Heat-stable enterotoxin receptor/guanylyl cyclase C is an oligomer consisting of functionally distinct subunits, which are non-covalently linked in the intestine
January 1994
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Guanylyl cyclase (GC) C is a heat-stable enterotoxin (STa) receptor with a monomeric M(r) of approximately 140,000. We calculated from its hydrodynamic parameters that an active GC-C complex has a M(r) of 393,000, suggesting that GC-C is a trimer under native conditions. Both trimeric and dimeric GC-C complexes were detected by 125I-STa binding and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-reducing conditions. The GC activity and STa binding from intestinal brush border membranes comigrated in gel filtration and velocity sedimentation with recombinant GC-C. However, 125I-STa cross-linking demonstrated that STa receptors with molecular masses of 52 and 74 kDa are non-covalently attached to GC in the intestine. Radiation inactivation revealed different functional sizes for basal GC activity, STa-stimulated GC activity, and STa binding (59, 210-240, and 32-52 kDa, respectively). At low radiation doses, basal GC activity was stimulated, suggesting that GC-C is inhibited by a relatively large, probably internal structure. These results suggest that STa may activate GC-C by promoting monomer-monomer interaction (internal "dimerization") within a homotrimeric GC-C complex, and that GC-C is proteolytically modified in the brush border membrane but retains its function.
- Male
- Animals
- Rats
- Rats, Wistar
- Models, Biological
- Molecular Weight
- Enzyme Activation
- Cross-Linking Reagents
- *Protein Conformation
- Microvilli/enzymology
- Bacterial Toxins/*metabolism
- Enterotoxins/*metabolism
- Guanylate Cyclase/*chemistry/radiation effects
- Intestines/*enzymology
- Receptors, Peptide/*chemistry/radiation effects
- Ultracentrifugation
- Electrons
- membrane
- activity
- brush
- border
- 293- gc-c membranes
- binding
- 293-
- protein
- sta binding
- receptor
- gc activity
- cyclase
- sample
- 1 m atp
- domain
- sta-stimulated gc activity
- condition
- brush border membranes
- radiation
- guanylyl