guanosine-triphosphate and Retinal-Diseases

guanosine-triphosphate has been researched along with Retinal-Diseases* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for guanosine-triphosphate and Retinal-Diseases

ArticleYear
IMPDH1 retinal variants control filament architecture to tune allosteric regulation.
    Nature structural & molecular biology, 2022, Volume: 29, Issue:1

    Inosine-5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH), a key regulatory enzyme in purine nucleotide biosynthesis, dynamically assembles filaments in response to changes in metabolic demand. Humans have two isoforms: IMPDH2 filaments reduce sensitivity to feedback inhibition, while IMPDH1 assembly remains uncharacterized. IMPDH1 plays a unique role in retinal metabolism, and point mutants cause blindness. Here, in a series of cryogenic-electron microscopy structures we show that human IMPDH1 assembles polymorphic filaments with different assembly interfaces in extended and compressed states. Retina-specific splice variants introduce structural elements that reduce sensitivity to GTP inhibition, including stabilization of the extended filament form. Finally, we show that IMPDH1 disease mutations fall into two classes: one disrupts GTP regulation and the other has no effect on GTP regulation or filament assembly. These findings provide a foundation for understanding the role of IMPDH1 in retinal function and disease and demonstrate the diverse mechanisms by which metabolic enzyme filaments are allosterically regulated.

    Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Allosteric Regulation; Binding Sites; Catalytic Domain; Guanosine Triphosphate; HEK293 Cells; Humans; IMP Dehydrogenase; Models, Molecular; NAD; Retina; Retinal Diseases

2022
Network and atomistic simulations unveil the structural determinants of mutations linked to retinal diseases.
    PLoS computational biology, 2013, Volume: 9, Issue:8

    A number of incurable retinal diseases causing vision impairments derive from alterations in visual phototransduction. Unraveling the structural determinants of even monogenic retinal diseases would require network-centered approaches combined with atomistic simulations. The transducin G38D mutant associated with the Nougaret Congenital Night Blindness (NCNB) was thoroughly investigated by both mathematical modeling of visual phototransduction and atomistic simulations on the major targets of the mutational effect. Mathematical modeling, in line with electrophysiological recordings, indicates reduction of phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE) recognition and activation as the main determinants of the pathological phenotype. Sub-microsecond molecular dynamics (MD) simulations coupled with Functional Mode Analysis improve the resolution of information, showing that such impairment is likely due to disruption of the PDEγ binding cavity in transducin. Protein Structure Network analyses additionally suggest that the observed slight reduction of theRGS9-catalyzed GTPase activity of transducin depends on perturbed communication between RGS9 and GTP binding site. These findings provide insights into the structural fundamentals of abnormal functioning of visual phototransduction caused by a missense mutation in one component of the signaling network. This combination of network-centered modeling with atomistic simulations represents a paradigm for future studies aimed at thoroughly deciphering the structural determinants of genetic retinal diseases. Analogous approaches are suitable to unveil the mechanism of information transfer in any signaling network either in physiological or pathological conditions.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Binding Sites; Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 6; Eye Diseases, Hereditary; GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunits; Guanosine Triphosphate; Mice; Mice, Transgenic; Models, Biological; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutation; Night Blindness; Retinal Diseases; RGS Proteins; Sequence Alignment; Vision, Ocular

2013