Disulfide bonds in the extracellular calcium-polyvalent cation-sensing receptor correlate with dimer formation and its response to divalent cations in vitro

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Abstract

Extracellular calcium/polyvalent cation-sensing receptors (CAR) couple to G proteins and contain highly conserved extracellular cysteine residues. Immunoblotting of proteins from rat kidney inner medullary collecting duct endosomes with CAR-specific antibodies reveals alterations in the apparent molecular mass of CAR depending on protein denaturation conditions. When denatured by SDS under nonreducing conditions, CAR migrates as a putative dimeric species of 240-310 kDa. This is twice the predicted molecular mass of the CaR monomer observed after SDS denaturation in the presence of sulfhydryl-reducing agents. In sucrose density gradients, Triton X-100- solubilized CAR sediments as a 220-kDa complex, not explainable by binding of G proteins to CAR monomers. Treatment of Triton-soluble CaR with divalent (Ca2+, Mg2+) and trivalent (Gd3+) metal ion CaR agonists, but not monovalent ions (Na+), partially shifts the electrophoretic mobility of CaR under reducing conditions from a predominantly monomeric to this putative dimeric species on immunoblots in a manner similar to their rank order of functional potency for CaR activation (Gd3+ >> Ca2+ > Mg2+). This Ca2+ effect is blocked by pretreatment with N-ethylmaleimide. We conclude that disulfide bonds present in CaRs mediate formation of dimers that are preserved in Triton X-100 solution. In addition, CaR exposure to Ca2+ induces formation of additional disulfide bonds within the Triton-soluble CaR complex.

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Ward, D. T., Brown, E. M., & Harris, H. W. (1998). Disulfide bonds in the extracellular calcium-polyvalent cation-sensing receptor correlate with dimer formation and its response to divalent cations in vitro. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(23), 14476–14483. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.23.14476

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