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1.
The human peptidyl prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) Pin1 has a key role in developmental processes and cell proliferation. Pin1 consists of an N-terminal WW domain and a C-terminal catalytic PPIase domain both targeted specifically to Ser(PO3H2)/Thr(PO3H2)-Pro sequences. Here, we report the enhanced affinity originating from bivalent binding of ligands toward Pin1 compared to monovalent binding. We developed composite peptides where an N-terminal segment represents a catalytic site-directed motif and a C-terminal segment exhibits a predominant affinity to the WW domain of Pin1 tethered by polyproline linkers of different chain length. We used NMR shift perturbation experiments to obtain information on the specific interaction of a bivalent ligand to both targeted sites of Pin1. The bivalent ligands allowed a considerable range of thermodynamic investigations using isothermal titration calorimetry and PPIase activity assays. They expressed up to 350-fold improved affinity toward Pin1 in the nanomolar range in comparison to the monovalent peptides. The distance between the two binding motifs was highly relevant for affinity. The optimum in affinity manifested by a linker length of five prolyl residues between active site- and WW domain-directed peptide fragments suggests that the corresponding domains in Pin1 are allowed to adopt preferred spatial arrangement upon ligand binding.  相似文献   

2.
Peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) interacting with NIMA-1 (Pin1) catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of pSer/pThr-Pro amide bonds. Pin1 is a two-domain protein that represents a promising target for the treatment of cancer. Both domains of Pin1 bind the pSer/pThr-Pro motif; PPIase enzymatic activity occurs in the catalytic domain, and the WW domain acts as a recognition module for the pSer/pThr-Pro motif. An assay we call an enzyme-linked enzyme-binding assay (ELEBA) was developed to measure the Kd of ligands that bind selectively to the WW domain. A ligand specific for the WW domain of Pin1 was covalently immobilized in a 96-well plate. Commercially available Pin1 conjugated to horseradish peroxidase was used for chemiluminescent detection of ligands that block the association of the WW domain with immobilized ligand. The peptide ligands were derived from the cell cycle regulatory phosphatase, Cdc25c, residues 45-50. The Kd values for Fmoc-VPRpTPVGGGK-NH2 and Ac-VPRpTPV-NH2 were determined to be 36 ± 4 and 110 ± 30 μM, respectively. The ELEBA offers a selective approach for detecting ligands that bind to the Pin1 WW domain, even in the presence of the catalytic domain. This method may be applied to any dual specificity, multidomain protein.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphoserine-binding modules help determine the specificity of signal transduction events. One such module, the group IV WW domain, plays an essential role in targeting the phosphorylation-specific prolyl isomerase Pin1 to its substrates. These modules require Ser/Thr phosphorylation of their ligands for binding activity. However, phosphorylation of these modules and its functional significance have not been described, nor is it known whether the function of Pin1 is regulated. Here we show that Pin1 WW domain is phosphorylated on Ser(16) both in vitro and in vivo. Further, this phosphorylation regulates the ability of the WW domain to mediate Pin1 substrate interaction and cellular localization. Moreover, both Pin1 and WW domain mutants refractory to Ser(16) phosphorylation act as dominant-negative mutants to induce mitotic block and apoptosis and increase multinucleated cells with 8 N DNA content. Thus, phosphorylation is a new mechanism critical for regulating WW domain phosphoserine binding activity and Pin1 function.  相似文献   

