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1.
Trends Biochem Sci ; 45(3): 259-271, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31866305

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotic protein kinases (EPKs) catalyze the transfer of a phosphate group onto another protein in response to appropriate regulatory cues. In doing so, they provide a primary means for cellular information transfer. Consequently, EPKs play crucial roles in cell differentiation and cell-cycle progression, and kinase dysregulation is associated with numerous disease phenotypes including cancer. Nonnative cues for synthetically regulating kinases are thus much sought after, both for dissecting cell signaling pathways and for pharmaceutical development. In recent years advances in protein engineering and sequence analysis have led to new approaches for manipulating kinase activity, localization, and in some instances specificity. These tools have revealed fundamental principles of intracellular signaling and suggest paths forward for the design of therapeutic allosteric kinase regulators.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms/metabolism , Protein Engineering , Protein Kinases/metabolism , Allosteric Regulation , Eukaryota/enzymology , Humans , Neoplasms/pathology , Protein Kinases/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, Protein , Signal Transduction
2.
Sci Signal ; 11(555)2018 11 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30401787

ABSTRACT

Phosphoregulation, in which the addition of a negatively charged phosphate group modulates protein activity, enables dynamic cellular responses. To understand how new phosphoregulation might be acquired, we mutationally scanned the surface of a prototypical yeast kinase (Kss1) to identify potential regulatory sites. The data revealed a set of spatially distributed "hotspots" that might have coevolved with the active site and preferentially modulated kinase activity. By engineering simple consensus phosphorylation sites at these hotspots, we rewired cell signaling in yeast. Using the same approach with a homolog yeast mitogen-activated protein kinase, Hog1, we introduced new phosphoregulation that modified its localization and signaling dynamics. Beyond revealing potential use in synthetic biology, our findings suggest that the identified hotspots contribute to the diversity of natural allosteric regulatory mechanisms in the eukaryotic kinome and, given that some are mutated in cancers, understanding these hotspots may have clinical relevance to human disease.


Subject(s)
Allosteric Site , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Protein Engineering/methods , Protein Kinases/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Allosteric Regulation , Binding Sites , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutation , Osmotic Pressure , Phosphates , Phosphorylation , Protein Conformation , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Synthetic Biology
3.
Phys Biol ; 14(2): 025002, 2017 04 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28266924

ABSTRACT

Allosteric regulation provides a way to control protein activity at the time scale of milliseconds to seconds inside the cell. An ability to engineer synthetic allosteric systems would be of practical utility for the development of novel biosensors, creation of synthetic cell signaling pathways, and design of small molecule pharmaceuticals with regulatory impact. To this end, we outline a general approach-termed rational engineering of allostery at conserved hotspots (REACH)-to introduce novel regulation into a protein of interest by exploiting latent allostery that has been hard-wired by evolution into its structure. REACH entails the use of statistical coupling analysis (SCA) to identify 'allosteric hotspots' on protein surfaces, the development and implementation of experimental assays to test hotspots for functionality, and a toolkit of allosteric modulators to impinge on endogenous cellular circuitry. REACH can be broadly applied to rewire cellular processes to respond to novel inputs.


Subject(s)
Allosteric Regulation , Evolution, Molecular , Proteins/chemistry , Signal Transduction , Models, Molecular
5.
Metab Eng ; 25: 238-47, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25073011

ABSTRACT

D-xylonate is a potential platform chemical which can be produced by engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. In order to address production constraints in more detail, we analysed the role of lactone ring opening in single cells and populations. Both D-xylono-γ-lactone and D-xylonate were produced when the Caulobacter crescentus xylB (D-xylose dehydrogenase) was expressed in S. cerevisiae, with or without co-expression of xylC (D-xylonolactonase), as seen by (1)H NMR. XylC facilitated rapid opening of the lactone and more D-xylonate was initially produced than in its absence. Using in vivo(1)H NMR analysis of cell extracts, culture media and intact cells we observed that the lactone and linear forms of D-xylonic acid were produced, accumulated intracellularly, and partially exported within 15-60min of D-xylose provision. During single-cell analysis of cells expressing the pH sensitive fluorescent probe pHluorin, pHluorin fluorescence was gradually lost from the cells during D-xylonate production, as expected for cells with decreasing intracellular pH. However, in the presence of D-xylose, only 9% of cells expressing xylB lost pHluorin fluorescence within 4.5h, whereas 99% of cells co-expressing xylB and xylC lost fluorescence, a large proportion of which also lost vitality, during this interval. Loss of vitality in the presence of D-xylose was correlated to the extracellular pH, but fluorescence was lost from xylB and xylC expressing cells regardless of the extracellular condition.


