A comprehensive structural, biochemical and biological profiling of the human NUDIX hydrolase family.
Jordi Carreras-PuigvertMarinka ZitnikAnn-Sofie JemthMegan CarterJudith E UnterlassBjörn HallströmOlga LosevaZhir KaremJosé Manuel Calderón-MontañoCecilia LindskogPer-Henrik EdqvistDamian J MatuszewskiHammou Ait BlalRonnie P-A BerntssonMaria HäggbladUlf MartensMatthew StudhamBo LundgrenCarolina WählbyErik L L SonnhammerEmma LundbergPål StenmarkBlaz ZupanThomas HelledayPublished in: Nature communications (2017)
The NUDIX enzymes are involved in cellular metabolism and homeostasis, as well as mRNA processing. Although highly conserved throughout all organisms, their biological roles and biochemical redundancies remain largely unclear. To address this, we globally resolve their individual properties and inter-relationships. We purify 18 of the human NUDIX proteins and screen 52 substrates, providing a substrate redundancy map. Using crystal structures, we generate sequence alignment analyses revealing four major structural classes. To a certain extent, their substrate preference redundancies correlate with structural classes, thus linking structure and activity relationships. To elucidate interdependence among the NUDIX hydrolases, we pairwise deplete them generating an epistatic interaction map, evaluate cell cycle perturbations upon knockdown in normal and cancer cells, and analyse their protein and mRNA expression in normal and cancer tissues. Using a novel FUSION algorithm, we integrate all data creating a comprehensive NUDIX enzyme profile map, which will prove fundamental to understanding their biological functionality.