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  • PIP3 inhibition of RGS protein and its reversal by Ca2+/calmodulin mediate voltage-dependent control of the G protein cycle in a cardiac K+ channel.

PIP3 inhibition of RGS protein and its reversal by Ca2+/calmodulin mediate voltage-dependent control of the G protein cycle in a cardiac K+ channel.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2002-03-21)
Masaru Ishii, Atsushi Inanobe, Yoshihisa Kurachi
ABSTRACT

Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) accelerate intrinsic GTP hydrolysis on alpha subunits of trimeric G proteins and play crucial roles in the physiological regulation of G protein-mediated cell signaling. The control mechanisms of the action of RGS proteins per se are poorly clarified, however. We recently showed a physiological mode of action of a RGS protein in cardiac myocytes. The voltage-dependent formation of Ca2+/calmodulin facilitated the GTPase activity of RGS by an unidentified mechanism, which underlay the "relaxation" behavior of G protein-gated K+ (K(G)) channels. Here we report the mechanism which is the reversal by Ca2+/calmodulin of phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5,-trisphosphate (PIP3)-mediated inhibition of RGS. Purified RGS4 protein alone inhibited GTP-induced K(G) channel activity in inside-out patches from atrial myocytes. The inhibitory effect of RGS4 was reduced by PIP3 and restored by addition of Ca2+/calmodulin. The intracellular application of anti-PIP3 antibody abolished the RGS-dependent relaxation behavior of K(G) current in atrial myocytes. This study, therefore, reveals a general physiological control mechanism of RGS proteins by lipid-protein interaction.