Abstract

Analogous to eukaryotic ubiquitination, proteins in actinobacteria can be post-translationally modified in a process referred to as pupylation, the covalent attachment of prokaryotic ubiquitin-like protein Pup to lysine side chains of the target protein via an isopeptide bond. As in eukaryotes, an opposing activity counteracts the modification by specific cleavage of the isopeptide bond formed with Pup. However, the enzymes involved in pupylation and depupylation have evolved independently of ubiquitination and are related to the family of ATP-binding and hydrolyzing carboxylate-amine ligases of the glutamine synthetase type. Furthermore, the Pup ligase PafA and the depupylase Dop share close structural and sequence homology and have a common evolutionary history despite catalyzing opposing reactions. Here, we investigate the role played by the nucleotide in the active site of the depupylase Dop using a combination of biochemical experiments and X-ray crystallographic studies. We show that, although Dop does not turn over ATP stoichiometrically with substrate, the active site nucleotide species in Dop is ADP and inorganic phosphate rather than ATP, and that non-hydrolyzable analogs of ATP cannot support the enzymatic reaction. This finding suggests that the catalytic mechanism is more similar to the mechanism of the ligase PafA than previously thought and likely involves the transient formation of a phosphorylated Pup-intermediate. Evidence is presented for a mechanism where the inorganic phosphate acts as the nucleophilic species in amide bond cleavage and implications for Dop function are discussed.

Highlights

  • Uitination, for example, the employment of a macromolecular tag, the nature of the generated covalent linkage, and the role played as an important recognition element in a protein degradation pathway involving a proteasome complex

  • The structure of PafA shows that it has a similar active site arrangement as glutamine synthetase (GS), consisting of a curved anti-parallel ␤-sheet with ATP bound at one end of the ␤-sheet cradle and the triphosphate chain running along the strands toward the opposite side of the sheet, where the glutamate residue of Pup is bound (9, 10)

  • The two enzymes involved in the pupylation and depupylation of proteins in actinobacteria, the ligase PafA and the depupylase Dop, are evolutionarily related

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Summary

Introduction

Uitination, for example, the employment of a macromolecular tag, the nature of the generated covalent linkage, and the role played as an important recognition element in a protein degradation pathway involving a proteasome complex. Dop opposes the ligase activity by catalyzing the specific cleavage of the isopeptide bond formed between Pup and the protein (14, 15).

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