Abstract
G proteins couple receptors for extracellular signals to several intracellular effector systems and play a key role in signalling transduction mechanisms. In particulate preparations of Drosophila melanogaster heads, only one substrate for pertussis toxin at 39-40 kd was detected. This substrate, which showed only one isoform when analysed by isoelectric focusing, was recognized by immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation techniques using a polyclonal antibody against the alpha subunit of the Go protein purified from bovine brain and can be thus considered as a Go-like protein. Antibodies obtained against a carboxy-terminal sequence of the alpha subunit of Go (but not of Gi1 or Gi2) and against an internal sequence shared by all the alpha subunits, were also able to cross-react with the alpha subunit of this protein in insects. We have also studied the Go-like protein in several D.melanogaster mutants, primarily in memory and learning mutants. In these mutants there was a sex-dependent enhancement in pertussis toxin-catalysed ADP-ribosylation with respect to the wild-type. This increase could be attributed in part to an increase in the alpha subunit of the Go-like protein, as revealed by immunoblotting with anti-Go alpha polyclonal antibody. This report constitutes the first evidence for the participation of a Go protein in learning and memory.
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