Signal transduction in the visual cascade involves specific lipid-protein interactions

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Abstract

In retinal rod photoreceptor cells, transducin (Gt) and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) are peripherally anchored to the cytoplasmic surface of the disk saccules. We have examined the role of specific phospholipids in the interaction of these proteins with native osmotically intact disk vesicles, employing spin-labeled phospholipid analogues (2% of total phospholipids) and bovine serum albumin back-exchange assay. Inactive GDP-bound transducin exclusively reduced the extraction of negatively charged phosphatidylserine. The effect disappeared upon activation of the G-protein with guanosine 5′-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTPγS). PDE affected the extraction of the zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine and, to a smaller extent, of phosphatidylethanolamine. When active GtGTPγS interacted with the PDE to form the active effector, the interaction with phosphatidylcholine was specifically enhanced. Each copy of the G-protein bound 3 ± 1 molecules of phosphatidylserine, whereas the PDE bound a much larger amount (70 ± 10) of a mixture of phosphatidylcholine and ethanolamine. The results are interpreted as a head group-specific and state-dependent interaction of the signaling proteins with the phospholipids of the photoreceptor membrane.

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Hessel, E., Heck, M., Müller, P., Herrmann, A., & Hofmann, K. P. (2003). Signal transduction in the visual cascade involves specific lipid-protein interactions. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(25), 22853–22860. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M302747200

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