Logo Logo
Help
Contact
Switch Language to German

Savitskiy, Sergey; Wachtel, Rudolf; Pourjafar-Dehkordi, Danial; Kang, Hyun-Seo; Trauschke, Vanessa; Lamb, Don C.; Sattler, Michael; Zacharias, Martin and Itzen, Aymelt (2021): Proteolysis of Rab32 by Salmonella GtgE induces an inactive GTPase conformation. In: Iscience, Vol. 24, No. 1, 101940

Full text not available from 'Open Access LMU'.

Abstract

Rab GTPases are central regulators of intracellular vesicular trafficking. They are frequently targeted by bacterial pathogens through post-translational modifications. Salmonella typhimurium secretes the cysteine protease GtgE during infection, leading to a regioselective proteolytic cleavage of the regulatory switch I loop in the small GTPases of the Rab32 subfamily. Here, using a combination of biochemical methods, molecular dynamics simulations, NMR spectroscopy, and single-pair Forster resonance energy transfer, we demonstrate that the cleavage of Rab32 causes a local increase of conformational flexibility in both switch regions. Cleaved Rab32 maintains its ability to interact with the GDP dissociation inhibitor (GDI). Interestingly, the Rab32 cleavage enables GDI binding also with an active GTP-bound Rab32 in vitro. Furthermore, the Rab32 proteolysis provokes disturbance in the interaction with its downstream effector VARP. Thus, the proteolysis of Rab32 is not a globally degradative mechanism but affects various biochemical and structural properties of the GTPase in a diverse manner.

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item