4.
The link between internal enzyme motions and catalysis is poorly understood. Correlated motions in the microsecond-to-millisecond timescale may be critical for enzyme function. We have characterized the backbone dynamics of the peptidylprolyl isomerase (Pin1) catalytic domain in the free state and during catalysis. Pin1 is a prolyl isomerase of the parvulin family and specifically catalyzes the isomerization of phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro peptide bonds. Pin1 has been shown to be essential for cell-cycle progression and to interact with the neuronal tau protein inhibiting its aggregation into fibrillar tangles as found in Alzheimer's disease. (15)N relaxation dispersion measurements performed on Pin1 during catalysis reveal conformational exchange processes in the microsecond timescale. A subset of active site residues undergo kinetically similar exchange processes even in the absence of a substrate, suggesting that this area is already "primed" for catalysis. Furthermore, structural data of the turning-over enzyme were obtained through inter- and intramolecular nuclear Overhauser enhancements. This analysis together with a characterization of the substrate concentration dependence of the conformational exchange allowed the distinguishing of regions of the enzyme active site that are affected primarily by substrate binding versus substrate isomerization. Together these data suggest a model for the reaction trajectory of Pin1 catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
The down-regulation or cellular depletion of protein kinase C (PKC) attendant to prolonged activation by phorbol esters is a widely described property of this key family of signaling enzymes. However, neither the mechanism of down-regulation nor whether this mechanism occurs following stimulation by physiological agonists is known. Here we show that the peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Pin1 provides a timer for the lifetime of conventional PKC isozymes, converting the enzymes into a species that can be dephosphorylated and ubiquitinated following activation induced by either phorbol esters or natural agonists. The regulation by Pin1 requires both the catalytic activity of the isomerase and the presence of a Pro immediately following the phosphorylated Thr of the turn motif phosphorylation site, one of two C-terminal sites that is phosphorylated during the maturation of PKC isozymes. Furthermore, the second C-terminal phosphorylation site, the hydrophobic motif, docks Pin1 to PKC. Our data are consistent with a model in which Pin1 binds the hydrophobic motif of conventional PKC isozymes to catalyze the isomerization of the phospho-Thr-Pro peptide bond at the turn motif, thus converting these PKC isozymes into species that can be efficiently down-regulated following activation.  相似文献   

6.
A functionally Pin1-like peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase(1)) was isolated from proembryogenic masses (PEMs) of Digitalis lanata according to its enzymatic activity. Partial sequence analysis of the purified enzyme (DlPar13) revealed sequence homology to members of the parvulin family of PPIases. Similar to human Pin1 and yeast Ess1, it exhibits catalytic activity toward substrates containing (Thr(P)/Ser(P))-Pro peptide bonds and comparable inhibition kinetics with juglone. Unlike Pin1-type enzymes it lacks the phosphoserine or phosphothreonine binding WW domain. Western blotting with anti-DlPar13 serum recognized the endogenous form in nucleic and cytosolic fractions of the plant cells. Since the PIN1 homologue ESS1 is an essential gene, complementation experiments in yeast were performed. When overexpressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae DlPar13 is almost as effective as hPin1 in rescuing the temperature-sensitive phenotype caused by a mutation in ESS1. In contrast, the human parvulin hPar14 is not able to rescue the lethal phenotype of this yeast strain at nonpermissive temperatures. These results suggest a function for DlPar13 rather similar to parvulins of the Pin1-type.  相似文献   

7.
Pin1 contains an N-terminal WW domain and a C-terminal peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) domain connected by a flexible linker. To address the energetic and structural basis for WW domain recognition of phosphoserine (P.Ser)/phosphothreonine (P. Thr)- proline containing proteins, we report the energetic and structural analysis of a Pin1-phosphopeptide complex. The X-ray crystal structure of Pin1 bound to a doubly phosphorylated peptide (Tyr-P.Ser-Pro-Thr-P.Ser-Pro-Ser) representing a heptad repeat of the RNA polymerase II large subunit's C-terminal domain (CTD), reveals the residues involved in the recognition of a single P.Ser side chain, the rings of two prolines, and the backbone of the CTD peptide. The side chains of neighboring Arg and Ser residues along with a backbone amide contribute to recognition of P.Ser. The lack of widespread conservation of the Arg and Ser residues responsible for P.Ser recognition in the WW domain family suggests that only a subset of WW domains can bind P.Ser-Pro in a similar fashion to that of Pin1.  相似文献   

