Abstract
Reptin is a member of the AAA+ superfamily whose members can exist in equilibrium between monomeric apo
forms and ligand bound hexamers. Inter-subunit protein-protein
interfaces that stabilize Reptin in its oligomeric state are not
well-defined. A self-peptide binding assay identified a protein-peptide
interface mapping to an inter-subunit “rim” of the hexamer bridged by
Tyrosine-340. A Y340A mutation reduced ADP-dependent oligomer
formation using a gel filtration assay, suggesting that Y340 forms a
dominant oligomer stabilizing side chain. The monomeric ReptinY340A mutant protein
exhibited increased activity to its partner protein AGR2 in an ELISA
assay, further suggesting that hexamer formation can preclude certain protein interactions. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) demonstrated that the Y340A mutation attenuated deuterium suppression of Reptin in this motif in the presence of ligand. By contrast, the tyrosine
motif of Reptin interacts with a shallower pocket in the
hetero-oligomeric structure containing Pontin and HDX-MS revealed no
obvious role of the Y340 side chain in stabilizing the Reptin-Pontin
oligomer. Molecular dynamic simulations
(MDS) rationalized how the Y340A mutation impacts upon a normally
stabilizing inter-subunit amino acid contact. MDS also revealed how the
D299N mutation can, by contrast, remove oligomer de-stabilizing
contacts. These data suggest that the Reptin interactome
can be regulated by a ligand dependent equilibrium between monomeric
and hexameric forms through a hydrophobic inter-subunit protein-protein
interaction motif bridged by Tyrosine-340.
Significance
Discovering dynamic protein-protein interactions is a fundamental aim of research in the life sciences. An emerging view of protein-protein interactions in higher eukaryotes is that they are driven by small linear polypeptide sequences; the linear motif. We report on the use of linear-peptide motif screens to discover a relatively high affinity peptide-protein interaction for the AAA+ and pro-oncogenic protein Reptin. This peptide interaction site was shown to form a ‘hot-spot’ protein-protein interaction site, and validated to be important for ligand-induced oligomerization of the Reptin protein. These biochemical data provide a foundation to understand how single point mutations in Reptin can impact on its oligomerization and protein-protein interaction landscape.
Significance
Discovering dynamic protein-protein interactions is a fundamental aim of research in the life sciences. An emerging view of protein-protein interactions in higher eukaryotes is that they are driven by small linear polypeptide sequences; the linear motif. We report on the use of linear-peptide motif screens to discover a relatively high affinity peptide-protein interaction for the AAA+ and pro-oncogenic protein Reptin. This peptide interaction site was shown to form a ‘hot-spot’ protein-protein interaction site, and validated to be important for ligand-induced oligomerization of the Reptin protein. These biochemical data provide a foundation to understand how single point mutations in Reptin can impact on its oligomerization and protein-protein interaction landscape.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 89-101 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Journal of Proteomics |
Volume | 199 |
Early online date | 9 Mar 2019 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 May 2019 |
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An inter-subunit protein-peptide interface that stabilizes the specific activity and oligomerization of the AAA+ chaperone Reptin (dataset)
Coufalova, D. (Creator), Remnant, L. (Creator), Hernychova, L. (Creator), Muller, P. (Creator), Healy, A. (Creator), Kannan, S. (Creator), Westwood, N. J. (Creator), Verma, C. S. (Creator), Vojtesek, B. (Creator), Hupp, T. R. (Creator) & Houston, D. R. (Creator), EMBL-EBI, 23 Apr 2019
https://www.ebi.ac.uk/pride/archive/projects/PXD008226
Dataset