Advanced Search
8

Intramolecular activation mechanism of the Dictyostelium LRRK2 homolog Roco protein GbpC.

van Egmond WN, Kortholt A, Plak K, Bosgraaf L, Bosgraaf S, Keizer-Gunnink I, van Haastert PJ

J Biol Chem. 2008 Oct 31; 283(44):30412-20

8 Must Read

Jeffrey Williams, University of Dundee, UK. F1000 Developmental Biology

02 Sep 2008 | New Finding

This paper is of interest because it presents evidence that the giant GbpC protein of Dictyostelium comprises a complete Ras signalling pathway in one molecule.

It is of potential medical importance because GbpC is the founder member of the Roco family of proteins, which have recently been shown to also contain human LRRK2: the gene product implicated in Parkinson's disease.

Competing interests: None declared

Williams J: "This paper is of interest because it presents evidence that the giant GbpC protein of..." Evaluation of: [van Egmond WN et al. Intramolecular activation mechanism of the Dictyostelium LRRK2 homolog Roco protein GbpC. J Biol Chem. 2008 Oct 31; 283(44):30412-20; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M804265200]. Faculty of 1000, 02 Sep 2008. F1000.com/1120536#eval576746

Short form
Williams J: 2008. F1000.com/1120536#eval576746

Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [van Egmond WN et al. Intramolecular activation mechanism of the Dictyostelium LRRK2 homolog Roco protein GbpC. J Biol Chem. 2008 Oct 31; 283(44):30412-20; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M804265200]. Faculty of 1000, 02 Sep 2008. F1000.com/1120536

Short form
Faculty of 1000: 2008. F1000.com/1120536

Only signed-in users with full subscription access can make comments.
Sign in/get access to leave a comment.

No comments yet.

GbpC is a large multidomain protein involved in cGMP-mediated chemotaxis in the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum. GbpC belongs to the Roco family of proteins that often share a central core region, consisting of leucine-rich repeats, a Ras domain (Roc), a Cor domain, and a MAPKKKinase domain. In addition to this core, GbpC contains a RasGEF domain and two cGMP-binding domains. Here, we report on an intramolecular signaling cascade of GbpC. In vitro, the RasGEF domain of GbpC specifically accelerates the GDP/GTP exchange of the Roc domain. Moreover, cGMP binding to GbpC strongly stimulates the binding of GbpC to GTP-agarose, suggesting cGMP-stimulated GDP/GTP exchange at the Roc domain. The function of the protein in vivo was investigated by rescue analysis of the chemotactic defect of gbpC null cells. Mutants that lack a functional guanine exchange factor (GEF), Roc, or kinase domain are inactive in vivo. Together, the results suggest a four-step intramolecular activation mechanism of the Roco protein GbpC: cGMP binding to the cyclic nucleotide-binding domains, activation of the GEF domain, GDP/GTP exchange of Roc, and activation of the MAPKKK domain.

DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M804265200

PMID: 18703517

Export