1. Academic Validation
  2. Structure of human ADP-ribosyl-acceptor hydrolase 3 bound to ADP-ribose reveals a conformational switch that enables specific substrate recognition

Structure of human ADP-ribosyl-acceptor hydrolase 3 bound to ADP-ribose reveals a conformational switch that enables specific substrate recognition

  • J Biol Chem. 2018 Aug 10;293(32):12350-12359. doi: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.003586.
Yasin Pourfarjam 1 Jessica Ventura 1 Igor Kurinov 2 Ahra Cho 1 Joel Moss 3 In-Kwon Kim 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From the Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221.
  • 2 Cornell University, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Northeastern Collaborative Access Team Advanced Photon Source (NE-CAT APS), Argonne, Illinois 60439, and.
  • 3 Pulmonary Branch, NHLBI, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
  • 4 From the Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221, [email protected].
Abstract

ADP-ribosyl-acceptor hydrolase 3 (ARH3) plays important roles in regulation of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation, a reversible post-translational modification, and in maintenance of genomic integrity. ARH3 degrades poly(ADP-ribose) to protect cells from poly(ADP-ribose)-dependent cell death, reverses serine mono(ADP-ribosyl)ation, and hydrolyzes O-acetyl-ADP-ribose, a product of Sirtuin-catalyzed histone deacetylation. ARH3 preferentially hydrolyzes O-linkages attached to the anomeric C1″ of ADP-ribose; however, how ARH3 specifically recognizes and cleaves structurally diverse substrates remains unknown. Here, structures of full-length human ARH3 bound to ADP-ribose and Mg2+, coupled with computational modeling, reveal a dramatic conformational switch from closed to open states that enables specific substrate recognition. The glutamate FLAP, which blocks substrate entrance to Mg2+ in the unliganded closed state, is ejected from the active site when substrate is bound. This closed-to-open transition significantly widens the substrate-binding channel and precisely positions the scissile 1″-O-linkage for cleavage while securing tightly 2″- and 3″-hydroxyls of ADP-ribose. Our collective data uncover an unprecedented structural plasticity of ARH3 that supports its specificity for the 1″-O-linkage in substrates and Mg2+-dependent catalysis.

Keywords

ADP-ribosylation; ARH3; PARP1; conformational change; hydrolase; structural biology; substrate specificity.

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