Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins

Sirtuins are NAD+ dependent deacetylases involved in the regulation of diverse cellular processes and are conserved throughout phylogeny. Here we report about in vitro transphosphorylation of the only NAD+ dependent deacetylase (mDAC) present in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by eukaryotic...

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Main Authors: Ghanshyam Singh Yadav, Sandeep Kaur Ravala, Neha eMalhotra, Pradip K Chakraborti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2016.00677/full
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spelling doaj-bda123001e00446b9bb7108bdddb31ff2020-11-24T22:37:17ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2016-05-01710.3389/fmicb.2016.00677191359Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial SirtuinsGhanshyam Singh Yadav0Sandeep Kaur Ravala1Neha eMalhotra2Pradip K Chakraborti3CSIR-Institute of Microbial TechnologyCSIR-Institute of Microbial TechnologyCSIR-Institute of Microbial TechnologyCSIR-Institute of Microbial TechnologySirtuins are NAD+ dependent deacetylases involved in the regulation of diverse cellular processes and are conserved throughout phylogeny. Here we report about in vitro transphosphorylation of the only NAD+ dependent deacetylase (mDAC) present in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by eukaryotic-type Ser/Thr kinases, particularly PknA. The phosphorylated mDAC displayed decreased deacetylase activity compared to its unphosphorylated counterpart. Mass-spectrometric study identified seven phosphosites in mDAC; however, mutational analysis highlighted major contribution of Thr-214 for phosphorylation of the protein. In concordance to this observation, variants of mDAC substituting Thr-214 with either Ala (phosphoablated) or Glu (phosphomimic) exhibited significantly reduced deacetylase activity suggesting phosphorylation mediated control of enzymatic activity. To assess the role of phosphorylation towards functionality of mDAC, we opted for a sirtuin knock-out strain of Escherichia coli (dac), where interference of endogenous mycobacterial kinases could be excluded. The dac strain in nutrient deprived acetate medium exhibited compromised growth and complementation with mDAC reversed this phenotype. The phosphoablated or phosphomimic variant, on the other hand, was unable to restore the functionality of mDAC indicating the role of phosphorylation per se in the process. We further over-expressed mDAC or mDAC-T214A as His-tagged protein in Mycobacterium smegmatis, where endogenous eukaryotic-type Ser/Thr kinases are present. Anti-phosphothreonine antibody recognized both mDAC and mDAC-T214A proteins in western blotting. However, the extent of phosphorylation, as adjudged by scanning the band intensity; was significantly low in the mutant protein (mDAC-T214A) compared to that of the wild-type (mDAC). Furthermore, expression of PknA in the mDAC complemented dac strain was able to phosphorylate M. tuberculosis sirtuin. The growth profile of this culture in acetate medium was slow compared to that transformed with only vector. On the other hand, use of a kinase dead variant, PknA-K42N instead of PknA, did not display such behaviour, which again supported phosphorylation mediated control of mDAC protein. Thus, our results ostensibly render evidence for cross-talk between two distinct post-translational modifications, phosphorylation and deacetylation, in any bacteria. Bioinformatic analysis further indicated conservation of Thr-214 among different mDAC orthologs, thereby arguing the event as mycobacteria specific.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2016.00677/fullProtein phosphorylationSIRTUINSite-directed mutagenesisenzyme kineticsEukaryotic-type serine/threonine kinasesNAD+-dependent deacetylase
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ghanshyam Singh Yadav
Sandeep Kaur Ravala
Neha eMalhotra
Pradip K Chakraborti
spellingShingle Ghanshyam Singh Yadav
Sandeep Kaur Ravala
Neha eMalhotra
Pradip K Chakraborti
Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins
Frontiers in Microbiology
Protein phosphorylation
SIRTUIN
Site-directed mutagenesis
enzyme kinetics
Eukaryotic-type serine/threonine kinases
NAD+-dependent deacetylase
author_facet Ghanshyam Singh Yadav
Sandeep Kaur Ravala
Neha eMalhotra
Pradip K Chakraborti
author_sort Ghanshyam Singh Yadav
title Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins
title_short Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins
title_full Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins
title_fullStr Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins
title_full_unstemmed Phosphorylation Modulates Catalytic Activity of Mycobacterial Sirtuins
title_sort phosphorylation modulates catalytic activity of mycobacterial sirtuins
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Sirtuins are NAD+ dependent deacetylases involved in the regulation of diverse cellular processes and are conserved throughout phylogeny. Here we report about in vitro transphosphorylation of the only NAD+ dependent deacetylase (mDAC) present in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by eukaryotic-type Ser/Thr kinases, particularly PknA. The phosphorylated mDAC displayed decreased deacetylase activity compared to its unphosphorylated counterpart. Mass-spectrometric study identified seven phosphosites in mDAC; however, mutational analysis highlighted major contribution of Thr-214 for phosphorylation of the protein. In concordance to this observation, variants of mDAC substituting Thr-214 with either Ala (phosphoablated) or Glu (phosphomimic) exhibited significantly reduced deacetylase activity suggesting phosphorylation mediated control of enzymatic activity. To assess the role of phosphorylation towards functionality of mDAC, we opted for a sirtuin knock-out strain of Escherichia coli (dac), where interference of endogenous mycobacterial kinases could be excluded. The dac strain in nutrient deprived acetate medium exhibited compromised growth and complementation with mDAC reversed this phenotype. The phosphoablated or phosphomimic variant, on the other hand, was unable to restore the functionality of mDAC indicating the role of phosphorylation per se in the process. We further over-expressed mDAC or mDAC-T214A as His-tagged protein in Mycobacterium smegmatis, where endogenous eukaryotic-type Ser/Thr kinases are present. Anti-phosphothreonine antibody recognized both mDAC and mDAC-T214A proteins in western blotting. However, the extent of phosphorylation, as adjudged by scanning the band intensity; was significantly low in the mutant protein (mDAC-T214A) compared to that of the wild-type (mDAC). Furthermore, expression of PknA in the mDAC complemented dac strain was able to phosphorylate M. tuberculosis sirtuin. The growth profile of this culture in acetate medium was slow compared to that transformed with only vector. On the other hand, use of a kinase dead variant, PknA-K42N instead of PknA, did not display such behaviour, which again supported phosphorylation mediated control of mDAC protein. Thus, our results ostensibly render evidence for cross-talk between two distinct post-translational modifications, phosphorylation and deacetylation, in any bacteria. Bioinformatic analysis further indicated conservation of Thr-214 among different mDAC orthologs, thereby arguing the event as mycobacteria specific.
topic Protein phosphorylation
SIRTUIN
Site-directed mutagenesis
enzyme kinetics
Eukaryotic-type serine/threonine kinases
NAD+-dependent deacetylase
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2016.00677/full
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