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A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life

Selenoproteins serve important functions in many organisms, usually providing essential oxidoreductase enzymatic activity, often for defense against toxic xenobiotic substances. Most eukaryotic genomes possess a small number of these proteins, usually not more than 20. Selenoproteins belong to vario...

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Autores principales: Dudkiewicz, Małgorzata, Szczepińska, Teresa, Grynberg, Marcin, Pawłowski, Krzysztof
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3281104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22359664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0032138
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author Dudkiewicz, Małgorzata
Szczepińska, Teresa
Grynberg, Marcin
Pawłowski, Krzysztof
author_facet Dudkiewicz, Małgorzata
Szczepińska, Teresa
Grynberg, Marcin
Pawłowski, Krzysztof
author_sort Dudkiewicz, Małgorzata
collection PubMed
description Selenoproteins serve important functions in many organisms, usually providing essential oxidoreductase enzymatic activity, often for defense against toxic xenobiotic substances. Most eukaryotic genomes possess a small number of these proteins, usually not more than 20. Selenoproteins belong to various structural classes, often related to oxidoreductase function, yet a few of them are completely uncharacterised. Here, the structural and functional prediction for the uncharacterised selenoprotein O (SELO) is presented. Using bioinformatics tools, we predict that SELO protein adopts a three-dimensional fold similar to protein kinases. Furthermore, we argue that despite the lack of conservation of the “classic” catalytic aspartate residue of the archetypical His-Arg-Asp motif, SELO kinases might have retained catalytic phosphotransferase activity, albeit with an atypical active site. Lastly, the role of the selenocysteine residue is considered and the possibility of an oxidoreductase-regulated kinase function for SELO is discussed. The novel kinase prediction is discussed in the context of functional data on SELO orthologues in model organisms, FMP40 a.k.a.YPL222W (yeast), and ydiU (bacteria). Expression data from bacteria and yeast suggest a role in oxidative stress response. Analysis of genomic neighbourhoods of SELO homologues in the three domains of life points toward a role in regulation of ABC transport, in oxidative stress response, or in basic metabolism regulation. Among bacteria possessing SELO homologues, there is a significant over-representation of aquatic organisms, also of aerobic ones. The selenocysteine residue in SELO proteins occurs only in few members of this protein family, including proteins from Metazoa, and few small eukaryotes (Ostreococcus, stramenopiles). It is also demonstrated that enterobacterial mchC proteins involved in maturation of bactericidal antibiotics, microcins, form a distant subfamily of the SELO proteins. The new protein structural domain, with a putative kinase function assigned, expands the known kinome and deserves experimental determination of its biological role within the cell-signaling network.
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spelling pubmed-32811042012-02-22 A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life Dudkiewicz, Małgorzata Szczepińska, Teresa Grynberg, Marcin Pawłowski, Krzysztof PLoS One Research Article Selenoproteins serve important functions in many organisms, usually providing essential oxidoreductase enzymatic activity, often for defense against toxic xenobiotic substances. Most eukaryotic genomes possess a small number of these proteins, usually not more than 20. Selenoproteins belong to various structural classes, often related to oxidoreductase function, yet a few of them are completely uncharacterised. Here, the structural and functional prediction for the uncharacterised selenoprotein O (SELO) is presented. Using bioinformatics tools, we predict that SELO protein adopts a three-dimensional fold similar to protein kinases. Furthermore, we argue that despite the lack of conservation of the “classic” catalytic aspartate residue of the archetypical His-Arg-Asp motif, SELO kinases might have retained catalytic phosphotransferase activity, albeit with an atypical active site. Lastly, the role of the selenocysteine residue is considered and the possibility of an oxidoreductase-regulated kinase function for SELO is discussed. The novel kinase prediction is discussed in the context of functional data on SELO orthologues in model organisms, FMP40 a.k.a.YPL222W (yeast), and ydiU (bacteria). Expression data from bacteria and yeast suggest a role in oxidative stress response. Analysis of genomic neighbourhoods of SELO homologues in the three domains of life points toward a role in regulation of ABC transport, in oxidative stress response, or in basic metabolism regulation. Among bacteria possessing SELO homologues, there is a significant over-representation of aquatic organisms, also of aerobic ones. The selenocysteine residue in SELO proteins occurs only in few members of this protein family, including proteins from Metazoa, and few small eukaryotes (Ostreococcus, stramenopiles). It is also demonstrated that enterobacterial mchC proteins involved in maturation of bactericidal antibiotics, microcins, form a distant subfamily of the SELO proteins. The new protein structural domain, with a putative kinase function assigned, expands the known kinome and deserves experimental determination of its biological role within the cell-signaling network. Public Library of Science 2012-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3281104/ /pubmed/22359664 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0032138 Text en Dudkiewicz et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dudkiewicz, Małgorzata
Szczepińska, Teresa
Grynberg, Marcin
Pawłowski, Krzysztof
A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life
title A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life
title_full A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life
title_fullStr A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life
title_full_unstemmed A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life
title_short A Novel Protein Kinase-Like Domain in a Selenoprotein, Widespread in the Tree of Life
title_sort novel protein kinase-like domain in a selenoprotein, widespread in the tree of life
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3281104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22359664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0032138
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