Subject(s)
Metabolic Flux Analysis/methods , Models, Biological , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Sugar Acids/metabolism , Xylosidases/metabolism , Computer Simulation , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology
7.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 79(24): 7569-82, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24038690

ABSTRACT

Organic acids derived from engineered microbes can replace fossil-derived chemicals in many applications. Fungal hosts are preferred for organic acid production because they tolerate lignocellulosic hydrolysates and low pH, allowing economic production and recovery of the free acid. However, cell death caused by cytosolic acidification constrains productivity. Cytosolic acidification affects cells asynchronously, suggesting that there is an underlying cell-to-cell heterogeneity in acid productivity and/or in resistance to toxicity. We used fluorescence microscopy to investigate the relationship between enzyme concentration, cytosolic pH, and viability at the single-cell level in Saccharomyces cerevisiae engineered to synthesize xylonic acid. We found that cultures producing xylonic acid accumulate cells with cytosolic pH below 5 (referred to here as "acidified"). Using live-cell time courses, we found that the probability of acidification was related to the initial levels of xylose dehydrogenase and sharply increased from 0.2 to 0.8 with just a 60% increase in enzyme abundance (Hill coefficient, >6). This "switch-like" relationship likely results from an enzyme level threshold above which the produced acid overwhelms the cell's pH buffering capacity. Consistent with this hypothesis, we showed that expression of xylose dehydrogenase from a chromosomal locus yields ∼20 times fewer acidified cells and ∼2-fold more xylonic acid relative to expression of the enzyme from a plasmid with variable copy number. These results suggest that strategies that further reduce cell-to-cell heterogeneity in enzyme levels could result in additional gains in xylonic acid productivity. Our results demonstrate a generalizable approach that takes advantage of the cell-to-cell variation of a clonal population to uncover causal relationships in the toxicity of engineered pathways.


Subject(s)
Carboxylic Acids/metabolism , Carboxylic Acids/toxicity , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzymology , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Carbohydrate Dehydrogenases/metabolism , Cytosol/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Microbial Viability/drug effects , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/chemistry , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/drug effects
8.
PLoS One ; 8(3): e56544, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23554854

ABSTRACT

Cell signaling systems transmit information by post-translationally modifying signaling proteins, often via phosphorylation. While thousands of sites of phosphorylation have been identified in proteomic studies, the vast majority of sites have no known function. Assigning functional roles to the catalog of uncharacterized phosphorylation sites is a key research challenge. Here we present a general approach to address this challenge and apply it to a prototypical signaling pathway, the pheromone response pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The pheromone pathway includes a mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade activated by a G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR). We used published mass spectrometry-based proteomics data to identify putative sites of phosphorylation on pheromone pathway components, and we used evolutionary conservation to assign priority to a list of candidate MAPK regulatory sites. We made targeted alterations in those sites, and measured the effects of the mutations on pheromone pathway output in single cells. Our work identified six new sites that quantitatively tuned system output. We developed simple computational models to find system architectures that recapitulated the quantitative phenotypes of the mutants. Our results identify a number of putative phosphorylation events that contribute to adjust the input-output relationship of this model eukaryotic signaling system. We believe this combined approach constitutes a general means not only to reveal modification sites required to turn a pathway on and off, but also those required for more subtle quantitative effects that tune pathway output. Our results suggest that relatively small quantitative influences from individual phosphorylation events endow signaling systems with plasticity that evolution may exploit to quantitatively tailor signaling outcomes.


Subject(s)
MAP Kinase Signaling System/physiology , Pheromones/metabolism , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/physiology , Phosphorylation/physiology
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(50): 20265-70, 2011 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22114196

ABSTRACT

Although the proteins comprising many signaling systems are known, less is known about their numbers per cell. Existing measurements often vary by more than 10-fold. Here, we devised improved quantification methods to measure protein abundances in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae pheromone response pathway, an archetypical signaling system. These methods limited variation between independent measurements of protein abundance to a factor of two. We used these measurements together with quantitative models to identify and investigate behaviors of the pheromone response system sensitive to precise abundances. The difference between the maximum and basal signaling output (dynamic range) of the pheromone response MAPK cascade was strongly sensitive to the abundance of Ste5, the MAPK scaffold protein, and absolute system output depended on the amount of Fus3, the MAPK. Additional analysis and experiment suggest that scaffold abundance sets a tradeoff between maximum system output and system dynamic range, a prediction supported by recent experiments.


