Abstract

Each protomer of the regulatory subunit dimer of cAMP-dependent protein kinase contains two tandem and homologous cAMP-binding domains, A and B, and cooperative cAMP binding to these two sites promotes holoenzyme dissociation. Several amino acid residues in the type I regulatory subunit, predicted to lie in close proximity to each bound cyclic nucleotide based on affinity labeling and model building, were replaced using recombinant techniques. The mutations included replacement of 1) Glu-200, predicted to hydrogen bond to the 2'-OH of cAMP bound to site A, with Asp, 2) Tyr-371, the site of affinity labeling with 8-N3-cAMP in site B, with Trp, and 3) Phe-247, the position in site A that is homologous to Tyr-371 in site B, with Tyr. Each mutation caused an approximate 2-fold increase in both the Ka(cAMP) and Kd(cAMP); however, the off-rates for cAMP and the characteristic pattern of affinity labeling with 8-N3-cAMP differed markedly for each mutant protein. Furthermore, these mutations affect the cAMP binding properties not only of the site containing the mutation, but of the adjacent nonmutated site as well, thus confirming that extensive cross-communication occurs between the two cAMP-binding domains. Photoaffinity labeling of the native R-subunit results in the covalent modification of two residues, Trp-260 and Tyr-371, by 8-N3-cAMP bound to sites A and B, respectively, with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of 8-N3-cAMP incorporated per mol of R-monomer (Bubis, J., and Taylor, S. S. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 3478-3486). A stoichiometry of 1 mol of 8-N3-cAMP incorporated per R-monomer was observed for each mutant regulatory subunit as well, even when 2 mol of 8-N3-cAMP were bound per R-monomer; however, the major sites of covalent modification were altered as follows: R(Y371/W), Trp-371; R(E200/D), Tyr-371, and R(F247/Y), Tyr-371.

Highlights

  • Glu in all of the R-subunits is consistent with its playing an important functional role [9, 28]

  • The potential importance of this dipole was suggested earlier based on mapping with CAMP analogs [32]

  • The model proposed by Weber et al [9] suggests that the C-helix lining the CAMP-binding pocket is shorter in site A than in site B, and the position corresponding to Tyr-371 in site A is Phe-247

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Summary

Introduction

Glu in all of the R-subunits is consistent with its playing an important functional role [9, 28]. In particular, has a very small dipole moment in comparison to Tyr and Trp. The potential importance of this dipole was suggested earlier based on mapping with CAMP analogs [32]. A second mutation replacing Phe-247 in site A with Tyr was constructed based on the role of Tyr-371 and the long C-helix in site B.

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Conclusion
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