Open Access Article
Mengyun
Zhang‡
ab,
Joseph M.
McEwen‡
c,
Nicole M.
Sjoblom
c,
Kristin M.
Kotewicz
ab,
Ralph R.
Isberg
*a and
Rebecca A.
Scheck
*c
aDepartment of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA. E-mail: Ralph.Isberg@tufts.edu
bGraduate Program in Molecular Microbiology, Tufts University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Boston, MA, USA
cDepartment of Chemistry, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA. E-mail: Rebecca.Scheck@tufts.edu
First published on 29th July 2021
Legionella pneumophila establishes a replication vacuole by translocating hundreds of protein effectors through a type IV secretion system (T4SS). Among these translocated effectors are members of the Sde family, which catalyze phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination (pR-Ub) of host targets. Previous work has posited that Sde proteins solely target serine (Ser) residues within acceptor protein substrates. We show here that SdeC-mediated pR-Ub modification results from a stepwise reaction that also modifies tyrosine (Tyr) residues. Unexpectedly, the presence of an HA tag on Ub resulted in poly-pR-ubiquitination, consistent with the HA tag acting as an acceptor target. Interrogation of phosphoribosyl-linked HA-Ub revealed that Tyr4 was the preferred targeted residue, based on LC-MS/MS analysis of the crosslinked product. Further analysis using synthetic HA variants revealed promiscuous modification of Tyr, as crosslinking was prevented only by constructing a triple mutant in which all three Tyr within the HA sequence were substituted with Phe. Although previous work has indicated that Ser is the sole acceptor residue, we found no evidence of Ser preference over Tyr using Tyr → Ser replacement mutants. This work demonstrates that pR-ubiquitination by the Sde family is not limited to Ser-modification as previously proposed, and broadens the potential sites targeted by this family.
The Sde family of L. pneumophila proteins is a set of four proteins translocated by the T4SS that are required for optimal growth in amoebae,26 with biochemical activities subject to extensive regulation by at least three other effectors.27–32 Each Sde protein has three domains, shown by either sequence similarity or biochemical analysis to control ubiquitin (Ub) dynamics (Fig. 1A and B). The N-terminal deubiquitinase (DUB) domain has been demonstrated to show specificity for hydrolyzing K63-linked polyubiquitin chains.15,33,34 Carboxyterminal to this region are a nucleotidase/phosphodiesterase (NP) domain followed by a mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase (ART)35 domain that collaborate to catalyze phosphoribosylation of ubiquitin and atypical ubiquitination through phosphoribosyl linkages (pR-Ub) (Fig. 1A and B).15,32 For three of the family members (SdeA, SdeB and SdeC), the ART domain activates ubiquitin by ADP-ribosylation at Arg42 using the cofactor β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (β-NAD). The resulting ADP-ribosylated ubiquitin (ADPr-Ub) provides a substrate for the Sde-family NP domain, which results either in the crosslinking of monophosphoribosylubiquitin (pR-Ub) to target proteins or hydrolysis to release AMP, forming free, monomeric pR-Ub (Fig. 1A).36–39
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| Fig. 1 The ART and NP domains of SdeC ubiquitinate substrates in a two-step manner. (A) Pathway for SdeC-mediated phosphribosyl-linked ubiquitination (pR-Ub).15 When monomeric wild-type ubiquitin (UbWT) is incubated with SdeC, the mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase (ART) domain ADP-ribosylates Ub at R42 in the presence of NAD to form ADPr-Ub. Next, the nucleotidase/phosphohydrolyase (NP) domain hydrolyzes AMP from the intermediate and transfers pR-Ub onto the final substrate (bottom path). In the absence of an acceptor substrate, AMP hydrolysis produces phosphoribose-modified ubiquitin (pR-Ub, top path). (B) Orientation of Sde family protein domains.35 (C) Cartoon scheme depicting the two-step bead assay. In step 1, recombinant purified His-tagged SdeC variants conjugated to Ni-NTA resin were treated with Ub and NAD in the absence of any acceptor substrate. In step 2, the resulting supernatant, which contains unmodified Ub (UbWT), ADPr-Ub or pR-Ub, depending on the SdeC variant used, is incubated with fresh recombinant SdeC and GST-Rtn4 for 1 h at 37 °C. (D) ADPr-Ub, but not pR-Ub, is a precursor to pR-linked ubiquitination of Rtn4. After treatment using the two-step bead assay, the resulting reaction mixtures are resolved by SDS-PAGE and imaged by silver staining. | ||
A number of host proteins have been identified as pR-Ub acceptors, including endoplasmic reticulum (ER) proteins reticulon 4 (Rtn4)15 and LULL1,28 the Golgi associated protein GRASP55,28 as well as Rab33b and likely other Rab GTPases.35 For most of these acceptors, the functional consequence of pR-Ub modification is unclear, although in the case of Rtn4 modification, wholesale ER rearrangements have been demonstrated15 while pR-Ub-LULL1 appears to be recruited to the replication vacuole.28 Together, these findings support a critical role for pR-Ub in promoting L. pneumophila infection in amoebal species.
