A tethering mechanism underlies Pin1-catalyzed proline isomerization at a noncanonical site.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Integrative Structural and Computational Biology, Scripps Research, and The Herbert Wertheim UF Scripps Institute for Biomedical Innovation and Technology, University of Florida, Jupiter, FL 33458.

Published: May 2025


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Article Abstract

The prolyl isomerase Pin1 catalyzes the - isomerization of proline peptide bonds, a noncovalent posttranslational modification that influences cellular and molecular processes, including protein-protein interactions. Pin1 is a two-domain enzyme containing a WW domain that recognizes phosphorylated serine/threonine-proline (pS/pT-P) canonical motifs and an enzymatic PPIase domain that catalyzes proline - isomerization of pS/pT-P motifs. Here, we show that Pin1 uses a tethering mechanism to bind and catalyze proline - isomerization of a noncanonical motif in the disordered N-terminal activation function-1 (AF-1) domain of the human nuclear receptor PPARγ. NMR reveals multiple Pin1 binding regions within the PPARγ AF-1, including a canonical motif (pS112-P113) that when phosphorylated by the kinase ERK2 binds the Pin1 WW domain with high affinity. NMR methods reveal that Pin1 also binds and accelerates - isomerization of a noncanonical motif containing a tryptophan-proline motif (W39-P40) previously shown to be involved in an interdomain interaction with the C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD) of PPARγ. Cellular transcription studies combined with mutagenesis and Pin1 inhibitor treatment reveal a functional role for Pin1-mediated acceleration of - isomerization of the PPARγ W39-P40 motif. Our data inform a refined model of the Pin1 catalytic mechanism where the WW domain can bind a canonical pS/T-P motif and tether Pin1 to a target, which enables the PPIase domain to exert catalytic - isomerization at a distal noncanonical site.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12130881PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2414606122DOI Listing

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