Regulating Target Protein Function Flashcards
1
Q
Altering subcellular localisation:
A
- one way this can happen is by phosphorylation causing the binding of 14-3-3 proteins
- 14-3-3 proteins are a small family of proteins that usually exist as homodimers
- they bind phosphopeptides with the sequence R-S-X-pS-X-P (or variants of this motif)
- the symmetrical structure of 14-3-3 dimers creates a “horse-shoe” shape that bind two phosphorylation site sequences in two symmetrical pockets
- the phosphate groups (negative) bind clusters of basic, positively charged side chains on the 14-3-3 dimer:
2
Q
CONSEQUENCES OF 14-3-3 BINDING: 2 examples
A
- the two phosphorylated peptides are usually present on a single target protein
- binding of two phosphorylation sites on one protein by 14-3-3s increases the binding affinity
Example 1
- protein kinase PKB/Akt phosphorylates the transcription factor FoxO1 on multiple sites
- this causes binding of FoxO1 to 14-3-3 proteins, masking the nuclear localization sequence on FoxO1 but leaving its nuclear export sequence exposed
- since FoxO1 normally shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm, activation of PKB/Akt will causes it to become trapped in the cytoplasm
- this explains how insulin, released in response to high blood glucose and which activates PKB/Akt, switches off expression of gluconeogenic genes, and hence liver glucose production
Example 2
- another example is the effect of AMPK on the Rab-GAP protein TBC1D1, which binds to intracellular storage vesicles containing the glucose transporter GLUT4 in muscle (Lecture 18)
- AMPK is activated by ATP depletion during contraction; it phosphorylates one site on TBC1D1 while other kinases phosphorylate a second site
- this causes 14-3-3 binding and dissociation of TBC1D1 from the GLUT4 vesicles, preventing its Rab-GAP activity from maintaining Rab proteins in their inactive GDP-bound state
- Rabs are thus converted to their active GTP state, promoting fusion of the storage vesicles with the plasma membrane; thus glucose uptake increases to fuel muscle contraction:
3
Q
PROMOTING DEGRADATION OF THE PROTEIN:
A
- phosphorylation may in some cases promote degradation of the protein, but we will discuss an example involving a different covalent modification, hydroxylation of the amino acid proline
- hypoxia-inducible factor-1a (HIF1a) promotes transcription of genes required during hypoxia, such as genes encoding the glycolytic pathway, which generates ATP even in absence of O2
- in normal [O2] (normoxia), HIF-1a is hydroxylated on proline, a reaction that requires oxygen:
- this triggers binding of HIF1a to VHL, a protein that has a binding pocket for hydroxylated HIF1a:
- VHL is an E3 ubiquitin ligase; VHL binding thus triggers polyubiquitylation of HIF1a and its consequent degradation by the proteasome
- thus, HIF1a is degraded in normoxia, but is stabilized in hypoxia due to lack of O2 for hydroxylation, promoting the transcription of genes such as glycolytic enzymes
- VHL is a tumour supressor
4
Q
FORMATION OF MULTIPROTEIN COMPLEXES:
A
- in some cases, protein phosphorylation creates binding sites for adapter domains
- e.g. SH2 domains recognize phosphotyrosine residues, with some specificity also for the amino acid three residues C-terminal to the P-Tyr (P+3 position)
5
Q
REGULATION OF ENZYME ACTIVITY:
A
- with some enzymes that are kinase targets, phosphorylation occurs at or near active site
- however in most cases phosphorylation sites are remote from the active site, so regulation is indirect – a good example of this is provided by the enzyme glycogen phosphorylase
6
Q
THE SYMMETRY MODEL FOR ALLOSTERIC REGULATION:
A
The model has the following key postulates:
- the protein must be a homo-oligomer, with two or more identical copies of each subunit (i.e. more than one identical subunit)
- within each oligomer, all subunits always have the same conformation (the so-called symmetry condition)
- the protein exists in two conformational states, the active R state and inactive T state
- equilibrium constant for the transition (allosteric constant or L) = [T]/[R] at equilibrium
- substrates preferentially bind to and stabilize R state, displacing equilibrium to the left
- activators also bind R state (at different site from substrate), displacing equilibrium to left
- conversely, inhibitors preferentially bind the T state, displacing the equilibrium to right
- thus, activators will increase the affinity for substrate, while inhibitors will decrease it
- Glycogen Phosphorylase is allosterically activated by AMP, and activated by phosphorylation from phosphorylase kinase
- Therefore glycogen phosphorylase has 4 states: (R, T, R-P, T-P)
- AMP has a large effect on the activity of R and T forms (dephosphorylated forms)
7
Q
STRUCTURE OF GLYCOGEN PHOSPHORYLASE:
A
- phosphorylase is a dimer
- when phosphorylated, the N-terminus flips, forming new interactions at the dimer interface
- note that the AMP-binding site and the Ser-P site are located at the dimer interface, far away from the active site where the cofactor, pyridoxal phosphate, is located
- changes at the dimer interface are transmitted to the active site by the alpha7 helix
8
Q
STABILIZATION OF R STATE BY AMP/PHOSPHORYLATION:
A
- structures of the dimers revealed a 10 degree rotation of the two subunits with respect to each other in the R state compared to the T state:
- in the T state, the alpha7 helices affect the active sites, restricting access to substrate
- in the R state, the alpha7 helices shift, allowing the substrate (glycogen) into the active site
- the binding sites for AMP and serine-P are located at the dimer interface
- binding of AMP/Ser-P stabilizes R state by “pulling” the subunits together on right-hand side
- thus, binding of AMP, or phosphorylation of Ser-14, promotes the active “R” conformation