| Literature DB >> 31598803 |
Ruth Hendus-Altenburger1, Catarina B Fernandes1, Katrine Bugge1, Micha B A Kunze1, Wouter Boomsma2, Birthe B Kragelund3.
Abstract
Phosphorylation is one of the main regulators of cellular signaling typically occurring in flexible parts of folded proteins and in intrinsically disordered regions. It can have distinct effects on the chemical environment as well as on the structural properties near the modification site. Secondary chemical shift analysis is the main NMR method for detection of transiently formed secondary structure in intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) and the reliability of the analysis depends on an appropriate choice of random coil model. Random coil chemical shifts and sequence correction factors were previously determined for an Ac-QQXQQ-NH2-peptide series with X being any of the 20 common amino acids. However, a matching dataset on the phosphorylated states has so far only been incompletely determined or determined only at a single pH value. Here we extend the database by the addition of the random coil chemical shifts of the phosphorylated states of serine, threonine and tyrosine measured over a range of pH values covering the pKas of the phosphates and at several temperatures (www.bio.ku.dk/sbinlab/randomcoil). The combined results allow for accurate random coil chemical shift determination of phosphorylated regions at any pH and temperature, minimizing systematic biases of the secondary chemical shifts. Comparison of chemical shifts using random coil sets with and without inclusion of the phosphoryl group, revealed under/over estimations of helicity of up to 33%. The expanded set of random coil values will improve the reliability in detection and quantification of transient secondary structure in phosphorylation-modified IDPs.Entities:
Keywords: IDP; NMR; PTM; Phosphorylation; Post translational modification; Random coil; Secondary chemical shift analysis; Secondary structure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31598803 PMCID: PMC6875518 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-019-00283-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol NMR ISSN: 0925-2738 Impact factor: 2.835
Fig. 2Temperature and pH dependence of the random coil chemical shifts of the Ac-QQXQQ-NH2 phosphopeptides. a Temperature dependence of the chemical shifts of pSer, pThr and pTyr recorded at pH 6.5. Random coil chemical shifts assigned at 25 °C were subtracted from the shifts recorded at the other temperatures to allow the different nuclei to be presented together. Lines represent the best linear fit to the change in chemical shifts, from which the temperature coefficients were extracted. b Temperature coefficients of the amide protons of the phosphopeptides at pH 6.5 (pSer, pThr, pTyr) and pH 5.0 (pSer, pThr). c3JHNHα coupling constants as a function of pH for pSer, pThr and pTyr. Missing bars are either due to decoupling or severe peak overlap. d The pH dependence of the chemical shifts of pSer, pThr, and pTyr determined in a titration series from pH 4.0 to 8.0 at 5 °C
Fig. 1NMR spectra of the Ac-QQXQQ-NH2 phosphopeptides. The CSs were assigned from combining a 2D TOCSY (black) and ROESY (red), b1H–15N HSQC, c1H–13C HSQC spectra. d ROE patterns for Ac-QQpXQQ-NH2 phosphopeptides (pH 6.5, 5 °C). The intensities of the ROEs are indicated by the height of the black bars
Random coil CSs at pH 6.5 and 5°C
| δRC (ppm) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cα | Cβ | C′ | N | HN | Hα | |
| Ser | 58.60 | 63.71 | 174.80 | 117.63 | 8.59 | 4.44 |
| Thr | 62.15 | 69.88 | 174.65 | 116.38 | 8.41 | 4.34 |
| Tyr | 57.97 | 38.65 | 175.77 | 121.79 | 8.40 | 4.59 |
| pSer | 58.24 | 65.73 | 174.77 | 118.87 | 9.13 | 4.44 |
| pThr | 62.99 | 72.45 | 174.57 | 119.10 | 9.09 | 4.25 |
| pTyr | 57.99 | 38.70 | 175.79 | 121.94 | 8.34 | 4.60 |
Random coil CSs of the fully protonated and fully deprotonated phosphorylated residues at 5 °C
