Deciphering the Arginine-Binding preferences at the Substrate-Binding groove of Ser/Thr kinases by computational surface mapping

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Abstract

Protein kinases are key signaling enzymes that catalyze the transfer of γ-phosphate from an ATP molecule to a phospho-accepting residue in the substrate. Unraveling the molecular features that govern the preference of kinases for particular residues flanking the phosphoacceptor is important for understanding kinase specificities toward their substrates and for designing substrate-like peptidic inhibitors. We applied ANCHORSmap, a new fragment-based computational approach for mapping amino acid side chains on protein surfaces, to predict and characterize the preference of kinases toward Arginine binding. We focus on positions P-2 and P-5, commonly occupied by Arginine (Arg) in substrates of basophilic Ser/Thr kinases. The method accurately identified all the P-2/P-5 Arg binding sites previously determined by X-ray crystallography and produced Arg preferences that corresponded to those experimentally found by peptide arrays. The predicted Arg-binding positions and their associated pockets were analyzed in terms of shape, physicochemical properties, amino acid composition, and in-silico mutagenesis, providing structural rationalization for previously unexplained trends in kinase preferences toward Arg moieties. This methodology sheds light on several kinases that were described in the literature as having non-trivial preferences for Arg, and provides some surprising departures from the prevailing views regarding residues that determine kinase specificity toward Arg. In particular, we found that the preference for a P-5 Arg is not necessarily governed by the 170/230 acidic pair, as was previously assumed, but by several different pairs of acidic residues, selected from positions 133, 169, and 230 (PKA numbering). The acidic residue at position 230 serves as a pivotal element in recognizing Arg from both the P-2 and P-5 positions. © 2011 Ben-Shimon, Niv.

Figures

  • Table 1. Reproducing the Arg-binding positions determined by X-ray crystallography at the 22/5 site.
  • Figure 1. ANCHORSmap correctly identifies the Arg-binding positions at the 22/5 site that were determined crystallographically. Kinases are shown in gray surface representation, ATP is shown as light-brown spheres. Arg mean anchoring spots are shown as isolated spheres according to the position of the Arg Cf atom and lowest RMSD positions are shown as yellow sticks. Selected rankings of mean positions are shown as green numbers. The four experimentally determined bound peptides are colored in cyan, blue, orange and magenta, for the PKB (1O6K), PKA (1JLU), PAK4 (2Q0N) and PIM1 (2BIL) kinases respectively. The peptides are presented from the most N-terminal-anchored Arg position. P25, P23 and P22 Arg residues are shown as sticks. (A) An overview of the kinase surface of PKB with top 20 mean anchoring spots and a superposition of all four peptides. The brown rectangle is a magnification of the 22/5 site (red ellipsoid) region. The 22 and 25 subsites are shown as dashed black ellipsoids. (B) Experimental vs. ANCHORSmap-identified Arg-binding positions. The complexes were superimposed on the unbound kinases (gray surface). For PIM1, in addition to the mean position (green sphere), all Arg positions constituting the mean position are also shown as small spheres colored according to energetic scale from red (214.7 Kcal/mol) to cyan (24.2 Kcal/mol). (C) Distribution of the Arg predictions (gray spheres) between the 22 and 25 subsites. The predicted and the experimental Arg positions of PAK4 are colored orange. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288.g001
  • Table 2. Predicted Arg-binding positions in the -2/5 site correspond to SCSs.
  • Figure 2. Unbound conformation of position 170 for several kinases. The structure of the PKB-peptide complex is shown in cyan stick representation. The mean anchoring spots detected for the unbound structure of PKB (3D0E) with a native (orange stick) or bound-like (cyan stick) conformation of position 170, are shown in orange and cyan CPK, respectively. The unbound conformation of position 170 for all the other kinases listed in Table 2 is colored red. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288.g002
  • Figure 3. DG values calculated for Arg at the 22/5 site in comparison to random Arg-binding positions. The random Arg DG distribution is shown as orange columns and the DG values obtained for Arg at the 22/5 site for the 10 kinases analyzed in this study are marked with red and green arrows for the group of binder and non-binder kinases, respectively. For PDK1, no solution was detected. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288.g003
  • Figure 4. Predicted Arg-binding positions in the major binding groove of PKC isomers. The N and C lobes of each isomer (gray ribbon) were superimposed independently on the structure of the PKA-PKI complex (1ATP). (A) Viewing the predicted positions with respect to the PKI peptide. PKI (black) is presented from positions P23 to P+3 and the P22 and P+2 positions are emphasized in orange. The predicted Arg-binding positions (spheres that represent the Arg Cf atom) of the four PKC isomers, alpha, betaII, iota and theta, are colored purple, cyan, blue and green, respectively. (B,C) Examples of the involvement of residues 82–84 on helix aC in Arg binding. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288.g004
  • Figure 5. Correspondence between calculated DGs for Arg at the 22 and 25 subsites and their SCSs. Kinases for which the SCS contains (or does not contain) Arg at the investigated substrate positions are colored orange (gray). Mixed coloring represents the exceptional case of PKB which uses P25 Arg to bind at the 22 subsite. (A,B) The calculated DG values of Arg at the 25 and 22 subsites, respectively. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288.g005
  • Figure 6. Key positions composing the 22/5 site of several kinases. Residues at positions: 129, 133, 169, 170, 204, 230, 236 and the backbone of position 234 are presented. For clarity, hydrophobic amino acids: Tyr, Trp, Ile and Pro are colored orange. Carbonyl and polar uncharged amino acids: Thr, Ser, Asn and also Gly are colored green. Negatively charged (Asp, Glu) and positively charged (Arg) amino acids are colored red and blue, respectively. Experimentally deduced H-bonds are shown as dotted gray lines. Predicted (panels A,B,D,E and F) and experimental (panels A and D) Arg-binding positions are colored in cyan and magenta respectively. For kinases for which an experimental Arg-binding position exists, the presented solution is of the lowest RMSD; otherwise, the lowest energy prediction in each subsite is presented. The table summarizes the key residue contents of all five kinases. (A) Viewing key residues at the 22/5 site of the PKA/PKI complex (1ATP). The PKI peptide is colored in cyan. (B) The predicted Arg positions and key residues at the 22/5 sites of ASK1. (C) Sequence alignment of 9 kinases from the STE family with an acidic-pair pattern. (D–F) Key residues and predicted Arg-binding positions at the 22/5 sites of P70S6K, PIM1 and PASK, respectively. For PIM1, the experimental Arg-binding position is shown in magenta. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288.g006

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Ben-Shimon, A., & Niv, M. Y. (2011). Deciphering the Arginine-Binding preferences at the Substrate-Binding groove of Ser/Thr kinases by computational surface mapping. PLoS Computational Biology, 7(11). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002288

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