Abstract

Protein kinase Iα (PKGIα) is a pivotal cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) signalling protein. Major steps related to the structural plasticity of PKGIα have been inferred but the structural aspects of the auto-inhibition and multidomain tertiary organization of human PKGIα in active and inactive form are not clear. Here we combine computational comparative modelling, protein–protein docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate structural details of the repressed state of the catalytic domain of PKGIα. Exploration of the potential inhibitory conformation of the auto-inhibitory domain (AI) within the catalytic cleft reveals that the pseudo-substrate motif binds with residues of the glycine rich loop and substrate-binding lobe. Dynamic changes as a result of coupling of the catalytic and AI domains are also investigated. The three-dimensional homodimeric models of PKGIα in the active and inactive state indicate that PKGIα in its inactive-state attains a compact globular structure where cyclic nucleotide binding (CNB-A/B) domains are buried, whereas the catalytic domains are inaccessible with their substrate-binding pockets facing the N-terminal of CNB-A. Contrary to this, the active-state model of PKGIα shows an extended conformation where CNB-A/B domains are slightly rearranged and the catalytic domains of homodimer flanking the C-terminal with their substrate binding lobes free to entrap downstream proteins. These findings are consistent with previously reported static images of the multidomain organization of PKGIα. Structural insights pertaining to the conformational heterogeneity and auto-inhibition of PKGIα provided in this study may help to understand the dynamics-driven effective regulation of PKGIα.

Highlights

  • Cyclic guanosine monophosphate specific protein kinase (PKG), a core regulator of the cGMP signalling pathway, displays a kinase-specific conformational heterogeneity at the structural level

  • We explore the spatial orientation/ binding mode of the AI domain within the PKGIa catalytic domain as well as the nature of the molecular interactions between the AIcatalytic domain complex using a protein-structure modelling approach coupled with protein–protein docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations

  • We explore the domain-domain interactions of AI and catalytic domains that govern the self-inhibitory mechanism of PKGIa using computational biophysical and in silico structure prediction methods

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Summary

Introduction

Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) specific protein kinase (PKG), a core regulator of the cGMP signalling pathway, displays a kinase-specific conformational heterogeneity at the structural level. CGMP specific protein kinases (PKGs) behave as dynamic switches; they exist in a com-. Pact ball-like folded form in their native cGMP-free inactive functional state but adopt a strikingly different and distinct cGMPdependent extended conformation in the active functional state [2,3]. The regulatory region is composed of four functional domains [1].

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