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Journal of Virology, January 1999, p. 839-842, Vol. 73, No. 1
Department of Pathology, University of
California at San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0612
Received 12 August 1998/Accepted 1 October 1998
The core enzyme of protein phosphatase 2A is composed of a
regulatory subunit A and a catalytic subunit C. It is controlled by
three types of regulatory B subunits (B, B', and B") and by tumor (T)
antigens, which are unrelated by sequence but bind to overlapping
regions on the A subunit. To find out whether the different B subunits
and T antigens bind to identical or distinct amino acids of the A
subunit, mutants were generated and their abilities to bind B subunits
and T antigens were tested. We found that some amino acids are involved
in the binding of all types of B subunits, whereas others are
specifically involved in the binding of one or two types of B subunits.
T-antigen-binding specificity does not correlate with that of a
particular type of B subunit.
Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is an
abundant enzyme constituting approximately 0.3% of the total protein
in mammalian cells (17). It exists in cells in two
forms The A subunit polypeptide consists of 15 nonidentical repeats,
approximately 40 amino acids long (6, 21), which form a
rod-shaped molecule (2). The B subunits from all three
families bind to repeats 1 through 10, and the C subunit binds to
repeats 11 through 15 of the A subunit. Simian virus 40 (SV40) small t antigen binds to repeats 3 through 6, and polyoma small t and middle T
bind to repeats 2 through 8 (15, 16). We have proposed a
model according to which each repeat consists of two amphipathic helices that are connected by loops (intrarepeat loops), and we have
shown that these loops are involved in the binding of B subunits and T
antigens (Fig. 1).
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Binding Specificity of Protein Phosphatase 2A Core
Enzyme for Regulatory B Subunits and T Antigens
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ABSTRACT
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Abstract
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TEXT
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Abstract
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the core enzyme, composed of a 36-kDa catalytic C subunit and a
65-kDa regulatory A subunit, and the holoenzyme, consisting of core
enzyme to which one of several B subunits is bound
at approximately
equal concentrations (8). The A and C subunits both occur as
two isoforms (
and
), whereas the B subunits fall into three
families, designated B, B' (also called B56), and B", that are
unrelated by protein sequence (13). The B family has three
members, B
, B
, and B
, each with a molecular mass of around 55 kDa (5, 10, 14, 23). The B' family consists of numerous,
recently identified isoforms and splice variants whose molecular masses
range from 54 to approximately 70 kDa (3, 11, 12, 18, 19).
The B" family has two members, which have molecular masses of 72 and 130 kDa and are splice variants of the same gene (7). B
subunits are the key regulators of PP2A. They determine not only the
activity and substrate specificity but also the intracellular
localization of PP2A (11, 19). In addition to the three
classes of B subunits, a fourth class of proteins that associate with
the PP2A core enzyme are the tumor (T) antigens encoded by
polyomaviruses, which are unrelated by sequence to the B subunits (for
a review, see reference 22). The association between
T antigens and PP2A plays an important role in virus-induced neoplastic
cell transformation.

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FIG. 1.
Model of the PP2A holoenzyme. The rod-shaped A subunit
consists of 15 repeats. Each repeat is composed of two
helices
connected by an intrarepeat loop. Adjacent repeats are connected by
interrepeat loops. Binding regions for B and C subunits, as well as for
T antigens, are indicated by bars. Loops involved in binding are solid;
loops not involved in binding are open. (Reprinted from reference
15, with permission.)
An intriguing question is how the three families of B subunits and the T antigens, although unrelated by sequence, are able to bind to the same region of the A subunit. To explain this finding, we considered two models. (i) B, B', B", and T antigens fold in such a way that a similarly spaced set of identical residues is generated in each case, which binds to a complementary set of residues on the A subunit (over a stretch of 10 repeats). Therefore, mutants of the A subunit that affect binding of one type of B subunit would also affect the binding of all other B subunits and of T antigens. (ii) B subunits and T antigens recognize distinct amino acids. This model predicts that one could generate mutants of the A subunit that are unable to bind certain B subunits or T antigens while still binding others. Our previous data supported the first model, since deletion of any one of repeats 1 to 10 or substitution of intrarepeat loop 4, 5, or 6 abolished binding of all types of B subunits, suggesting that there was no specificity in binding of individual B subunits. On the other hand, the first model seemed unlikely because the same binding site would have to have evolved in four unrelated protein families.
