Abstract
The guanylyl cyclase-activating protein, GCAP1, activates photoreceptor membrane guanylyl cyclase (RetGC) in the light, when free Ca2+ concentrations decline, and decelerates the cyclase in the dark, when Ca2+ concentrations rise. Here, we report a novel mutation, G86R, in the GCAP1 (GUCA1A) gene in a family with a dominant retinopathy. The G86R substitution in a "hinge" region connecting EF-hand domains 2 and 3 in GCAP1 strongly interfered with its Ca2+-dependent activator-to-inhibitor conformational transition. The G86R-GCAP1 variant activated RetGC at low Ca2+ concentrations with higher affinity than did the WT GCAP1, but failed to decelerate the cyclase at the Ca2+ concentrations characteristic of dark-adapted photoreceptors. Ca2+-dependent increase in Trp94 fluorescence, indicative of the GCAP1 transition to its RetGC inhibiting state, was suppressed and shifted to a higher Ca2+ range. Conformational changes in G86R GCAP1 detectable by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) also became less sensitive to Ca2+, and the dose dependence of the G86R GCAP1-RetGC1 complex inhibition by retinal degeneration 3 (RD3) protein was shifted toward higher than normal concentrations. Our results indicate that the flexibility of the hinge region between EF-hands 2 and 3 is required for placing GCAP1-regulated Ca2+ sensitivity of the cyclase within the physiological range of intracellular Ca2+ at the expense of reducing GCAP1 affinity for the target enzyme. The disease-linked mutation of the hinge Gly86, leading to abnormally high affinity for the target enzyme and reduced Ca2+ sensitivity of GCAP1, is predicted to abnormally elevate cGMP production and Ca2+ influx in photoreceptors in the dark.
Highlights
The guanylyl cyclase-activating protein, GCAP1, activates photoreceptor membrane guanylyl cyclase (RetGC) in the light, when free Ca2؉ concentrations decline, and decelerates the cyclase in the dark, when Ca2؉ concentrations rise
We found that activation of the cyclase by G86R GCAP1 becomes more resistant to inhibition by retinal degeneration 3 (RD3) than the cyclase activated by WT RD3 (Fig. 8)
Clinical features of the disease caused by G86R GCAP1
Summary
A G86R mutation in the calcium-sensor protein GCAP1 alters regulation of retinal guanylyl cyclase and causes dominant cone-rod degeneration. The disease-linked mutation of the hinge Gly, leading to abnormally high affinity for the target enzyme and reduced Ca2؉ sensitivity of GCAP1, is predicted to abnormally elevate cGMP production and Ca2؉ influx in photoreceptors in the dark. Failure of RetGC to accelerate or decelerate cGMP production within the normal range of the intracellular free Ca2ϩ alters light sensitivity and kinetics of rod and cone response to light (7–9, 16 –18) and has been linked to various forms of retinal blindness in humans, such as Leber congenital amaurosis, dominant cone or cone-rod degenerations (reviewed in Ref. 19 –22), and a recessive night blindness [23]. We present evidence that the flexible hinge Gly connecting the semiglobules formed by the two pairs of EF-hands reduces GCAP1 affinity for RetGC1 and adjusts the Ca2ϩ sensitivity of the activator-to-inhibitor transition to the proper physiological range of RetGC1 regulation by Ca2ϩ. We reason that the G86R mutation in GCAP1 would trigger photoreceptor death by abnormally elevating cGMP production rate in the dark
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