(Received for publication, December 18, 1996, and in revised form, April 18, 1997)
From the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology,
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XW, Scotland and the
§ Harvard Medical School, Howe Laboratory of Ophthamolgy,
Boston, Massachusetts 02114
The cGMP phosphodiesterase from retinal rods
(PDE-6) is an 2 heterotetramer. The
and
subunits contain catalytic sites for cGMP hydrolysis, whereas the
subunits serve as a protein inhibitor of the enzyme. Visual
excitation of photoreceptors enables the activated GTP-bound form of
the G-protein transducin to remove the inhibitory action of the
subunit, thereby triggering PDE-6 activation. The type 5 phosphodiesterase (PDE-5) isoform shares a number of similar
characteristics with PDE-6, including binding of cGMP to noncatalytic
sites, the cyclic nucleotide specificity, and inhibitor sensitivities.
Although the functional role of PDE-5 remains unclear, it has been
shown to be activated by protein kinase A (PKA) (Burns, F., Rodger, I. W. & Pyne, N. J. (1992) Biochem. J. 283, 487-491). Here we
report that both the recombinant
subunit and a peptide
corresponding to amino acids 24-46 in this protein inhibited the
activation of PDE-5 by PKA. Furthermore, immunoblotting airway smooth
muscle membranes with a specific antibody against amino acids 24-46 of
the PDE-6
subunit identified two major immunoreactive small
molecular mass proteins of 14 and 18 kDa (p14 and p18). These appear to
form a complex with PDE-5, because PDE activity was immunoprecipitated
using antibody against the PDE-6
subunit. p14 and p18 were also
substrates for phosphorylation by a unidentified kinase that was
stimulated by a pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein. Phosphorylation of
p14/p18 in membranes treated with guanine nucleotides correlated with a
concurrent reduction in the activation of PDE-5 by PKA. We suggest that
p14 and p18 share an epitope common to PDE-6
and that this region
may interact with PDE-5 to prevent its activation by PKA.
PDEs1 are expressed as a family of distinct isoforms (type 1-7) with each subgroup of isoforms containing multiple spliced variants (1). The different members of the PDE family are also differentially regulated by kinases (2-5), calcium/calmodulin (6), cGMP (7, 8), and G-proteins (9). The integration of these diverse cell signals enables the precise co-ordinated regulation of intracellular cyclic nucleotide levels in response to receptor stimulation.
PDE-5 from smooth muscle and PDE-6 from photoreceptors share a number of common properties. They have two tightly bound subunits containing both catalytic and noncatalytic cGMP binding sites, hydrolyze cGMP better than cAMP, and are both inhibited by zaprinast. The noncatalytic cGMP-binding site in PDE-5 is formed from an N-terminal tandem repeat that is indicative of gene duplication, whereas the catalytic site is located in the C-terminal region of the protein and is conserved in a number of PDE isoforms (1, 10).
PDE-6 is expressed in photoreceptor rod cells, where it serves as an
effector in the visual transduction signal cascade (11-13). This
involves the photoexcitation of rhodopsin, the GDP-GTP cyclical activation of the G-protein, transducin, and the subsequent stimulation of PDE-6 activity by the GTP-bound transducin. PDE-6 is a
heterotetrameric protein composed of catalytic and
subunits and
two inhibitory
subunits. The GTP-bound transducin binds to the
subunits and displaces them, thereby activating PDE-6. PDE-6
has two
additional functions: first, it increases the affinity for cGMP in the
PDE-6 noncatalytic site (14, 15), and second, it participates in the
activation of transducin GTPase, thereby terminating the activation of
PDE activity by the GTP-bound
subunit of transducin (16). Desensitization of PDE-6 activity might also occur via a recently proposed kinase-directed phosphorylation mechanism (17, 18). When
PDE-6
is removed from PDE-6
in a complex with transducin, it
is apparently phosphorylated by an unidentified kinase. The phosphorylated
subunits appear to render PDE-6 refractory to stimulation by transducin.
