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The Solvation of the E. coli CheY Phosphorylation Site Mapped by XFMS
Authors:Maham Hamid  Muhammad Farhan Khalid  Safee Ullah Chaudhary  Shahid Khan
Affiliation:1.Biomedical Informatics and Engineering Research Laboratory (BIRL), Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), Lahore 54792, Pakistan;2.Syed Babar Ali School of Science & Engineering, Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), Lahore 54792, Pakistan;3.Molecular Biology Consortium, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Abstract:The Escherichia coli CheY protein belongs to a large bacterial response regulator superfamily. X-ray hydroxy radical foot-printing with mass spectroscopy (XFMS) has shown that allosteric activation of CheY by its motor target triggers a concerted internalization of aromatic sidechains. We reanalyzed the XFMS data to compare polar versus non-polar CheY residue positions. The polar residues around and including the 57D phosphorylated site had an elevated hydroxy radical reactivity. Bioinformatic measures revealed that a water-mediated hydrogen bond network connected this ring of residues with the central 57D. These residues solvated 57D to energetically stabilize the apo-CheY fold. The abundance of these reactive residues was reduced upon activation. This result was supported by the bioinformatics and consistent with the previously reported activation-induced increase in core hydrophobicity. It further illustrated XFMS detection of structural waters. Direct contacts between the ring residues and the phosphorylation site would stabilize the aspartyl phosphate. In addition, we report that the ring residue, 18R, is a constant central node in the 57D solvation network and that 18R non-polar substitutions determine CheY diversity as assessed by its evolutionary trace in bacteria with well-studied chemotaxis. These results showcase the importance of structured water dynamics for phosphorylation-mediated signal transduction.
Keywords:solvent accessible surface area (SASA)   mass spectroscopy   protein phosphorylation   protection factor (PF)   MATLAB toolbox   structured water   protein fold energetics
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