Dual Specificity of the Interfacial Inhibitor Brefeldin A for Arf Proteins and Sec7 Domains

Jean‐Christophe Zeeh(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Mahel Zeghouf(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Cédric Grauffel(Institut de génétique et de biologie moléculaire et cellulaire), Bernard Guibert(Laboratoire d'Enzymologie et Biochimie Structurales), Elyette Martin(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Annick Dejaegere(Institut de génétique et de biologie moléculaire et cellulaire), Jacqueline Cherfils(Laboratoire d'Enzymologie et Biochimie Structurales)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
February 16, 2006
Cited by 88Open Access
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Abstract

Guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs), which activate small GTP-binding proteins (SMG) by stimulating their GDP/GTP exchange, are emerging as candidate targets for the inhibition of cellular pathways involved in diseases. However, their specific inhibition by competitive inhibitors is challenging, because GEF and SMG families comprise highly similar members. Nature shows us an alternative strategy called interfacial inhibition, exemplified by Brefeldin A (BFA). BFA inhibits the activation of Arf1 by its GEFs in vivo by stabilizing an abortive complex between Arf-GDP and the catalytic Sec7 domain of some of its GEFs. Here we characterize the specificity of BFA toward wild-type (ARNO and BIG1) and mutant Sec7 domains and toward class I, II, and III Arfs. We find that BFA sensitivity of the exchange reaction depends on the nature of both the Sec7 domain and the Arf protein. A single Phe/Tyr substitution is sufficient to achieve BFA sensitivity of the Sec7 domain, which is supported by our characterization of brefeldin C (BFC), a BFA analog that cannot interact with the Tyr residue, and by free energy computations. We further show that Arf1 and Arf5, but not Arf6, are BFA-sensitive, despite their having every BFA-interacting residue in common. Analysis of Arf6 mutants points to the dynamics of the interswitch, which is involved in membrane-to-nucleotide signal propagation, as contributing to, although not sufficient for, BFA sensitivity. Altogether, our results reveal the Tyr/Phe substitution as a novel tool for monitoring BFA sensitivity of cellular ArfGEFs and document the exquisite and dual specificity that can be achieved by an interfacial inhibitor.


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