PDE-5 is the major cGMP-binding protein in lung (19). It is a homodimer comprised of two identical catalytic subunits, each with the molecular mass of 93 kDa. PDE-5 contains a site (Ser92) that is phosphorylated by protein kinase A (PKA) and protein kinase G (5). The kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation of the PDE-5 is kinetically enhanced by the binding of cGMP to the noncatalytic cGMP-binding site. However, no change in enzyme activity has been observed as a consequence of the phosphorylation of purified bovine PDE-5 (5). To the contrary, we have demonstrated that the catalytic subunit of PKA can catalyze up to a 10-fold increase in the Vmax of a partially purified preparation of guinea pig lung PDE-5 (20, 21). Activation of PDE-5 by phosphorylation may therefore enhance the rate of cGMP signal termination in intact cells, and this proposal is supported by the observation that cGMP elevating agents elicit rapid transient phosphorylation and activation of PDE-5 in vascular smooth muscle cells (22).
Multiple similarities in the structure and function of PDE-5 and PDE-6
point to the possibility that PDE-5 might contain its own subunits
that couple this enzyme to unidentified G-protein-dependent pathway. Here we have characterized the interaction of PDE-5 with recombinant PDE-6
and have identified two small molecular mass proteins in airway smooth muscle cell membranes that appear to share an
epitope common to PDE-6
. This epitope region interacts with PDE-5 to
prevent its activation by PKA.
Materials
All biochemicals were from Boehringer Mannheim, whereas general
chemicals were from Sigma. [-32P]ATP,
[3H]cGMP, and excitation chemiluminescence detection kits
were from Amersham International (Bucks, UK). Ophiophagus Hannah snake
venom was from Sigma. Reporter horseradish peroxidase-linked
anti-rabbit antibody was from the Scottish Antibody Production Unit
(Carluke, Scotland). Purified brain protein kinase C containing
multiple isoforms was purchased from Calbiochem.
Cell Culture
The preparation of the primary cultures of guinea pig airway
smooth muscle (ASM) cells was achieved as described previously (23).
The cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
containing 10% (v/v) fetal calf serum and 10% (v/v) donor horse serum
and were passaged twice using trypsin prior to experimentation. Cells
were grown to confluence and routinely used at 15-21 days after the
initial preparation. Their identity was confirmed to be smooth muscle
by the presence of -actin, using a smooth muscle-specific mouse
anti-
-actin monoclonal antibody (23).
Membrane Preparation
Guinea Pig ASM Cell MembranesCells were placed in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 1% (v/v) fetal calf serum and 1% (v/v) donor horse serum for 24 h. In some cases, cells were incubated with pertussis toxin (0.1 µg/ml) for 24 h. All fractionation procedures were performed at 4 °C. The medium was removed from the cells and buffer A containing 0.25 M sucrose, 10 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 2 mM benzamidine was added. Cells were scraped off the plate and passed twice through a 0.25-mm gauge syringe. Cell membranes were collected by centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 10 min and resuspended in buffer A.
Guinea Pig Lung MembranesLung tissue was homogenized in buffer A, using a Turrex homogenizer, and the subsequently obtained homogenate was filtered through cheese cloth and centrifuged at 10,000 × g in a Beckman prep 65 centrifuge for 10 min. The supernatant was removed and recentrifuged at 48,000 × g for 20 min at 4 °C. The subsequently obtained membrane pellet was resuspended in buffer A.
