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Important Role for Phylogenetically Invariant PP2Ac
Active Site and C-Terminal Residues Revealed by Mutational Analysis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
David R. H. Evansa and
Brian A. Hemmingsa
a Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel 4058 Switzerland
Corresponding author: David R. H. Evans, Program in Molecular Pharmacology, Mailstop D2-100, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Ctr., 1100 Fairview Ave. N., Seattle, WA 98109., drhevans{at}usa.net (E-mail)
Communicating editor: P. RUSSELL
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
PP2A is a central regulator of eukaryotic signal transduction. The human catalytic subunit PP2Ac
functionally replaces the endogenous yeast enzyme, Pph22p, indicating a conservation of function in vivo. Therefore, yeast cells were employed to explore the role of invariant PP2Ac residues. The PP2Ac
Y127N substitution abolished essential PP2Ac function in vivo and impaired catalysis severely in vitro, consistent with the prediction from structural studies that Tyr-127 mediates substrate binding and its side chain interacts with the key active site residues His-118 and Asp-88. The V159E substitution similarly impaired PP2Ac
catalysis profoundly and may cause global disruption of the active site. Two conditional mutations in the yeast Pph22p protein, F232S and P240H, were found to cause temperature-sensitive impairment of PP2Ac catalytic function in vitro. Thus, the mitotic and cell lysis defects conferred by these mutations result from a loss of PP2Ac enzyme activity. Substitution of the PP2Ac
C-terminal Tyr-307 residue by phenylalanine impaired protein function, whereas the Y307D and T304D substitutions abolished essential function in vivo. Nevertheless, Y307D did not reduce PP2Ac
catalytic activity significantly in vitro, consistent with an important role for the C terminus in mediating essential protein-protein interactions. Our results identify key residues important for PP2Ac function and characterize new reagents for the study of PP2A in vivo.
PROTEIN phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is ubiquitous among eukaryotes and is implicated in multiple cellular processes including signal transduction, cell cycle regulation, and protein synthesis (![]()
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4 subunit (![]()
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Additional regulation of PP2Ac activity is mediated by post-translational modification of the C terminus. The highly conserved Tyr-307 residue may be targeted for phosphorylation, leading to an inhibition of PP2Ac activity (![]()
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PP2A is a member of the PPP family of protein Ser/Thr phosphatases that includes protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) and PP2B (calcineurin). These protein phosphatases share many invariant amino acids, especially active site residues believed to be involved in metal ion and/or substrate binding and catalysis (![]()
1 suggests a model for the catalytic mechanism of the PPP family (![]()
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1 His-125 performs a critical role in the dephosphorylation reaction as a general acid that protonates the Ser/Thr leaving group oxygen, accelerating phos-phoester hydrolysis. Computer modeling based on the crystal structure of PP1
1 suggests that PP2Ac and PP1c possess a similar overall fold (![]()
1 His-125) has been demonstrated biochemically (![]()
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The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae possesses the proteins Pph22p/Pph21p (![]()
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![]()
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4 subunits, respectively. Moreover, the mammalian PP2Ac (![]()
![]()
![]()
that interfere with wild-type PP2A function in vivo (![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Strains, media, vectors, and sequence analysis:
Yeast strains are described in Table 1. Rich (YPD), minimal (SD), and 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FOA) media and nucleotide sequence analysis were described (![]()
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Construction of strain DEY103HA:
DEY103HA was constructed by replacing the genomic PPH22::URA3 allele in strain DEY213 (![]()
DNA manipulations:
Epitope-tagged yeast PP2Ac, encoded by PPH22HA with a double HA-tag inserted at the NsiI site, was a gift from Mike Stark. Plasmid YCpDE22HA is a PPH22HA 1.8-kb KpnI/EcoRI fragment in vector YCplac22. Plasmid YCpDE22-12HA was constructed by first inserting the PPH22HA 1.8-kb KpnI/EcoRI fragment into vector YEp352. The 5-kb BstXI/EcoRI fragment from the resulting plasmid (YEpDE2e) was ligated to the 0.9-kb BstXI/EcoRI fragment of plasmid pDE22-12 (![]()
![]()
alleles were tagged with the hemagglutinin (HA) epitope and expressed from the PGK1 promoter of vector pYPGE2 or the GAL1 promoter of vector pYES2 as described (![]()
by PCR using a reverse primer encoding the relevant substitution.
