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    J Biol Chem. 1995 Dec 22;270(51):30671-9.

    An essential aspartic acid at each of two allosteric cGMP-binding sites of a cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase.

    McAllister-Lucas LM, Haik TL, Colbran JL, Sonnenburg WK, Seger D, Turko IV, Beavo JA, Francis SH, Corbin JD.

    Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-0165, USA.

    The amino acid sequences of all known cGMP-binding phosphodiesterases (PDEs) contain internally homologous repeats (a and b) that are 80-90 residues in length and are arranged in tandem within the putative cGMP-binding domains. In the bovine lung cGMP-binding, cGMP-specific PDE (cGB-PDE or PDE5A), these repeats span residues 228-311 (a) and 410-500 (b). An aspartic acid (residue 289 or 478) that is invariant in repeats a and b of all known cGMP-binding PDEs was changed to alanine by site-directed mutagenesis of cGB-PDE, and wild type (WT) and mutant cGB-PDEs were expressed in COS-7 cells. Purified bovine lung cGB-PDE (native) and WT cGB-PDE displayed identical cGMP-binding kinetics, with approximately 1.8 microM cGMP required for half-maximal saturation. The D289A mutant showed decreased affinity for cGMP (Kd > 10 microM) and the D478A mutant showed increased affinity for cGMP (Kd approximately 0.5 microM) as compared to WT and native cGB-PDE. WT and native cGB-PDE displayed an identical curvilinear profile of cGMP dissociation which was consistent with the presence of distinct slowly dissociating (koff = 0.26 h-1) and rapidly dissociating (koff = 1.00 h-1) sites of cGMP binding. In contrast, the D289A mutant displayed a single koff = 1.24 h-1, which was similar to the calculated koff for the fast site of WT and native cGB-PDE, and the D478A mutant displayed a single koff = 0.29 h-1, which was similar to that calculated for the slow site of WT and native cGB-PDE. These results were consistent with the loss of a slow cGMP-binding site in repeat a of the D289A mutant cGB-PDE, and the loss of a fast site in repeat b of the D478A mutant, suggesting that cGB-PDE possesses two distinct cGMP-binding sites located at repeats a and b, with the invariant aspartic acid being crucial for interaction with cGMP at each site.

    PMID: 8530505 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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