The PH domain in the ArfGAP ASAP1 drives catalytic activation through an unprecedented allosteric mechanism

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The PH domain in the ArfGAP ASAP1 drives catalytic activation through an unprecedented allosteric mechanism

Authors

Soubias, O.; Foley, S. L.; Jian, X.; Jackson, R. A.; Zhang, Y.; Rosenberg, E. M.; Li, J.; Heinrich, F.; Johnson, M. E.; Sodt, A. J.; Randazzo, P. A.; Byrd, R. A.

Abstract

ASAP1 is a multidomain Arf GTPase-activating protein (ArfGAP) that catalyzes GTP hydrolysis on the small GTPase Arf1 and is implicated in cancer progression. The PH domain of ASAP1 enhances its activity greater than 7 orders of magnitude but the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we combined Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR), Molecular Dynamic (MD) simulations and mathematical modeling of functional data to build a comprehensive structural-mechanistic model of the complex of Arf1 and the ASAP1 PH domain on a membrane surface. Our results support a new conceptual model in which the PH domain contributes to efficient catalysis not only by membrane recruitment but by acting as a critical component of the catalytic interface, binding Arf-GTP and allosterically driving it towards the catalytic transition state. We discuss the biological implications of these results and how they may apply more broadly to poorly understood membrane-dependent regulatory mechanisms controlling catalysis of the ArfGAP superfamily as well as other peripheral membrane enzymes.

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