8.
Deregulation of Tau phosphorylation is a key question in Alzheimer disease pathogenesis. Recently, Pin1, a peptidylprolyl cis/trans-isomerase, was proposed to be a new modulator in Tau phosphorylation in Alzheimer disease. In vitro, Pin1 was reported to present a high affinity for both Thr(P)-231, a crucial site for microtubule binding, and Thr(P)-212. In fact, Pin1 may facilitate Thr(P)-231 dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase 2A through trans isomerization of the Thr(P)-Pro peptide bound. However, whether Pin1 binding to Tau leads to isomerization of a single site or of multiple Ser/Thr(P)-Pro sites in vivo is still unknown. In the present study, Pin1 involvement was investigated in stress-induced Tau dephosphorylation with protein phosphatase 2A activation. Both oxidative (H2O2) and heat stresses induced hypophosphorylation of a large set of phospho-Tau epitopes in primary cortical cultures. In both cases, juglone, a Pin1 pharmacological inhibitor, partially prevented dephosphorylation of Tau at Thr-231 among a set of phosphoepitopes tested. Moreover, Pin1 is physiologically found in neurons and partially co-localized with Tau. Furthermore, in Pin1-deficient neuronal primary cultures, H2O2 stress-induced Tau dephosphorylation at Thr(P)-231 was significantly lower than in wild type neurons. Finally, Pin1 transfection in Pin1-deficient neuronal cell cultures allowed for rescuing the effect of H2O2 stress-induced Tau dephosphorylation, whereas a Pin1 catalytic mutant did not. This is the first demonstration of an in situ Pin1 involvement in a differential Tau dephosphorylation on the full-length multiphosphorylated substrate.  相似文献   

9.
Pin1 is a prolyl isomerase that recognizes phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro sites, and phosphatase inhibitor-2 (I-2) is phosphorylated during mitosis at a PSpTP site that is expected to be a Pin1 substrate. However, we previously discovered I-2, but not phospho-I-2, bound to Pin1 as an allosteric modifier of Pin1 substrate specificity [Li, M., et al. (2008) Biochemistry 47, 292]. Here, we use binding assays and NMR spectroscopy to map the interactions on Pin1 and I-2 to elucidate the organization of this complex. Despite having sequences that are ~50% identical, human, Xenopus, and Drosophila I-2 proteins all exhibited identical, saturable binding to GST-Pin1 with K(0.5) values of 0.3 μM. The (1)H-(15)N heteronuclear single-quantum coherence spectra for both the WW domain and isomerase domain of Pin1 showed distinctive shifts upon addition of I-2. Conversely, as shown by NMR spectroscopy, specific regions of I-2 were affected by addition of Pin1. A single-residue I68A substitution in I-2 weakened binding to Pin1 by half and essentially eliminated binding to the isolated WW domain. On the other hand, truncation of I-2 to residue 152 had a minimal effect on binding to the WW domain but eliminated binding to the isomerase domain. Size exclusion chromatography revealed that wild-type I-2 and Pin1 formed a large (>300 kDa) complex and I-2(I68A) formed a complex of half the size that we propose are a heterotetramer and a heterodimer, respectively. Pin1 and I-2 are conserved among eukaryotes from yeast to humans, and we propose they make up an ancient partnership that provides a means for regulating Pin1 specificity and function.  相似文献   

