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Cleavage of a Signal Sequence Biosynthesis and Directing secretory proteins to ER 2: Synthesis of signal peptide 1: Ribosome binds to the initiation codon Cytosol SRP=Signal Recognition Particle 5: SRP dissociates and recycled and accompanied by the hydrolysis of GTP. 3: SRP binds to the ribosome and halts elongation. 4: The ribosome-SRP complex is bound by the SRP receptor and GTP on the ER. The peptide, coupled to peptide translocation complex, inserts into the ER lumen. 7: The signal sequence is cleaved by signal peptidase. Signal sequences targeting different locations Characteristics of signal sequences: 1. 13-36 amino acid residues 2. 10-15 hydrophobic amino acid residues 3. one or two basic amino acid residues (Lys or Arg) preceding the hydrophobic sequence 4. cleavage site: Gly or Ala (small side chains) Protein Targeting to Mitochondria, Chloroplasts and Nuclei Mitochondria Chloroplasts A signal sequence is cleaved off in mitochondria and chloroplasts Nuclei Nuclear localization sequence (NLS) is not cleaved off. Internal Peptide Bond Cleavage Activation of Proteases 1. After trypsinogen enters the small intestine, it is converted into its active form, trypsin by enteropeptidase. 2. Now trypsin hydrolyzes more trypsinogen and starts to hydrolyze chymotrpsinogen to active their forms. Activation of Insulin 1. Insulin is initially synthesized as preproinsulin. 2. After its assembly in the ER, preproinsulin is processed into proinsulin after signal peptide cleavage. 3. Proinsulin undergoes maturation through the action of several proteases. 4. The remaining polypeptides (51 amino acids in total), the B- and A- chains bound together by disulfide bond, are the active insulin. Protein Splicing The Protein Splicing in Gene Expression The intervening sequence is transcribed into mRNA and translated into a nonfunctional protein precursor. This precursor undergoes a selfcatalyzed rearrangement in which the intervening polypeptide segment, known as the intein, is excised. The flanking protein segments, the exteins, are concomitantly joined to yield the mature protein. Characteristics of Protein Splicing 1. Protein splicing is catalyzed entirely by amino acid residues contained in the intein. 2. Protein splicing is an intra-molecular process. 3. Protein splicing requires no coenzymes or sources of metabolic energy. 4. Protein splicing involves bond rearrangements rather than bond cleavage, followed by resynthesis. Conserved Elements in a Typical Intein A highly conserved amino acid residue is Asn at the intein C-terminus which can cyclize, leading to the cleavage of the intein-C-extein bond. The C-terminal residue at either splice junction is always an amino acid with a thiol or hydroxyl side chain, suggesting ester intermediates produced by N-S or N-O acyl rearrangements. The Mechanism for Protein Splicing Formation of a linear ester intermediate by N-O acyl rearrangement involving the nucleophilic amino acid residue at the N-terminal junction. Formation of a branched ester intermediate by the attack of the nucleophilic residue at the C-terminal splice junction on the linear ester intermediate. Cyclization of the Asn residue coupled with cleavage of the branched ester intermediate. Yield an excised intein with a C-terminal aminosuccinimide and the two exteins joined by an ester bond. Rearrangement of the ester linking the exteins to the more stable amide bond. Importance of Protein Splicing 1. Important applications in protein engineering: the elucidation of the splicing steps to modulate the reactions by mutation and to design proteins that can undergo self-cleavage and protein ligation reactions. 2. The protein splicing elements can be recognized in other forms of protein autoprocessing, ranging from peptide bond cleavage to conjugation with nonprotein moieties. 3. Protein splicing has an ancient evolutionary origin. Protein splicing elements have been found only in unicellular organisms, whereas the closely related hedgehog proteins have been found only in animals, where they play a critical regulatory function in early development. 