Disruption of the Zinc Finger Motifs in the Leishmania tarentolae LC-4 (=TbMP63) L-complex Editing Protein Affects the Stability of the L-complex

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Abstract

The uridine insertion/deletion editing complex, which we have termed the L-complex, is composed of at least 16 polypeptides stabilized entirely by protein-protein interactions. Three L-complex proteins contain zinc finger motifs that could be involved in these interactions. In Leishmania these proteins are labeled LC-1, LC-4, and LC-7b, and the orthologs in Trypanosoma brucei are labeled MP81, MP63, and MP42. Overexpression of TAP-tagged LC-4 in Leishmania tarentolae led to a partial localization of the protein in the L-complex together with the endogenous LC-4 protein, suggesting at least a dimeric organization. Disruption of zinc fingers 1 or 2 (ZnF-1 and ZnF-2) in the tagged LC-4 protein was performed by mutation of the two zinc-binding cysteines to glycines. Disruption of ZnF-1 led to a partial growth defect and a substantive breakdown of the L-complex, whereas disruption of ZnF-2 had no effect on cell growth and caused a partial breakdown of the L-complex. A close interaction of LC-4 with 2-4 proteins, including REL1 (RNA ligase) and LC-3, was suggested by chemical crosslinking and co-immunoprecipitation experiments. Our results suggest that both ZnF-1 and ZnF-2 in LC-4 play a role in protein-protein interactions and indicate that the LC-4 subcomplex may be required for formation or stability of the entire L-complex.

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Kang, X., Falick, A. M., Nelson, R. E., Gao, G., Rogers, K., Aphasizhev, R., & Simpson, L. (2004). Disruption of the Zinc Finger Motifs in the Leishmania tarentolae LC-4 (=TbMP63) L-complex Editing Protein Affects the Stability of the L-complex. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(6), 3893–3899. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M310185200

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