Abstract

Phosphorylase kinase (PhK) is a hexadecameric (αβγδ)(4) complex that regulates glycogenolysis in skeletal muscle. Activity of the catalytic γ subunit is regulated by allosteric activators targeting the regulatory α, β, and δ subunits. Three-dimensional EM reconstructions of PhK show it to be two large (αβγδ)(2) lobes joined with D(2) symmetry through interconnecting bridges. The subunit composition of these bridges was unknown, although indirect evidence suggested the β subunits may be involved in their formation. We have used biochemical, biophysical, and computational approaches to not only address the quaternary structure of the β subunits within the PhK complex, i.e. whether they compose the bridges, but also their secondary and tertiary structures. The secondary structure of β was determined to be predominantly helical by comparing the CD spectrum of an αγδ subcomplex with that of the native (αβγδ)(4) complex. An atomic model displaying tertiary structure for the entire β subunit was constructed using chemical cross-linking, MS, threading, and ab initio approaches. Nearly all this model is covered by two templates corresponding to glycosyl hydrolase 15 family members and the A subunit of protein phosphatase 2A. Regarding the quaternary structure of the β subunits, they were directly determined to compose the four interconnecting bridges in the (αβγδ)(4) kinase core, because a β(4) subcomplex was observed through both chemical cross-linking and top-down MS of PhK. The predicted model of the β subunit was docked within the bridges of a cryoelectron microscopic density envelope of PhK utilizing known surface features of the subunit.

Highlights

  • Structural information concerning the phosphorylatable regulatory ␤ subunit of phosphorylase kinase was lacking

  • The major regulatory phosphorylatable serine, Ser-26 (28), which is targeted in vivo by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and is part of the ␤ subunit’s unique N-terminal phosphorylatable domain (NB1) (20), is reportedly autophosphorylated, along with Ser-11, by the ␥ subunit within the complex (7, 20), triggering a conformational change in ␤ that is detected by its cross-linking with 1,5-difluoro-2,4dinitrobenzene (DFDNB) to form homodimers (29)

  • The ␤ subunit undoubtedly influences the structure of ␣, ␥, and ␦ in the Phosphorylase kinase (PhK) complex, we have shown that features of an established Ca2ϩ-dependent communication network among the ␣, ␥, and ␦ subunits are the same in both the (␣␤␥␦)[4] and ␣␥␦ complexes (57), suggesting a similar structural architecture for these subunits in each complex

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Summary

Background

Structural information concerning the phosphorylatable regulatory ␤ subunit of phosphorylase kinase was lacking. The major regulatory phosphorylatable serine, Ser-26 (28), which is targeted in vivo by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and is part of the ␤ subunit’s unique N-terminal phosphorylatable domain (NB1) (20), is reportedly autophosphorylated, along with Ser-11, by the ␥ subunit within the complex (7, 20), triggering a conformational change in ␤ that is detected by its cross-linking with 1,5-difluoro-2,4dinitrobenzene (DFDNB) to form homodimers (29) This possible association of ␤ subunits is consistent with phospho-mimetic S11E/S26E joint mutations that promote self-association of ␤ chimeras in two-hybrid assays (7). A comparison of the sequences of the ␤ subunit and its ␣ subunit homolog indicated that both are multidomain structures, containing subunit-specific regulatory regions and large distinct sequence-similar domains, the latter of which suggested that the subunits are products of early gene duplication events (20) Since these earlier reports, both N-terminal glycosyl hydrolase (GH) clan 15 member-like (GHL) domains and C-terminal calcineurin-B like (CBL) domains have been predicted for ␣ and ␤ (22–24); attempts to model the entire structures were unsuccessful (22, 23). We directly demonstrate for the intact complex by top-down MS and chemical cross-linking that the ␤ subunits compose the central bridge region of PhK and that rigid-body docking of their theoretical counterparts in the individual bridges of the native PhK cryo-EM envelope correlates well with the known structural details for this subunit in the complex (7, 16, 30)

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