There has been considerable work exploring the determinants of acceptor protein recognition by Sde family proteins, as pR-Ub modification proceeds via a previously uncharacterized pathway distinct from the canonical eukaryotic ubiquitination that results in an isopeptide bond linkage between Ub and an acceptor protein lysine.23,40 Analysis of model target peptides and crystal structures of Sde family ART-NP regions have argued that target recognition by the Sde family involves presentation of a Ser residue in unstructured regions of acceptor proteins,32,37–39 enabling phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination of these cellular targets. This has led to the concept that Sde proteins are Ser-specific pR-Ub transferases. In this manuscript, we demonstrate for the first time that Tyr residues are efficient acceptors of pR-Ub. Using a combination of intact proteins and model peptides, we have shown that there is tolerance for a variety of Tyr acceptors with surprisingly little evidence for Ser preference. This result explains previous work consistent with cryptic poly-pR-Ub modification of targets,15,31 adding a previously unappreciated level of complexity to the analysis of Sde family activity.
N-His-SdeC variants (see Materials and methods) were immobilized on nickel agarose resin and the bead-bound enzymes were incubated with recombinant human monomeric Ub and ε-NAD during a “preincubation” step. The immobilized SdeC variants were then removed and the resulting modified ubiquitin species, present in the supernatant, were subsequently treated in an “incubation” step with SdeC variants in the presence of GST-Rtn4, a known Sde-mediated pR-Ub acceptor.15 This assay allowed preparation of either ADPr-Ub or pR-Ub, depending on the SdeC variant used,15 followed by evaluating which of these isolated species could be crosslinked to GST-Rtn4.
After preincubation in the absence of SdeC (Fig. 1D, Lane 9) or with catalytically dead ART or NP variants of SdeC (Fig. 1D, Lanes 1, 2), subsequent incubation of the resulting modified Ub species with GST-Rtn4, SdeCWT, and NAD resulted in the previously reported multiple GST-Rtn4-pR-Ub and SdeC-pR-Ub due to multi-monoubiquitination (Fig. 1D, lane 9).15,37 This indicates that the preincubation step does not interfere with subsequent pR-Ub crosslinking. Furthermore, regardless of the SdeC variant used in the preincubation step, GST-Rtn4 cannot be linked to pR-Ub without subsequent incubation with additional SdeC (Fig. 1D, Lanes 3–6). Notably, preincubation of Ub with intact SdeCWT in the absence of acceptor dramatically reduced the amount of Ub available for crosslinking to GST-Rtn4 during the subsequent incubation step (Fig. 1D, Lanes 10–12). As incubation of Ub with SdeC results in pR-Ub,15 this indicates that pR-Ub is an end-product that cannot be used for crosslinking to acceptor molecules. Therefore, unlike the traditional Ub pathway, Sde-mediated phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination can generate end-products that do not result in productive linkages, yet consume free Ub.
