Abstract

Each regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase has two tandem cAMP-binding sites, A and B, at the carboxyl terminus. Based on sequence homologies with the cAMP-binding domain of the Escherichia coli catabolite gene activator protein, a model has been constructed for each cAMP-binding domain. Two of the conserved features of each cAMP-binding site are an arginine and a glutamic acid which interact with the negatively charged phosphate and with the 2'-OH on the ribose ring, respectively. In the type I regulatory subunit, this arginine in cAMP binding site A is Arg-209. Recombinant DNA techniques have been used to change this arginine to a lysine. The resulting protein binds cAMP with a high affinity and associates with the catalytic subunit to form holoenzyme. The mutant holoenzyme also is activated by cAMP. However, the mutant R-subunit binds only 1 mol of cAMP/R-monomer. Photoaffinity labeling confirmed that the mutant R-subunit has only one functional cAMP-binding site. In contrast to the native R-subunit which is labeled at Trp-260 and Tyr-371 by 8-N3cAMP, the mutant R-subunit is convalently modified at a single site, Tyr-371, which correlates with a functional cAMP-binding site B. The lack of functional cAMP-binding site A also was confirmed by activating the mutant holoenzyme with analogs of cAMP which have a high specificity for either site A or site B. 8-NH2-methyl cAMP which preferentially binds to site B was similar to cAMP in its ability to activate both mutant and wild type holoenzyme whereas N6-monobutyryl cAMP, a site A-specific analog, was a very poor activator of the mutant holoenzyme. The results support the conclusions that 1) Arg-209 is essential for cAMP binding to site A and 2) cAMP binding to domain A is not essential for dissociation of the mutant holoenzyme.

Highlights

  • Two conserved features which appear to be invariant features of every cAMP binding siteare an arginine anda glutamic acid residue (Fig. 6)

  • The guanidinium group of the arginine, in particular, is thought to interact with the negative charge on the cyclic phosphate ring based on the homologies that theR-subunit shares with catabolite gene activatorprotein (CAP) [16]

  • Equilibrium dialysis demonstrated that only one site/monomer was occupied byCAMP;no binding to a second site was observed at concentrationsup to 2 PM CAMP

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Summary

Introduction

Binds cAMP with a high affinity and associates with differ for the two sites andhave led to the designation of slow the catalytic subunit toform holoenzyme. Are required for dissociation of the holoenzyme, we have used directed mutagenesis to selectively alter the CAMP-binding sites in each domain.

Results
Conclusion

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