Protein Purification
Partial purification of guinea pig lung PDE-5 from a "high speed" supernatant fraction was achieved as described previously by us (20). Briefly this involved homogenizing guinea pig lung in phosphate buffer containing 20 mM K2HPO4/K2HPO4, pH 6.8, at 4 °C. The homogenate was passed through cheese cloth and centrifuged identically to that described for the preparation of membranes. The high speed (48,000 × g) supernatant was taken for the partial purification of the PDE-5. This was achieved using three chromatographic columns; namely (i) DEAE-Sepharose 6B (PDE was eluted with 0.25 M NaCl in phosphate buffer, pH 6.8); (ii) Affi-gel blue agarose (PDE was eluted with 0.35 M potassium thiocyanate in phosphate buffer, pH 6.8); and (iii) zinc chelate adsorbent matrix (PDE activity passes straight through the column). This yields a preparation of enzyme that is approximately 10-20% pure, based upon maximal isobutylmethylxanthine-stimulated [3H]cGMP binding to the noncatalytic site of PDE-5. We have previously demonstrated that this enzyme preparation contained a single class of cGMP hydrolytic sites, was potently inhibited by zaprinast (IC50 = 0.68 µM using 0.5 µM cGMP), and could be maximally activated up to 10-fold by the catalytic subunit of PKA (20).
Recombinant wild type PDE-6 was purified by a combination of
cation exchange and reverse-phase chromatography (24) from Escherichia coli strain BL21 DE3 transformed with an
expression plasmid containing PDE
synthetic gene. The coding
sequence for PDE
from the fusion protein (24) was subcloned into an
expression vector pET-11a (Novagen) by Dr. J. Sondek (Yale University).
The purity of PDE6
was estimated to be >95%, and the PDE6
concentration was determined spectrophotometrically at 280 nm using a
molar extinction coefficient of 7100.
PDE Assay
The assay of PDE activity was by the two-step radiotracer method (25). Assays were performed at 0.5 µM [3H]cGMP. All PDE activity measurements were done under conditions of linear rate product formation and where less than 10% of the substrate was utilized during the assay.
Protein Phosphorylation
Partially purified guinea pig PDE-5 and membranes were
separately incubated with an "activation mixture" containing final concentrations of 25 µM ATP, 25 mM Hepes, pH
7.4, 5 mM MgCl2, and the catalytic subunit of
PKA (10 units). Incubations were performed at 37 °C for 20 min.
Samples were then withdrawn for PDE assay. In experiments where the
effect of either PDE-6 or a peptide corresponding to amino acids
24-46 of PDE-6
was investigated, we combined each with the PDE
prior to the addition of the activation mixture and kinase.
In studies investigating the phosphorylation of PDE-6 peptide (amino
acids 24-46), we combined the peptide with the activation mixture and
the catalytic subunit of PKA (10 units). In studies using purified
protein kinase C (PKC), we added 0.75 mM CaCl2, 50 µg/ml phosphatidylserine, and 0.05 units of PKC to the activation mixture. Each reaction was initiated by adding 1 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP. Incubations were performed at 37 °C for
60 min and terminated by the addition of 75 mM
orthophosphoric acid. Samples were spotted onto P81 cellulose discs and
washed in 3 × 250 ml acetic acid (1%, v/v) washes. The amount of
32P-labeled peptide was quantified by liquid scintillation
counting.
In experiments where ASM membranes were utilized to assess p14 and p18
phosphorylation, the catalytic subunit of PKA was omitted, and the
activation mixture was supplemented with [-32P]ATP (10 µCi/assay). Incubations were performed at 37 °C for 20 min. At the
termination of the incubation, membranes were then harvested by
centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C and taken for immunoprecipitation with anti-PDE-6
antibody.
In some experiments, ASM membranes were incubated with varying
concentrations of GppNHp (1-100 µM) and ATP (0.005-50
µM) in 10 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.4, and 5 mM MgCl2. This was performed at 37 °C for 10 min. GppNHp was prepared in 60 mM NaCl, 5 mM
Hepes, pH 7.4, and 5 mM MgCl2. At the
termination of the incubation, membranes were then harvested by
centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C and
taken either for immunoblotting with anti-PDE-6 or for activation
with PKA.
Immunoprecipitation
ASM membranes were solubilized in 10 mM
K2HPO4/K2HPO4 and 0.15 M NaCl, pH 6.8 (PBS) containing 1% (w/v) deoxycholate and
0.1% (w/v) SDS for 60 min at 4 °C. The material was harvested and
centrifuged at 14,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C, and
250 µl of supernatant was taken and immunoprecipitated with the
anti-PDE-6 antibody. After agitation for 1-2 h at 4 °C, 50 µl
of protein A-Sepharose was added for 30 min at 4 °C. The
subsequently obtained protein A-Sepharose immune complex was collected
by centrifugation at 14,000 × g for 5 min at 4 °C,
washed three times in PBS, and then taken either for PDE assay or for
analysis of [32P]phosphate incorporation into p14 and
p18.
