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Doc Toxin Is a Kinase That Inactivates Elongation Factor Tu
Authors:Jonathan W Cruz  Francesca P Rothenbacher  Tatsuya Maehigashi  William S Lane  Christine M Dunham  Nancy A Woychik
Institution:From the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Rutgers University, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, and Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854.;the §Department of Biochemistry, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, and ;the Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics Resource Laboratory, FAS Center for Systems Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
Abstract:The Doc toxin from bacteriophage P1 (of the phd-doc toxin-antitoxin system) has served as a model for the family of Doc toxins, many of which are harbored in the genomes of pathogens. We have shown previously that the mode of action of this toxin is distinct from the majority derived from toxin-antitoxin systems: it does not cleave RNA; in fact P1 Doc expression leads to mRNA stabilization. However, the molecular triggers that lead to translation arrest are not understood. The presence of a Fic domain, albeit slightly altered in length and at the catalytic site, provided a clue to the mechanism of P1 Doc action, as most proteins with this conserved domain inactivate GTPases through addition of an adenylyl group (also referred to as AMPylation). We demonstrated that P1 Doc added a single phosphate group to the essential translation elongation factor and GTPase, elongation factor (EF)-Tu. The phosphorylation site was at a highly conserved threonine, Thr-382, which was blocked when EF-Tu was treated with the antibiotic kirromycin. Therefore, we have established that Fic domain proteins can function as kinases. This distinct enzymatic activity exhibited by P1 Doc also solves the mystery of the degenerate Fic motif unique to the Doc family of toxins. Moreover, we have established that all characterized Fic domain proteins, even those that phosphorylate, target pivotal GTPases for inactivation through a post-translational modification at a single functionally critical acceptor site.
Keywords:GTPase  Phosphorylation  Post-translational Modification  Protein Synthesis  Translation  Translation Elongation Factors  Fic  Adenylylation  Antitoxin
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