4. Most inteins harbor homing endonucleases, which turn inteins into infectious elements by mediating horizontal transfer of the intein coding sequence. Protein Lipidation N-Myristorylation Structure: CH3(CH2)12CO-NH-GXXXXXX---------COOH Motif: G ─{EDRHPFYW} ─ χ(2) ─ [STAGCNDEF] ─ {P} Myristoylation is an irreversible covalent reaction linking the 14-carbon saturated fatty acid to the N-terminal Gly of many eukaryotic and viral proteins. Biosynthesis of N-Myristoryl Proteins Myristate + ATP Myistoryl-AMP + PPi Myistoryl-AMP + CoA Myistoryl-CoA + AMP Catalyzed by Acyl-CoA Synthetase Myistoryl-CoA + Enz Enz-Myistoryl-CoA Enz-Myistoryl-CoA + Protein Enz-Myistoryl-Protein + CoA Enz-Myistoryl-Protein Enz + Myistoryl-Protein Enz= Myistoryl-CoA:Protein N-Myristoryltransferase (NMT) Importance of Myristoylation 1. The myristate moiety participates in protein subcellular localization by facilitating protein-membrane interactions as well as protein-protein interactions. 2. Myristoylated proteins are crucial components of a wide variety of functions, including many signaling pathways, oncogenesis or viral replication. 3. Initially, myristoylation was described as a co-translational reaction that occurs after the removal of the initiator Met. It is now established that myristoylation can also occur post-translationally in apoptotic cells. 4. During apoptosis hundreds of proteins are cleaved by caspases and in many cases this cleavage exposes an N-terminal Gly within a cryptic myristoylation consensus sequence, which can be myristoylated. Co- and Post-translational Attachment of Myristate to Proteins Co-translational myristoylation: following removal of the initiator Met, the exposed N-terminal Gly is myristoylated. Post-translational myristoylation: following cleavage of a cryptic myristoylation site by caspase cleavage, the exposed N-terminl Gly is myristoylated. Myristoylation of Proteins During Apoptosis Activation of the extrinsic pathway begins with binding of a death ligand (FasL) to its corresponding death receptor (Fas). Subsequent binding of adaptor proteins leads to the formation of the death inducing signalling complex (DISC) and activation of caspase-8. Caspase-8 cleaves Bid, which is then myristoylated by NMT at an N-terminally Gly of the C-terminal fragment (ctBid). The ctBid is essential for translocation to the mitochondria and progression of apoptosis by the release of cytochrome c. Gelsolin, b-Actin and PAK2 are all cleaved by caspase-3 to yield ctActin, ctGelsolin and ctPAK2, which are subsequently myristoylated. The caspase-truncated products translocate to their new respective membrane locales to affect apoptosis. Isoprenylation C | Structure:(C-C=C-C-)3-4SCH2-CH-CO-OCH3 | NH | C =O | Polypeptide Biosynthesis of C-Terminal Isoprenyl Cysteine Methyl Ester 1. Proteins with a terminal residue Leu are modified by an isoprenyltransferase that transfers from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to Cys. Proteins with terminal residues, Ser, Ala, Met, or Gln are modified by another enzyme that adds farnesyl pyrophosphate to Cys. 2. Following the attachment of the isoprenyl moietis, the three terminal amino acids are cleaved by a protease. 3. Finally, an enzyme catalyzes the addition of a methyl group to the newly exposed carboxyl terminal Cys. Isoprenyl Proteins and Their Functions 1. Isoprenyl proteins include the ras proteins and many of the other small Gproteins, the γ-subunits of the large G-proteins, some of the nuclear lamins, the retinal cGMP Phosphodiesterase, and several fungal mating pheromones. 2. Many isoprenyl proteins function in signal transduction processes across the plasma membrane or in the control of cell division. 3. The increased hydrophobicity of the C-terminus can lead to interactions with the membrane bilayer that result in membrane association of these proteins. 4. Alternatively, the isoprenyl and methyl groups may be specific targets for binding by other membrane "receptor" proteins, leading to a specific alignment of protein partners in signaling pathways. The Ras Protein 1. The Ras protein is a product of the ras gene, a mutant version of a normal gene encoding a GDP-binding protein. 2. The normal protein acts in general transductions triggered by neurotransmitters, hormones, growth factors and other extracellular signals. 