pineal gland: biochemical, molecular, and immunohistochemical evidence. 1082 76
Calcium feedback in vertebrate photoreceptors regulates synthesis of cGMP, a second messenger in phototransduction. The decrease in the free intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations caused by illumination stimulates two isoforms of retinal membrane
guanylyl cyclase
(RetGC) via Ca(2+)-sensor proteins and thus contributes to photoreceptor recovery and light adaptation. Unlike other members of the membrane
guanylyl cyclase
family, retinal guanylyl cyclases do not have identified extracellular peptide ligands. Recoverin-like proteins,
GCAP
-1 and
GCAP
-2, interact with the intracellular portion of the cyclases and stimulate its activity through dimerization of the cyclase subunits. Several mutations that affect the function of photoreceptor
guanylyl cyclase
and the activator protein have been linked to various forms of congenital human retinal diseases, such as Leber congenital amaurosis, cone and cone-rod dystrophy.
...
PMID:Regulation of cGMP synthesis in photoreceptors: role in signal transduction and congenital diseases of the retina. 1115 56
RetGC-1, a member of the membrane
guanylyl cyclase
family of proteins, is regulated in photoreceptor cells by a Ca(2+)-binding protein known as
GCAP
-1. Proper regulation of RetGC-1 is essential in photoreceptor cells for normal light adaptation and recovery to the dark state. In this study we show that cGMP synthesis by RetGC-1 requires dimerization, because critical functions in the catalytic site must be provided by each of the two polypeptide chains of the dimer. We also show that an intact alpha-helical coiled-coil structure is required to provide dimerization strength for the catalytic domain of RetGC-1. However, the dimerization strength of this domain must be precisely optimized for proper regulation by
GCAP
-1. We found that Arg(838) within the dimerization domain establishes the Ca(2+) sensitivity of RetGC-1 by determining the strength of the coiled-coil interaction. Arg(838) substitutions dominantly enhance cGMP synthesis even at the highest Ca(2+) concentrations that occur in normal dark-adapted photoreceptor cells. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest that Arg(838) substitutions disrupt a small network of salt bridges to allow an abnormal extension of coiled-coil structure. Substitutions at Arg(838) were first identified by linkage to the retinal degenerative disease, autosomal dominant cone rod dystrophy (adCORD). Consistent with the characteristics of this disease, the Arg(838)-substituted RetGC-1 mutants exhibit a dominant biochemical phenotype. We propose that accelerated cGMP synthesis in humans with adCORD is the primary cause of cone-rod degeneration.
...
PMID:Interactions within the coiled-coil domain of RetGC-1 guanylyl cyclase are optimized for regulation rather than for high affinity. 1130 65
A key challenge in studying protein/protein interactions is to accurately identify contact surfaces, i.e. regions of two proteins that are in direct physical contact. Aside from x-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy few methods are available that address this problem. Although x-ray crystallography often provides detailed information about contact surfaces, it is limited to situations when a co-crystal of proteins is available. NMR circumvents this requirement but is limited to small protein complexes. Other methods, for instance protection from proteolysis, are less direct and therefore less informative. Here we describe a new method that identifies candidate contact surfaces in protein complexes. The complexes are first stabilized by cross-linking. They are then digested with a protease, and the cross-linked fragments are analyzed by mass spectrometry. We applied this method, referred to as COSUMAS (contact surfaces by mass spectrometry), to two proteins, retinal
guanylyl cyclase
1 (RetGC1) and
guanylyl cyclase
-activating protein-1 (GCAP-1), that regulate cGMP synthesis in photoreceptors. Two regions in
GCAP
-1 and three in RetGC1 were identified as possible contact sites. The two regions of RetGC1 that are in the vicinities of Cys(741) and Cys(780) map to a kinase homology domain in RetGC1. Their identities as contact sites were independently evaluated by peptide inhibition analysis. Peptides with sequences from these regions block
GCAP
-1-mediated regulation of
guanylyl cyclase
at both high and low Ca2+ concentrations. The two regions of
GCAP
-1 cross-linked to these peptides were in the vicinities of Cys(17) and Cys(105) of
GCAP
-1. Peptides with sequences derived from these regions inhibit
guanylyl cyclase
activity directly. These results support a model in which
GCAP
-1 binds constitutively to RetGC1 and regulates cyclase activity by structural changes caused by the binding or dissociation of Ca2+.
...
PMID:Identification of proximate regions in a complex of retinal guanylyl cyclase 1 and guanylyl cyclase-activating protein-1 by a novel mass spectrometry-based method. 1138 42
Guanylate cyclase-activating protein 1 (GCAP-1) is a Ca(2+)-sensing protein in vertebrate photoreceptor cells. It activates a membrane-bound
guanylate cyclase
. Three of four cysteines present in wild-type
GCAP
-1 were accessible to the thiol-modifying reagent 5,5'-dithio-bis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) in the presence of Ca(2+). Only Cys106 became exposed to the solvent after Ca(2+)-chelation. Since Cys106 is located in EF-hand 3, we could determine an apparent K(D) of 2.9 microM for Ca(2+) binding to this site with a fast off-rate (t approximately 2 ms). We conclude that the rapid dissociation of Ca(2+) from EF-hand 3 in
GCAP
-1 triggers activation of
guanylate cyclase
in rod cells.
...
PMID:Calcium-dependent cysteine reactivities in the neuronal calcium sensor guanylate cyclase-activating protein 1. 1172 51
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