Abstract

BackgroundPhosphoinositide metabolism is essential to membrane dynamics and impinges on many cellular processes, including phagocytosis. Modulation of phosphoinositide metabolism is important for pathogenicity and virulence of many human pathogens, allowing them to survive and replicate in the host cells. Phosphoinositide phosphatases from bacterial pathogens are therefore key players in this modulation and constitute attractive targets for chemotherapy. MptpB, a virulence factor from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, has phosphoinositide phosphatase activity and a distinct active site P-loop signature HCXXGKDR that shares characteristics with eukaryotic lipid phosphatases and protein tyrosine phosphatases. We used this P-loop signature as a "diagnostic motif" to identify related putative phosphatases with phosphoinositide activity in other organisms.ResultsWe found more than 200 uncharacterised putative phosphatase sequences with the conserved signature in bacteria, with some related examples in fungi and protozoa. Many of the sequences identified belong to recognised human pathogens. Interestingly, no homologues were found in any other organisms including Archaea, plants, or animals. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that these proteins are unrelated to classic eukaryotic lipid phosphatases. However, biochemical characterisation of those from Listeria monocytogenes and Leishmania major, demonstrated that, like MptpB, they have phosphatase activity towards phosphoinositides. Mutagenesis studies established that the conserved Asp and Lys in the P-loop signature (HCXXGKDR) are important in catalysis and substrate binding respectively. Furthermore, we provide experimental evidence that the number of basic residues in the P-loop is critical in determining activity towards poly-phosphoinositides.ConclusionThis new family of enzymes in microorganisms shows distinct sequence and biochemical characteristics to classic eukaryotic lipid phosphatases and they have no homologues in humans. This study provides a foundation for examining the biological role of this new family of phosphatases and their potential as pharmaceutical targets against infectious diseases.

Highlights

  • Phosphoinositide metabolism is essential to membrane dynamics and impinges on many cellular processes, including phagocytosis

  • PI phosphatases belong to different families of enzymes; PTEN and myotubularin inositol 3-phosphatases (3-ptases) belong to the protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) superfamily and have both protein and lipid phosphatase activities [6,7]

  • Bioinformatics analysis reveals a large family of MptpB related sequences Initial sequence homology searches were done using the full-length MptpB sequence

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphoinositide metabolism is essential to membrane dynamics and impinges on many cellular processes, including phagocytosis. MptpB, a virulence factor from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, has phosphoinositide phosphatase activity and a distinct active site P-loop signature HCXXGKDR that shares characteristics with eukaryotic lipid phosphatases and protein tyrosine phosphatases. We used this P-loop signature as a “diagnostic motif” to identify related putative phosphatases with phosphoinositide activity in other organisms. Phosphatidylinositols are important metabolites present in animal cell membranes. They can be phosphorylated at three main positions of the inositol head (D-3, 4, and 5) to generate seven different phosphoinositides (PIs). The inositol 5-phosphatases (5-ptases) are Mg2+-dependent enzymes related to endonucleases (reviewed in [6,7])

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