In contrast to the use of pR-Ub as a substrate, the presentation of ADPr-Ub to SdeCE859A, a SdeC variant lacking a functional ART domain, allowed robust pR-Ub crosslinking to GST-Rtn4 that was indistinguishable from incubation with SdeCWT (Fig. 1D, Lanes 8, 9). If the order of treatment were reversed, in which Ub was first preincubated with the immobilized SdeCE859A (ART-defective) and then incubated with SdeCH416A (NP-defective), crosslinking to GST-Rtn4 was dramatically reduced (Fig. 1D, Lane 7). Therefore, an ordered series of steps catalyzed by independently acting enzymatic activities is necessary and sufficient for pR-Ub crosslinking to substrate. On the other hand, if SdeC modifies Ub in the absence of substrate, pR-Ub is formed,15 acting as a terminal end-product that prevents transfer of Ub to the acceptor protein.
The HA epitope (MYPYDVPDYA) lacks Ser residues that are the supposed targets for phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination,37 but is the only feature that distinguishes substrates that polymerize (HA-Ub) from those that do not (such as UbWT). Thus, we decided to further investigate this surprising finding to determine if the SdeC-mediated pR-Ub linkage extends beyond modification at Ser only. The Ub sequence in both HA-Ub and UbWT contains three serine residues, indicating that in the proper context, residues other than Ser are likely targets. We first confirmed that polymerization of HA-Ub occurred through a mechanism analogous to UbWT crosslinking with Rtn4 (Fig. 2A). To do so, we analyzed HA-Ub treated with or without SdeC and β-NAD using intact protein liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS). Only a fraction (roughly 10–20%) of the HA-Ub substrate polymerized, so size exclusion chromatography was used to separate monomeric HA-Ub fractions from those that were polymeric after treatment with SdeC and β-NAD (Fig. 2B and C), and the resulting isolated preparation was used for the subsequent analysis.
Based on LC-MS, the pooled monomeric fractions were quantitatively converted to an [M + 212] adduct (observed 10049.69 amu, expected 100049.21 amu) with virtually no unmodified HA-Ub remaining (observed 9837.44 amu, expected 9837.21 amu). This is the predicted result for SdeC-mediated formation of phosphoribose-modified HA-Ub (pR-HA-Ub, Fig. 2A and D).15 In the pooled polymeric fractions, which were enriched with dimeric species, LC-MS analysis revealed an additional mass of 20080.99 amu (expected 200080.42 amu), consistent with crosslinking of two pR-HA-Ub monomers with the loss of water ([2*(M + 212)-18]; xl-HA-Ub). Based on the results obtained in Fig. 1 demonstrating a two-step reaction, this was the mass change predicted by a crosslinking mechanism in which ADP-ribosylated HA-Ub provides a substrate for condensation with another pR-HA-Ub monomer, thereby generating xl-HA-Ub (Fig. 2A).15
Past work has established that R42 is the site of ADP-ribosylation on ubiquitin.15,32 To determine the complementary site of crosslinking in HA-Ub polymers, we subjected the purified monomer (pR-HA-Ub) or dimer (xl-HA-Ub) fractions to proteolysis by trypsin and subsequent LC-MS/MS analysis (Fig. 3A). We began by searching for the phosphoribosylated tryptic fragment (E34-K49 [M + 212]: 1882.93 amu) that exists primarily as the doubly and triply charged ions (m/z 940.96 [z = 2] & 627.64 [z = 3]). These ions were abundant in the monomeric (pR-HA-Ub) sample, but were substantially reduced in the dimeric (xl-HA-Ub) sample (Fig. 3B). This observation is consistent with our previous findings that the intermediate ADPr-HA-Ub is consumed during crosslinking, thereby diminishing the levels of pR-HA-Ub that could be obtained. Based on the observation that crosslinking does not occur in the absence of an HA-tag, we investigated the likelihood that crosslinking occurs between the Ub tryptic fragments that contains R42 (E34-K49) and the fragment that contains the HA tag (M1-K17). The predicted mass of the resulting crosslinked xl-Ub tryptic fragment between R42 of Ub and a site within the HA tag is 3897.84 amu. We were able to confirm the presence of this xl-HA-Ub tryptic fragment exclusively in the dimeric, but not monomeric, samples using an extracted ion chromatogram (EIC) of the triply and quadruply charged ion (m/z 1300.96 [z = 3] & 975.79 [z = 4]) (Fig. 3B and C).
