4.7 Article

Polypeptide Substrate Accessibility Hypothesis: Gain-of-Function R206H Mutation Allosterically Affects Activin Receptor-like Protein Kinase Activity

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom13071129

Keywords

allosteric regulation; bone morphogenetic protein (BMP); serine; threonine kinase; ACVR1; ALK2; FKBP12; BMPRII; Smad MH2

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Although structurally similar to type II counterparts, type I or activin receptor-like kinases (ALKs) have a unique helix-loop-helix (HLH) element that plays an active role in inhibiting the kinase activity. A single mutation in the codon of the penultimate residue causes milder activation of ACVR1/ALK2 and leads to abnormal bone deposition. The HLH subdomain of the mutant protein suppresses the enzyme's activity and affects the ATP-binding and polypeptide-interacting active site, resulting in the gain of function responsible for sporadic heterotopic ossification.
Although structurally similar to type II counterparts, type I or activin receptor-like kinases (ALKs) are set apart by a metastable helix-loop-helix (HLH) element preceding the protein kinase domain that, according to a longstanding paradigm, serves passive albeit critical roles as an inhibitor-to-substrate-binding switch. A single recurrent mutation in the codon of the penultimate residue, directly adjacent the position of a constitutively activating substitution, causes milder activation of ACVR1/ALK2 leading to sporadic heterotopic bone deposition in patients presenting with fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, or FOP. To determine the protein structural-functional basis for the gain of function, R206H mutant, Q207D (aspartate-substituted caALK2) and HLH subdomain-truncated (208 Ntrunc) forms were compared to one another and the wild-type enzyme through in vitro kinase and protein-protein interaction analyses that were complemented by signaling read-out (p-Smad) in primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts and Drosophila S2 cells. Contrary to the paradigm, the HLH subdomain actively suppressed the phosphotransferase activity of the enzyme, even in the absence of FKBP12. Unexpectedly, perturbation of the HLH subdomain elevated kinase activity at a distance, i.e., allosterically, at the ATP-binding and polypeptide-interacting active site cleft. Accessibility to polypeptide substrate (BMP Smad C-terminal tails) due to allosterically altered conformations of type I active sites within heterohexameric cytoplasmic signaling complexes-assembled noncanonically by activin-type II receptors extracellularly-is hypothesized to produce a gain of function of the R206H mutant protein responsible for episodic heterotopic ossification in FOP.

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