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NMR Structure of Retinal Guanylate Cyclase Activating Protein 5 (GCAP5) with R22A Mutation That Abolishes Dimerization and Enhances Cyclase Activation.

Authors :
Cudia DL
Ahoulou EO
Bej A
Janssen AN
Scholten A
Koch KW
Ames JB
Source :
Biochemistry [Biochemistry] 2024 May 21; Vol. 63 (10), pp. 1246-1256. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 25.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Guanylate cyclase activating protein-5 (GCAP5) in zebrafish photoreceptors promotes the activation of membrane receptor retinal guanylate cyclase (GC-E). Previously, we showed the R22A mutation in GCAP5 (GCAP5 <superscript>R22A</superscript> ) abolishes dimerization of GCAP5 and activates GC-E by more than 3-fold compared to that of wild-type GCAP5 (GCAP5 <superscript>WT</superscript> ). Here, we present ITC, NMR, and functional analysis of GCAP5 <superscript>R22A</superscript> to understand how R22A causes a decreased dimerization affinity and increased cyclase activation. ITC experiments reveal GCAP5 <superscript>R22A</superscript> binds a total of 3 Ca <superscript>2+</superscript> , including two sites in the nanomolar range followed by a single micromolar site. The two nanomolar sites in GCAP5 <superscript>WT</superscript> were not detected by ITC, suggesting that R22A may affect the binding of Ca <superscript>2+</superscript> to these sites. The NMR-derived structure of GCAP5 <superscript>R22A</superscript> is overall similar to that of GCAP5 <superscript>WT</superscript> (RMSD = 2.3 Å), except for local differences near R22A (Q19, W20, Y21, and K23) and an altered orientation of the C-terminal helix near the N-terminal myristate. GCAP5 <superscript>R22A</superscript> lacks an intermolecular salt bridge between R22 and D71 that may explain the weakened dimerization. We present a structural model of GCAP5 bound to GC-E in which the R22 side-chain contacts exposed hydrophobic residues in GC-E. Cyclase assays suggest that GC-E binds to GCAP5 <superscript>R22A</superscript> with ∼25% higher affinity compared to GCAP5 <superscript>WT</superscript> , consistent with more favorable hydrophobic contact by R22A that may help explain the increased cyclase activation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-4995
Volume :
63
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38662574
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.4c00046