Immunoblotting
Nitrocellulose sheets were blocked in 5% gelatin in PBS at
37 °C for 1 h and then probed with anti-PDE-6 antibody in
PBS containing 1% gelatin (w/v) plus 0.05% (v/v) Nonidet P-40 at
37 °C for 12 h. After this time, the nitrocellulose sheets were
washed in PBS plus 0.05% (v/v) Nonidet P-40. Detection of
immunoreactivity was achieved by incubating nitrocellulose sheets for
2 h at 37 °C with a reporter horseradish peroxidase-linked
anti-rabbit antibody in PBS containing 1% gelatin (w/v) plus 0.05%
(v/v) Nonidet P-40. After washing the blots as described above to
remove excess reporter antibody, immunoreactive bands were detected
using an excitation chemiluminescence detection kit.
To explore the
hypothesis that PDE-5 can be regulated by small proteins homologous to
PDE-6, we have tested the ability of recombinant PDE-6
to
modulate the activity of the partially purified PDE-5. As shown in Fig.
1A, the incubation of PDE-6
with PDE-5 at
4 °C for 30 min prevented the subsequent activation of PDE-5 by PKA.
A doubling in kinase activity does not reduce the inhibitory effect of
PDE-6
, suggesting that the kinase does not compete with PDE-6
for
PDE-5. It is well documented that PDE-6
interacts with PDE-6 via a
central polycationic region whose role is to increase the affinity
between PDE-6
and PDE-6 catalytic subunits (26-28). To establish
whether this region of PDE-6
is responsible for preventing PDE-5
activation by PKA, we studied the effect of a peptide, whose sequence
corresponded to amino acids 24-46 in PDE-6
on the activation of
PDE-5 by PKA. As shown in Fig. 1A, the incubation of PDE-5
with micromolar quantities of the polycationic peptide at 4 °C for
30 min prevented the subsequent activation of PDE-5 by PKA.
The effect of PDE-6 was also concentration-dependent
(Fig. 1B), with an approximately 80% inhibition of the
PKA-dependent activation of PDE-5 being evident at 0.3 µM PDE-6
. The addition of PDE-6
to the activated
PDE-5 was without effect (Fig. 1C), suggesting that PDE-6
elicits its effect by preventing the activation process.
It was also necessary to show whether PDE-6 is required to be
phosphorylated to inhibit PDE-5. This concern was raised after we found
that PDE-6
can in fact serve as a substrate for PKA (see Fig. 8). A
definitive answer came from experiments with the peptide. The peptide
does not contain putative sites for the phosphorylation by PKA and
indeed was not phosphorylated by this kinase (Fig. 2).
The peptide does contain a phosphorylation site for PKC at Thr35 (29) and is vigorously phosphorylated by this kinase
(Fig. 2). We conclude from these studies that the phosphorylation of PDE-6
subunit by PKA has no influence upon its interaction with PDE-5.
Finally we needed to show that the effect of PDE-6 and the
polycationic peptide on the regulation of PDE-5 by PKA was not due to
inhibition of the kinase. This was established by demonstrating that
neither PDE-6
nor the polycationic peptide inhibited the PKA-catalyzed phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate, myelin basic
protein (Fig. 3).
Airway Smooth Muscle Membranes Contain Two Proteins Immunoreactive with Anti-PDE-6
We next attempted to establish
whether ASM cell membranes express proteins that contain a similar
peptide region to that found in PDE-6 (amino acids 24-46), because
these may serve as inhibitors of PDE-5. Immunoblotting cultured airway
smooth muscle membranes with rabbit antibodies raised against amino
acids 24-46 of bovine PDE-6
identified two immunoreactive staining
polypeptides in the low molecular mass range (Fig.
