酵母磷酸转运蛋白 Ypd1 中高度保守的 G68 残基的作用:组氨酸磷酸转运蛋白(HPt)与反应调节蛋白之间相互作用的意义。

Q2 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology BMC Biochemistry Pub Date : 2019-01-21 DOI:10.1186/s12858-019-0104-5
Emily N Kennedy, Skyler D Hebdon, Smita K Menon, Clay A Foster, Daniel M Copeland, Qingping Xu, Fabiola Janiak-Spens, Ann H West
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:许多细菌和某些真核生物利用从 His 到天冬氨酸的多步磷酸化途径对细胞外环境做出适应性反应。组氨酸磷酸转移(HPt)蛋白是这些途径的关键组成部分。HPt 蛋白在基因上多种多样,但都有一个共同的三级折叠,其活性位点附近的残基是保守的。在大量已注释的 HPt 蛋白序列中,相对于可磷酸化组氨酸的 H + 4 位置上有一个表面暴露的甘氨酸。以前的报告表明,该位置的置换会导致 HPt 蛋白与其同源信号伴侣之间的磷酸转移活性减弱:结果:我们报告了利用一组 H + 4 (G68) 取代蛋白对原型 HPt 蛋白 Ypd1 的伙伴结合相互作用和磷酸转移活性进行的分析。在这个位置上用大的、疏水的或带电荷的氨基酸取代后,Ypd1 几乎无法从其上游信号伴侣 Sln1(Sln1-R1)的接收结构域中接受磷酸。体外结合试验表明,G68 取代仅导致 Ypd1 与 Sln1-R1 之间的亲和力略有下降,而且这些差异似乎不足以解释所观察到的磷酸转移活性下降。其中一个 H + 4 突变体 Ypd1-G68Q 的晶体结构显示出参与磷酸转移的能力减弱,但其整体结构与野生型相似。分子建模表明,Sln1接收结构域内高度保守的活性位点残基必须进行重排,以适应Ypd1中较大的H + 4取代:磷转移反应需要活性位点元素的精确排列,以对齐供体-受体原子,并在反应过程中稳定过渡态。任何变化都可能导致在磷酸转移过程中无法形成可行的过渡态。我们的数据表明,HPt 蛋白中 H + 4 位上具有小侧链的残基在进化过程中保持高度一致,这是最佳活性所必需的,而 H + 4 位上较大残基的存在会导致伴侣反应调节因子中活性位点残基的定位发生变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Role of the highly conserved G68 residue in the yeast phosphorelay protein Ypd1: implications for interactions between histidine phosphotransfer (HPt) and response regulator proteins.

Background: Many bacteria and certain eukaryotes utilize multi-step His-to-Asp phosphorelays for adaptive responses to their extracellular environments. Histidine phosphotransfer (HPt) proteins function as key components of these pathways. HPt proteins are genetically diverse, but share a common tertiary fold with conserved residues near the active site. A surface-exposed glycine at the H + 4 position relative to the phosphorylatable histidine is found in a significant number of annotated HPt protein sequences. Previous reports demonstrated that substitutions at this position result in diminished phosphotransfer activity between HPt proteins and their cognate signaling partners.

Results: We report the analysis of partner binding interactions and phosphotransfer activity of the prototypical HPt protein Ypd1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae using a set of H + 4 (G68) substituted proteins. Substitutions at this position with large, hydrophobic, or charged amino acids nearly abolished phospho-acceptance from the receiver domain of its upstream signaling partner, Sln1 (Sln1-R1). An in vitro binding assay indicated that G68 substitutions caused only modest decreases in affinity between Ypd1 and Sln1-R1, and these differences did not appear to be large enough to account for the observed decrease in phosphotransfer activity. The crystal structure of one of these H + 4 mutants, Ypd1-G68Q, which exhibited a diminished ability to participate in phosphotransfer, shows a similar overall structure to that of wild-type. Molecular modelling suggests that the highly conserved active site residues within the receiver domain of Sln1 must undergo rearrangement to accommodate larger H + 4 substitutions in Ypd1.

Conclusions: Phosphotransfer reactions require precise arrangement of active site elements to align the donor-acceptor atoms and stabilize the transition state during the reaction. Any changes likely result in an inability to form a viable transition state during phosphotransfer. Our data suggest that the high degree of evolutionary conservation of residues with small side chains at the H + 4 position in HPt proteins is required for optimal activity and that the presence of larger residues at the H + 4 position would cause alterations in the positioning of active site residues in the partner response regulator.

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来源期刊
BMC Biochemistry
BMC Biochemistry BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: BMC Biochemistry is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of biochemical processes, including the structure, function and dynamics of metabolic pathways, supramolecular complexes, enzymes, proteins, nucleic acids and small molecular components of organelles, cells and tissues. BMC Biochemistry (ISSN 1471-2091) is indexed/tracked/covered by PubMed, MEDLINE, BIOSIS, CAS, EMBASE, Scopus, Zoological Record, Thomson Reuters (ISI) and Google Scholar.
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