Protein depalmitoylation describes the removal of thioester-linked long chain fatty acids from cysteine residues in proteins. For many S-palmitoylated proteins, this process is promoted by acyl protein thioesterase enzymes, which catalyze thioester hydrolysis to solubilize and displace substrate proteins from membranes. The closely related enzymes acyl protein thioesterase 1 (APT1; LYPLA1) and acyl protein thioesterase 2 (APT2; LYPLA2) were initially identified from biochemical assays as G protein depalmitoylases, yet later were shown to accept a number of S-palmitoylated protein and phospholipid substrates. Leveraging the development of isoform-selective APT inhibitors, several studies report distinct roles for APT enzymes in growth factor and hormonal signaling. Recent crystal structures of APT1 and APT2 reveal convergent acyl binding channels, suggesting additional factors beyond acyl chain recognition mediate substrate selection. In addition to APT enzymes, the ABHD17 family of hydrolases contributes to the depalmitoylation of Ras-family GTPases and synaptic proteins. Overall, enzymatic depalmitoylation ensures efficient membrane targeting by balancing the palmitoylation cycle, and may play additional roles in signaling, growth, and cell organization. In this review, we provide a perspective on the biochemical, structural, and cellular analysis of protein depalmitoylases, and outline opportunities for future studies of systems-wide analysis of protein depalmitoylation.
Summary The multi-domain scaffolding protein Scribble (Scrib) organizes key signaling complexes to specify basolateral cell polarity and suppress aberrant growth. In many human cancers, genetically normal Scrib mislocalizes from cell–cell junctions to the cytosol, correlating with enhanced growth signaling and malignancy. Here we confirm that expression of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transcription factor (EMT-TF) Snail in benign epithelial cells leads to Scrib displacement from the plasma membrane, mimicking the mislocalization observed in aggressive cancers. Upon further examination, Snail promotes a transcriptional program that targets genes in the palmitoylation cycle, repressing many protein acyl transferases and elevating expression and activity of protein acyl thioesterase 2 (APT2). APT2 isoform-selective inhibition or knockdown rescued Scrib membrane localization and palmitoylation while attenuating MEK activation. Overall, inhibiting APT2 restores balance to the Scrib palmitoylation cycle, promoting membrane re-localization and growth attenuation. These findings emphasize the importance of S-palmitoylation as a post-translational gatekeeper of cell polarity-mediated tumor suppression.
Gas-phase ion/ion chemistry was coupled to ion mobility/mass spectrometry analysis to correlate the structure of gaseous ubiquitin to its solution structures with selective covalent structural probes. Collision cross section (CCS) distributions were measured to ensure the ubiquitin ions were not unfolded when they were introduced to the gas phase. Aqueous solutions stabilizing the native state of ubiquitin yielded folded ubiquitin structures with CCS values consistent with previously published literature. Denaturing solutions favored several families of unfolded conformations for most of the charge states evaluated. Gas-phase covalent labeling via ion/ion reactions was followed by collision induced dissociation of the intact, labeled protein to determine which residues were labeled. Ubiquitin 5 + and 6 + electrosprayed from aqueous conditions were covalently modified preferentially at the lysine 29 and arginine 54 positions, indicating that elements of three-dimensional structure were maintained in the gas phase. On the other hand, most ubiquitin ions produced in denaturing conditions were labeled at various other lysine residues, likely due to the availability of additional sites following methanol and low pHinduced unfolding. These data support the conservation of ubiquitin structural elements in the gas phase. The research presented here provides the basis for residue-specific characterization of biomolecules in the gas phase.
Intramolecular interactions within a protein are key in maintaining protein tertiary structure and understanding how proteins function. Ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS) has become a widely used approach in structural biology since it provides rapid measurements of collision cross sections (CCS), which inform on the gas-phase conformation of the biomolecule under study. Gas-phase ion/ion reactions target amino acid residues with specific chemical properties and the modified sites can be identified by MS. In this study, electrostatically reactive, gas-phase ion/ion chemistry and IM-MS are combined to characterize the structural changes between ubiquitin electrosprayed from aqueous and denaturing conditions. The electrostatic attachment of sulfo-NHS acetate to ubiquitin via ion/ion reactions and fragmentation by electron-capture dissociation (ECD) provide the identification of the most accessible protonated sites within ubiquitin as the sulfonate group forms an electrostatic complex with accessible protonated side chains. The protonated sites identified by ECD from the different solution conditions are distinct and, in some cases, reflect the disruption of interactions such as salt bridges that maintain the native protein structure. This agrees with previously published literature demonstrating that a high methanol concentration at low pH causes the structure of ubiquitin to change from a native (N) state to a more elongated A state. Results using gas-phase, electrostatic cross-linking reagents also point to similar structural changes and further confirm the role of methanol and acid in favoring a more unfolded conformation. Since cross-linking reagents have a distance constraint for the two reactive sites, the data is valuable in guiding computational structures generated by molecular dynamics. The research presented here describes a promising strategy that can detect subtle changes in the local environment of targeted amino acid residues to inform on changes in the overall protein structure. File list (2) download file view on ChemRxiv webb_electrostatic_x-link_manuscript.pdf (1.05 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv Supplemental information.pdf (0.93 MiB)