3. The mutant ras gene is found in cancers of the lung, colon or pancreas. The mutant gene product is responsible for the uncontrolled division of the cancerous cells. S-Palmitorylation ︱ Structure: CH3(CH2)14CO-SCys ︱ 1. Protein S-palmitoylation is the thioester linkage of long-chain fatty acids to Cys in proteins. 2. Addition of palmitate to proteins facilitates their membrane interactions and trafficking, and it modulates protein-protein interactions and enzyme activity. 3. The reversibility of palmitoylation makes it a bilogical mechanism for regulating protein activity. 4. The regulation of palmitoylation occurs through the actions of acyltransferases and acylthioesterases. These molecules work in concert with thioesterases to regulate the palmitoylation status of numerous signaling molecules, ultimately influencing their function. 5. It is found mainly in the Ras proteins. Palmitoylation Motifs I. Dually lipidated proteins A. Prenylation and S-palmitoylation Ras GTPase –GCMSCKCfarn Rho GTPase –QNGCINCCfarn/gg B. N-myristoylation and S-palmitoylation Gpal (S. cerevisiae) myr-N-GCTVST– C. N-palmitoylation and S-palmitoylation Gs palm-N-GCLGNSKTE– II. Cytoplasmic proteins—exclusively palmitoylated A. N-terminal motifs 1MLCCM– GAP-43 B. C-terminal motif Yck2 (S. cerevisiae) –FFSKLGCC-COOH C. Cysteine string motifs SNAP-25b –83KFCGLCVCPCNKL95– III. Pleckstrin homology domains Phospholipase D1 –236PGLNCCGQGR245– VI. RGS core domains RGS4 –91FWISCEEYKKI103– Two Mechanisms of Protein Palmitoylation: Enzymatic and Nonenzymatic 1. The first mechanism is through the action of an enzyme generically referred to as protein acyltransferase (PAT). Genetic strategies in yeast have recently yielded the identity of two PATs. Thus, it is clear that some palmitoylation reactions are mediated by enzymes. 2. The second mechanism is nonenyzmatic: spontaneous autoacylation of a protein in the presence of long-chain acyl-coenzyme As (CoAs). Autoacylation of two mitochondrial enzymes is important for their regulation. Functions of Palmitoylation 1. Similar to other lipid modifications, palmitoylation promotes membrane association of otherwise soluble proteins. 2. The function of palmitoylation, however, ranges beyond that of a simple membrane anchor. 3. Trafficking of lipidated proteins from the early secretory pathway to the plasma membrane is dependent upon palmitoylation in many cases. 4. Modification with fatty acids impacts the lateral distribution of proteins on the plasma membrane by targeting them to lipid rafts. 5. Palmitoylation also functions in the regulation of protein activity. 6. SCG-10, a microtubule-destabilizing protein, requires palmitoylation for targeting to Golgi membranes for transport to neuronal growth cones. Glypiation 1. The process of adding glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol (GPI) to proteins, which has been termed glypiation, is carried out by a transamidase that cleaves the C-terminal peptide and concomitantly transfers the preassembled GPI anchor to the newly exposed carboxy-terminal amino acid residue to establish an amide bond between the latter and the ethanolamine moiety of the glycolipid. 2. GPI assembly takes place entirely on the cytoplasmic side of the ER and followed by its translocation to the lumenal side, where attachment to the protein takes place. 3. The transamidase reaction is carried out by a multiprotein complex that has as yet not been isolated in its intact form. 4. The carboxy-terminal signal peptide which is cleaved prior to binding of the GPI, consisting 15–30 amino acids, has structural similarities to the NH2terminal peptide that functions in general to direct nascent chains into the ER lumen. GPI Anchor The GPI anchor is a complex structure comprising a phosphoethanolamine linker, glycan core, and phospholipid tail. Membrane-Associated Proteins in a Lipid Bilayer Containing Lipid Raft Domains The GPI anchor anchors the modified protein in the outer leaflet of the cell membrane. Sequences Signaling the Addition of GPI Anker 1. Addition involves removal of the sequence to the right of the space and linkage of the GPI to the residue at the left of the space. 2. The residue to which GPI becomes attached (termed ω) has small side chains (e.g., Gly, Ala, Cys, Ser, Asn) as does the amino acid in the ω+2 position (e.g., Gly, Ala). 