10.
The phosphorylation-specific peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Pin1 catalyzes the isomerization of the peptide bond preceding a proline residue between cis and trans isomers. To best understand the mechanisms of Pin1 regulation, rigorous enzymatic assays of isomerization are required. However, most measures of isomerase activity require significant constraints on substrate sequence and only yield rate constants for the cis isomer, [Formula: see text] and apparent Michaelis constants, [Formula: see text]. By contrast, NMR lineshape analysis is a powerful tool for determining microscopic rates and populations of each state in a complex binding scheme. The isolated catalytic domain of Pin1 was employed as a first step towards elucidating the reaction scheme of the full-length enzyme. A 24-residue phosphopeptide derived from the amyloid precurser protein intracellular domain (AICD) phosphorylated at Thr668 served as a biologically-relevant Pin1 substrate. Specific (13)C labeling at the Pin1-targeted proline residue provided multiple reporters sensitive to individual isomer binding and on-enzyme catalysis. We have performed titration experiments and employed lineshape analysis of phosphopeptide (13)C-(1)H constant time HSQC spectra to determine [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and [Formula: see text] for the catalytic domain of Pin1 acting on this AICD substrate. The on-enzyme equilibrium value of [E·trans]/[E·cis]?=?3.9 suggests that the catalytic domain of Pin1 is optimized to operate on this substrate near equilibrium in the cellular context. This highlights the power of lineshape analysis for determining the microscopic parameters of enzyme catalysis, and demonstrates the feasibility of future studies of Pin1-PPIase mutants to gain insights on the catalytic mechanism of this important enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Proline-directed protein phosphorylation was shown to depend on the capacity of the targeted Ser(Thr)-Pro bond to exhibit conformational polymorphism. The cis/trans isomer specificity underlying ERK2-catalyzed phosphate transfer leads to a complete discrimination of the cis Ser(Thr)-Pro conformer of oligopeptide substrates. We investigated in vitro the ERK2-catalyzed phosphorylation of Aspergillus oryzae RNase T1 containing two Ser-Pro bonds both of which share high stabilization energy in their respective native state conformation, the cis Ser54-Pro and the trans Ser72-Pro moiety. Despite trans isomer specificity of ERK2, a doubly phosphorylated RNase T1 was found as the final reaction product. Similarly, the RNase T1 S54G/P55N and RNase T1 P73V variants, which retain the prolyl bond conformations of the RNase T1-wt, were both monophosphorylated with a catalytic efficiency kcat/KM of 425 M(-1) s(-1) and 1228 M(-1) s(-1), respectively. However, initial phosphorylation rates did not depend linearly on the ERK2 concentration. The phosphorylation rate of the resulting plateau region at high ERK2 concentrations can be increased up to threefold for the RNase T1 P73V variant in the presence of the peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase Cyclophilin 18, indicating a conformational interconversion as the rate limiting step in the catalyzed phosphate group transfer. Using peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerases with different substrate specificity, we identified a native state conformational equilibrium of the Ser54-Pro bond with the minor trans Ser54-Pro bond as the phosphorylation-sensitive moiety. This technique can therefore be used for a determination of the ratio and the interconversion rates of prolyl bond isomers in the native state of proteins.  相似文献   

