Different phenotypic outcome due to site-specific phosphorylation in the cancer-associated NQO1 enzyme studied by phosphomimetic mutations
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteMateria
Flavoprotein Phosphorylation Structure-function relationships
Date
2022-10-30Referencia bibliográfica
Different phenotypic outcome due to site-specific phosphorylation in the cancer-associated NQO1 enzyme studied by phosphomimetic mutations, Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics Volume 729, 109392
Patrocinador
Departamento de Química-Fisica. Financiación: ERDF/Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities—State Research Agency (Grant RTI2018-096246-B-I00), Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad, Junta de Andalucía (Grant P18-RT-2413) and ERDF/Counseling of Economic transformation, Industry, Knowledge and Universities, Junta de Andalucía (Grant B-BIO-84-UGR20), MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 (Grant PID2019-103901 GB-I00), Government of Aragon-FEDER ´ (Grant E35_20R)Résumé
Protein phosphorylation is a common phenomenon in human flavoproteins although the functional consequences of this site-specific modification are largely unknown. Here, we evaluated the effects of site-specific
phosphorylation (using phosphomimetic mutations at sites S40, S82 and T128) on multiple functional aspects
as well as in the structural stability of the antioxidant and disease-associated human flavoprotein NQO1 using
biophysical and biochemical methods. In vitro biophysical studies revealed effects of phosphorylation at different
sites such as decreased binding affinity for FAD and structural stability of its binding site (S82), conformational
stability (S40 and S82) and reduced catalytic efficiency and functional cooperativity (T128). Local stability
measurements by H/D exchange in different ligation states provided structural insight into these effects.
Transfection of eukaryotic cells showed that phosphorylation at sites S40 and S82 may reduce steady-levels of
NQO1 protein by enhanced proteasome-induced degradation. We show that site-specific phosphorylation of
human NQO1 may cause pleiotropic and counterintuitive effects on this multifunctional protein with potential
implications for its relationships with human disease. Our approach allows to establish relationships between
site-specific phosphorylation, functional and structural stability effects in vitro and inside cells paving the way for
more detailed analyses of phosphorylation at the flavoproteome scale