3. The latter site is followed by a short hydrophilic domain (5–7 residues) and this is followed by a hydrophobic region (12–20 residues) that extends to the carboxyterminus. The ω+1 position can be filled by any amino acid except Pro or Trp. Biosynthesis of GPI Anchor In trypanosomes In mammalian cells PI, phophatidylinositol; G, glucosamine; Ac, acetyl; M, mannose; pE, Phosphoehanolamine; (acyl), fatty acid linked to inositol. Functions of GPI-Anchored Proteins ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Biological role Protein Source ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── enzymes alkaline phosphatase mammalian tissues, Schistosoma 5′-nucleotidase mammalian tissues dipeptidase pig and human kidney, sheep lung cell-cell interaction LFA-3 human blood cells PH-20 guinea pig sperm complement regulation CD55 (DAF) human blood cells CD59 human blood cells mammalian antigens Thy-1 mammalian brain and lymphocytes Qa-2 mouse lymphocytes CD14 human monocytes CD52 human lymphocytes protozoan antigens VSG T. brucei 1G7 T. cruzi procyclin T. brucei miscellaneous scrapie prion protein hamster brain CD16b human neutrophils folate-binding protein human epithelial cells ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Difficulties in the Studies of GPI-Proteins 1. The GPI anchor is a structurally complex posttranslational modification that remains a mystery with respect to its biological activities. 2. A major obstacle to functional investigations is the difficulty in producing structurally defined GPI moieties and GPIanchored proteins. 3. Cells generate heterogeneous mixtures of both anchor and modified protein structures, and chemical synthesis requires numerous difficult synthetic transformations. 4. The flexibility of glycosidic linkages and the solubility issues inherent to lipids have rendered GPImodified proteins difficult to crystallize or to study by NMR. Cholesterol-Modified Proteins: Hedgehog (Hh) proteins 1. Hh proteins are the representative of cholesterol-modified proteins and carry a cholesterol ester at the C terminus of their signaling domain. 2. They comprise a family of secreted signaling molecules essential for patterning a variety of structures in animal embryogenesis. Biosynthesis of Hh Proteins 1. During biosynthesis, Hh undergoes an autocleavage reaction, mediated by its carboxyl-terminal domain, that produces a lipid-modified amino-terminal fragment responsible for all known Hh signaling activity. 2. Cholesterol is the lipophilic moiety covalently attached to the amino-terminal signaling domain during autoprocessing and that the carboxyl-terminal domain acts as an intramolecular cholesterol transferase. 3. This use of cholesterol to modify embryonic signaling proteins may account for some of the effects of perturbed cholesterol biosynthesis on animal development. Mechanism of Hh Autoprocessing and Attachment of Cholesterol The reaction is initiated by formation of a thio-ester between the thiol side chain of Cys258 and the carbonyl carbon of Gly257, an N to S shift. The activated intermediate then undergoes a nucleophilic attack by DTT or by a lipophilic nucleophile (cholesterol), resulting in cleavage as well as formation of a covalent adduct at the COOH-terminus of the NH2-terminal product. X denotes the attacking nucleophile Disulfide Bonds Historical Events on Disulfide Formation 1. Anfinsen’s experiment showed that the reduced RNase could be oxidized spontaneously in air, but it took hours to do so. In the cell, the process is more rapid. It takes only seconds. 2. The discovery of mutations in the gene, dsbA, revealed that disulfide formation is a catalyzed process. Thiol-Redox Reactions This figure shows the 3 thiol-disulfide interconversions between an enzyme (E) with 2 active Cys and a substrate (S) with 3 Cys. The commonality of mechanism is shown for the three series of reactions. The mixed disulfide intermediate is formed by the attack by a depronated thiolate anion. The central complex represents one of the six possible mixed disulfide intermediates. Dsb A, Primary Catalyst for Disulfide Formation 1. DsbA is a monomeric 21-kDa enzyme containing a redox active sequence, Cys-Pro-His-Cys, embedded in the thioredeoxin-like fold. 2. DsbA, with a standard redox potential of about –120 mV, is the strongest thiol oxidant. 