Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.6.1.2 (guanylate cyclase)
8,497 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recoverin (Rv) is a myristoylated Ca(2+)-binding protein present primarily in bovine photoreceptors. It represents a newly identified family of neuronal specific Ca(2+)-binding proteins that includes neurocalcin, hippocalcin, and guanylyl cyclase-activating protein. To investigate the function of Rv in photoreceptors, we identified proteins that bind immobilized Rv in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. Rhodopsin kinase (RK), interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein, and tubulin interact with Rv in the presence of Ca2+. The importance of the Rv/RK interaction was further characterized. RK, purified using immobilized Rv as an affinity matrix, catalyzed the light-dependent and Ca(2+)-independent incorporation of phosphates into rhodopsin when reconstituted with urea-stripped rod outer segment membranes. When only a small fraction (0.04%) of rhodopsin was photolyzed, as many as 700 phosphates were incorporated per photolyzed rhodopsin, a phenomenon known as "high gain" phosphorylation. When recoverin was added, the activity of RK became sensitive to free Ca2+, with EC50 = 3 microM. The N-terminal myristoyl residue of Rv enhances the inhibitory effect of Rv and introduces cooperativity to the Ca(2+)-dependent inhibition of rhodopsin phosphorylation. Rv neither interacts with other members of the G-protein-coupled receptor kinase family such as beta-adrenergic receptor kinase 1 nor inhibits beta-adrenergic receptor kinase 1 activity. The specific and Ca(2+)-dependent Rv/RK interaction is necessary for the inhibitory effect of Rv on rhodopsin phosphorylation and may play an important role in photoreceptor light adaptation.
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PMID:Ca(2+)-dependent interaction of recoverin with rhodopsin kinase. 762 15

We purified and sequenced from bovine brain a novel calcium-binding protein. This protein which we named neurocalcin has 3 putative EF hand motifs and a close homology with recoverin which activates guanylate cyclase Ca2+ dependently. Neurocalcin has at least 6 isoforms and is expressed in the central nervous system (CNS), retina and adrenal gland. Considering unique distribution of neurocalcin, this protein may an important physiological role which differs from that of visinin or recoverin.
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PMID:Neurocalcin family: a novel calcium-binding protein abundant in bovine central nervous system. 838 72

Neurocalcins belong to a family of neuronal specific EF hand Ca2+-binding proteins defined by recoverin. Previously, we reported the cloning and initial characterization of neurocalcin in Drosophila melanogaster (Teng, D. H.-F., Chen, C.-K., and Hurley, J. B. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 31900-31907). We showed that the Drosophila neurocalcin protein (DrosNCa) is expressed in neurons and that bacterially expressed recombinant DrosNCa (rDrosNCa) can be myristoylated. Here, we present two lines of evidence that DrosNCa is fatty acylated in vivo. First, the mobility of affinity-purified native DrosNCa on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis is identical to that of myristoylated rDrosNCa and distinct from that of nonacylated rDrosNCa. Second, the membrane binding properties of native DrosNCa are similar to those of myristoylated rDrosNCa; both of these proteins bind to membranes at 0.2 mM Ca2+, whereas nonacylated rDrosNCa always remains soluble. It has been shown that recoverin inhibits the phosphorylation of rhodopsin when Ca2+ is present (Kawamura et al., 1993) and that a dependent recoverin/rhodopsin kinase interaction underlies the inhibitory effect of recoverin (Chen et al., 1995). Given the similarities between recoverin and neurocalcin, we examined the effect of DrosNCa on rhodopsin phosphorylation. We find that rDrosNCa is capable of inhibiting bovine rhodopsin phosphorylation in vitro in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The inhibitory activity of rDrosNCa is enhanced by myristoylation, and the potency of its effect is similar to that of recoverin. Two other related EF hand proteins, guanylate cyclase-activating protein-2 and calmodulin, are only poor inhibitors in these phosphorylation assays. in vitro inhibition of rhodopsin phosphorylation therefore appears to be an assayable property of a subset of recoverin-like proteins.
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PMID:Drosophila neurocalcin, a fatty acylated, Ca2+-binding protein that associates with membranes and inhibits in vitro phosphorylation of bovine rhodopsin. 862 92