To resolve this question, we generated smaller mutations by substituting for only 1 to 4 amino acids in intrarepeat loops 3 (amino acids 100 to 105), 4 (amino acids 139 to 144), 5 (amino acids 177 to 182), and 7 (amino acids 255 to 260). Some mutations outside the loop regions were also generated. The expectation was that smaller mutations might have a better chance of revealing differences in binding specificity between different B subunits and T antigens. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed with the Gene Editor system from Promega. The plasmid used for mutagenesis, pcDNA3-AEE, is a eukaryotic expression vector encoding the wild-type A subunit tagged at the C terminus with the EE tag (EEEEYMPME) (9). The tag was introduced into the A subunit within Bluescript, p16-1A (21), by insertion of a fragment generated by PCR and encoding a BglII site, the EE tag, and a HindIII site. AEE was then moved from Bluescript to pcDNA3 as an EcoRI-XhoI fragment. To assay whether A subunit mutants bind B subunits, both were synthesized separately in vitro and labeled with [35S]methionine by using Promega's TNT T7 Quick coupled transcription/translation system, as previously described (8). Five microliters of each reaction mixture was combined and incubated for 4 h at 30°C to allow complex formation between the labeled A subunit mutant, endogenous C subunit (unlabeled), and labeled B subunit, as previously described (15, 16). Mutations in repeats 1 to 10 have no effect on the binding of C subunit to repeats 11 to 15 (15, 16). Anti-EE monoclonal antibodies were used to immunoprecipitate the tagged A subunit mutants. The precipitates were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) to identify coprecipitated B subunits. Since in vitro-synthesized middle T does not form a complex with core enzyme (1), we used a previously described assay to determine whether A subunit mutants bind T antigens (16). The mutants were synthesized in vitro as described above. SV40 small t was added as a bacterially expressed purified protein (20), polyomavirus small t was added as a baculovirus-expressed protein in Sf9 cell lysate, and middle T was added as an overexpressed protein in 293 cell lysate. Hamster antitumor serum was added to immunoprecipitate SV40 small t, and rat antitumor ascitic fluid was used to precipitate polyomavirus small t and middle T (16). The mixtures were incubated at 4°C for 16 h. The immunoprecipitates were washed with buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 150 mM NaCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 0.5% Triton X-100) and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Coprecipitated A subunit mutants were visualized by autoradiography. Radioactive bands were quantitated with a Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager and ImageQuant software.
The results demonstrate that some mutations affect binding of all B subunits, whereas others affect binding of specific B subunits (Fig. 2 and 3). The mutants fall into four categories.
|
|
(i) B
B'
B"
.
An
example is mutant EE100RR, which bound none of the B subunits.
(ii) B
B'+ B"
.
An
example is mutant DW139RR, which showed almost no binding of B
and
B" whereas binding of B' was reduced only by one-third.
(iii) B+ B'
B"
.
An example is DWF139HAA, which bound B
as well as or better
than the wild type but did not bind B' or B". Note the dramatic difference in specificities between W140A (B
B'+ B"
) and DWF139HAA (B+
B'
B"
), indicating that W140 is essential
for B and B" binding and F141 is required for B' binding. D139 had
little if any effect, since the binding patterns of DW139RR and W140A
are very similar. It is intriguing that mutation of W140 destroyed
binding of B
and that the additional mutation of F141 restored
binding of B
.
(iv) B+ B'
B"+.
An
example is DTP177AAA, which showed a 25-fold reduction in binding of B'
whereas binding of B
was normal and that of B" was reduced
approximately 50%. This mutant is most specific because its deficiency
is limited mainly to one type of B subunit (B'). In view of the fact
that the binding regions for all B subunits extend over 10 repeats, it
is remarkable that a point mutation such as W257A in repeat 7 completely destroyed the binding capacity for all B subunits (but not
for T antigens).
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant CA-36111.
We thank Kathy Rundell for providing SV40 small t and Anders Berqvist and Göran Magnusson for supplying polyomavirus small t.
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FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, University of California at San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA 92093-0612. Phone: (619) 534-1894. Fax: (619) 534-8942. E-mail: GWalter{at}ucsd.edu.
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