A long isoform of GIV/Girdin contains a PDZ-binding module that regulates localization and G-protein binding.
J Biol Chem
; 296: 100493, 2021.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-33675748
PDZ domains are one of the most abundant protein domains in eukaryotes and are frequently found on junction-localized scaffold proteins. Various signaling molecules bind to PDZ proteins via PDZ-binding motifs (PBM) and fine-tune cellular signaling. However, how such interaction affects protein function is difficult to predict and must be solved empirically. Here we describe a long isoform of the guanine nucleotide exchange factor GIV/Girdin (CCDC88A) that we named GIV-L, which is conserved throughout evolution, from invertebrates to vertebrates, and contains a PBM. Unlike GIV, which lacks PBM and is cytosolic, GIV-L localizes onto cell junctions and has a PDZ interactome (as shown through annotating Human Cell Map and BioID-proximity labeling studies), which impacts GIV-L's ability to bind and activate trimeric G-protein, Gαi, through its guanine-nucleotide exchange modulator (GEM) module. This GEM module is found exclusively in vertebrates. We propose that the two functional modules in GIV may have evolved sequentially: the ability to bind PDZ proteins via the PBM evolved earlier in invertebrates, whereas G-protein binding and activation may have evolved later only among vertebrates. Phenotypic studies in Caco-2 cells revealed that GIV and GIV-L may have antagonistic effects on cell growth, proliferation (cell cycle), and survival. Immunohistochemical analysis in human colon tissues showed that GIV expression increases with a concomitant decrease in GIV-L during cancer initiation. Taken together, these findings reveal how regulation in GIV/CCDC88A transcript helps to achieve protein modularity, which allows the protein to play opposing roles either as a tumor suppressor (GIV-L) or as an oncogene (GIV).
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Colonic Neoplasms
/
GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunits, Gi-Go
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Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors
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Vesicular Transport Proteins
/
Microfilament Proteins
Type of study:
Prognostic_studies
Limits:
Animals
/
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
J Biol Chem
Year:
2021
Type:
Article