Guanylate cyclase regulator protein (GCAP)-2 is a Ca2+-binding protein that regulates photoreceptor outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase (RetGC) in a Ca2+-sensitive manner. GCAP-2 activates RetGC at free Ca2+ concentrations below 100 nM, characteristic of light-adapted photoreceptors, and inhibits RetGC when free Ca2+ concentrations are above the 500 nM level, characteristic of dark-adapted photoreceptors. We have mapped functional domains in GCAP-2 by using deletion mutants and chimeric proteins in which parts of GCAP-2 were substituted with corresponding fragments of other closely related recoverin-like proteins that do not regulate RetGC. We find that in addition to the EF-hand Ca2+-binding centers there are three regions that contain GCAP-2-specific sequences essential for regulation of RetGC. 1) The region between Phe78 and Asp113 determines whether GCAP-2 activates outer segment RetGC in low or high Ca2+ concentrations. Substitution of this domain with the corresponding region from neurocalcin causes a paradoxical behavior of the chimeric proteins. They activate RetGC only at high and not at low Ca2+ concentrations. 2) The amino acid sequence of GCAP-2 between Lys29 and Phe48 that includes the EF-hand-related motif EF-1 is essential both for activation of RetGC at low Ca2+ and inhibition at high Ca2+ concentrations. Most of the remaining N-terminal region can be substituted with recoverin or neurocalcin sequences without loss of GCAP-2 function. 3) Region Val171-Asn189, adjacent to the C-terminal EF-4 contributes to activation of RetGC, but it is not essential for the ability of Ca2+-loaded GCAP-2 to inhibit RetGC. Other regions of the molecule can be substituted with the corresponding fragments from neurocalcin or recoverin, or even partially deleted without preventing GCAP-2 from regulating RetGC. Substitution of these three domains in GCAP-2 with corresponding neurocalcin sequences also affects activation of individual recombinant RetGC-1 and RetGC-2 expressed in HEK293 cells.
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PMID:Mapping functional domains of the guanylate cyclase regulator protein, GCAP-2. 1019 58

Ca(2+)-binding guanylyl cyclase-activating proteins (GCAPs) stimulate photoreceptor membrane guanylyl cyclase (retGC) in the light when the free Ca(2+) concentrations in photoreceptors decrease from 600 to 50 nM. RetGC activated by GCAPs exhibits tight dimerization revealed by chemical cross-linking (Yu, H., Olshevskaya, E., Duda, T., Seno, K., Hayashi, F., Sharma, R. K., Dizhoor, A. M., and Yamazaki, A. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 15547-15555). We have found that the Ca(2+)-loaded GCAP-2 monomer undergoes reversible dimerization upon dissociation of Ca(2+). The ability of GCAP-2 and its several mutants to activate retGC in vitro correlates with their ability to dimerize at low free Ca(2+) concentrations. A constitutively active GCAP-2 mutant E80Q/E116Q/D158N that stimulates retGC regardless of the free Ca(2+) concentrations forms dimers both in the absence and in the presence of Ca(2+). Several GCAP-2/neurocalcin chimera proteins that cannot efficiently activate retGC in low Ca(2+) concentrations are also unable to dimerize in the absence of Ca(2+). Additional mutation that restores normal activity of the GCAP-2 chimera mutant also restores its ability to dimerize in the absence of Ca(2+). These results suggest that dimerization of GCAP-2 can be a part of the mechanism by which GCAP-2 regulates the photoreceptor guanylyl cyclase. The Ca(2+)-free GCAP-1 is also capable of dimerization in the absence of Ca(2+), but unlike GCAP-2, dimerization of GCAP-1 is resistant to the presence of Ca(2+).
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PMID:Dimerization of guanylyl cyclase-activating protein and a mechanism of photoreceptor guanylyl cyclase activation. 1046 92

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.
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PMID:A second calcium regulator of rod outer segment membrane guanylate cyclase, ROS-GC1: neurocalcin. 1050 30