3. The first Cys (Cys30) has a pKa value of 3.5. This Cys is thus entirely in the thiolate state at physiological pH. 4. 3-D structure shows that this Cys is located at the N-terminus of the active site helix 1 from which the positive charge of the helix dipole can stabilize the thiolate. 5. 3-D structure also shows that His32 in the CXXC motif is hydrogen-bonded to Cys30 in the reduced but not in the oxidized form. Electron Transfer from Substrate to DsbA and DsbB 1. The protease digestion of DsbA suggested that the oxidized form is more flexible than the reduced form. 2. The greater flexibility of the oxidized form can facilitate the accommodation of its various substrates, while the rigid nature of the reduced form can facilitate the release of the oxidized products. DsbB is responsible for maintaining DsbA oxidized. DsbC, Protein Disulfide Bond Isomerase 1. The slowness of the spontaneously unscrambling of the scrambled RNase led Anfinsen to isolate a protein disulfide bond isomerase (DsbC) which promotes the rearrangements of nonnative disulfide bonds. 2. The dimeric structure is fundamental for disulfide bond isomerase and as a chaperon. 3. As a chaperon, DsbC can reactivate denatured proteins without Cys, and the active site Cys of DsbC is not required for the chaperon activity. 4. The recognition of unfolded proteins is in the uncharged cleft which can switch between open and closed conformation. 5. The flexibility allows DsbC to adjust the cleft to accommodate different sizes and shapes of the binding partner. DsbC is a V-shaped homodimer (monomer, 23.4 kD) where each arm consists of a Cterminal thioredoxin fold with an active CXXC motif and an N-terminal dimerization domain. DsbD, An Enzyme Responsible for Maintaining DsbC in the Reduced State DsbD consists of an N-terminal periplasmic domain (DsbDα), a central hydrophobic core with 8 transmembrane segments (DsbDβ) and a C-terminal thioredoxin-like domain (DsbDγ). Each of the three domains includes a pair of Cys. DsbD utilizes the thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase system in the cytosol as a source of reducing equivalents. The reducing potential is transferred from thioredoxin to DsbDβ and then successively to DsbDγ, DsbDα, and DsbC. Protein Ubiquitination Ubiquitin System The conjugation of Ub to proteins involves a ATPdependent step in which the last residue of Ub (Gly76) is joined to a Cys residue of the E1 (Ubactivating) enzyme. The “activated” Ub moiety is transferred to a Cys residue in one of several Ub-conjugating (E2) enzymes and, from there, through an isopeptide bond to a Lys residue of an ultimate acceptor protein. E2 enzymes function as subunits of E2-E3 ligase holoenzyme that can produce substrate-linked poly-Ub chains. Substrate linked poly-Ub chains with specific Ub-Ub isopeptide bonds mediate either the processive degradation of a substrate by the 26S proteasome or other metabolic fates. The Arg/N-End Rule Pathway 1.Primary destabilizing N-terminal residues (Arg, Lys, His, Leu, Phe, Tyr, Trp, and Ile), are directly recognized by E3-E2 ligase. 2.The N-terminal residues Asp, Glu, Asn, and Gln can be targeted by E3-E2 ligase only after their N-terminal arginylation by the Ate1 Arg-tRNA-protein transferase (Rtransferase). 3.The destabilizing residues are called secondary or tertiary, depending on the number of steps (arginylation of Asp and Glu; deamidation/arginylation of Asn and Gln) that precede the targeting. 4.Specifically, the targeting apparatus of the Arg/N-end rule pathway comprises a physical complex of the RING-type E3 (called N-recognin) and the HECT-type E3, together with their cognate E2 enzymes, respectively. The Ac/N-End Rule Pathway 1.The red arrow indicates the removal of N-terminal Met by Met aminopeptidases (MetAPs). 2.This Met residue is retained if a residue at position 2 is nonpermissive (too large) for MetAPs. If the retained N-terminal Met or N-terminal Ala, Val, Ser, Thr, and Cys are followed by acetylation-permissive residues, the above N-terminal residues are usually Nterminally acetylated by Nt-acetylases . The resulting N-degrons are called AcN-degrons. 