Glutaminase Affects the Transcriptional Activity of Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor γ (PPARγ) via Direct Interaction.
Carolina Aparecida de Guzzi CassagoMarília Meira DiasMatheus Pinto PinheiroCamila Cristina PasqualiAlliny Cristiny Silva BastosZeyaul IslamSílvio Roberto ConsonniJuliana Ferreira de OliveiraEmerson Machi GomesCarolline Fernanda Rodrigues AscençãoRodrigo HonoratoBianca Alves PaulettiNathalia de Carvalho IndolfoHelder Veras Ribeiro FilhoPaulo Sergio Lopes de OliveiraAna Carolina Migliorini FigueiraAdriana Franco Paes LemeAndre Luis Berteli AmbrosioSandra Martha Gomes DiasPublished in: Biochemistry (2018)
Phosphate-activated glutaminases catalyze the deamidation of glutamine to glutamate and play key roles in several physiological and pathological processes. In humans, GLS encodes two multidomain splicing isoforms: KGA and GAC. In both isoforms, the canonical glutaminase domain is flanked by an N-terminal region that is folded into an EF-hand-like four-helix bundle. However, the splicing event replaces a well-structured three-repeat ankyrin domain in KGA with a shorter, unordered C-terminal stretch in GAC. The multidomain architecture, which contains putative protein-protein binding motifs, has led to speculation that glutaminases are involved in cellular processes other than glutamine metabolism; in fact, some proteins have been identified as binding partners of KGA and the isoforms of its paralogue gene, GLS2. Here, a yeast two-hybrid assay identified nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) as a new binding partner of the glutaminase. We show that KGA and GAC directly bind PPARγ with a low-micromolar dissociation constant; the interaction involves the N-terminal and catalytic domains of glutaminases as well as the ligand-binding domain of the nuclear receptor. The interaction occurs within the nucleus, and by sequestering PPARγ from its responsive element DR1, the glutaminases decreased nuclear receptor activity as assessed by a luciferase reporter assay. Altogether, our findings reveal an unexpected glutaminase-binding partner and, for the first time, directly link mitochondrial glutaminases to an unanticipated role in gene regulation.