Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Structures of liganded glycosylphosphatidylinositol transamidase illuminate GPI-AP biogenesis

  • Yidan Xu,
  • Tingting Li,
  • Zixuan Zhou,
  • Jingjing Hong,
  • Yulin Chao,
  • Zhini Zhu,
  • Ying Zhang,
  • Qianhui Qu,
  • Dianfan Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41281-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Many eukaryotic receptors and enzymes rely on glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors for membrane localization and function. The transmembrane complex GPI-T recognizes diverse proproteins at a signal peptide region that lacks consensus sequence and replaces it with GPI via a transamidation reaction. How GPI-T maintains broad specificity while preventing unintentional cleavage is unclear. Here, substrates- and products-bound human GPI-T structures identify subsite features that enable broad proprotein specificity, inform catalytic mechanism, and reveal a multilevel safeguard mechanism against its promiscuity. In the absence of proproteins, the catalytic site is invaded by a locally stabilized loop. Activation requires energetically unfavorable rearrangements that transform the autoinhibitory loop into crucial catalytic cleft elements. Enzyme-proprotein binding in the transmembrane and luminal domains respectively powers the conformational rearrangement and induces a competent cleft. GPI-T thus integrates various weak specificity regions to form strong selectivity and prevent accidental activation. These findings provide important mechanistic insights into GPI-anchored protein biogenesis.