2؉switch helix changes solvent accessibility of Thr-171 and Leu-174 that affects the domain interface. Although the Ca 2؉ switch helix is not part of the RetGC1 binding site, insertion of an extra Gly residue between Ser-173 and Leu-174 as well as deletion of Arg-172, Ser-173, or Leu-174 all caused a decrease in Ca 2؉ binding affinity and abolished RetGC1 activation. We conclude that Ca 2؉ -dependent conformational changes in the Ca 2؉ switch helix are important for activating RetGC1 and provide further support for a Ca 2؉ -myristoyl tug mechanism.Guanylyl cyclase activating proteins (GCAPs) 2 belong to the neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) branch of the calmodulin superfamily (1-3) and regulate Ca 2ϩ -sensitive activity of retinal guanylyl cyclase (RetGC) in rod and cone cells (4 -6). Phototransduction in retinal rods and cones is modulated by intracellular Ca 2ϩ sensed by GCAPs (7,8), and defects in Ca 2ϩ signaling by GCAPs are linked to retinal diseases (9). GCAP proteins in the Ca 2ϩ -free/Mg 2ϩ -bound state activate RetGC (10), whereas Ca 2ϩ -bound GCAPs inhibit RetGC at high Ca 2ϩ levels maintained in the dark (11-13).The GCAPs (GCAP1 (6), GCAP2 (14), GCAP3 (15), and GCAP4 -8 (16) are all ϳ200-amino acid residue proteins containing a covalently attached N-terminal myristoyl group and four EF-hand motifs (EF1 through EF4; Fig. 1 RetGC (10,18,19). The x-ray crystal structure of Ca 2ϩ -bound GCAP1 (20) and NMR structure of GCAP2 (21) showed that the four EF-hands form two semiglobular domains (EF1 and EF2 in the N-domain and EF3 and EF4 in the C-domain); Ca 2ϩ is bound at EF2, EF3, and EF4, and the N-terminal myristoyl group in GCAP1 is buried inside the Ca 2ϩ -bound protein flanked by hydrophobic residues at the N and C termini (see the red residues in Fig. 1
Experimental ProceduresExpression and Purification of GCAP1 and Mutants-Mutations were introduced in a bovine GCAP1 coding plasmid using a "splice by overlap extension" approach as previously described (24). Myristoylated GCAP1 and its mutants were produced in Escherichia coli strain harboring yeast N-myristoyl