Solution NMR assignment of the ARC4 domain of human tankyrase 2.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Zaleska, M
Pollock, K
Collins, I
Guettler, S
Pfuhl, M

Document Type

Journal Article

Date

2019-04-15

Date Accepted

2019-03-02

Date Available

Abstract

Tankyrases are poly(ADP-ribose)polymerases (PARPs) which recognize their substrates via their ankyrin repeat cluster (ARC) domains. The human tankyrases (TNKS/TNKS2) contain five ARCs in their extensive N-terminal region; of these, four bind peptides present within tankyrase interactors and substrates. These short, linear segments, known as tankyrase-binding motifs (TBMs), contain some highly conserved features: an arginine at position 1, which occupies a predominantly acidic binding site, and a glycine at position 6 that is sandwiched between two aromatic side chains on the surface of the ARC domain. Tankyrases are involved in a multitude of biological functions, amongst them Wnt/β-catenin signaling, the maintenance of telomeres, glucose metabolism, spindle formation, the DNA damage response and Hippo signaling. As many of these are relevant to human disease, tankyrase is an important target candidate for drug development. With the emergence of non-catalytic (scaffolding) functions of tankyrase, it seems attractive to interfere with ARC function rather than the enzymatic activity of tankyrase. To study the mechanism of ARC-dependent recruitment of tankyrase binders and enable protein-observed NMR screening methods, we have as the first step obtained a full backbone and partial side chain assignment of TNKS2 ARC4. The assignment highlights some of the unusual structural features of the ARC domain.

Citation

Biomolecular NMR assignments, 2019, 13 (1), pp. 255 - 260

Source Title

Publisher

SPRINGER

ISSN

1874-2718

eISSN

1874-270X

Research Team

Medicinal Chemistry 2
Structural Biology of Cell Signalling

Notes