1. Academic Validation
  2. Functional Study and Mapping Sites for Interaction with the Target Enzyme in Retinal Degeneration 3 (RD3) Protein

Functional Study and Mapping Sites for Interaction with the Target Enzyme in Retinal Degeneration 3 (RD3) Protein

  • J Biol Chem. 2016 Sep 9;291(37):19713-23. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M116.742288.
Igor V Peshenko 1 Elena V Olshevskaya 1 Alexander M Dizhoor 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From the Pennsylvania College of Optometry, Department of Research, Salus University, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania 19027.
  • 2 From the Pennsylvania College of Optometry, Department of Research, Salus University, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania 19027 adizhoor@salus.edu.
Abstract

Retinal degeneration 3 (RD3) protein, essential for normal expression of retinal membrane guanylyl cyclase (RetGC) in photoreceptor cells, blocks RetGC catalytic activity and stimulation by guanylyl cyclase-activating proteins (GCAPs). In a mouse retina, RD3 inhibited both RetGC1 and RetGC2 isozymes. Photoreceptors in the rd3/rd3 mouse retinas lacking functional RD3 degenerated more severely than in the retinas lacking both RetGC isozymes, consistent with a hypothesis that the inhibitory activity of RD3 has a functional role in photoreceptors. To map the potential target-binding site(s) on RD3, short evolutionary conserved regions of its primary structure were scrambled and the mutations were tested for the RD3 ability to inhibit RetGC1 and co-localize with the cyclase in co-transfected cells. Substitutions in 4 out of 22 tested regions, (87)KIHP(90), (93)CGPAI(97), (99)RFRQ(102), and (119)RSVL(122), reduced the RD3 apparent affinity for the cyclase 180-700-fold. Changes of amino acid sequences outside the Lys(87)-Leu(122) central portion of the molecule either failed to prevent RD3 binding to the cyclase or had a much smaller effect. Mutations in the (93)CGPAI(97) portion of a predicted central α-helix most drastically suppressed the inhibitory activity of RD3 and disrupted RD3 co-localization with RetGC1 in HEK293 cells. Different side chains replacing Cys(93) profoundly reduced RD3 affinity for the cyclase, irrespective of their relative helix propensities. We conclude that the main RetGC-binding interface on RD3 required for the negative regulation of the cyclase localizes to the Lys(87)-Leu(122) region.

Keywords

calcium-binding proteins; cyclic GMP (cGMP); eye; guanylate cyclase (guanylyl cyclase); neurobiology; photoreceptor; phototransduction; retina; signal transduction.

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