Publication | Open Access
Domain mapping on the human metastasis regulator protein h-Prune reveals a C-terminal dimerization domain
17
Citations
19
References
2007
Year
Molecular BiologyCancer BiologyC-terminal Dimerization DomainDomain MappingSignaling PathwayCell RegulationProtein FoldingProteomicsCell SignalingDrosophila Prune ProteinPde Catalytic DomainProtein FunctionHuman Metastasis RegulatorBiomolecular InteractionCell BiologyStructural BiologyProtein PhosphorylationNatural SciencesH-prune HomodimerizationCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
The human orthologue of the Drosophila prune protein (h-Prune) is an interaction partner and regulator of the metastasis suppressor protein NM23-H1 (non-metastatic protein 23). Studies on a cellular breast-cancer model showed that inhibition of the cAMP-specific PDE (phosphodiesterase) activity of h-Prune lowered the incidence of metastasis formation, suggesting that inhibition of h-Prune could be a therapeutic approach towards metastatic tumours. H-Prune shows no sequence similarity with known mammalian PDEs, but instead appears to belong to the DHH (Asp-His-His) superfamily of phosphoesterases. In order to investigate the structure and molecular function of h-Prune, we expressed recombinant h-Prune in a bacterial system. Through sequence analysis and limited proteolysis, we identified domain boundaries and a potential coiled-coil region in a C-terminal cortexillin homology domain. We found that this C-terminal domain mediated h-Prune homodimerization, as well as its interaction with NM23-H1. The PDE catalytic domain of h-Prune was mapped to the N-terminus and shown to be active, even when present in a monomeric form. Our findings indicate that h-Prune is composed of two independent active sites and two interaction sites for the assembly of oligomeric signalling complexes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1