Abstract

Protein import of nucleus-encoded proteins into plant chloroplasts is a highly regulated process, requiring fine-tuning mechanisms especially during chloroplast differentiation. One way of altering import efficiency is phosphorylation of chloroplast transit peptides in the cytosol. We recently investigated the role of three serine/threonine/tyrosine (STY) kinases, STY8, STY17, and STY46, in precursor phosphorylation. These three kinases have a high degree of similarity and harbor a conserved aspartate kinase-chorismate mutase-tyrA (prephenate dehydrogenase) (ACT) domain upstream of the kinase domain. The ACT domain is a widely distributed structural motif known to be important for allosteric regulation of many enzymes. In this work, using biochemical and biophysical techniques in vitro and in planta, including kinase assays, microscale thermophoresis, size exclusion chromatography, as well as site-directed mutagenesis approaches, we show that the ACT domain regulates autophosphorylation and substrate phosphorylation of the STY kinases. We found that isoleucine and S-adenosylmethionine bind to the ACT domain, negatively influencing its autophosphorylation ability. Moreover, we investigated the role of the ACT domain in planta and confirmed its involvement in chloroplast differentiation in vivo Our results provide detailed insights into the regulation of enzyme activity by ACT domains and establish that it has a role in binding amino acid ligands during chloroplast biogenesis.

Highlights

  • Protein import of nucleus-encoded proteins into plant chloroplasts is a highly regulated process, requiring fine-tuning mechanisms especially during chloroplast differentiation

  • Our results indicate that the purified ACT domain of STY8 likewise elutes as a trimer or tetramer because of the apparent size of 35 kDa, indicating that oligomerization may be mediated by the ACT domain (Fig. 2B)

  • All three STY kinases (STY8, STY17, and STY46) as well as the corresponding ACT domain deletions STY8⌬ACT, STY17⌬ACT, and STY46⌬ACT were expressed in E. coli and purified via affinity chromatography

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

We recently investigated the role of three serine/threonine/tyrosine (STY) kinases, STY8, STY17, and STY46, in precursor phosphorylation. These three kinases have a high degree of similarity and harbor a conserved aspartate kinase– chorismate mutase–tyrA (prephenate dehydrogenase) (ACT) domain upstream of the kinase domain. Our results provide detailed insights into the regulation of enzyme activity by ACT domains and establish that it has a role in binding amino acid ligands during chloroplast biogenesis. This study presents new insights into the regulation of enzyme activity by ACT domains and elucidates its role with respect to ligand binding during chloroplast biogenesis. The results show a band at approximately 230 kDa, indicating trimer or tetramer formation

The ACT domain regulates STY kinase activity and substrate binding
Impact of deletion of the ACT domain in planta
Discussion
Plant materials and growth conditions
Overexpression and purification of recombinant proteins
In vitro kinase assays
MST analysis
Relative molecular mass estimation by size exclusion chromatography
Analysis of proteins by PAGE and immunoblotting
Chlorophyll extraction
Protein sequence analysis
Quantification and statistical analysis
Full Text
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