3.The term “secondary” refers to the necessity of modification (Nt-acetylation) of a destabilizing N-terminal residue before a protein can be recognized by a cognate Ub ligase. 4.Although second-position Gly or Pro can be made N-terminal by MetAPs, and although the Doa10 E3 can recognize Nt-acetylated Gly and Pro, few proteins with N-terminal Gly or Pro are Nt-acetylated. Functions of Ubiquitination 1. The function of ubiquitination was to cause protein degradation in the 26 S proteasome, if the linkage to the target protein is via Lys48 on ubiquitin (Ub). Ubmediated degradation of regulatory proteins plays important roles in the control of numerous processes, including cell-cycle progression, signal transduction, transcriptional regulation, receptor down-regulation, and endocytosis 2. If the polyubiquitin chains are linked via Lys63, a major function is to assemble into multiprotein complexes and regulates processes such as endocytosis and ribosomal protein synthesis. 3. If the process of ubiquitination is mediated by Ub ligases and is reversed by deubiquitinating enzymes, the phenomenon can be found in the regulation of innate immune signaling, where both phosphorylation and Lys63-linked ubiquitination are the critical covalent modifications that launch signaling pathways activated by innate immune receptors. 4. Monoubiquitylation of specific substrates has specific functions. 5. An individual mammalian genome encodes at least a thousand distinct E3s. One role of E3 is the initial recognition of a substrate’s degradation signal (degron). . 6. The ubiquitin system has been implicated in the immune response, development, and programmed cell death. Protein Sumonylation Small ubiquitin-related modifier is referred to as SUMO and protein sumonylation is a posttranlational process. The SUMO Conjugation Pathway 1. The enzymes of the SUMO pathway are analogous to those of the Ub pathway with a SUMOactivating enzyme (E1), a SUMO-conjugating enzyme (E2) and one of several SUMO-protein ligases (E3s). 2. E2 and the E3s both contribute to substrate specificity. 3. The linkage between SUMO and its substrates is an isopeptide bond between the C-terminal carboxyl group of SUMO and the ε-amino group of Lys in the substrate. The Lys residues where SUMO becomes attached are in the short consensus sequence ΨKXE, where is Ψ a large hydrophobic amino acid, generally Ile, Leu, or Val and X is any residue. 4. Sumoylation is a reversible modification, and removal of SUMO is carried out by enzymes of the Ulp family. 5. Ulps are also required for generating mature SUMO from the SUMO precursor, which contains a short peptide blocking its C terminus. 6. The enzymes of the SUMO pathway are specific for SUMO and have no role in conjugating Ub or any of the other Ubls. The Structures of SUMOs 1. SUMOs are 11 kDa proteins, but they appear larger on SDSPAGE and add 20 kDa to the apparent molecular weight of most substrates. 2. SUMOs are 20 amino acids longer than Ub, and the extra residues are found in an N-terminal extension, which is flexible in solution. 3. The N-terminal extension of yeast SUMO can be entirely deleted with only modest effects on SUMO function, indicating that the Ub-like domain is sufficient for conjugation to many substrates. Comparison of the Structures of SUMO and Ubiquitin SUMOs share 18% sequence identity with Ub, but the folded structure of the SUMO C-terminal Ub-like domain is virtually superimposable on that of Ub. Functions of Sumonylation 1. SUMO modifies many proteins that participate in diverse cellular processes, including transcriptional regulation, nuclear transport, maintenance of genome integrity, and signal transduction. 2. Reversible attachment of SUMO is controlled by an enzyme pathway that is analogous to the ubiquitin pathway but not for protein degradation. 3. The functional consequences of SUMO attachment vary greatly from substrate to substrate, and in many cases are not understood at the molecular level. 4. Frequently SUMO alters interactions of substrates with other proteins or with DNA, but SUMO can also act by blocking ubiquitin attachment sites. 5. An unusual feature of SUMO modification is that, for most substrates, only a small fraction of the substrate is sumoylated at any given time.