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NLIP and HAD-like Domains of Pah1 and Lipin 1 Phosphatidate Phosphatases Are Essential for Their Catalytic Activities

Wei‐Hsin Hsu, Yihao Huang, Pin‐Ru Chen, Lu‐Sheng Hsieh

2021Molecules15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pah1 phosphatidate phosphatase (PAP) catalyzes the dephosphorylation of phosphatidate to yield diacylglycerol, controlling phospholipids and triacylglycerol metabolisms. Pah1 and human Lipin 1 are intrinsically disordered proteins with 56% and 43% unfolded regions, respectively. Truncation analysis of the conserved and non-conserved regions showed that N- and C-conserved regions are essential for the catalytic activity of Pah1. PAP activities can be detected in the conserved N-terminal Lipin (NLIP) domain and C-terminal Lipin (CLIP)/haloacid dehalogenase (HAD)-like domain of Pah1 and Lipin 1, suggesting that the evolutionarily conserved domains are essential for the catalytic activity. The removal of disordered hydrophilic regions drastically reduced the protein solubility of Pah1. Thioredoxin is an efficient fusion protein for production of soluble NLIP-HAD recombinant proteins in

Topics & Concepts

PhosphatidateDephosphorylationBiochemistryPhosphataseSaccharomyces cerevisiaeAspergillus nidulansChemistryBiologyDiacylglycerol kinasePhosphorylationYeastGeneMutantProtein kinase CProtein Structure and DynamicsEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseLipid metabolism and biosynthesis
NLIP and HAD-like Domains of Pah1 and Lipin 1 Phosphatidate Phosphatases Are Essential for Their Catalytic Activities | Litcius