1. Academic Validation
  2. Biochemical properties of the human guanylate binding protein 5 and a tumor-specific truncated splice variant

Biochemical properties of the human guanylate binding protein 5 and a tumor-specific truncated splice variant

  • FEBS J. 2010 Apr;277(7):1597-605. doi: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2010.07586.x.
Mark Wehner 1 Christian Herrmann
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Physikalische Chemie I - AG Proteininteraktionen, Universtitätsstrasse 150, Bochum, Germany.
Abstract

The human guanylate binding protein 5 (hGBP5) belongs to the family of interferon-gamma-inducible large GTPases, which are well known for their high induction by pro-inflammatory cytokines. The cellular role of this protein family is unclear at this point, but there are indications for Antiviral and Antibacterial activity of hGBP1. hGBP5 exists in three splice variants, forming two different proteins, of which the tumor-specific one is C-terminally truncated by 97 Amino acids, and therefore lacks the CaaX motif for geranylgeranylation. Here we present biochemical data on the splice variants of hGBP5. We show that, unlike hGBP1, hGBP5a/b and hGBP5ta do not bind GMP or produce any GMP during hydrolysis despite the fact the residues involved in GMP production from hGBP1 are conserved in hGBP5. Hydrolysis of GTP is concentration-dependent and shows weak self-activation. Thermodynamic studies showed strongly negative entropic changes during nucleotide binding, which re fl ect structural ordering in the protein during nucleotide binding. These structural changes were also observed during changes in the oligomerization state. We observed only a minor in fluence of the C-terminal truncation on hydrolysis, nucleotide binding and oligomerization of hGBP5. Based on these similarities we speculate that the missing C-terminal part, which also carries the geranylgeranylation motif, is the reason for the dysregulation of hGBP5's function in lymphoma cells.

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