Abstract

myo-Inositol phosphates (IPs) are important bioactive molecules that have multiple activities within eukaryotic cells, including well-known roles as second messengers and cofactors that help regulate diverse biochemical processes such as transcription and hormone receptor activity. Despite the typical absence of IPs in prokaryotes, many of these organisms express IPases (or phytases) that dephosphorylate IPs. Functionally, these enzymes participate in phosphate-scavenging pathways and in plant pathogenesis. Here, we determined the X-ray crystallographic structures of two catalytically inactive mutants of protein-tyrosine phosphatase-like myo-inositol phosphatases (PTPLPs) from the non-pathogenic bacteria Selenomonas ruminantium (PhyAsr) and Mitsuokella multacida (PhyAmm) in complex with the known eukaryotic second messengers Ins(1,3,4,5)P4 and Ins(1,4,5)P3 Both enzymes bound these less-phosphorylated IPs in a catalytically competent manner, suggesting that IP hydrolysis has a role in plant pathogenesis. The less-phosphorylated IP binding differed in both the myo-inositol ring position and orientation when compared with a previously determined complex structure in the presence of myo-inositol-1,2,3,4,5,6-hexakisphosphate (InsP6 or phytate). Further, we have demonstrated that PhyAsr and PhyAmm have different specificities for Ins(1,2,4,5,6)P5, have identified structural features that account for this difference, and have shown that the absence of these features results in a broad specificity toward Ins(1,2,4,5,6)P5 These features are main-chain conformational differences in loops adjacent to the active site that include the extended loop prior to the penultimate helix, the extended Ω-loop, and a β-hairpin turn of the Phy-specific domain.

Highlights

  • Edited by Wolfgang Peti myo-Inositol phosphates (IPs) are important bioactive molecules that have multiple activities within eukaryotic cells, including well-known roles as second messengers and cofactors that help regulate diverse biochemical processes such as transcription and hormone receptor activity

  • The overall fold of protein-tyrosine phosphataselike myo-inositol phosphatases (PTPLPs) is composed of a catalytic ␣-␤-␣ sandwich PTP domain and an antiparallel ␣-␤ sandwich Phy domain

  • The active site includes the general acid loop (GAloop) and phosphate-binding loop (P-loop) from the catalytic PTP domain as well as residues from both domains that participate in substrate binding (17)

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Summary

Introduction

Edited by Wolfgang Peti myo-Inositol phosphates (IPs) are important bioactive molecules that have multiple activities within eukaryotic cells, including well-known roles as second messengers and cofactors that help regulate diverse biochemical processes such as transcription and hormone receptor activity. Structural features that determine C3-phosphoryl group specificity of IPases (3-phytases) have been identified for two distinct enzyme families: protein-tyrosine phosphatase-like myo-inositol phosphatase (PTPLPs) and histidine-acid phosphatases (16, 17). The N- and C-terminal repeats of PhyAmm have different IP substrate specificities, they are both active toward the Ins(1,4,5)P3 second messenger (23).

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