Abstract

Peroxisomes are eukaryotic organelles that sequester critical oxidative reactions and process the resulting reactive oxygen species into less toxic byproducts. Peroxisome function and formation are coordinated by peroxins (PEX proteins) that guide peroxisome biogenesis and division and shuttle proteins into the lumen and membrane of the organelle. Despite the importance of peroxins in plant metabolism and development, no plant peroxin structures have been reported. Here we report the X-ray crystal structure of the PEX4-PEX22 peroxin complex from the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana. PEX4 is a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (UBC) that ubiquitinates proteins associated with the peroxisomal membrane, and PEX22 is a peroxisomal membrane protein that anchors PEX4 to the peroxisome and facilitates PEX4 activity. We co-expressed Arabidopsis PEX4 as a translational fusion with the soluble PEX4-interacting domain of PEX22 in E. coli. The fusion was linked via a protease recognition site, allowing us to separate PEX4 and PEX22 following purification and solve the structure of the complex. We compared the structure of the PEX4-PEX22 complex to the previously published structures of yeast orthologs. Arabidopsis PEX4 displays the typical UBC structure expected from its sequence. Although Arabidopsis PEX22 lacks notable sequence identity to yeast PEX22, it maintains a similar Rossmann fold-like structure. Several salt bridges are positioned to contribute to the specificity of PEX22 for PEX4 versus other Arabidopsis UBCs, and the long unstructured PEX22 tether would allow PEX4-mediated ubiquitination of distant peroxisomal membrane targets without dissociation from PEX22. The Arabidopsis PEX4-PEX22 structure also revealed that the residue altered in pex4-1 (P123L), a mutant previously isolated via a forward-genetic screen for peroxisomal dysfunction, is near the active site cysteine of PEX4. We demonstrated in vitro UBC activity for the PEX4-PEX22 complex and found that the pex4-1 enzyme has reduced in vitro ubiquitin-conjugating activity and altered specificity compared to PEX4. Our findings illuminate the role of PEX4 and PEX22 in peroxisome structure and function and provide tools for future exploration of ubiquitination at the peroxisome surface.

Highlights

  • Peroxisomes are membrane-bound organelles that are essential for life in almost all multicellular eukaryotes because they house critical metabolism, including the β-oxidation of fatty acids and the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide and other reactive oxygen species

  • We constructed a plasmid for expressing full-length A. thaliana PEX4 (At5g25760; named UBC21) without a stop codon and fused to truncated PEX22 (At3g21865; residues 111-283) via a linker consisting of a PreScission protease (Genscript Z03092) cleavage site (LEVLFQ|GP, where “|” designates the cleavage site)

  • To understand the specificity of plant PEX4-PEX22 interactions and to gain mechanistic insight into the defects conferred by the pex4-1 missense allele, we determined the structure of the A. thaliana PEX4-PEX22 complex

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Summary

Introduction

Peroxisomes are membrane-bound organelles that are essential for life in almost all multicellular eukaryotes because they house critical metabolism, including the β-oxidation of fatty acids and the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide and other reactive oxygen species. Returning PEX5 to the cytosol for additional rounds of import requires ubiquitination of a cysteine residue near the PEX5 N-terminus mediated by a complex of RING-type ubiquitin-protein ligases: PEX2, PEX10, and PEX12 (Kragt et al, 2005; Carvalho et al, 2007; Grou et al, 2008; Platta et al, 2009). In metazoans, these RING peroxins recruit a cytosolic ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (UBC) (Grou et al, 2008). In the presence of Pex, Ogataea angusta (previously known as Hansenula polymorpha) Pex adopts an active conformation and is able to build polyubiquitin chains in vitro (Groves et al, 2018)

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