Journal Article PreJuSER-19450

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Conformational dynamics of helix 8 in the GPCR rhodopsin controls arrestin activation in the desensitization process

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2011
Academy Washington, DC

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108, 18690 - 18695 () [10.1073/pnas.1015461108]

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Abstract: Arrestins are regulatory molecules for G-protein coupled receptor function. In visual rhodopsin, selective binding of arrestin to the cytoplasmic side of light-activated, phosphorylated rhodopsin (P-Rh*) terminates signaling via the G-protein transducin. While the "phosphate-sensor" of arrestin for the recognition of receptor-attached phosphates is identified, the molecular mechanism of arrestin binding and the involvement of receptor conformations in this process are still largely hypothetic. Here we used fluorescence pump-probe and time-resolved fluorescence depolarization measurements to investigate the kinetics of arrestin conformational changes and the corresponding nanosecond dynamical changes at the receptor surface. We show that at least two sequential conformational changes of arrestin occur upon interaction with P-Rh*, thus providing a kinetic proof for the suggested multistep nature of arrestin binding. At the cytoplasmic surface of P-Rh*, the structural dynamics of the amphipathic helix 8 (H8), connecting transmembrane helix 7 and the phosphorylated C-terminal tail, depends on the arrestin interaction state. We find that a high mobility of H8 is required in the low-affinity (prebinding) but not in the high-affinity binding state. High-affinity arrestin binding is inhibited when a bulky, inflexible group is bound to H8, indicating close interaction. We further show that this close steric interaction of H8 with arrestin is mandatory for the transition from prebinding to high-affinity binding; i.e., for arrestin activation. This finding implies a regulatory role for H8 in activation of visual arrestin, which shows high selectivity to P-Rh* in contrast to the broad receptor specificity displayed by the two nonvisual arrestins.

Keyword(s): Animals (MeSH) ; Anisotropy (MeSH) ; Arrestin: chemistry (MeSH) ; Cattle (MeSH) ; Crystallography, X-Ray: methods (MeSH) ; Kinetics (MeSH) ; Microscopy, Fluorescence: methods (MeSH) ; Molecular Conformation (MeSH) ; Phosphorylation (MeSH) ; Protein Binding (MeSH) ; Protein Conformation (MeSH) ; Protein Structure, Tertiary (MeSH) ; Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled: chemistry (MeSH) ; Retina: metabolism (MeSH) ; Rhodopsin: chemistry (MeSH) ; Signal Transduction (MeSH) ; Spectrophotometry: methods (MeSH) ; Arrestin ; Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled ; Rhodopsin ; J ; membrane receptor (auto) ; protein conformational change (auto) ; binding kinetics (auto)


Note: We thank Dr. R. Batra Safferling (ICS) and C. Seidler (FU Berlin) for help with sample and measurements, and S. Lehmann for building up the light-scattering instrument. The work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Sfb 449, (to U.A.) and ONEXIM (to G.B.).

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Molekulare Biophysik (ICS-5)
  2. Strukturbiochemie (ICS-6)
Research Program(s):
  1. BioSoft: Makromolekulare Systeme und biologische Informationsverarbeitung (P45)

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Dokumenttypen > Aufsätze > Zeitschriftenaufsätze
Institutssammlungen > ER-C > ER-C-3
Institutssammlungen > IBI > IBI-6
Institutssammlungen > IBI > IBI-7
Workflowsammlungen > Öffentliche Einträge
ICS > ICS-5
ICS > ICS-6
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