This report defines the identity of a calcium-regulated membrane guanylate cyclase transduction system in the cilia of olfactory sensory neurons, which is the site of odorant transduction. The membrane fraction of the neuroepithelial layer of the rat exhibited Ca(2+)-dependent guanylate cyclase activity, which was eliminated by the addition of EGTA. This indicated that the cyclase did not represent a rod outer segment guanylate cyclase (ROS-GC), which is inhibited by free Ca(2+). This interpretation was supported by studies with the Ca(2+) binding proteins, GCAPs (guanylate cyclase activating proteins), which stimulate photoreceptor ROS-GC in the absence of Ca(2+). They did not stimulate the olfactory neuroepithelial membrane guanylate cyclase. The olfactory neuroepithelium contained a Ca(2+) binding protein, neurocalcin, which stimulated the cyclase in a Ca(2+)-dependent fashion. The cyclase was cloned from the neuroepithelium and was found to be identical in structure to that of the previously cloned cyclase termed GC-D. The cyclase was expressed in a heterologous cell system, and was reconstituted with its Ca(2+)-dependent activity in the presence of recombinant neurocalcin. The reconstituted cyclase mimicked the native enzyme. Immunocytochemical studies showed that the guanylate cyclase coexists with neurocalcin in the apical region of the cilia. Deletion analysis showed that the neurocalcin-regulated domain resides at the C-terminal region of the cyclase. The findings establish the biochemical, molecular, and functional identity of a novel Ca(2+)-dependent membrane guanylate cyclase transduction system in the cilia of the olfactory epithelium, suggesting a mechanism of the olfactory neuroepithelial guanylate cyclase regulation fundamentally distinct from the phototransduction-linked ROS-GC.
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PMID:A novel calcium-regulated membrane guanylate cyclase transduction system in the olfactory neuroepithelium. 1158 Feb 82

Guanylyl cyclase activator proteins (GCAPs) are calcium-binding proteins closely related to recoverin, neurocalcin, and many other neuronal Ca(2+)-sensor proteins of the EF-hand superfamily. GCAP-1 and GCAP-2 interact with the intracellular portion of photoreceptor membrane guanylyl cyclase and stimulate its activity by promoting tight dimerization of the cyclase subunits. At low free Ca(2+) concentrations, the activator form of GCAP-2 associates into a dimer, which dissociates when GCAP-2 binds Ca(2+) and becomes inhibitor of the cyclase. GCAP-2 is known to have three active EF-hands and one additional EF-hand-like structure, EF-1, that deviates form the EF-hand consensus sequence. We have found that various point mutations within the EF-1 domain can specifically affect the ability of GCAP-2 to interact with the target cyclase but do not hamper the ability of GCAP-2 to undergo reversible Ca(2+)-sensitive dimerization. Point mutations within the EF-1 region can interfere with both the activation of the cyclase by the Ca(2+)-free form of GCAP-2 and the inhibition of retGC basal activity by the Ca(2+)-loaded GCAP-2. Our results strongly indicate that evolutionary conserved and GCAP-specific amino acid residues within the EF-1 can create a contact surface for binding GCAP-2 to the cyclase. Apparently, in the course of evolution GCAP-2 exchanged the ability of its first EF-hand motif to bind Ca(2+) for the ability to interact with the target enzyme.
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PMID:Instead of binding calcium, one of the EF-hand structures in guanylyl cyclase activating protein-2 is required for targeting photoreceptor guanylyl cyclase. 1158 9

Neurocalcin is an N-myristoylated calcium-binding protein which belongs to a novel family of neuronal calcium sensors. Here we show, by cosedimentation, co-immunoprecipitation and cross-linking approaches, that myristoylated neurocalcin directly interacts with actin in a calcium-dependent manner. We used EDC cross-linking and obtained one novel 64 kDa entity composed of one actin molecule and one neurocalcin molecule, as demonstrated with IAEDANS-actin and neurocalcin-specific antibodies. This interaction could modulate the rod outer segment-guanylate cyclase 1-neurocalcin interface.
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PMID:Neurocalcin-actin interaction. 1169 Jun 57

Rod outer segment guanylate cyclase 1 (ROS-GC1) is a pivotal enzyme for vertebrate phototransduction and the systematically growing evidence point to its connection with processes other than phototransduction within and outside the retina. ROS-GC1 activity is regulated by Ca2+ in two opposite modes. This regulation is indirect and occurs through Ca+-binding proteins. At nanomolar Ca2+ concentrations, ROS-GC1 is activated by GCAPs and at micromolar Ca2+-concentrations, by S100beta and neurocalcin. The former mode operates in phototransduction and the latter was proposed to play a role in synaptic activity. The last possibility was supported by findings of ROS-GC1 expression not only in various retinal layers other than photoreceptor outer segments but also outside the retina, in pineal gland and olfactory bulb. If ROS-GC1 indeed is to play a role in neurotransmission its expression must be colocalized with its Ca2+-dependent regulators and with possible targets of an increased cyclic GMP concentration, cyclic nucleotide-gated channels or cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase, in synaptic regions. In this review these aspects of ROS-GC1 expression in retina, pineal gland and olfactory bulb are discussed.
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PMID:Calcium-modulated membrane guanylate cyclase in synaptic transmission? 1195 85


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