5w0w
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of Protein Phosphatase 2A bound to TIPRL
Structural highlights
Function2AAA_HUMAN The PR65 subunit of protein phosphatase 2A serves as a scaffolding molecule to coordinate the assembly of the catalytic subunit and a variable regulatory B subunit. Required for proper chromosome segregation and for centromeric localization of SGOL1 in mitosis.[1] Publication Abstract from PubMedDynamic assembly/disassembly of signaling complexes are crucial for cellular functions. Specialized latency and activation chaperones control the biogenesis of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) holoenzymes that contain a common scaffold and catalytic subunits and a variable regulatory subunit. Here we show that the butterfly-shaped TIPRL (TOR signaling pathway regulator) makes highly integrative multibranching contacts with the PP2A catalytic subunit, selective for the unmethylated tail and perturbing/inactivating the phosphatase active site. TIPRL also makes unusual wobble contacts with the scaffold subunit, allowing TIPRL, but not the overlapping regulatory subunits, to tolerate disease-associated PP2A mutations, resulting in reduced holoenzyme assembly and enhanced inactivation of mutant PP2A. Strikingly, TIPRL and the latency chaperone, alpha4, coordinate to disassemble active holoenzymes into latent PP2A, strictly controlled by methylation. Our study reveals a mechanism for methylation-responsive inactivation and holoenzyme disassembly, illustrating the complexity of regulation/signaling, dynamic complex disassembly, and disease mutations in cancer and intellectual disability. Methylation-regulated decommissioning of multimeric PP2A complexes.,Wu CG, Zheng A, Jiang L, Rowse M, Stanevich V, Chen H, Li Y, Satyshur KA, Johnson B, Gu TJ, Liu Z, Xing Y Nat Commun. 2017 Dec 22;8(1):2272. doi: 10.1038/s41467-017-02405-3. PMID:29273778[2] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. Loading citation details.. Citations 6 reviews cite this structure No citations found See AlsoReferences
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Categories: Homo sapiens | Large Structures | Mus musculus | Li J | Satyshur K | Wu C | Xing Y | Zheng A