Having confidently determined the correct crosslinked tryptic fragment, we sought to identify the site of crosslinking within the HA tag. We treated HA-Ub with SdeC and β-NAD and subjected the entire sample to proteolysis by trypsin without any further purification by size exclusion chromatography to avoid sample dilution (Fig. 3D). Using this approach, we could readily identify the xl-HA-Ub tryptic fragment by extracted ion chromatogram (Fig. 3E). MS/MS analysis of this xl-HA-Ub trypic fragment enabled us to determine that crosslinking occurs at Y4 within the HA sequence, as indicated by the identified b and y ions (Fig. 3F). Observation of modified b4 and y14 ions, which describe xl-HA-Ub ions fragmented at the amide just after or just before Y4, respectively, allowed us to unambiguously conclude that the site of crosslinking for the HA-Ub protein is at Y4, despite the presence of two additional tyrosine residues within the HA sequence (Fig. 3F, G and Table S1, ESI†). Thus, these results establish that Sde family proteins can catalyze phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination at tyrosine, in addition to serine.
Based on the surprisingly persistent crosslinking for HA point variants, we next sought to determine if crosslinking could occur at multiple Tyr residues. Proteolysis by trypsin followed by LC-MS/MS analysis identified tryptic fragments corresponding to HA peptides crosslinked with full-length Ub (Fig. 5A and B). Notably, the abundance of the observed crosslinked fragment for each of mutant derivatives was reduced compared to the HAWT peptide (Fig. 5B). These results are consistent with a model in which each tyrosine residue can act as an acceptor. Therefore, SdeC is able to use any available Tyr residue located on short unstructured peptide substrates as the final acceptors.
We next determined if more than one site in a single peptide could act as an acceptor. In pursuing this hypothesis, we searched for diagnostic b or y ions that could confirm that the xl-Ub tryptic fragment (Fig. 5B and Table S2, ESI†) was not a single species but rather a mixture of xl-Ub isomers, each of which formed a crosslink at a distinct single site. For instance, the identification of a modified b2 ion confirms crosslinking at Y2. Such a b2 ion was identified for crosslinked HAWT, HAY4F and HAY9F peptides, but was absent in HAY2F (Fig. 5C, left). Similarly, the identification of a modified y7 ion is diagnostic of crosslinking at Y9, and was present in tryptic fragments generated from HAWT, HAY2F and HAY4F peptide variants, but was absent from HAY9F (Fig. 5C, right). Crosslinking at Y4 generated a modified y11 ion in the HAY9F variant while it resulted in a modified b6 ion in the HAY2F variant (Fig. 5C, middle). These results further support the observation that SdeC catalyzes phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination at Tyr in addition to Ser. Therefore, the chemical identity of the acceptor side chain is not limited to Ser as previously suggested, and target specificity by SdeC is promiscuous with respect to the exact site of modification.
MS/MS analysis of crosslinking to HAY249S found that crosslinking to the triple-Ser variant shifted the position preference to S9 (Fig. 6D and Table S3, ESI†). MS/MS analysis of single Ser variants supported this result, as any convincing evidence for crosslinking to serine was limited to S9, as observed for the HAY9S peptide (Fig. S2 and Table S4, ESI†). There was no indication of crosslinking to S2 (HAY2S) and evidence for crosslinking to S4 (HAY4S) was inconclusive as it could also be attributed to modification at Y2 or Y9. Surprisingly, in all single serine variants, crosslinking to Tyr appeared to remain efficient (Fig. S2, ESI†). For instance, SdeC treatment of the HAY9S mutant led to robust crosslinking at Y2 and Y4 (Fig. S2, bottom panels, ESI†). These data argue against an absolute preference for Ser as a target of pR-Ub modification, and are consistent with the surrounding protein microenvironment determining SdeC target site preference.
