SHP-1 Variants Broaden the Understanding of pH-Dependent Activities in Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases

18 January 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) SHP-1 plays an important role in both immune regulation and oncogenesis. This enzyme is part of a broader family of PTPs that all play important regulatory roles in vivo. Common to these enzymes is a highly conserved aspartic acid (D421 in SHP-1) that acts as an acid/base catalysis during the PTP-catalyzed reaction. This residue is located on a mobile loop, the WPD-loop, the dynamical behavior of which is intimately connected to catalytic activity. The SHP-1 WPD-loop variants H422Q, E427A, and S418A have been kinetically characterized and compared to the WT enzyme. These variants exhibit limiting magnitudes of kcat ranging from 43% to 77% of the WT enzyme. However, their pH profiles are significantly broadened in the basic pH range. As a result, above pH 6 the E427A and S418A variants have notably higher turnover numbers than WT SHP-1. Molecular modeling results indicate that the shifted pH dependencies result primarily from changes in solvation and hydrogen-bonding networks that affect the pKa of the D421 residue, explaining the changes in pH-rate profiles for kcat on the basic side. In contrast, a previous study of a noncatalytic residue variant of the PTP YopH, which also exhibited changes in pH dependency, showed that catalytic change arose from mutation-induced changes in conformational equilibria of the WPD-loop. That finding, and the present study, show the existence of distinct strategies for nature to tune the activity of PTPs in particular environments through controlling the pH-dependency of catalysis.

Keywords

protein tyrosine phosphatase
SHP-1
pH dependency
protein dynamics
biomolecular simulations

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