Abstract

Basic-region leucine zipper (bZIP) proteins are one of the largest transcription factor families that regulate a wide range of cellular functions. Owing to the stability of their coiled coil structure leucine zipper (LZ) domains of bZIP factors are widely employed as dimerization motifs in protein engineering studies. In the course of one such study, the X-ray structure of the retro-version of the LZ moiety of yeast transcriptional activator GCN4 suggested that this retro-LZ may have ribonuclease activity. Here we show that not only the retro-LZ but also the authentic LZ of GCN4 has weak but distinct ribonuclease activity. The observed cleavage of RNA is unspecific, it is not suppressed by the ribonuclease A inhibitor RNasin and involves the breakage of 3′,5′-phosphodiester bonds with formation of 2′,3′-cyclic phosphates as the final products as demonstrated by HPLC/electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Several mutants of the GCN4 leucine zipper are catalytically inactive, providing important negative controls and unequivocally associating the enzymatic activity with the peptide under study. The leucine zipper moiety of the human factor c-Jun as well as the entire c-Jun protein are also shown to catalyze degradation of RNA. The presented data, which was obtained in the test-tube experiments, adds GCN4 and c-Jun to the pool of proteins with multiple functions (also known as moonlighting proteins). If expressed in vivo, the endoribonuclease activity of these bZIP-containing factors may represent a direct coupling between transcription activation and controlled RNA turnover. As an additional result of this work, the retro-leucine zipper of GCN4 can be added to the list of functional retro-peptides.

Highlights

  • Leucine zippers [1] are parallel alpha-helical coiled coil motifs and as such one of the most common mediators of protein-protein interactions [2]

  • The observed juxtaposition of histidines was vaguely reminiscent of the active-site structure of ribonuclease A (RNase A) [10] and prompted us to test the retroleucine zipper for ribonuclease activity

  • The ribonuclease activity of the GCN4 and c-Jun leucine zippers was not affected by the ribonuclease A familyspecific inhibitor RNasin

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Summary

Introduction

Leucine zippers [1] are parallel alpha-helical coiled coil motifs and as such one of the most common mediators of protein-protein interactions [2]. The most widely known leucine zipper (LZ) proteins are the basic-region leucine zippers (bZIP) [1], which account for more than 51 unique members in Homo sapiens [3], comprising the second-largest family of dimerizing transcription factors in humans after bHLH proteins [4]. A GCN4 (yeast transcription activator) retro-leucine zipper [Fig. 1(I c)] seemed to be most suitable as dimerization module for an artificial HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) enhancer-binding peptide. Molecular weight studies in the ultracentrifuge and the crystal structure revealed that the disulfide peptide formed a noncovalent dimer or four-helix bundle and that neighbouring bundles were bridged by histidine side chains (Fig. 2C in [9]). Weak ribonuclease activity distinct from that of RNase A was found for the GCN4 retro-leucine zipper and for the authentic leucine zipper domains of GCN4 and oncoprotein c-Jun (component of transcription factor AP-1)

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