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LRRK2 autophosphorylation enhances its GTPase activity
Author(s) -
Liu Zhiyong,
Mobley James A.,
DeLucas Lawrence J.,
Kahn Richard A.,
West Andrew B.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.15-277095
Subject(s) - autophosphorylation , gtpase , lrrk2 , phosphorylation , kinase , microbiology and biotechnology , protein kinase domain , effector , biology , gtp' , biochemistry , chemistry , protein kinase a , enzyme , mutation , mutant , gene
The leucine‐rich repeat kinase (LRRK)‐2 protein contains nonoverlapping GTPase and kinase domains, and mutation in either domain can cause Parkinson disease. GTPase proteins are critical upstream modulators of many effector protein kinases. In LRRK2, this paradigm may be reversed, as the kinase domain phosphorylates its own GTPase domain. In this study, we found that the ameba LRRK2 ortholog ROCO4 phosphorylates the GTPase domain [termed Ras‐of‐complex (ROC) domain in this family] of human LRRK2 on the same residues as the human LRRK2 kinase. Phosphorylation of ROC enhances its rate of GTP hydrolysis [from k cat (catalytic constant) 0.007 to 0.016 min ‐1 ], without affecting GTP or GDP dissociation kinetics [ k off = 0.093 and 0.148 min ‐1 for GTP and GDP, respectively). Phosphorylation also promotes the formation of ROC dimers, although GTPase activity appears to be equivalent between purified dimers and monomers. Modeling experiments show that phosphorylation induces conformational changes at the critical p‐loop structure. Finally, ROC appears to be one of many GTPases phosphorylated in p‐loop residues, as revealed by alignment of LRRK2 autophosphorylation sites with GTPases annotated in the phosphoproteome database. These results provide an example of a novel mechanism for kinase‐mediated control of GTPase activity.—Liu, Z., Mobley, J. A., DeLucas, L. J., Kahn, R. A., West, A. B. LRRK2 autophosphorylation enhances its GTPase activity. FASEB J. 30, 336‐347 (2016). www.fasebj.org

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