Suhaily Caban-Penix, Kristin Ho, Zhewen Yang, Rishika Baral, Niels Bradshaw
The Journal of biological chemistry 2024 SepHow protein phosphatases achieve specificity for their substrates is a major outstanding question. PPM family serine/threonine phosphatases are widespread in bacteria and eukaryotes, where they dephosphorylate target proteins with a high degree of specificity. In bacteria, PPM phosphatases control diverse transcriptional responses by dephosphorylating anti-anti-sigma factors of the STAS domain family, exemplified by Bacillus subtilis phosphatases SpoIIE, which controls cell-fate during endospore formation, and RsbU, which initiates the general stress response. Using a combination of forward genetics, biochemical reconstitution, and AlphaFold2 structure prediction, we identified a conserved, tripartite substrate docking interface comprised of three variable loops on the surface of the PPM phosphatase domains of SpoIIE and RsbU that recognize the three-dimensional structure of the substrate protein. Nonconserved amino acids in these loops facilitate the accommodation of the cognate substrate and prevent dephosphorylation of the noncognate substrate. Together, single-amino acid substitutions in these three elements cause an over 500-fold change in specificity. Our data additionally suggest that substrate-docking interactions regulate phosphatase specificity through a conserved allosteric switch element that controls the catalytic efficiency of the phosphatase by positioning the metal cofactor and substrate. We hypothesize that this is a generalizable mechanistic model for PPM family phosphatase substrate specificity. Importantly, the substrate docking interface with the phosphatase is only partially overlapping with the much more extensive interface with the upstream kinase, suggesting the possibility that kinase and phosphatase specificity evolved independently. Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Suhaily Caban-Penix, Kristin Ho, Zhewen Yang, Rishika Baral, Niels Bradshaw. Docking interactions determine substrate specificity of members of a widespread family of protein phosphatases. The Journal of biological chemistry. 2024 Sep;300(9):107700
PMID: 39173947
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