12.
The functional mechanisms of multidomain proteins often exploit interdomain interactions, or “cross-talk.” An example is human Pin1, an essential mitotic regulator consisting of a Trp–Trp (WW) domain flexibly tethered to a peptidyl-prolyl isomerase (PPIase) domain, resulting in interdomain interactions important for Pin1 function. Substrate binding to the WW domain alters its transient contacts with the PPIase domain via means that are only partially understood. Accordingly, we have investigated Pin1 interdomain interactions using NMR paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The PREs show that apo-Pin1 samples interdomain contacts beyond the range suggested by previous structural studies. They further show that substrate binding to the WW domain simultaneously alters interdomain separation and the internal conformation of the WW domain. A 4.5-μs all-atom MD simulation of apo-Pin1 suggests that the fluctuations of interdomain distances are correlated with fluctuations of WW domain interresidue contacts involved in substrate binding. Thus, the interdomain/WW domain conformations sampled by apo-Pin1 may already include a range of conformations appropriate for binding Pin1''s numerous substrates. The proposed coupling between intra-/interdomain conformational fluctuations is a consequence of the dynamic modular architecture of Pin1. Such modular architecture is common among cell-cycle proteins; thus, the WW–PPIase domain cross-talk mechanisms of Pin1 may be relevant for their mechanisms as well.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Here we show that prolyl isomerase Pin1 is involved in the Abeta production central to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Enzyme immunoassay of brains of the Pin1-deficient mice revealed that production of Abeta40 and Abeta42 was lower than that of the wild-type mice, indicating that Pin1 promotes Abeta production in the brain. GST-Pin1 pull-down and immunoprecipitation assay revealed that Pin1 binds phosphorylated Thr668-Pro of C99. In the Pin1-/- MEF transfected with C99, Pin1 co-transfection enhanced the levels of Abeta40 and Abeta42 compared to that without Pin1 co-transfection. In COS7 cells transfected with C99, Pin1 co-transfection enhanced the generation of Abeta40 and Abeta42, and reduced the expression level of C99, facilitating the C99 turnover. Thus, Pin1 interacts with C99 and promotes its gamma-cleavage, generating Abeta40 and Abeta42. Further, GSK3 inhibitor lithium blocked Pin1 binding to C99 by decreasing Thr668 phosphorylation and attenuated Abeta generation, explaining the inhibitory effect of lithium on Abeta generation.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction between the neuronal Tau protein and the Pin1 prolyl cis/trans-isomerase is dependent on the phosphorylation state of the former. The interaction site was mapped to the unique phospho-Thr231-Pro232 motif, despite the presence of many other Thr/Ser-Pro phosphorylation sites in Tau and structural evidence that the interaction site does not significantly extend beyond those very two residues. We demonstrate here by NMR and fluorescence mapping that the Alzheimer's disease specific epitope centered around the phospho-Thr212-Pro213 motif is also an interaction site, and that the sole phospho-Thr-Pro motif is already sufficient for interaction. Because a detectable fraction of the Pro213 amide bond in the peptide centered around the phospho-Thr212-Pro213 motif is in the cis conformation, catalysis of the isomerization by the catalytic domain of Pin1 could be investigated via NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

16.
Proteins containing phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro motifs play key roles in numerous regulatory processes in the cell. The peptidyl prolyl cis/trans isomerase Pin1 specifically catalyzes the conformational transition of phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro motifs. Here we report the direct analysis of the thermodynamic properties of the interaction of the PPIase Pin1 with its substrate-analogue inhibitor Ac-Phe-D-Thr(PO3H2)-Pip-Nal-Gln-NH2 specifically targeted to the PPIase active site based on the combination of isothermal titration calorimetry and studies on inhibition of enzymatic activity of wt Pin1 and active site variants. Determination of the thermodynamic parameters revealed an enthalpically and entropically favored interaction characterized by binding enthalpy deltaH(ITC) of -6.3 +/- 0.1 kcal mol(-1) and a TdeltaS(ITC) of 4.1 +/- 0.1 kcal mol(-1). The resulting dissociation constant KD for binding of the peptidic inhibitor with 1.8 x 10(-8) M resembles the dissociation constant of a Pin1 substrate in the transition state, suggesting a transition state analogue conformation of the bound inhibitor. The strongly decreased affinity of Pin1 for ligand at increasing ionic strength implicates that the potential of bidentate binding of a substrate protein by the PPIase and the WW domain of Pin1 may be required to deploy improved efficiency and specificity of Pin1 under conditions of physiological ionic strength.  相似文献   

