Regulator of G protein signaling

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The structure of the RGS domain was defined by X-ray crystallographic analysis of a complex of RGS4 and Gα<sub>i1</sub>.
The structure of the RGS domain was defined by X-ray crystallographic analysis of a complex of RGS4 and Gα<sub>i1</sub>.
1AGR is a tetramer structure of two identical duplicate crystal complex of <scene name='70/701447/Gi-rgs4/16'>RGS4- Gα<sub>i1</sub></scene> (tetramer excess stability of crystal structure) GDP–Mg<sup>+2</sup>, bound in the active site of Gα<sub>i1</sub> is shown as a ball-and-stick model.
1AGR is a tetramer structure of two identical duplicate crystal complex of <scene name='70/701447/Gi-rgs4/16'>RGS4- Gα<sub>i1</sub></scene> (tetramer excess stability of crystal structure) GDP–Mg<sup>+2</sup>, bound in the active site of Gα<sub>i1</sub> is shown as a ball-and-stick model.
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The <scene name='70/701447/Rgs4_monomer/4'>Monomer structure of RGS4</scene> corresponds to an array of nine α-helices that fold into two small subdomains Both subdomains are required for GAP activity. α1, α2, α3, α4, α5 and α6 colred blue, aqua, yellow, coral, magenta and dark green respectivly. the helices α7, α8 and α9 colored red.
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The <scene name='70/701447/Rgs4_monomer/4'>Monomer structure of RGS4</scene> corresponds to an array of nine α-helices that fold into two small subdomains Both subdomains are required for GAP activity. α1, α2, α3, α4, α5 and α6 helices colred blue, aqua, yellow, coral, magenta and dark green respectivly. the helices α7, α8 and α9 colored red.
Gα<sub>i1</sub> subunits adopt a conserved fold composed of <scene name='70/701447/All-helical-domain/6'>α helical domain</scene> , a helical domain of six α helices shown as blue cartoon and a GTPase domain shown in gray cartoons.The GTPase domain hydrolyzes GTP and provides most of Gα's binding surfaces for Gβγ, receptors, effectors and RGS proteins. <scene name='70/701447/Gi-rgs4/19'>The GTPase domain</scene> contains three flexible regions designated switch-I presented as blue sticks, switch-II presented as magenta sticks and switch-III presented as green sticks that change conformation in response to GTP binding and hydrolysis. The three switch regions of Gα<sub>i1</sub>: residues 176–184, 201–215, and 233–241, respectively . <ref>PMID: 9108480</ref>
Gα<sub>i1</sub> subunits adopt a conserved fold composed of <scene name='70/701447/All-helical-domain/6'>α helical domain</scene> , a helical domain of six α helices shown as blue cartoon and a GTPase domain shown in gray cartoons.The GTPase domain hydrolyzes GTP and provides most of Gα's binding surfaces for Gβγ, receptors, effectors and RGS proteins. <scene name='70/701447/Gi-rgs4/19'>The GTPase domain</scene> contains three flexible regions designated switch-I presented as blue sticks, switch-II presented as magenta sticks and switch-III presented as green sticks that change conformation in response to GTP binding and hydrolysis. The three switch regions of Gα<sub>i1</sub>: residues 176–184, 201–215, and 233–241, respectively . <ref>PMID: 9108480</ref>

Revision as of 21:05, 18 May 2015

Regulator of G protein signaling (RGS) interactions with G proteins – RGS4-Gαi as a model structure.

RGS4-Gα complex

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References

  1. Kosloff M, Travis AM, Bosch DE, Siderovski DP, Arshavsky VY. Integrating energy calculations with functional assays to decipher the specificity of G protein-RGS protein interactions. Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2011 Jun 19;18(7):846-53. doi: 10.1038/nsmb.2068. PMID:21685921 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nsmb.2068
  2. Milligan G, Kostenis E. Heterotrimeric G-proteins: a short history. Br J Pharmacol. 2006 Jan;147 Suppl 1:S46-55. PMID:16402120 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0706405
  3. Tesmer JJ, Berman DM, Gilman AG, Sprang SR. Structure of RGS4 bound to AlF4--activated G(i alpha1): stabilization of the transition state for GTP hydrolysis. Cell. 1997 Apr 18;89(2):251-61. PMID:9108480

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