The Apo-structure of the Low Molecular Weight Protein-tyrosine Phosphatase A (MptpA) from Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Allows for Better Target-specific Drug Development
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) and protein-tyrosine kinases co-regulate cellular processes. In pathogenic bacteria, they are frequently exploited to act as key virulence factors for human diseases. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative organism of tuberculosis, secretes a low molecular weight PTP (LMW-PTP), MptpA, which is required for its survival upon infection of host macrophages. Although there is otherwise no sequence similarity of LMW-PTPs to other classes of PTPs, the phosphate binding loop (P-loop) CX(5)R and the loop containing a critical aspartic acid residue (D-loop), required for the catalytic activity, are well conserved. In most high molecular weight PTPs, ligand binding to the P-loop triggers a large conformational reorientation of the D-loop, in which it moves ∼10 Å, from an "open" to a "closed" conformation. Until now, there have been no ligand-free structures of LMW-PTPs described, and hence the dynamics of the D-loop have remained largely unknown for these PTPs. Here, we present a high resolution solution NMR structure of the free form of the MptpA LMW-PTP. In the absence of ligand and phosphate ions, the D-loop adopts an open conformation. Furthermore, we characterized the binding site of phosphate, a competitive inhibitor of LMW-PTPs, on MptpA and elucidated the involvement of both the P- and D-loop in phosphate binding. Notably, in LMW-PTPs, the phosphorylation status of two well conserved tyrosine residues, typically located in the D-loop, regulates the enzyme activity. PtkA, the kinase complementary to MptpA, phosphorylates these two tyrosine residues in MptpA. We characterized the MptpA-PtkA interaction by NMR spectroscopy to show that both the P- and D-loop form part of the binding interface.
Shikonin and Juglone Inhibit Low-Molecular-Weight Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase a (Mt-PTPa).
Sulyman A, Fulcher J, Crossley S, Fatokun A, Olorunniji F BioTech (Basel). 2023; 12(3).
PMID: 37754203 PMC: 10526854. DOI: 10.3390/biotech12030059.
MDiGest: A Python package for describing allostery from molecular dynamics simulations.
Maschietto F, Allen B, Kyro G, Batista V J Chem Phys. 2023; 158(21).
PMID: 37272574 PMC: 10769569. DOI: 10.1063/5.0140453.
Alphonse S, Djemil I, Piserchio A, Ghose R Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022; 119(26):e2201800119.
PMID: 35737836 PMC: 9245664. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2201800119.
MptpA Kinetics Enhanced by Allosteric Control of an Active Conformation.
Maschietto F, Zavala E, Allen B, Loria J, Batista V J Mol Biol. 2022; 434(17):167540.
PMID: 35339563 PMC: 10623291. DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2022.167540.
From infection niche to therapeutic target: the intracellular lifestyle of .
Rankine-Wilson L, Shapira T, Emani C, Av-Gay Y Microbiology (Reading). 2021; 167(4).
PMID: 33826491 PMC: 8289223. DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.001041.