| Ka | Cα | Cβ | C′ | N | HN | Hα | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pSer | 9.76 × 10−7 6.01 | δHA | 57.61 | 66.53 | 174.06 | 116.94 | 8.81 | 4.52 |
| δA | 58.43 | 65.46 | 174.98 | 119.49 | 9.24 | 4.41 | ||
| δA − δHA | 0.82 | − 1.07 | 0.92 | 2.55 | 0.43 | − 0.11 | ||
| pThr | 5.00 × 10−7 6.30 | δHA | 61.83 | 73.99 | 174.06 | 115.94 | 8.62 | 4.41 |
| δA | 63.52 | 71.72 | 174.79 | 121.10 | 9.40 | 4.17 | ||
| δA − δHA | 1.69 | − 2.27 | 0.73 | 5.16 | 0.79 | − 0.24 | ||
| pTyr | 1.47 × 10−6 5.83 | δHA | 57.91 | 38.76 | 175.61 | 121.80 | 8.40 | 4.60 |
| δA | 58.00 | 38.69 | 175.79 | 121.95 | 8.32 | 4.59 | ||
| δA − δHA | 0.09 | − 0.07 | 0.18 | 0.15 | − 0.08 | − 0.01 |
Glutamine derived sequence correction factors at pH 6.5, 5 °C
| Cα | Cβ | C′ | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | D | A | B | C | D | A | B | C | D | |
| pSer | − 0.30 | 0.18 | − 0.16 | − 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.08 | − 0.18 | − 0.06 | − 0.14 | 0.25 | 0.00 | 0.12 |
| pThr | − 0.30 | − 0.04 | − 0.10 | 0.06 | 0.08 | 0.21 | 0.00 | − 0.03 | − 0.37 | 0.07 | − 0.13 | 0.10 |
| pTyr | 0.26 | 0.04 | − 0.40 | 0.13 | − 0.15 | − 0.51 | 0.08 | − 0.02 | − 0.03 | − 0.25 | − 0.61 | 0.05 |
‘A’ is the sequence correction factor obtained by subtracting the CS of Q1 of the Ac-QQQQQ-NH2 peptide from that of the Ac-QQXQQ-NH2 peptides. ‘B’, ‘C’ and ‘D’ correspond to the differences for Q2, Q4, and Q5, respectively
CSs of phosphorylated proteins available in the BMRB and used in this study
| Protein | Phosphorylation sites (kinase) | BMRB |
|---|---|---|
| Na+/H+ exchanger 1 (NHE1), disordered distal tail | Ser693, Ser723, Ser726, Ser771, Thr779, Ser785 (MAP kinase ERK2) | 26755 27812 (Hendus-Altenburger et al. |
| Kinase inducible transactivation (KID) domain of the transcription factor CREB | Ser133 (Protein kinase A, PKA) | 6784 6788 (Radhakrishnan et al. |
| Regulatory region of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) | Ser660, Ser700, Ser712, Ser737, Ser753, Ser768, Ser795, Ser813 (Protein kinase A, PKA) | 15336 15340 (Baker et al. |
| Transcriptional regulator protein Ash1 | Ser424, Ser426, Thr429, Ser442, Thr450, Ser452, Ser455, Ser465, Ser469, Ser490 (cyclin A/Cdk2) | 26719 26720 (Martin et al. |
| Activation domain of the transcription factor Elk-1 | Thr337, Thr354, Thr364, Thr369, Ser384, Ser390, Thr418, Ser423 (MAP kinase ERK2) | 26762 26786 (Mylona et al. |
| Disordered cytosolic domain CD79a of the B-cell receptor | Tyr182, Tyr188, Tyr199, Tyr210 (Src family kinase Fyn) | 19644 19648 (Rosenlow et al. |
Fig. 3Difference in secondary chemical shift prediction with and without the reference chemical shifts and correction factors for phosphorylated residues. Secondary Cα chemical shifts (SCS Cα) from the predictor lacking the reference chemical shifts and correction factors for phosphorylated residues (grey) and with these included in the updated predictor (black) of the following phosphorylated proteins a NHE1, b KID domain, c R-region of CFTR, d Ash1, e Elk1, transactivation domain and f CD79a. Subtraction of the SCS of the previous predictor from the SCS of the updated predictor (SCSnew − SCSold) are shown for each phosphorylated region in the highlighted boxes. g Difference for pSer, pThr and pTyr, averaged over all analyzed sites. Colored bars, dots and letters indicate the phosphorylated residues. Black stars indicate unassigned residues
Fig. 4Effect of phosphorylation on secondary structure in a selected set of IDPs. Secondary Cα chemical shifts (SCS Cα) for the unphosphorylated and phosphorylated states are compared for a the disordered distal tail of NHE1, b R-region of CFTR, c Elk-1, and d CD79a. Boxes indicate regions with structural modulation. Colored dots indicate the phosphorylated residues (red/blue/yellow for pSer/pThr/pTyr respectively). Black stars indicate unassigned residues