Abstract

NADPH oxidase activation involves the assembly of membrane-localized cytochrome b559 with the cytosolic components p47phox, p67phox, and the small GTPase Rac. Assembly is mimicked by a cell-free system consisting of membranes and cytosolic components, activated by an anionic amphiphile. We reported that a chimeric construct, consisting of residues 1-212 of p67phox and full-length Rac1, activates the oxidase in vitro in an amphiphile-dependent manner, and when prenylated, in the absence of amphiphile and p47phox. We subjected chimera p67phox-(1-212)-Rac1 to mutational analysis and found that: 1) replacement of a single basic residue at the C terminus of the Rac1 moiety by glutamine is sufficient for loss of activity by the non-prenylated chimera; replacement of all six basic residues by glutamines is required for loss of activity by the prenylated chimera. 2) A V204A mutation in the activation domain of the p67phox moiety leads to a reduction in activity. 3) Mutating residues, known to participate in the interaction between free p67phox and Rac1, in the p67phox-(R102E) or Rac1 (A27K, G30S) moieties of the chimera, leads to a marked decrease in activity, indicating a requirement for intrachimeric bonds, in addition to the engineered fusion. 4) Chimeras, inactive because of mutations A27K or G30S in the Rac1 moiety, are reactivated by supplementation with exogenous Rac1-GTP but not with exogenous p67phox. This demonstrates that Rac has a dual role in the assembly of NADPH oxidase. One is to tether p67phox to the membrane; the other is to induce an "activating" conformational change in p67phox.

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