We performed phosphoproteome analysis of proteins from the extremely thermophilic Gram-negative eubacterium Thermus thermophilus HB8 using gel-free mass spectrometric method. We identified 52 phosphopeptides from 48 proteins and determined 46 phosphorylation sites: 30 on serine, 12 on threonine, and 4 on tyrosine. The identified phosphoproteins are known to be involved in a wide variety of cellular processes. To help elucidate the functional roles of these phosphorylation events, we mapped the phosphorylation sites on the known tertiary structures of the respective proteins. In all, we succeeded in mapping 46 sites (approximately 88%) on the corresponding structures. Most of the phosphorylation sites were found to be located on loops and terminal regions of the secondary structures. Surprisingly, 28 of these sites were situated at or near the active site of the enzyme. In particular, 18 sites were within 4 Å of the ligand, including substrate or cofactor. Such structural locations suggest direct effects of the phosphorylation on the binding of ligand in addition to inducing a conformational change. Interestingly, 19 of these 28 phosphorylation sites were situated near the phosphate moiety of a substrate or cofactor. In oligomeric proteins, 5 phosphorylation sites were found at the subunit interface. Based on these results, we propose a regulatory mechanism that involves Ser/Thr/Tyr phosphorylation in T. thermophilus HB8.
Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-specific exonucleases (ssExos) are expected to be involved in a variety of DNA repair pathways corresponding to their cleavage polarities; however, the relationship between the cleavage polarity and the respective DNA repair pathways is only partially understood. To understand the cellular function of ssExos in DNA repair better, genes encoding ssExos were disrupted in Thermus thermophilus HB8 that seems to have only a single set of 5′–3′ and 3′–5′ ssExos unlike other model organisms. Disruption of the tthb178 gene, which was expected to encode a 3′–5′ ssExo, resulted in significant increase in the sensitivity to H2O2 and frequency of the spontaneous mutation rate, but scarcely affected the sensitivity to ultraviolet (UV) irradiation. In contrast, disruption of the recJ gene, which encodes a 5′–3′ ssExo, showed little effect on the sensitivity to H2O2, but caused increased sensitivity to UV irradiation. In vitro characterization revealed that TTHB178 possessed 3′–5′ ssExo activity that degraded ssDNAs containing deaminated and methylated bases, but not those containing oxidized bases or abasic sites. Consequently, we concluded that TTHB178 is a novel 3′–5′ ssExo that functions in various DNA repair systems in cooperation with or independently of RecJ. We named TTHB178 as T. thermophilus exonuclease I.
Electrospray ionization with Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (ESI–FT ICR MS) is a powerful tool for analyzing the precise structural features of biopolymers, including oligonucleotides. Here, we described the detailed characterization of a newly discovered nuclease activity of the C-terminal domain of Thermus thermophilus MutS2 (ttMutS2). Using this method, the length, nucleotide content and nature of the 5′- and 3′-termini of the product oligonucleotides were accurately identified. It is revealed that the C-terminal domain of ttMutS2 incised the phosphate backbone of oligodeoxynucleotides non-sequence-specifically at the 3′ side of the phosphates. The simultaneous identification of the innumerable fragments was achieved by the extremely high-accuracy of ESI–FT ICR MS.
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