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Allosteric Communication of the Dimerization and the Catalytic Domain in Photoreceptor Guanylate Cyclase.

Manisha Kumari ShahuFabian SchuhmannSiu Ying WongIlia A Solov'yovKarl-Wilhelm Koch
Published in: Biochemistry (2024)
Phototransduction in vertebrate photoreceptor cells is controlled by Ca 2+ -dependent feedback loops involving the membrane-bound guanylate cyclase GC-E that synthesizes the second messenger guanosine-3',5'-cyclic monophosphate. Intracellular Ca 2+ -sensor proteins named guanylate cyclase-activating proteins (GCAPs) regulate the activity of GC-E by switching from a Ca 2+ -bound inhibiting state to a Ca 2+ -free/Mg 2+ -bound activating state. The gene GUCY2D encodes for human GC-E, and mutations in GUCY2D are often associated with an imbalance of Ca 2+ and cGMP homeostasis causing retinal disorders. Here, we investigate the Ca 2+ -dependent inhibition of the constitutively active GC-E mutant V902L. The inhibition is not mediated by GCAP variants but by Ca 2+ replacing Mg 2+ in the catalytic center. Distant from the cyclase catalytic domain is an α-helical domain containing a highly conserved helix-turn-helix motif. Mutating the critical amino acid position 804 from leucine to proline left the principal activation mechanism intact but resulted in a lower level of catalytic efficiency. Our experimental analysis of amino acid positions in two distant GC-E domains implied an allosteric communication pathway connecting the α-helical and the cyclase catalytic domains. A computational connectivity analysis unveiled critical differences between wildtype GC-E and the mutant V902L in the allosteric network of critical amino acid positions.
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