The combination of ion/ion chemistry with commercially available ion mobility/mass spectrometry systems has allowed rich structural information to be obtained for gaseous protein ions. Recently, the simple modification of such an instrument with an electrospray reagent source has allowed three-dimensional gas-phase interrogation of protein structures through covalent and non-covalent interactions coupled with collision cross section measurements. However, the energetics of these processes have not yet been studied quantitatively. In this work, previously developed Monte Carlo simulations of ion temperatures inside traveling wave ion guides are used to characterize the energetics of the transition state of activated ubiquitin cation/reagent anion long-lived complexes formed via ion/ion reactions. The ΔH ‡ and ΔS ‡ of major processes observed from collisional activation of long-lived gas phase ion/ion complexes, namely collision induced unfolding (CIU), covalent bond formation, or neutral loss of the anionic reagent via intramolecular proton transfer, were determined. Covalent bond formation via ion/ion complexes was found to be significantly lower energy compared to unfolding and bond cleavage. ΔG ‡ of activation of all three processes lie between 55 and 75 kJ/mol, easily accessible with moderate collisional activation. Bond formation is favored over reagent loss at lower activation energies, whereas reagent loss becomes competitive at higher collision energies. Though ΔG ‡ are between CIU of a precursor ion and covalent bond formation of its ion/ion product complex are comparable, our data suggest covalent bond formation does not require extensive isomerization, supporting evidence from previous structural studies that these ion/ion reactions measure compact gas phase structures. File list (2) download file view on ChemRxiv manuscript_final.pdf (547.56 KiB) download file view on ChemRxiv Supporting Information_final.pdf (177.83 KiB)
The speed, sensitivity, and tolerance of heterogeneity of native mass spectrometry, as well as the kinetic trapping of solution-like states during electrospray, makes mass spectrometry an attractive method to study protein structure. Increasing resolution of ion mobility measurements and mass resolving power and range are leading to the increase of the information content of intact protein measurements, and an expanded role of mass spectrometry in structural biology. Herein, a suite of different length noncovalent (sulfonate to positively charged side chain) crosslinkers was introduced via gas-phase ion/ion chemistry and used to determine distance restraints of kinetically trapped gas-phase structures of native-like cytochrome c ions. Electron capture dissociation allowed for the identification of crosslinked sites. Different length linkers resulted in distinct pairs of side chains being linked, supporting the ability of gas-phase crosslinking to be structurally specific. The gas-phase lengths of the crosslinkers were determined by conformational searches and density functional theory, allowing for the interpretation of the crosslinks as distance restraints.These distance restraints were used to model gas-phase structures with molecular dynamics simulations, revealing a mixture of structures with similar overall shape/size but distinct features, thereby illustrating the kinetic trapping of multiple native-like solution structures in the gas phase.
Glycerolipids are the main constituents of biological membranes in Trypanosoma brucei, which causes sleeping sickness in humans. Importantly, they occur as a structural component of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol lipid anchor of the abundant cell surface glycoproteins procyclin in procyclic forms and variant surface glycoprotein in bloodstream form, that play crucial roles for the development of the parasite in the insect vector and the mammalian host, respectively. The present work reports the characterization of the glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase TbGAT that initiates the biosynthesis of ester glycerolipids. TbGAT restored glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity when expressed in a Leishmania major deletion strain lacking this activity and exhibited preference for medium length, unsaturated fatty acyl-CoAs. TbGAT localized to the endoplasmic reticulum membrane with its N-terminal domain facing the cytosol. Despite that a TbGAT null mutant in T. brucei procyclic forms lacked glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity, it remained viable and exhibited similar growth rate as the wild type. TbGAT was dispensable for the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylserine and GPI-anchored protein procyclin. However, the null mutant exhibited a slight decrease in phosphatidylethanolamine biosynthesis that was compensated with a modest increase in production of ether phosphatidylcholine. Our data suggest that an alternative initial acyltransferase takes over TbGAT’s function in its absence.
Glycerophospholipids are the most abundant constituents of biological membranes in Trypanosoma brucei, which causes sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in cattle. They are essential cellular components that fulfill various important functions beyond their structural role in biological membranes such as in signal transduction, regulation of membrane trafficking or control of cell cycle progression. Our previous studies have established that the glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase TbGAT is dispensable for growth, viability, and ester lipid biosynthesis suggesting the existence of another initial acyltransferase(s). This work presents the characterization of the alternative, dihydroxyacetonephosphate acyltransferase TbDAT, which acylates primarily dihydroxyacetonephosphate and prefers palmitoyl-CoA as an acyl-CoA donor. TbDAT restores the viability of a yeast double null mutant that lacks glycerol-3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetonephosphate acyltransferase activities. A conditional null mutant of TbDAT in T. brucei procyclic form was created and characterized. TbDAT was important for survival during stationary phase and synthesis of ether lipids. In contrast, TbDAT was dispensable for normal growth. Our results show that in T. brucei procyclic forms i) TbDAT but not TbGAT is the physiologically relevant initial acyltransferase and ii) ether lipid precursors are primarily made by TbDAT.
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