Subject(s)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Systems Biology , Fluorescence , Immunoblotting , MAP Kinase Signaling System , Models, Biological , Pheromones/metabolism
10.
Yeast ; 27(7): 423-30, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20162536

ABSTRACT

Here we present a set of resources (bacterial expression plasmids and antibodies) for the interrogation of proteins involved in yeast MAPK signalling. We constructed bacterial protein expression plasmids for 25 proteins involved in MAPK signalling in budding yeast. From these constructs we expressed and purified proteins and generated rabbit polyclonal antibodies against 13 proteins in the pheromone MAPK pathway. We verified the specificity of the antibodies and employed them to follow pathway proteins in cells stimulated with pheromone. We show that these reagents can be used to detect pheromone-induced post-translational modifications and changes in the oligomeric state of pathway proteins. In addition to recognizing their target proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, these antibodies allow the detection of predicted orthologues in the distant evolutionary relatives Kluyveromyces lactis and Schizosaccharomyces pombe. These antibodies are new tools for investigating MAPK signalling in model yeast species and may be useful for studying MAPK signalling in higher eukaryotes.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Fungal/immunology , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Pheromones , Signal Transduction , Yeasts/physiology , Animals , Antibodies, Fungal/isolation & purification , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Fungal Proteins/isolation & purification , Gene Expression , Genetic Vectors , Kluyveromyces/metabolism , Kluyveromyces/physiology , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/immunology , Plasmids , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Rabbits , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/immunology , Recombinant Proteins/isolation & purification , Schizosaccharomyces/metabolism , Schizosaccharomyces/physiology , Yeasts/metabolism
11.
Nat Methods ; 4(12): 1011-3, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17982460

ABSTRACT

We present general means to greatly increase the sensitivity of antibody-based assays. Augmentation relies on a 'tadpole' protein-DNA chimera whose protein moiety binds most classes of mammalian antibodies but not avian immunoglobulin Y (IgY). We used this tadpole in affinity capture assays followed by real-time PCR to quantify numerous molecules, including prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in human serum, with great sensitivity and accuracy.


Subject(s)
Immunoassay/methods , Microchemistry/methods , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Prostate-Specific Antigen/analysis , Prostate-Specific Antigen/immunology , DNA/immunology , DNA-Binding Proteins/immunology , Humans , Recombinant Proteins/immunology , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
12.
Nature ; 437(7059): 699-706, 2005 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16170311

ABSTRACT

Here we studied the quantitative behaviour and cell-to-cell variability of a prototypical eukaryotic cell-fate decision system, the mating pheromone response pathway in yeast. We dissected and measured sources of variation in system output, analysing thousands of individual, genetically identical cells. Only a small proportion of total cell-to-cell variation is caused by random fluctuations in gene transcription and translation during the response ('expression noise'). Instead, variation is dominated by differences in the capacity of individual cells to transmit signals through the pathway ('pathway capacity') and to express proteins from genes ('expression capacity'). Cells with high expression capacity express proteins at a higher rate and increase in volume more rapidly. Our results identify two mechanisms that regulate cell-to-cell variation in pathway capacity. First, the MAP kinase Fus3 suppresses variation at high pheromone levels, while the MAP kinase Kss1 enhances variation at low pheromone levels. Second, pathway capacity and expression capacity are negatively correlated, suggesting a compensatory mechanism that allows cells to respond more precisely to pheromone in the presence of a large variation in expression capacity.


Subject(s)
Cell Lineage , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/cytology , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Signal Transduction , CDC28 Protein Kinase, S cerevisiae/metabolism , Cell Cycle/physiology , Cell Lineage/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal/drug effects , Mating Factor , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/genetics , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Models, Biological , Peptides/pharmacology , Pheromones/pharmacology , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/drug effects , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Stochastic Processes
13.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1576(1-2): 30-8, 2002 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12031481

ABSTRACT

The DNA-binding protein GerE acts as both a repressor and an activator of transcription of genes transcribed by sigma(K)-RNA polymerase (RNA-P) during the later stages of endospore formation in Bacillus subtilis. GerE represses transcription from the sigK promoter, and activates transcription from other promoters, including cotC and cotX. Two different regions of GerE (AR1 and AR2) are required for activation of cotC and cotX, respectively. We used a genetic screen to seek mutations that would define additional regions of GerE required for promoter activation. We found that a substitution of proline for leucine at position 12 of GerE (L12P) decreased cotC promoter activity but did not interfere with GerE-dependent repression of the sigK promoter or with activation of the cotX promoter in vivo. We also found that the L12P substitution had no effect on binding to cotC in vitro. However, the L12P-substituted GerE failed to stimulate cotC transcription in vitro, whereas it stimulated transcription from PcotX. The crystal structure of GerE suggests that L12 is not exposed on the surface of the molecule. Therefore, we propose that the L12P substitution reduces the flexibility of the N-terminal arm, preventing an interaction of AR1 with RNA-P that is essential for activation of the cotC promoter.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Sigma Factor , Alleles , Amino Acid Substitution , DNA Footprinting , Dimerization , Models, Molecular , Mutation , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Transcription, Genetic
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