4.6 Article

A substitution in cGMP-dependent protein kinase 1 associated with aortic disease induces an active conformation in the absence of cGMP

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 295, Issue 30, Pages 10394-10405

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA119.010984

Keywords

protein kinase G (PKG); cyclic GMP (cGMP); mutant; mutagenesis; autophosphorylation; enzyme structure; hydrogen; deuterium exchange; thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection (TAAD); kinase signaling; cardiovascular system; hydrogen exchange mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-HL132141, R01-GM090161, 1U19AI117905, R01-GM020501]

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Type 1 cGMP-dependent protein kinases (PKGs) play important roles in human cardiovascular physiology, regulating vascular tone and smooth-muscle cell phenotype. A mutation in the human PRKG1 gene encoding cGMP-dependent protein kinase 1 (PKG1) leads to thoracic aortic aneurysms and dissections. The mutation causes an arginine-to-glutamine (RQ) substitution within the first cGMP-binding pocket in PKG1. This substitution disrupts cGMP binding to the pocket, but it also unexpectedly causes PKG1 to have high activity in the absence of cGMP via an unknown mechanism. Here, we identified the molecular mechanism whereby the RQ mutation increases basal kinase activity in the human PKG1? and PKG1? isoforms. Although we found that the RQ substitution (R177Q in PKG1? and R192Q in PKG1?) increases PKG1? and PKG1? autophosphorylationin vitro, we did not detect increased autophosphorylation of the PKG1? or PKG1? RQ variant isolated from transiently transfected 293T cells, indicating that increased basal activity of the RQ variants in cells was not driven by PKG1 autophosphorylation. Replacement of Arg-177 in PKG1? with alanine or methionine also increased basal activity. PKG1 exists as a parallel homodimer linked by an N-terminal leucine zipper, and we show that the WT chain in WT-RQ heterodimers partly reduces basal activity of the RQ chain. Using hydrogen/deuterium-exchange MS, we found that the RQ substitution causes PKG1? to adopt an active conformation in the absence of cGMP, similar to that of cGMP-bound WT enzyme. We conclude that the RQ substitution in PKG1 increases its basal activity by disrupting the formation of an inactive conformation.

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