Abstract

Interaction between the inhibitory subunit (P gamma) and catalytic subunits of cGMP phosphodiesterase is essential for the regulation of cGMP phosphodiesterase in vertebrate rod photoreceptors. P gamma phosphorylation in vitro has been studied using a kinase which is extracted from amphibian rod outer segments. Various chromatographies of the kinase preparation using ionic exchange, gel filtration, and heparin-Sepharose columns indicate that a kinase with M(r) 70,000 is responsible for the P gamma phosphorylation. The kinase does not require any of the known activators for protein kinases but is inhibited by cGMP in a concentration-dependent manner. Together with analysis by laser-desorption mass spectrometry, measurement of 32P radioactivity in phosphorylated P gamma indicates that P gamma extracted with GTP-bound transducin alpha subunit is not phosphorylated and that a phosphate is incorporated into more than 80% of the P gamma by the kinase. Phosphoamino acid analysis, sequencing of phosphorylated peptides derived from phosphorylated P gamma, and phosphorylation of synthetic peptides indicate threonine 22 in P gamma is phosphorylated by the kinase. Phosphorylated P gamma has a higher inhibitory activity for active cGMP phosphodiesterase than non-phosphorylated P gamma. These data suggest that threonine 22 in P gamma is phosphorylated by a specific kinase and that the P gamma phosphorylation governs the interaction between P gamma and catalytic subunits of cGMP phosphodiesterase in vertebrate rod photoreceptors.

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