Metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) are dimeric G-protein–coupled receptors that operate at synapses. Macroscopic and single molecule FRET to monitor structural rearrangements in the ligand binding domain (LBD) of the mGluR7/7 homodimer revealed it to have an apparent affinity ~4000-fold lower than other mGluRs and a maximal activation of only ~10%, seemingly too low for activation at synapses. However, mGluR7 heterodimerizes, and we find it to associate with mGluR2 in the hippocampus. Strikingly, the mGluR2/7 heterodimer has high affinity and efficacy. mGluR2/7 shows cooperativity in which an unliganded subunit greatly enhances activation by agonist bound to its heteromeric partner, and a unique conformational pathway to activation, in which mGluR2/7 partially activates in the Apo state, even when its LBDs are held open by antagonist. High sensitivity and an unusually broad dynamic range should enable mGluR2/7 to respond to both glutamate transients from nearby release and spillover from distant synapses.
Algal fucoidan is an alpha-L-fucose-based polysaccharide endowed with important biological properties for which the structure has not yet been fully elucidated. In an attempt to implement new enzymatic tools for structural study of this polysaccharide, we have found a fucosidase activity in the digestive glands of the common marine mollusk Pecten maximus, which is active on a fucoidan extracted from the brown algae Ascophyllum nodosum. We now report the purification and characterization of this alpha-L-fucosidase (EC 3.2.1.51). The enzyme was purified by three chromatographic steps, including an essential affinity chromatography based on the glycosidase inhibitor analog 6-amino-deoxymannojirimycin as the ligand. The purified alpha-L-fucosidase is a tetrameric glycoprotein of 200 kDa that hydrolyzes the synthetic substrate p-nitrophenyl alpha-L-fucopyranoside with a K(m) value of 650 microM. This enzyme has high catalytic activity (85 micromol x min(-1) x mg(-1)) compared with the other known fucosidases and also possesses an unusual thermal stability. The purified alpha-L-fucosidase is a retaining glycosidase. The activity of the purified fucosidase was determined on two structurally different fucoidans of the brown algae A. nodosum and Fucus vesiculosus to delineate glycosidic bond specificity. This report is to our knowledge the first demonstration of a fucosidase that can efficiently release alpha-L-fucose from fucoidan.
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