A FRET map of membrane anchors suggests distinct microdomains of heterotrimeric G proteins
Author(s) -
Daniel Abankwa,
Horst Vogel
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of cell science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.384
H-Index - 278
eISSN - 1477-9137
pISSN - 0021-9533
DOI - 10.1242/jcs.001404
Subject(s) - heterotrimeric g protein , lipid microdomain , förster resonance energy transfer , biology , lipid raft , g protein , microbiology and biotechnology , protein subunit , gq alpha subunit , biophysics , membrane , signal transduction , biochemistry , fluorescence , gene , physics , quantum mechanics
The standard model of heterotrimeric G protein signaling postulates a dissociation of Galpha and Gbetagamma subunits after activation. We hypothesized that the different combination of lipid-modifications on Galpha and Galphabetagamma subunits directs them into different microdomains. By characterizing rapidly and at high sensitivity 38 fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) pairs of heterotrimeric-G-protein constructs, we defined their microdomains in relation to each other, free from the constraints of the raft/non-raft dualism. We estimated that in a cell approximately 30% of these membrane-anchored proteins are mostly clustered in 3400-16,200 copies of 30-nm microdomains. We found that the membrane anchors of Galpha and Galphabetagamma subunits of both the G(i/o) and G(q) family co-cluster differently with microdomain markers. Moreover, anchors of the Galpha(i/o) and Galpha(q) subunits co-clustered only weakly, whereas constructs that contained the anchors of the corresponding heterotrimers co-clustered considerably, suggesting the existence of at least three types of microdomain. Finally, FRET experiments with full-length heterotrimeric G proteins confirmed that the inactive, heterotrimerized Galpha subunit is in microdomains shared by heterotrimers from different subclasses, from where it displaces upon activation into a membrane-anchor- and subclass-specific microdomain.
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