4A). These polypeptides each have an
Mr of 14 and 18 kDa (termed here p14 and p18)
and migrated close to recombinant PDE-6
(see Figs. 8 and 10).
We also show that the detection of p14 and p18 was reduced when the
immunizing peptide was combined with antibody (Fig. 4B). p14
and p18 appear to form a stable complex with PDE-5 in membranes. This
was indicated from experiments in which the anti-PDE-6 antibody immunoprecipitated PDE activity from detergent solubilized membranes (Fig. 4C).
The finding that a
peptide corresponding to amino acids 24-46 of PDE-6 can modulate
the activation of PDE-5 and that an antibody raised to this region
identified two low molecular mass proteins suggests that these proteins
may function like PDE-6
. It also indicates that a
G-protein-dependent mechanism similar to that regulating
PDE-6
may be present in ASM cell membranes. To test this hypothesis
we needed to show that PDE-5 could be activated by PKA in isolated
membranes and that this could be modified by p14 and p18 in a
G-protein-dependent manner. In this regard, Fig. 5 shows that PDE-5 in guinea pig lung and ASM membranes
was markedly activated by PKA in the presence of ATP. To assess the
role of G-proteins, we have tested the effect of GppNHp (a
nonhydrolyzable analogue of GTP) on the activation of PDE-5 by PKA. The
addition of GppNHp (1-100 µM) to membranes prevented
activation in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig.
6). The inhibition was not due to direct activation of
PKA or binding of this guanine nucleotide to the PDE, because GppNHp
was without effect on the activation of partially purified PDE-5 by PKA
(data not shown). Further, GppNHp did not modulate membrane PDE-5
activity in the absence of PKA (data not shown).
p14 and p18 and PKA-dependent Activation of PDE in ASM Membranes Can Be Modulated by GppNHp
We show in Fig.
7A that pertussis toxin treatment of ASM
cells, which was used to inactivate Gi and Go,
reversed the inhibition induced by GppNHp on the
PKA-dependent activation of PDE-5. When samples are
prepared from membranes treated with GppNHp, a reduction in the
immunoreactivity of p14 and p18 was also detected on immunoblots (Fig.
7B). This reduction was prevented in cells pretreated with pertussis toxin (Fig. 7B) and therefore correlated with the
reversal of the inhibitory effect of GppNHp on the
PKA-dependent activation of PDE-5.
The corresponding appearance of p14 and p18 in the supernatant of
GppNHp-treated membranes was not detected, indicating that the reduced
immunoreactivity of p14 and p18 was not due to their displacement from
the membrane but rather a consequence of a post-translational modification. This may involve phosphorylation of the antibody recognition epitope supported by endogenous ATP. Alternatively, GppNHp
may activate a protease that cleaves p14/p18 to remove the epitope.
However, phosphorylation in this region is consistent with the
following observations. In Fig. 8 we show that p14 and p18 were phosphorylated by an endogenous kinase when radiolabeled ATP
is added, and this could be increased by the addition of GppNHp to
membranes. In Fig. 9 we show that the addition of ATP
(0.5-50 µM) to membranes also induced a reduction in the
immunoreactivity of p14 and p18. However, when membranes were washed
with buffer A to remove endogenous nucleotides, GppNHp and ATP were
only effective when added together (Fig. 10).
In Fig. 11, we show that the addition of PDE inhibitors
(isobutylmethylxanthine and theophylline, 100 µM) at a
concentration that is known to completely inhibit PDE-5 activity
negated the effect of GppNHp on the phosphorylation and
immunoreactivity of p14 and p18. These observations indicate that
PDE-5, p14 and p18, unidentified G-protein, and kinase may be linked in
a signal transduction cascade, because their ligand bindings appear to
modulate their interactions.