The crystal structures of SdeA have revealed that the active sites of ART and NP domains are 90° opposed, making it unlikely that ADP-ribosylation of Ub and transfer to an acceptor molecule are coincident events. Our results further support the model that the two domains are biochemically independent and can be fully uncoupled. The results from the sequential bead-based assay, demonstrating that ADPr-Ub provides a substrate for linkage to Rtn4 by the SdeC NP domain, suggest a strategy that can maximize the number of potential substrates for pR-Ub crosslinking. By having duties assigned to different domains acting independently, this raises the possibility that two different L. pneumophila proteins can collaborate in the process during intracellular growth. Biochemically, the SdeC ART domain is known to cause rapid formation of ADPr-Ub, with near complete modification occurring even during short incubations on ice.15 Physiologically, this could drive the accumulation of a large pool of ADPr-Ub about the Legionella replication vacuole. This pool could be used by the NP domain on the same protein, but there are also several Legionella translocated proteins consisting of solitary orphan NP domains that could transfer pR-Ub to an alternative spectrum of substrates.39,43 As a consequence, catalytic domain collaboration potentially takes place both within or between proteins, with the latter strategy increasing the diversity of pR-Ub crosslinking targets.
The discovery of tyrosine as a Sde protein modification sites is significant for multiple reasons. From a purely technical aspect, this represents an overlooked modification that has likely gone undetected using biochemical strategies that focus on serine modifications. Although we agree with previous studies37–39,41 that phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination of the serine-rich Rtn4 protein likely occurs exclusively at Ser, this does not preclude crosslinking at Tyr from occurring in other targets. In fact, Rtn4 appears to be an excellent model for Sde modification precisely because of its high serine content. Here we have found that the HA peptide, rich in tyrosines (3 out of 9 residues), is also an attractive target for pR-Ub crosslinking. This observation suggests that a search for short stretches within proteins that are similarly tyrosine-rich could reveal a number of new potential targets of the Sde family.
In regards to the intracellular lifestyle, pR-Ub crosslinking is likely part of an “act quickly, leave abruptly” strategy for L. pneumophila. Members of the Sde family are secreted immediately on contact with host cells, ensuring that execution of their activities occurs rapidly.44 Shortly thereafter, Sde proteins become inactivated by SidJ42,44 and pR-Ub crosslinking on target proteins is reversed by pR-linkage specific deubiquitinases.27,28 Therefore, there is only a short window of time for Sde action. Broadening the target selection to multiple hydroxylated sidechains, including Tyr in addition to Ser, should act in concert with having independently acting domains, as both properties broaden the spectrum of proteins that can act as acceptors in a very short timespan. Moreover, although Ser occurs in the human proteome with far greater frequency than Tyr, Tyr is particularly enriched at binding interfaces on protein surfaces, suggesting an important functional role in the binding of small molecules, nucleotides, or other proteins.45,46 Thus, phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination at Tyr could offer L. pneumophila an added benefit by wreaking maximal havoc on host cell signaling.
This work uncovered new levels of complexity regarding the determinants of pR-Ub target recognition. The unstructured nature of the HA peptide used in these studies supports previous hypotheses that an unstructured targeting site likely provides an optimal conformational fit to the enzymatic surface of the NP domain.37–39,41 In the case of targeting of the Tyr hydroxyl, however, we found that the context of the peptide was important in regards to residue site-specificity. When targeting the HA-Ub hybrid, there was specificity for pR-Ub linkage to the Y4 residue (Fig. 3). When a free synthetic peptide was analyzed, this specificity was lost, as peptides having single Tyr to Phe substitutions still retained pR-Ub linkage (Fig. 4). In support of promiscuous site selectivity in unstructured peptide targets, we found clear evidence for linkage to all three Tyr residues based on MS/MS analyses (Fig. 5). Although the HA sequence is likely to be unstructured in all contexts, being linked to a larger protein structure such as Ub results in conformational restraints not observed for free peptides in solution, changing the nature of the recognition event. A free peptide may be threaded into the NP enzymatic site in more than one direction, allowing free access to all the Tyr residues. In contrast, HA-Ub may provide restraints that limit the residues accessible to the site of pR-Ub transfer, conferring residue site selectivity.
