Cargando…

Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP

Signal output from receptor–G-protein–effector modules is a dynamic function of the nucleotide exchange activity of the receptor, the GTPase-accelerating activity of GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), and their interactions. GAPs may inhibit steady-state signaling but may also accelerate deactivatio...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Turcotte, Marc, Tang, Wei, Ross, Elliott M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2518520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18716678
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000148
_version_ 1782158583094312960
author Turcotte, Marc
Tang, Wei
Ross, Elliott M.
author_facet Turcotte, Marc
Tang, Wei
Ross, Elliott M.
author_sort Turcotte, Marc
collection PubMed
description Signal output from receptor–G-protein–effector modules is a dynamic function of the nucleotide exchange activity of the receptor, the GTPase-accelerating activity of GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), and their interactions. GAPs may inhibit steady-state signaling but may also accelerate deactivation upon removal of stimulus without significantly inhibiting output when the receptor is active. Further, some effectors (e.g., phospholipase C-β) are themselves GAPs, and it is unclear how such effectors can be stimulated by G proteins at the same time as they accelerate G protein deactivation. The multiple combinations of protein–protein associations and interacting regulatory effects that allow such complex behaviors in this system do not permit the usual simplifying assumptions of traditional enzyme kinetics and are uniquely subject to systems-level analysis. We developed a kinetic model for G protein signaling that permits analysis of both interactive and independent G protein binding and regulation by receptor and GAP. We evaluated parameters of the model (all forward and reverse rate constants) by global least-squares fitting to a diverse set of steady-state GTPase measurements in an m1 muscarinic receptor–G(q)–phospholipase C-β1 module in which GTPase activities were varied by ∼10(4)-fold. We provide multiple tests to validate the fitted parameter set, which is consistent with results from the few previous pre-steady-state kinetic measurements. Results indicate that (1) GAP potentiates the GDP/GTP exchange activity of the receptor, an activity never before reported; (2) exchange activity of the receptor is biased toward replacement of GDP by GTP; (3) receptor and GAP bind G protein with negative cooperativity when G protein is bound to either GTP or GDP, promoting rapid GAP binding and dissociation; (4) GAP indirectly stabilizes the continuous binding of receptor to G protein during steady-state GTPase hydrolysis, thus further enhancing receptor activity; and (5) receptor accelerates GDP/GTP exchange primarily by opening an otherwise closed nucleotide binding site on the G protein but has minimal effect on affinity (K (assoc) = k (assoc)/k (dissoc)) of G protein for nucleotide. Model-based simulation explains how GAP activity can accelerate deactivation >10-fold upon removal of agonist but still allow high signal output while the receptor is active. Analysis of GTPase flux through distinct reaction pathways and consequent accumulation of specific GTPase cycle intermediates indicate that, in the presence of a GAP, the receptor remains bound to G protein throughout the GTPase cycle and that GAP binds primarily during the GTP-bound phase. The analysis explains these behaviors and relates them to the specific regulatory phenomena described above. The work also demonstrates the applicability of appropriately data-constrained system-level analysis to signaling networks of this scale.
format Text
id pubmed-2518520
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25185202008-08-21 Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP Turcotte, Marc Tang, Wei Ross, Elliott M. PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Signal output from receptor–G-protein–effector modules is a dynamic function of the nucleotide exchange activity of the receptor, the GTPase-accelerating activity of GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), and their interactions. GAPs may inhibit steady-state signaling but may also accelerate deactivation upon removal of stimulus without significantly inhibiting output when the receptor is active. Further, some effectors (e.g., phospholipase C-β) are themselves GAPs, and it is unclear how such effectors can be stimulated by G proteins at the same time as they accelerate G protein deactivation. The multiple combinations of protein–protein associations and interacting regulatory effects that allow such complex behaviors in this system do not permit the usual simplifying assumptions of traditional enzyme kinetics and are uniquely subject to systems-level analysis. We developed a kinetic model for G protein signaling that permits analysis of both interactive and independent G protein binding and regulation by receptor and GAP. We evaluated parameters of the model (all forward and reverse rate constants) by global least-squares fitting to a diverse set of steady-state GTPase measurements in an m1 muscarinic receptor–G(q)–phospholipase C-β1 module in which GTPase activities were varied by ∼10(4)-fold. We provide multiple tests to validate the fitted parameter set, which is consistent with results from the few previous pre-steady-state kinetic measurements. Results indicate that (1) GAP potentiates the GDP/GTP exchange activity of the receptor, an activity never before reported; (2) exchange activity of the receptor is biased toward replacement of GDP by GTP; (3) receptor and GAP bind G protein with negative cooperativity when G protein is bound to either GTP or GDP, promoting rapid GAP binding and dissociation; (4) GAP indirectly stabilizes the continuous binding of receptor to G protein during steady-state GTPase hydrolysis, thus further enhancing receptor activity; and (5) receptor accelerates GDP/GTP exchange primarily by opening an otherwise closed nucleotide binding site on the G protein but has minimal effect on affinity (K (assoc) = k (assoc)/k (dissoc)) of G protein for nucleotide. Model-based simulation explains how GAP activity can accelerate deactivation >10-fold upon removal of agonist but still allow high signal output while the receptor is active. Analysis of GTPase flux through distinct reaction pathways and consequent accumulation of specific GTPase cycle intermediates indicate that, in the presence of a GAP, the receptor remains bound to G protein throughout the GTPase cycle and that GAP binds primarily during the GTP-bound phase. The analysis explains these behaviors and relates them to the specific regulatory phenomena described above. The work also demonstrates the applicability of appropriately data-constrained system-level analysis to signaling networks of this scale. Public Library of Science 2008-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2518520/ /pubmed/18716678 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000148 Text en Turcotte et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Turcotte, Marc
Tang, Wei
Ross, Elliott M.
Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP
title Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP
title_full Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP
title_fullStr Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP
title_full_unstemmed Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP
title_short Coordinate Regulation of G Protein Signaling via Dynamic Interactions of Receptor and GAP
title_sort coordinate regulation of g protein signaling via dynamic interactions of receptor and gap
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2518520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18716678
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000148
work_keys_str_mv AT turcottemarc coordinateregulationofgproteinsignalingviadynamicinteractionsofreceptorandgap
AT tangwei coordinateregulationofgproteinsignalingviadynamicinteractionsofreceptorandgap
AT rosselliottm coordinateregulationofgproteinsignalingviadynamicinteractionsofreceptorandgap