MUTATIONAL ANALYSIS OF PHOSPHOLIPASE C-BETA(2) IDENTIFICATION OF REGIONS REQUIRED FOR MEMBRANE ASSOCIATION AND STIMULATION BY GUANINE-NUCLEOTIDE-BINDING PROTEIN BETA-GAMMA-SUBUNITS
P. Schnabel et al., MUTATIONAL ANALYSIS OF PHOSPHOLIPASE C-BETA(2) IDENTIFICATION OF REGIONS REQUIRED FOR MEMBRANE ASSOCIATION AND STIMULATION BY GUANINE-NUCLEOTIDE-BINDING PROTEIN BETA-GAMMA-SUBUNITS, European journal of biochemistry, 217(3), 1993, pp. 1109-1115
Members of the beta isozyme subfamily of the phosphoinositide-specific
phospholipases C (PLCbeta) have recently been shown to be stimulated
by both guanine-nucleotide-binding protein alpha and betagamma subunit
s. The alpha subunits of the G(q) class activate PLCbeta isozymes in t
he order of PLCbeta1 greater-than-or-equal-to PLCbeta3 much greater th
an PLCbeta2, which is different from the order of PLCbeta3 > PLCbeta2
> PLCbeta1 for betagamma subunit stimulation. The C-terminal region of
PLCbeta1, in particular the sequence between Thr903 and Leu1142, has
been shown to be involved in interacting with activated alpha(q) subun
its and to contain a region required for efficient membrane associatio
n of PLCbeta1 [Park, D., Jhon, D.-Y., Lee, C.-W., Ryu, S. H. & Rhee, S
. G. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 3710-3714, and Wu, D., Jiang, H., Katz
, A. & Simon, M. 1. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268,3704-3709]. To examine t
he structure-function relationships of a PLCbeta isozyme highly sensit
ive to betagamma subunit stimulation, we have altered the cDNA of PLCb
eta2 by site-directed mutagenesis and have examined the effects of the
se structural alterations on the functional properties of the mutant p
olypeptides. The results show that the C-terminal region of PLCbeta2 d
ownstream of Phe818, which corresponds to Tyr816 of PLCbeta1, contains
a region essential for membrane association, but is required neither
for the interaction of PLCbeta2 with Ca2+ and the phospholipid substra
te, nor for betagamma subunit stimulation of PLCbeta2. These data sugg
est that PLCbeta isozymes are activated by alpha(q) and betagamma subu
nits via distinct domains.