Preparation of yeast cell extracts and Western blot analysis:
Extracts were prepared and Western blotting was performed as described (![]()
Immunoprecipitations and protein phosphatase activity measurements:
Precipitations were performed as described (![]()
![]()
Galactose-induced expression of PP2Ac
alleles in liquid medium:
PP2Ac
alleles were expressed from the GAL1 promoter of pYES2. Transformant cells (strain INVSC1) were grown to a density of 5.0 x 106 per ml at 30° in selective S-medium containing raffinose (2.0% w/v), glycerol (3.0% v/v), and cassamino acids (0.2% w/v), whereupon an equal volume of SG medium, containing galactose at 4.0%, was added.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Analysis of highly conserved PP2Ac active site residues:
PP2Ac contains residues that are highly conserved between species and implicated in catalysis. The PP2Ac-Y127N mutant protein was identified in a screen for mutant forms that cause a dominant inhibition of cell growth when overexpressed in yeast (![]()
structure predicts that the side chain of Tyr-127 is in van der Waal's contact with the active site residues, His-118 and Asp-88, that apparently are critical for PP2Ac- catalytic function (![]()
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mutant allele encoding Y127N was originally generated by random mutagenesis and encoded a second substitution, V159E. Surprisingly, site-directed mutagenesis revealed that each of these substitutions causes a dominant-negative effect individually (![]()
(Fig 1A). However, unlike the wild-type protein, both the Y127N and V159E substituted form was severely impaired for catalytic activity in vitro (Fig 1B) and, consistent with this, each failed to provide essential PP2Ac function in yeast when expressed at a low level from the PGK1 promoter (Fig 1C). These results demonstrate that the conserved Tyr-127 and Val-159 residues are important for PP2Ac
catalytic function. Furthermore, they support the notion that the inhibition of cell growth observed during PP2Ac-Y127N or PP2Ac-V159E overexpression is caused by native folding, but catalytic impairment, of the mutant proteins.
|
Two active site substitution mutations have been identified in the yeast PP2Ac protein, Pph22p, that cause a recessive and conditional loss of function in vivo (![]()
structure predicts that the residues Phe-164 and Pro-172 (equivalent to Pph22 Phe-232 and Pro-240, respectively) pack closely to the highly conserved residue His-167 (Pph22 His-235), which may be important for catalysis through a role in metal binding (![]()
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|
Functional analysis of invariant PP2Ac C-terminal residues:
The C terminus of PP2Ac is highly conserved between species and is a site of post-translational modification in the mammalian protein. The Tyr-307 residue of PP2Ac
is invariant between species and believed to be a site of inhibitory phosphorylation (![]()
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mutant proteins for rescue of the ts growth defect caused by the F232S or P240H substitution in Pph22p. This revealed that substituting an aspartate for the conserved Tyr-307 or Thr-304 residue impaired PP2Ac
function severely in vivo, while the Y307F and T304A substitutions caused partial and no detectable impairment, respectively (Table 2). This assay required incubation of cells at 37°, an extreme temperature for yeast cell growth, raising the possibility that under stress conditions, partial PP2Ac
function might be obscured. To address this, we performed parallel experiments testing the ability of PP2Ac
to substitute for wild-type Pph22p in vivo at 30° (![]()
function in vivo while the Y307F and T304A substituted proteins supported impaired and largely wild-type yeast cell growth, respectively, in the absence of Pph22p. A Y307A substituted form similarly supported impaired cell growth, indicating that alanine at this position does not abolish PP2Ac function in vivo. Growth rate analysis revealed that the Y307F substitution impaired protein function severely in vivo while T304A had little inhibitory effect (Table 3). Furthermore, the growth rate of cells functionally expressing PP2Ac-Y307F varied between experiments, suggesting the accumulation of suppressor mutations. Western blot analysis of cell extracts (Fig 3B) revealed that all human PP2Ac
proteins tested were stably expressed and soluble in yeast and, typical of the wild-type protein (![]()
function is sensitive to mutation of evolutionarily invariant residues at its C terminus, especially replacement of Tyr-307 or Thr-304 by a charged aspartate residue. Nevertheless, replacement of Thr-304 with alanine is largely tolerated, while uncharged residues replacing Tyr-307 cause partial impairment of protein function.
|
|
|
PP2Ac-Y307D is enzymatically active and causes recessive PP2Ac impairment:
It has been reported that phosphorylation on Tyr-307 inhibits PP2Ac activity (![]()
![]()
mutant proteins, truncated at the C terminus, cause a severe dominant-negative inhibition of cell growth when expressed in yeast from a strong promoter (![]()
were expressed from the GAL1 promoter, neither inhibited cell growth severely, though a weak dominant-negative effect was observed initially (see colony formation after 5 days in Table 4). Together, these results suggest that, unlike truncated PP2Ac
proteins, the Y307D and T304D C-terminally substituted forms retain some property that prevents severe interference with wild-type PP2Ac function.
|
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Human PP2Ac
provides an essential function in yeast (![]()
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![]()
![]()
active site and C-terminal residues that are invariant between species. Our results demonstrate the importance of the PP2Ac C terminus for protein function in vivo and identify active site residues important for enzyme activity. Moreover, this study characterizes a number of human and yeast PP2Ac mutant forms that will be useful for further study of PP2A function in vivo.
