Exp Mol Med.
1998 Dec;30(4):235-239.
Retainment of membrane binding capacity of non-palmitoylated Gs alpha mutants expressed in COS-1 cells
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea.
Abstract
- Heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide binding regulatory proteins (G proteins)
transduce extracellular signals into intracellular signals by coupling receptors
and effectors. Because most of the G protein-coupled receptors are integral
proteins, the G proteins need to have a membrane binding capacity to receive
signals from the receptors. The alpha subunit of G protein binds tightly to the
cytoplasmic face of the plasma membrane without any membrane spanning domain.
Fatty acylation of G alpha with myristic acid or palmitic acid, in addition to
the beta gamma subunits, plays an important role in anchoring the G alpha
subunit. The reversible and dynamic palmitoylation of the alpha subunit of
stimulatory G protein (Gs alpha) has been suggested as essential for its
membrane attachment. However, in our previous experiments, Gs alpha deleted in
the amino terminus containing palmitoylation site, retained its binding capacity
when expressed in COS cells. Thus, to evaluate the role of palmitoylation in Gs
alpha membrane binding, we constructed and expressed non-palmitoylated mutants
of Gs alpha and analyzed their subcellular distributions in COS-1 cells. We
found that non-palmitoylated mutants of Gs alpha, C3S- and G2A/C3S Gs alpha,
retained their membrane binding capacities in COS-1 cells, demonstrating that
palmitoylation is not essential for membrane binding of Gs alpha in COS-1 cells.
We also found that the palmitoylation did not change significantly the
distribution of Gs alpha in Triton X-114 partition. These results suggest that
the palmitoylation of Gs alpha may produce different effects on membrane binding
depending on cell types.