Bacterial Production of CDKL5 Catalytic Domain: Insights in Aggregation, Internal Translation and Phosphorylation Patterns

Author:

Colarusso Andrea1,Lauro Concetta1ORCID,Canè Luisa23,Cozzolino Flora12ORCID,Tutino Maria Luisa14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical Sciences, University of Naples Federico II, Complesso Universitario Monte S. Angelo, Via Cintia 4, 80126 Naples, Italy

2. CEINGE Advanced Biotechnologies, Via G. Salvatore 486, 80145 Naples, Italy

3. Department of Translational Medical Sciences, University of Naples Federico II, Via Sergio Pansini 5, 80131 Naples, Italy

4. Istituto Nazionale Biostrutture e Biosistemi I.N.B.B., Viale Medaglie D’Oro 305, 00136 Roma, Italy

Abstract

Cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5 (CDKL5) is a serine/threonine protein kinase involved in human brain development and functioning. Mutations in CDKL5, especially in its catalytic domain, cause a severe developmental condition named CDKL5 deficiency disorder. Nevertheless, molecular studies investigating the structural consequences of such mutations are still missing. The CDKL5 catalytic domain harbors different sites of post-translational modification, such as phosphorylations, but their role in catalytic activity, protein folding, and stability has not been entirely investigated. With this work, we describe the expression pattern of the CDKL5 catalytic domain in Escherichia coli demonstrating that it predominantly aggregates. However, the use of solubility tags, the lowering of the expression temperature, the manual codon optimization to overcome an internal translational start, and the incubation of the protein with K+ and MgATP allow the collection of a soluble catalytically active kinase. Interestingly, the resulting protein exhibits hypophosphorylation compared to its eukaryotic counterpart, proving that bacteria are a useful tool to achieve almost unmodified CDKL5. Posing questions about the CDKL5 autoactivation mechanism and the determinants for its stability, this research provides a valuable platform for comparative biophysical studies between bacterial and eukaryotic-expressed proteins, contributing to our understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders associated with CDKL5 dysfunction.

Funder

University of Pennsylvania Orphan Disease Center on behalf of the Loulou Foundation to MLT

Italian Parents’ Association “La fabbrica dei sogni 2—New developments for Rett syndrome”

Italian Parents’ Association “CONRETT ONLUS”

Publisher

MDPI AG

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