
Sara Linse
Professor

Calcium binding, structural stability and guanylate cyclase activation in GCAP1 variants associated with human cone dystrophy
Author
Summary, in English
Guanylate cyclase activating protein 1 (GCAP1) is a neuronal Ca2+ sensor (NCS) that regulates the activation of rod outer segment guanylate cyclases (ROS-GCs) in photoreceptors. In this study, we investigated the Ca2+-induced effects on the conformation and the thermal stability of four GCAP1 variants associated with hereditary human cone dystrophies. Ca2+ binding stabilized the conformation of all the GCAP1 variants independent of myristoylation. The myristoylated wild-type GCAP1 was found to have the highest Ca2+ affinity and thermal stability, whereas all the mutants showed decreased Ca2+ affinity and significantly lower thermal stability in both apo and Ca2+-loaded forms. No apparent cooperativity of Ca2+ binding was detected for any variant. Finally, the nonmyristoylated mutants were still capable of activating ROS-GC1, but the measured cyclase activity was shifted toward high, nonphysiological Ca2+ concentrations. Thus, we conclude that distorted Ca2+-sensor properties could lead to cone dysfunction.
Department/s
- Biochemistry and Structural Biology
- MultiPark: Multidisciplinary research focused on Parkinson´s disease
Publishing year
2010
Language
English
Pages
973-984
Publication/Series
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences
Volume
67
Issue
6
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Birkhäuser Verlag
Topic
- Cell Biology
Keywords
- Photoreceptor
- Neuronal calcium sensor
- GCAP
- Cone dystrophy
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1420-9071