Han Seungil, Tainer John A
Department of Molecular Biology, Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA.
Int J Med Microbiol. 2002 Feb;291(6-7):523-9. doi: 10.1078/1438-4221-00162.
ADP-ribosylation is a widely occurring and biologically critical covalent chemical modification process in pathogenic mechanisms, intracellular signaling systems, DNA repair, and cell division. The reaction is catalyzed by ADP-ribosyltransferases, which transfer the ADP-ribose moiety of NAD to a target protein with nicotinamide release. A family of bacterial toxins and eukaryotic enzymes has been termed the mono-ADP-ribosyltransferases, in distinction to the poly-ADP-ribosyltransferases, which catalyze the addition of multiple ADP-ribose groups to the carboxyl terminus of eukaryotic nucleoproteins. Despite the limited primary sequence homology among the different ADP-ribosyltransferases, a central cleft bearing the NAD-binding pocket formed by the two perpendicular beta-sheet cores has been remarkably conserved between bacterial toxins and eukaryotic mono- and poly-ADP-ribosyltransferases. The majority of bacterial toxins and eukaryotic mono-ADP-ribosyltransferases are characterized by conserved His and catalytic Glu residues. In contrast, diphtheria toxin, Pseudomonas exotoxin A, and eukaryotic poly-ADP-ribosytransferases are characterized by conserved Arg and catalytic Glu residues. Structural and mutagenic studies of the NAD-binding core of a binary toxin and a C3-like toxin identified an ARTT motif (ADP-ribosylating turn-turn motif) that is implicated in substrate specificity and recognition. Here we apply structure-based sequence alignment and comparative structural analyses of all known structures of ADP-ribosyltransfeases to suggest that this ARTT motif is functionally important in many ADP-ribosylating enzymes that bear a NAD-binding cleft as characterized by conserved Arg and catalytic Glu residues. Overall, structure-based sequence analysis reveals common core structures and conserved active sites of ADP-ribosyltransferases to support similar NAD-binding mechanisms but differing mechanisms of target protein binding via sequence variations within the ARTT motif structural framework. Thus, we propose here that the ARTT motif represents an experimentally testable general recognition motif region for many ADP-ribosyltransferases and thereby potentially provides a unified structural understanding of substrate recognition in ADP-ribosylation processes.
ADP核糖基化是一种广泛存在且在致病机制、细胞内信号系统、DNA修复和细胞分裂中具有生物学关键意义的共价化学修饰过程。该反应由ADP核糖基转移酶催化,这些酶将NAD的ADP核糖部分转移到靶蛋白上并释放烟酰胺。与催化将多个ADP核糖基团添加到真核核蛋白羧基末端的聚ADP核糖基转移酶不同,一类细菌毒素和真核酶被称为单ADP核糖基转移酶。尽管不同的ADP核糖基转移酶之间一级序列同源性有限,但由两个垂直的β折叠核心形成的带有NAD结合口袋的中央裂隙在细菌毒素与真核单ADP核糖基转移酶和聚ADP核糖基转移酶之间显著保守。大多数细菌毒素和真核单ADP核糖基转移酶的特征是具有保守的组氨酸和催化性谷氨酸残基。相比之下,白喉毒素、铜绿假单胞菌外毒素A和真核聚ADP核糖基转移酶的特征是具有保守的精氨酸和催化性谷氨酸残基。对一种二元毒素和一种C3样毒素的NAD结合核心的结构和诱变研究确定了一个ARTT基序(ADP核糖基化转转基序),该基序与底物特异性和识别有关。在此,我们应用基于结构的序列比对以及对ADP核糖基转移酶所有已知结构的比较结构分析,表明这个ARTT基序在许多带有以保守精氨酸和催化性谷氨酸残基为特征的NAD结合裂隙的ADP核糖基化酶中具有功能重要性。总体而言,基于结构的序列分析揭示了ADP核糖基转移酶的共同核心结构和保守活性位点,以支持相似的NAD结合机制,但通过ARTT基序结构框架内的序列变异存在不同的靶蛋白结合机制。因此,我们在此提出,ARTT基序代表了许多ADP核糖基转移酶的一个可通过实验验证的通用识别基序区域,从而潜在地为ADP核糖基化过程中的底物识别提供统一的结构理解。