Weria Pezeshkian bio photo

Computational microscopy group at the Niels Bohr International Academy, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Twitter Github

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

Manisha Kumari Shahu, Fabian Schuhmann, Siu Ying Wong, Ilia A. Solov’yov, Karl-Wilhelm Koch

Abstract: Phototransduction in vertebrate photoreceptor cells is controlled by Ca2+-dependent feedback loops involving the membrane-bound guanylate cyclase GC-E that synthesizes the second messenger guanosine-3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate. Intra-cellular Ca2+-sensor proteins named guanylate cyclase-activating proteins (GCAPs) regulate the activity of GC-E by switching from a Ca2+-bound inhibiting state to a Ca2+-free/Mg2+-bound activating state. The gene GUCY2D encodes for human GC-E, and mutations in GUCY2D are often associated with an imbalance of Ca2+ and cGMP homeostasis causing retinal disorders. Here, we investigate the Ca2+-dependent inhibition of the constitutively active GC-E mutant V902L. The inhibition is not mediated by GCAP variants but by Ca2+ replacing Mg2+ 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.