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Phosphorylation-Competent Metastable State of Escherichia coli Toxin HipA.

Authors :
Pandey B
Sinha K
Dev A
Ganguly HK
Polley S
Chakrabarty S
Basu G
Source :
Biochemistry [Biochemistry] 2023 Mar 07; Vol. 62 (5), pp. 989-999. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Feb 20.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Phosphorylation is a key post-translational modification that alters the functional state of many proteins. The Escherichia coli toxin HipA, which phosphorylates glutamyl-tRNA synthetase and triggers bacterial persistence under stress, becomes inactivated upon autophosphorylation of Ser150. Interestingly, Ser150 is phosphorylation-incompetent in the crystal structure of HipA since it is deeply buried ("in-state"), although in the phosphorylated state it is solvent exposed ("out-state"). To be phosphorylated, a minor population of HipA must exist in the phosphorylation-competent "out-state" (solvent-exposed Ser150), not detected in the crystal structure of unphosphorylated HipA. Here we report a molten-globule-like intermediate of HipA at low urea (∼4 kcal/mol unstable than natively folded HipA). The intermediate is aggregation-prone, consistent with a solvent exposed Ser150 and its two flanking hydrophobic neighbors (Val/Ile) in the "out-state". Molecular dynamics simulations showed the HipA "in-out" pathway to contain multiple free energy minima with an increasing degree of Ser150 solvent exposure with the free energy difference between the "in-state" and the metastable exposed state(s) to be ∼2-2.5 kcal/mol, with unique sets of hydrogen bonds and salt bridges associated with the metastable loop conformations. Together, the data clearly identify the existence of a phosphorylation-competent metastable state of HipA. Our results not only suggest a mechanism of HipA autophosphorylation but also add to a number of recent reports on unrelated protein systems where the common proposed mechanism for phosphorylation of buried residues is their transient exposure even without phosphorylation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-4995
Volume :
62
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36802529
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00614