PP2Ac is sensitive to C-terminal mutations:
We have found that PP2Ac function is sensitive to mutation of invariant C-terminal residues, especially replacement of Tyr-307 or Thr-304 with an aspartate residue. This is consistent with the observation that the PP2Ac C terminus is an important regulatory domain, which, in mammalian cells, is targeted for multiple post-translational modifications modulating PP2Ac activity and subunit interactions. In mammalian cells, the C-terminal Tyr-307 residue may undergo phosphorylation, leading to an inhibition of PP2Ac activity (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
in vitro and therefore does not mimic phosphorylation of Tyr-307. This is consistent with the observations of ![]()
-Y307D and T304D substituted proteins are unable to support yeast cell growth because of defective subunit binding. Accordingly, in an in vivo assay testing the ability of PP2Ac
to rescue the ts growth of cells containing a Pph22p F232S or P240H substituted protein, neither PP2Ac-Y307D nor PP2Ac-T304D provided essential function at 37°. It is noteworthy that in the W303 yeast strain background used in this study, deletion of the CDC55 gene (encoding the yeast PR55/B subunit) confers a ts growth defect at 37° (D. EVANS, unpublished observation) in addition to the previously reported cold-sensitive growth phenotype (![]()
to replace Pph22p at 30° (a permissive temperature for growth of cdc55
mutant cells). This indicates that the Y307D and T304D substitutions may inhibit PP2Ac function by impairing the binding of multiple proteins, possibly including the yeast PR61/B' subunit, Rts1p (the lack of which causes a ts growth defect at 37°; ![]()
4-like subunit, Tap42p (![]()
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![]()
![]()
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function in yeast (![]()
Identification of active site residues important for PP2Ac catalytic function:
The PP2Ac
-Y127N and V159E substituted forms were identified in a screen for dominant-negative mutant proteins that interfere with wild-type PP2Ac
function in vivo (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
catalytic function profoundly. The residue equivalent to Val-159 is highly conserved among PP2Ac proteins, and computer modeling predicts that the V159E substitution causes a global disruption of the PP2Ac
active site (![]()
in vivo (![]()
![]()
![]()
wild-type and mutant forms expressed in mammalian cells. Interestingly, we have found that the PP2Ac
-Y307D mutant protein confers a weak, dominant-negative effect despite retaining catalytic activity. This supports the notion that proper folding of mutant PP2Ac forms facilitates interference with the wild-type protein, but that catalytic impairment greatly exacerbates the dominant-negative effect.
The Pph22 F232S and P240H substitutions were shown by genetic analysis to cause a conditional-lethal loss of PP2Ac function in vivo (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
, His-167, lies at the base of a hydrophobic pocket (encompassing ß-sheet 6) and that its packing may be disrupted by a F164S or P172H substitution (equivalent to Pph22 Phe-232 and Pro-240, respectively), possibly leading to impairment of metal-ion-mediated catalysis. Nevertheless, the ts growth defect at 37°, of cells containing the Pph22 F232S or P240H substituted form, is rescued by wild-type Pph22p (![]()
Y127N and V159E dominant-negative forms were overexpressed, the Pph22 F232S and P240H mutations apparently do not cause a severe dominant-negative effect. This suggests that, at 37°, these mutant proteins may undergo ts denaturation over a large portion of the molecule, preventing interference with wild-type Pph22p. However, these conditionally defective mutant proteins will be useful tools for studying PP2A function in haploid yeast cells. Moreover, because PP2A function is likely to regulate the basal and stimulated activity of protein kinase-mediated signaling pathways, the recessive and dominant-negative mutant forms of PP2Ac characterized here may help uncover important mechanisms and components of eukaryotic signal transduction.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Mike Stark (Dundee University) for HA-tagged Pph22p; Herbert Angliker for DNA sequence analysis; and Timothy Myles, Thomas Millward, Mirjana Andjelkovic, and Pat Dennis for comments on the work. This work was supported by a Human Frontiers program grant (B.A.H).
Manuscript received February 4, 2000; Accepted for publication May 4, 2000.
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36 kD) was absent from complexes prepared from the (vector) control extract. Ig, immunoglobulin. Blots were probed with the 12CA5 monoclonal. Molecular mass marker shown on the right.