| Literature DB >> 27669326 |
Samuel H Henager1, Nam Chu1, Zan Chen1, David Bolduc1, Daniel R Dempsey1, Yousang Hwang1, James Wells2, Philip A Cole1.
Abstract
Expressed protein ligation is a valuable method for protein semisynthesis that involves the reaction of recombinant protein C-terminal thioesters with N-terminal cysteine (N-Cys)-containing peptides, but the requirement of a Cys residue at the ligation junction can limit the utility of this method. Here we employ subtiligase variants to efficiently ligate Cys-free peptides to protein thioesters. Using this method, we have more accurately determined the effect of C-terminal phosphorylation on the tumor suppressor protein PTEN.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27669326 PMCID: PMC5088058 DOI: 10.1038/nmeth.4004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Methods ISSN: 1548-7091 Impact factor: 28.547
Figure 1Subtiligase-catalyzed expressed protein ligation. (a) Schematic showing the intein-mediated generation of a protein thioester followed by ligation via native chemical ligation (NCL) or subtiligase. (b) Subtiligase is known to interact with 4 residues (P4 – P1) N-terminal to and 2 residues (P1′ – P2′) C-terminal to the ligation site. (c) Time-course analysis of a subtiligase-catalyzed ligation between G76Y ubiquitin thioester (P4 P1 = LY) and peptide 1 (P1′ P2′ = GL, see Supplementary Table 3). MW, molecular weight markers. (d) r-PTEN, consisting of residues 1 – 377 of PTEN, was ligated to a 25-mer peptide corresponding to residues 378 – 402 (tetra-phosphorylated 4p-tail or non-phosphorylated np-tail, see Supplementary Table 3) and also containing a biotin attached to the C-terminal Lys sidechain. (e) SDS-PAGE analysis of the results of 4-hour ligations between r-PTEN and either the tetra-phosphorylated or non-phosphorylated tail peptides. MW, molecular weight markers. Ligations with the tetra-phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated tails proceeded to ~30% and ~50% completion, respectively, possibly indicating that pSer380 in the P3′ position may interfere with the ligation reaction.
Figure 2Y379-4p-PTEN can be used as a standard to quantify PTEN phosphorylation in cell culture and shows lower activity and a more closed conformation compared to C379-4p-PTEN. (a) Representative Western blots showing a decrease in PTEN phosphorylation following treatment with a CK2 inhibitor. Fraction phosphorylated: Untreated, 0.72 ± 0.06; Treated, 0.33 ± 0.09 (n = 5 biological replicates, p = 0.0071, Student's t-test). Note that it has previously been shown that phosphorylation can stabilize cellular PTEN[20], explaining the reduction in total PTEN after CK2 inhibition. (b) Activity of t-, Y379-n-, C379-4p-, and Y379-4p-PTEN toward 160 μM soluble di-C6 PIP3 with 60 mM or 200 mM NaCl. Values are the averages of 2 replicates and error bars represent the span of measurements. (c) Illustration of the open and closed conformations of PTEN and the change in accessibility of the phosphorylation sites to alkaline phosphatase. Red circles indicate phosphorylated residues. Cat., catalytic domain; C2, C2 domain; AP, alkaline phosphatase. (d) Y379C-4p-PTEN is more resistant to treatment with alkaline phosphatase than C379-4p-PTEN. Data are the average of two replicates for each PTEN construct. Representative Western blots show the decrease in phosphorylation with longer phosphatase treatment for both PTEN variants. C379-4p-PTEN half-life = 9.0 ± 2.2 min; Y379-4p-PTEN half-life = 112.1 ± 24.5 min (n = 2, p = 0.0273, Student's t-test).