The major observations of this study are: (i) recombinant PDE-6
and a peptide corresponding to amino acids 24-46 of PDE-6
prevent
the PKA-dependent activation of PDE-5 and (ii) airway smooth muscle cells express two small molecular mass proteins (p14 and
p18) that are immunologically related to the inhibitory
subunit of
the photoreceptor cGMP phosphodiesterase. p14 and p18 appear to
interact with PDE-5, a major cGMP hydrolyzing enzyme that is present in
airway smooth muscle. Phosphorylation of membrane-bound p14/p18 is
stimulated by guanine nucleotides, and this correlates with a
concurrent reduction in the ability of PKA to activate PDE-5.
Phosphorylation of p14/p18 appears to be regulated by a pertussis
toxin-sensitive G-protein-dependent kinase. At present we
do not know if an additional G-protein is responsible for regulating PDE-5 independently of p14/p18, although our correlative data tend to
favor the idea that p14/p18 is responsible for linking a single
G-protein to PDE-5. Further evidence for an interaction between PDE-5
and p14/p18 is the formation of a stable complex between these proteins
in cell membranes. Experiments with isobutylmethylxanthine and
theophylline show that ligand binding to the catalytic site of PDE-5
appears to affect the phosphorylation of p14/p18 by the G-protein-dependent kinase. Ligand binding to catalytic
sites is known to increase binding of cGMP to noncatalytic sites in PDE-5, suggesting that interaction of p14/p18 with PDE-5 may be governed by this occupancy. It follows that the association of p14/p18
with PDE-5 may affect the ability of the former to be phosphorylated by
the G-protein-dependent kinase.
The identity of the G-protein can be considered on the basis of
pertussis toxin sensitivity and may be ascribed to Gi,
because Go
is not expressed in these cells (30). The
G-protein can either bind to p14 and p18 to increase their
susceptibility to phosphorylation by an unidentified kinase or increase
the activity of this kinase directly. The role of a G-protein in
regulating PDE-5 indicates the possibility that this signal
transduction pathway may originate from the occupancy of a receptor
with extracellular ligand. The proposed model for the regulation of
PDE-5 by G-protein is distinct from that explaining the regulation of
PDE-6 by its own
and by transducin. In the latter case,
inhibits PDE-6 activity whereas G-protein reverses this inhibition. The
model proposed for PDE-5 bears some limited analogy with another
regulatory mechanism that was recently suggested to modulate activation
of PDE-6 in amphibian rod outer segments (17, 18). In this case, when
PDE-6
is complexed with the GTP-bound transducin it is
phosphorylated by an unidentified kinase. The phosphorylated
prevents subsequent activation of PDE-6 by GTP-bound transducin.
Two functional regions in the subunit of PDE-6, a polycationic
(amino acids 24-46) and a C-terminal domain, interact with both
transducin and PDE-6 catalytic subunits (31-34). The C-terminal domain
is essential for both the inhibitory action against PDE-6 (26, 31, 32,
35) and for stimulating transducin GTPase (36). The role of the
polycationic domain is to provide a second site for interaction, which
serves to increase the affinity of PDE-6
for PDE-6
and
transducin. However, the peptide corresponding to this region was shown
to inhibit the activation of PDE-5 by PKA. The PDE-6
antibody was
raised to this polycationic region, suggesting that p14 and p18 may
also contain a similar domain. On the other hand, PDE-5 contains a
region that has some homology with the sites in the PDE-6 catalytic
subunits that interact with the polycationic region of PDE-6
(28).
In contrast, PDE-5 does not have a region homologous to the site on
PDE-6 that was shown to interact with the C terminus of PDE-6
.
Because the polycationic region in PDE-6
has not been shown to have
any catalytic activity on PDE-6, this suggests either that a similar
region in p14 and p18 subserves a different function that may be to
modulate the activation of PDE-5 by PKA or that this proposed function
is conferred to a different domain(s) in p14 and p18. Our finding that
the polycationic peptide prevents the PKA-dependent
activation of partially purified PDE-5 favors the former proposal.
In conclusion, p14 and p18 are PDE-5-associated proteins that appear to
be affected by G-protein and kinase-directed regulation. Along with
PDE-6 they may represent a novel class of proteins that
differentially modulate the function of various cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases.