4.6 Article

Calpain-Catalyzed Proteolysis of Human dUTPase Specifically Removes the Nuclear Localization Signal Peptide

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0019546

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund [OTKA NK 60723, OTKA K68229, CK-78646]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institutes [55000342]
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  4. National Office for Research and Technology, Hungary [TAMOP-4.2.1/B-09/1/KMR-2010-0002]
  5. [ADDMAL09 TET-09-1-2010-001]

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Background: Calpain proteases drive intracellular signal transduction via specific proteolysis of multiple substrates upon Ca2+-induced activation. Recently, dUTPase, an enzyme essential to maintain genomic integrity, was identified as a physiological calpain substrate in Drosophila cells. Here we investigate the potential structural/functional significance of calpain-activated proteolysis of human dUTPase. Methodology/Principal Findings: Limited proteolysis of human dUTPase by mammalian m-calpain was investigated in the presence and absence of cognate ligands of either calpain or dUTPase. Significant proteolysis was observed only in the presence of Ca(II) ions, inducing calpain action. The presence or absence of the dUTP-analogue alpha,beta-imido-dUTP did not show any effect on Ca2+-calpain-induced cleavage of human dUTPase. The catalytic rate constant of dUTPase was unaffected by calpain cleavage. Gel electrophoretic analysis showed that Ca2+-calpain-induced cleavage of human dUTPase resulted in several distinctly observable dUTPase fragments. Mass spectrometric identification of the calpain-cleaved fragments identified three calpain cleavage sites (between residues (SE5)-S-4; (TP8)-T-7; and (LS32)-L-31). The cleavage between the (LS32)-L-31 peptide bond specifically removes the flexible N-terminal nuclear localization signal, indispensable for cognate localization. Conclusions/Significance: Results argue for a mechanism where Ca2+-calpain may regulate nuclear availability and degradation of dUTPase.

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