An oligomeric state-dependent switch in the ER enzyme FICD regulates AMPylation and deAMPylation of BiP

October 4, 2019

of HKTx dispensed into 384‐well non‐binding, low volume, HiBase, black microplates (greiner bio‐one). Note, all FICD variants were dispensed directly into the microplate well solutions using a D300e digital dispenser (Tecan). The plate was then sealed and the final 20 μl (Fig 6F) or 15 μl reactions (Fig 6G) were incubated for 45 min at 10°C, whilst shaking at 300 rpm on a ThermoMix

AMPylation is an inactivating modification that alters the activity of the major endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperone BiP to match the burden of unfolded proteins. A single ER-localised Fic protein, FICD (HYPE), catalyses both AMPylation and deAMPylation of BiP. However, the basis for the switch in FICD's activity is unknown. We report on the transition of FICD from a dimeric enzyme, that deAMPylates BiP, to a monomer with potent AMPylation activity. Mutations in the dimer interface, or of residues along an inhibitory pathway linking the dimer interface to the enzyme's active site, favour BiP AMPylation in vitro and in cells. Mechanistically, monomerisation relieves a repressive effect allosterically propagated from the dimer interface to the inhibitory Glu234, thereby permitting AMPylation-competent binding of MgATP. Moreover, a reciprocal signal, propagated from the nucleotide-binding site, provides a mechanism for coupling the oligomeric state and enzymatic activity of FICD to the energy status of the ER. Š 2019 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.

Perera, LA; Rato, C; Yan, Y; Neidhardt, L; McLaughlin, SH; Read, RJ; Preissler, S; Ron, D;

Journal: EMBO J. Pages: e102177

Original article (31531998)