Functions of the C-terminal domain of CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase. Effects of C-terminal deletions on enzyme activity, intracellular localization and phosphorylation potential

Author:

Cornell R B1,Kalmar G B1,Kay R J12,Johnson M A1,Sanghera J S13,Pelech S L13

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry and Department of Chemistry, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A-1S6

2. Terry Fox Laboratory, B. C. Cancer Research Centre, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V5Z 1L3

3. Biomedical Research Centre and Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia and Kinetek Biotechnology Corporation, Suite 500, 520 W. 6th Ave., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V5Z 1A1

Abstract

The role of the C-terminal domain of CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CT) was explored by the creation of a series of deletion mutations in rat liver cDNA, which were expressed in COS cells as a major protein component. Deletion of up to 55 amino acids from the C-terminus had no effect on the activity of the enzyme, its stimulation by lipid vesicles or on its intracellular distribution between soluble and membrane-bound forms. However, deletion of the C-terminal 139 amino acids resulted in a 90% decrease in activity, loss of response to lipid vesicles and a significant decrease in the fraction of membrane-bound enzyme. Identification of the domain that is phosphorylated in vivo was determined by analysis of 32P-labelled CT mutants and by chymotrypsin proteolysis of purified CT that was 32P-labelled in vivo. Phosphorylation was restricted to the C-terminal 52 amino acids (domain P) and occurred on multiple sites. CT phosphorylation in vitro was catalysed by casein kinase II, cell division control 2 kinase (cdc2 kinase), protein kinases C alpha and beta II, and glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3), but not by mitogen-activated kinase (MAP kinase). Casein kinase II phosphorylation was directed exclusively to Ser-362. The sites phosphorylated by cdc2 kinase and GSK-3 were restricted to several serines within three proline-rich motifs of domain P. Sites phosphorylated in vitro by protein kinase C, on the other hand, were distributed over the N-terminal catalytic as well as the C-terminal regulatory domain. The stoichiometry of phosphorylation catalysed by any of these kinases was less than 0.2 mol P/mol CT, and no effects on enzyme activity were detected. This study supports a tripartite structure for CT with an N-terminal catalytic domain and a C-terminal regulatory domain comprised of a membrane-binding domain (domain M) and a phosphorylation domain (domain P). It also identifies three kinases as potential regulators in vivo of CT, casein kinase II, cyclin-dependent kinase and GSK-3.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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