Nature Communications (Oct 2023)

An allosteric switch between the activation loop and a c-terminal palindromic phospho-motif controls c-Src function

  • Hipólito Nicolás Cuesta-Hernández,
  • Julia Contreras,
  • Pablo Soriano-Maldonado,
  • Jana Sánchez-Wandelmer,
  • Wayland Yeung,
  • Ana Martín-Hurtado,
  • Inés G. Muñoz,
  • Natarajan Kannan,
  • Marta Llimargas,
  • Javier Muñoz,
  • Iván Plaza-Menacho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41890-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Abstract Autophosphorylation controls the transition between discrete functional and conformational states in protein kinases, yet the structural and molecular determinants underlying this fundamental process remain unclear. Here we show that c-terminal Tyr 530 is a de facto c-Src autophosphorylation site with slow time-resolution kinetics and a strong intermolecular component. On the contrary, activation-loop Tyr 419 undergoes faster kinetics and a cis-to-trans phosphorylation switch that controls c-terminal Tyr 530 autophosphorylation, enzyme specificity, and strikingly, c-Src non-catalytic function as a substrate. In line with this, we visualize by X-ray crystallography a snapshot of Tyr 530 intermolecular autophosphorylation. In an asymmetric arrangement of both catalytic domains, a c-terminal palindromic phospho-motif flanking Tyr 530 on the substrate molecule engages the G-loop of the active kinase adopting a position ready for entry into the catalytic cleft. Perturbation of the phospho-motif accounts for c-Src dysfunction as indicated by viral and colorectal cancer (CRC)-associated c-terminal deleted variants. We show that c-terminal residues 531 to 536 are required for c-Src Tyr 530 autophosphorylation, and such a detrimental effect is caused by the substrate molecule inhibiting allosterically the active kinase. Our work reveals a crosstalk between the activation and c-terminal segments that control the allosteric interplay between substrate- and enzyme-acting kinases during autophosphorylation.