The observed selectivity was highly dependent on the chemical nature of the sidechain. Ser-containing HA peptides behaved differently from those with Tyr, as they retained specificity for crosslinking at a single position (S9) (Fig. 6). For the targeting of Ser residues, there are likely to be sequence determinants extending beyond conformational restraints that drive residue site specificity. Modification of Tyr residues, in contrast, showed a high level of promiscuity. This raises the possibility that a protein region compatible with recognition by the Sde NP domain supports increased site promiscuity for Tyr targeting relative to that observed for Ser. Targeting a particular substrate residue with high specificity could be a critical element in determining if a modification generates a new function, as opposed to causing protein dysfunction.
In summary, our work provides powerful evidence that the targeting of the Sde family is much broader than previously hypothesized, with the potential that modification could result in either acquiring new functions or blocking activities depending on the site of modification and its relative promiscuity. It also provides insights on the molecular mechanisms of this noncanonical ubiquitination pathway, as well as potential information for understanding how pathogens control host cellular functions.
For HA peptide ubiquitination assays, 12.5 μM HA peptides were mixed with 10 μM monomeric Ub, and incubated with 20 nM SdeC and 250 μM β-NAD at 37 °C in 1× ART buffer for 1 hours. All reactions for gel analysis were terminated by either addition of reducing loading buffer and boiling, or flash freezing in liquid N2 for storage prior to further analysis. For samples analyzed by mass spectrometry (MS), excess salts and NAD were removed via buffer exchange, using either Illustra NAP-5 Columns (Cytiva Life sciences) or Amicon Ultra Centrifuge filters, 3K MWCO (MilliporeSigma), eluting in water.
:
1 t-butanol
:
water. DTT was added to a final concentration of 3 mM. Reactions were then heated to 65 °C for 35 minutes and subsequently cooled to room temperature. Sequencing grade modified trypsin (Promega) was added for a final 1
:
25 protease
:
protein ratio. This digest solution was incubated at 37 °C overnight. The resulting solution of peptides was subjected to LC-MS/MS analysis without further purification.
Following tryptic digestion, peptide fragments were injected onto an AdvanceBio Peptide 2.7 μm column (2.1 × 150 mm, Agilent) and were eluted with the same gradient and flow rate as indicated above. MS spectra were obtained using the same parameters as described above. MS/MS spectra were acquired using the following settings: ESI capillary voltage, 4000 V; fragmentor, 150 V; gas temperature, 325 °C; gas rate 12 L min−1; nebulizer, 40 psig. MS/MS was acquired at 1 spectra per second with a mass range of 300–3000 m/z. For all MS/MS acquisitions, targeted precursor ion selection, coupled with set collision energies were used. Full length precursor ion m/z's were calculated using ChemDraw. Precursors were identified via MS scans with the following stringency: medium isolation width, z = 2–4, RT = 10 min, ΔRT = 2 min. After identification, precursor ions were subjected to iterative rounds of collision induced dissociation in the collision chamber and subsequent mass identification. MS/MS cycles scanned five ionization energies from 20–28 V, with a 2 V step between scans to sample various ionization events for each precursor ion. Following acquisition, all MS/MS spectra were combined for display. On average, targeted MS/MS acquisition yielded 80–140 spectra for each defined precursor ion. Agilent MassHunter Bioconfirm (v. B.07.00) was used for generation of intact protein deconvolutions. Bioconfirm was also used to generate extracted ion chromatograms (EIC) and additional mass spectra. Posttranslational modifications (PTMs) were identified using PEAKS Studio (v. 7.5) software. For further details about MS and MS/MS acquisition and analysis methods, please see the ESI.†
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d1cb00088h |
| ‡ These authors contributed equally. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021 |