Abstract

Within the family of large GTP-binding proteins, human guanylate binding protein 1 (hGBP1) belongs to a subgroup of interferon-inducible proteins. GTP hydrolysis activity of these proteins is much higher compared with members of other GTPase families and underlies mechanisms that are not understood. The large GTP-binding proteins form self-assemblies that lead to stimulation of the catalytic activity. The unique result of GTP hydrolysis catalyzed by hGBP1 is GDP and GMP. We investigated this reaction mechanism by transient kinetic methods using radioactively labeled GTP as well as fluorescent probes. Substrate binding and formation of the hGBP1 homodimer are fast as no lag phase is observed in the time courses of GTP hydrolysis. Instead, multiple turnover experiments show a rapid burst of P(i) formation prior to the steady state phase, indicating a rate-limiting step after GTP cleavage. Both molecules are catalytically active and cleave off a phosphate ion in the first step. Then bifurcation into catalytic inactivation, probably by irreversible dissociation of the dimer, and into GDP hydrolysis is observed. The second cleavage step is even faster than the first step, implying a rapid rearrangement of the nucleotide within the catalytic center of hGBP1. We could also show that the release of the products, including the phosphate ions, is fast and not limiting the steady state activity. We suggest that slow dissociation of the GMP-bound homodimer gives rise to the burst behavior and controls the steady state. The assembled forms of the GDP- and GMP-bound states of hGBP1 are accessible only through GTP binding and hydrolysis and achieve a lifetime of a few seconds.

Highlights

  • They can flip between these two states by GTP hydrolysis and by GDP dissociation followed by rebinding of abundant GTP

  • GTP hydrolysis kinetics were measured by mixing human guanylate binding protein 1 (hGBP1) with an excess of substrate, i.e. multiple turnover conditions

  • Our earlier biochemical and structural studies have shown that GTP binding to hGBP1 is followed by dimer formation, which leads to stimulation of catalytic hydrolysis activity [11, 23, 24]

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Protein Preparation— hGBP1 with an N-terminal His tag was synthesized from a pQE9 vector (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) in Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) and purified as described previously [23]. The A197S mutant of PBP was prepared and labeled with N-[2-(1-maleimidyl)ethyl]-7-(diethylamino)coumarin-3-carboxamide (MDCC) as described by Brune et al [30] Following this procedure we obtained protein, which was labeled to more than 93%, as determined from the absorbance at 280 and 430 nm. Single-turnover kinetics of GTP hydrolysis lead to three nucleotide time courses that were analyzed simultaneously by a global fit using the program Scientist (MicroMath). For this kind of analysis the differential equations derived from Scheme 2 were used yielding the values for k1, k2, and k3. They define the three parameters of Equation 1 according to Equations 2– 4 [31]

Transient Kinetics of Nucleotide Cleavage
Kinetics of Substrate Binding and Product Release
DISCUSSION
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