
HD-[HD-GYP] Phosphodiesterases: Activities and Evolutionary Diversification within the HD-GYP Family
Author(s) -
Sining Sun,
MariaEirini Pandelia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.43
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1520-4995
pISSN - 0006-2960
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00257
Subject(s) - enzyme kinetics , subfamily , chemistry , stereochemistry , biochemistry , enzyme , active site , gene
Cyclic dinucleotides are signaling molecules that modulate many processes, including immune response and virulence factor production. Their cellular levels in bacteria are fine-tuned by metal-dependent phosphodiesterases, namely, the EAL and HD-GYP proteins, with HD-GYPs belonging to the larger HD domain superfamily. In this study, we first focus on the catalytic properties and the range of metal ions and substrates of the HD-[HD-GYP] subfamily, consisting of two HD domains. We identified SO3491 as a homologue of VCA0681 and the second example of an HD-[HD-GYP]. Both proteins hydrolyze c-di-GMP and 3'3'c-GAMP and coordinate various metal ions, but only Fe and to a lesser extent Co support hydrolysis. The proteins are active only in the diferrous form and not in the one-electron more oxidized Fe II Fe III state. Although the C-terminal HD-GYP domain is essential for activity, the role of the N-terminal HD domain remains unknown. We show that the N-terminal site is important for protein stability, influences the individual apparent k cat and K M (but not k cat / K M ), and cannot bind c-di-GMP, thus precluding its involvement in cyclic dinucleotide sensing. We proceeded to perform phylogenetic analyses to examine the distribution and functional relationships of the HD-[HD-GYP]s to the rest of the HD-GYPs. The phylogeny provides a correlation map that draws a link between the evolutionary and functional diversification of HD-GYPs, serving as a template for predicting the chemical nature of the metallocofactor, level of activity, and reaction outcome.