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Dimerization of cAMP phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) in living cells requires interfaces located in both the UCR1 and catalytic unit domains

Authors :
Miles D. Houslay
David R. Adams
Jon P. Day
Enno Klussmann
George S. Baillie
Dong Meng
Allan J. Dunlop
Graeme B. Bolger
Source :
Cellular Signalling
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc., 2015.

Abstract

PDE4 family cAMP phosphodiesterases play a pivotal role in determining compartmentalised cAMP signalling through targeted cAMP breakdown. Expressing the widely found PDE4D5 isoform, as both bait and prey in a yeast 2-hybrid system, we demonstrated interaction consistent with the notion that long PDE4 isoforms form dimers. Four potential dimerization sites were uncovered using a scanning peptide array approach, where a recombinant purified PDE4D5 fusion protein was used to probe a 25-mer library of overlapping peptides covering the entire PDE4D5 sequence. Key residues involved in PDE4D5 dimerization were defined using a site-directed mutagenesis programme directed by an alanine scanning peptide array approach. Critical residues stabilising PDE4D5 dimerization were defined within the regulatory UCR1 region found in long, but not short, PDE4 isoforms, namely the Arg173, Asn174 and Asn175 (DD1) cluster. Disruption of the DD1 cluster was not sufficient, in itself, to destabilise PDE4D5 homodimers. Instead, disruption of an additional interface, located on the PDE4 catalytic unit, was also required to convert PDE4D5 into a monomeric form. This second dimerization site on the conserved PDE4 catalytic unit is dependent upon a critical ion pair interaction. This involves Asp463 and Arg499 in PDE4D5, which interact in a trans fashion involving the two PDE4D5 molecules participating in the homodimer. PDE4 long isoforms adopt a dimeric state in living cells that is underpinned by two key contributory interactions, one involving the UCR modules and one involving an interface on the core catalytic domain. We propose that short forms do not adopt a dimeric configuration because, in the absence of the UCR1 module, residual engagement of the remaining core catalytic domain interface provides insufficient free energy to drive dimerization. The functioning of PDE4 long and short forms is thus poised to be inherently distinct due to this difference in quaternary structure.<br />Highlights • In a yeast 2-hybrid system we show that long PDE4 isoforms dimerize. • Scanning peptide array and mutagenesis located two dimerization surfaces. • One surface maps to the regulatory UCR1 region found only in long forms. • A second locates to the core catalytic domain. • PDE4 long and short forms differ in quaternary structure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08986568 and 18733913
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cellular Signalling
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dbd57504058e3ffee34e9ab86e084d01