September 21, 2022
Journal Article

Zng1 is a GTP-dependent zinc transferase needed for activation of methionine aminopeptidase

Abstract

The evolution of zinc (Zn) as a protein cofactor altered the functional landscape of biology, but dependency on Zn also created an Achilles’ heel, necessitating adaptive mechanisms to ensure Zn availability to proteins. A debated strategy is whether metallochaperones exist to prioritize essential Zn-dependent proteins. Here, we present evidence for a conserved family of putative metal transferases in human and fungi, which interact with Zn-dependent methionine aminopeptidase type I (MetAP1/Map1p/Fma1). Deletion of the putative metal transferase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ZNG1; formerly YNR029c) leads to defective Map1p function and a Zn-deficiency growth defect. In vitro, Zng1p can transfer Zn2+ or Co2+ to apo-Map1p, but unlike characterized copper chaperones, transfer is dependent on GTP hydrolysis. Proteomics reveal mis-regulation of the Zap1p transcription factor regulon because of loss of ZNG1 and Map1p activity, suggesting that Zng1p is required to avoid a compounding effect of Map1p dysfunction on survival during Zn limitation.

Published: September 21, 2022

Citation

Pasquini M., N. Grosjean, K.K. Hixson, C.D. Nicora, E. Yee, M.S. Lipton, and I.K. Blaby, et al. 2022. Zng1 is a GTP-dependent zinc transferase needed for activation of methionine aminopeptidase. Cell Reports 39, no. 7:Art. No. 110834. PNNL-SA-174544. doi:10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110834

Research topics