4.6 Article

Action of Pasteurella multocida toxin depends on the helical domain of Gαq

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 279, Issue 33, Pages 34150-34155

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M405353200

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Pasteurella multocida produces a 146-kDa protein toxin (PMT), which activates multiple cellular signal transduction pathways, resulting in the activation of phospholipase Cbeta, RhoA, Jun kinase, and extracellular signal-regulated kinase. Using Galpha(q)/Galpha(11)-deficient cells, it was shown that the PMT-induced pleiotropic effects are mediated by Galpha(q) but not by the highly related Galpha(11) protein (Zywietz, A., Gohla, A., Schmelz, M., Schultz, G., and Offermanns, S. ( 2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 3840 - 3845). Here we studied the molecular basis of the unique specificity of PMT to distinguish between Galpha(q) and/or Galpha(11). Infection of Galpha(q/11)-deficient cells with retrovirus-encoding Galpha(q) caused reconstitution of PMT-induced activation of phospholipase Cbeta, whereas Galpha(11)-encoding virus did not reconstitute PMT activity. Chimeras between Galpha(q) and/or Galpha(11) revealed that a peptide region of Galpha(q), covering amino acid residues 105 - 113, is essential for the action of PMT to activate phospholipase Cbeta. Exchange of glutamine 105 or asparagine 109 of Galpha(11), which are located in the all-helical domain of the Galpha subunit, with the equally positioned histidines of Galpha(q), renders Galpha(11) capable of transmission PMT-induced phospholipase Cbeta activation. The data indicate that the all-helical domain of Galpha(q) is essential for the action of PMT and suggest an essential functional role of this domain in signal transduction via G(q) proteins.

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