17.
Inhibitor-2 (I-2) is the most ancient protein that selectively recognizes type-1 protein phosphatase and is phosphorylated by CDK1-cyclinB during mitosis at Thr72 in a conserved PXTP site. Pin1 is a peptide prolyl cis/trans isomerase conserved among eukaryotes that specifically reacts with proteins phosphorylated at Ser/Thr-Pro sites. We tested phospho-T72-I-2 as a substrate for Pin1 and discovered that unphosphorylated I-2 bound Pin1 with micromolar affinity and phosphorylation of the PXTP site or truncation of I-2 reduced binding 10-fold. Ectopic Pin1 coprecipitated endogenous I-2 and ectopic I-2 coprecipitated endogenous Pin1, but only in the absence of detergents, which may account for the interaction not being detected previously. Endogenous I-2 and Pin1 colocalized in HeLa cells and showed nuclear-cytoplasmic redistribution in response to cell density, suggestive of their association in living cells. Recombinant Pin1 binding to different phosphoproteins in mitotic cell extracts was modulated by I-2, and binding to individual mitotic phosphoproteins was increased, decreased or unaffected by I-2, showing that I-2 allosterically modifies Pin1 specificity. This was confirmed by mutation of Ser16 to Ala in the Pin1 WW domain that eliminated I-2 binding and abrogated I-2 effects on Pin1 binding to different phosphoproteins. A S16E mutation to mimic Pin1 phosphorylation restored binding to both I-2 and phospho-T72-I-2, indicating that phosphorylation of both proteins governs their interaction. The results reveal a novel function for I-2, and suggest phosphorylation-dependent regulation of Pin1 specificity during entry and exit of mitosis, in other phases of the cell cycle, and in multiple cell signaling processes.  相似文献   

18.
Human Pin1 is a peptidyl prolyl cis/trans isomerase with a unique preference for phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro substrate motifs.Here we report that MCM3 (minichromosome maintenance complex component 3) is a novel target of Pin1. MCM3 interacts directly with the WW domain of Pin1. Proline-directed phosphorylation of MCM3 at S112 and T722 are crucial for the interaction with Pin1. MCM3 as a subunit of the minichromosome maintenance heterocomplex MCM2–7 is part of the pre-replication complex responsible for replication licensing and is implicated in the formation of the replicative helicase during progression of replication. Our data suggest that Pin1 coordinates phosphorylation-dependently MCM3 loading onto chromatin and its unloading from chromatin, thereby mediating S phase control.  相似文献   

19.
Pin1 is a peptidyl-prolyl isomerase consisting of a WW domain and a catalytic isomerase (PPIase) domain connected by a flexible linker. Pin1 recognizes phospho-Ser/Thr-Pro motifs in cell-signaling proteins, and is both a cancer and an Alzheimer's disease target. Here, we provide novel insight into the functional motions underlying Pin1 substrate interaction using nuclear magnetic resonance deuterium ((2)D) and carbon ((13)C) spin relaxation. Specifically, we compare Pin1 side-chain motions in the presence and absence of a known phosphopeptide substrate derived from the mitotic phosphatase Cdc25. Substrate interaction alters Pin1 side-chain motions on both the microsecond-millisecond (mus-ms) and picosecond-nanosecond (ps-ns) timescales. Alterations include loss of ps-ns flexibility along an internal conduit of hydrophobic residues connecting the catalytic site with the interdomain interface. These residues are conserved among Pin1 homologs; hence, their dynamics are likely important for the Pin1 mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Lippens G  Landrieu I  Smet C 《The FEBS journal》2007,274(20):5211-5222
Since its discovery 10 years ago, Pin1, a prolyl cis/trans isomerase essential for cell cycle progression, has been implicated in a large number of molecular processes related to human diseases, including cancer and Alzheimer's disease. Pin1 is made up of a WW interaction domain and a C-terminal catalytic subunit, and several high-resolution structures are available that have helped define its function. The enzymatic activity of Pin1 towards short peptides containing the pSer/Thr-Pro motif has been well documented, and we discuss the available evidence for the molecular mechanisms of its isomerase activity. We further focus on those studies that examine its cis/trans isomerase function using full-length protein substrates. The interpretation of this research has been further complicated by the observation that many of its pSer/Thr-Pro substrate motifs are located in natively unstructured regions of polypeptides, and are characterized by minor populations of the cis conformer. Finally, we review the data on the possibility of alternative modes of substrate binding and the complex role that Pin1 plays in the degradation of its substrates. After considering the available work, it seems that further analysis is required to determine whether binding or catalysis is the primary mechanism through which Pin1 affects cell cycle progression.  相似文献   

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