Structure and regulation of G-substrate in neurodegenerative disease
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Abstract
G-substrate is a 23 kDa protein named as a specific substrate of cGMP-dependent
protein kinase and found predominantly in cerebellar Purkinje cells. As a component
of the NO/cGMP/PKG pathway, G-substrate is potentially involved in several
important cellular processes and has so far been associated with a number of disease
conditions: a single point mutation in G-substrate has been linked to
hypercholesterolaemia, while the potent inhibition of PP2A by phosphorylated Gsubstrate
possibly influences Tau protein hyperphosphorylation and contributes to
Alzheimer's disease pathology. Conversely, overexpression of G-substrate protein in
dopaminergic neurons has been found to protect neurons from Parkinson's disease
toxins, making G-substrate a possible target of interventions for mitigating the
debilitating effects of Parkinson's disease on patients.
A shorter splice variant, which only retains one of the phosphorylatable threonine
motifs, has recently been described for G-substrate and given the importance of
phosphorylation to its action as a phosphatase inhibitor, this study focuses on
determining whether both variants of the protein exhibit similar levels of phosphatase
inhibition and interact with the same/similar proteins in vivo. We were also interested
in determining whether the 51 amino acid section absent from short G-substrate
resulted in any significant differences in protein structure, which potentially has
implications on functions in vivo.
My results indicate the association of G-substrate with a wide range of proteins
involved in processes including cell cycle regulation, endocytosis and signalling and
the two variants do not always interact with the same proteins. Among these
interactors is the PARK 7/ DJ-1 protease, which like G-substrate has been shown to
be neuroprotective. I have found that G-substrate is proteolysed by DJ-1 in its active
form and interactions between these two proteins is affected by the anti-vertigo drug
Tanganil. Phosphatase inhibition studies suggest that the G-substrate variants affect
phosphatase activity to different extents under similar conditions, while NMR and
circular dichroism structural studies suggest that in solution, the full length Gsubstrate
variant is slightly more compactly folded. Understanding the details of G-substrate action in the cell will lead to a better
understanding of its roles including the protection of dopaminergic neurons from
Parkinson's disease toxins and shed more light on the intricacies of the
NO/cGMP/PKG signalling pathway as a whole, thus providing important
information that might help improve strategies for dealing with conditions involving
this pathway and help develop interventions for diseases such as Alzheimer's and
Parkinson's.
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