Molecular Cell
Volume 79, Issue 2, 16 July 2020, Pages 342-358.e12
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Systematic Discovery of Short Linear Motifs Decodes Calcineurin Phosphatase Signaling

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2020.06.029Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Global calcineurin signaling in humans revealed through systematic substrate mapping

  • Discovery of calcineurin-binding sequences enables robust in silico SLiM predictions

  • BioID uncovers SLiM-dependent calcineurin proximity to nuclear pores and centrosomes

  • Calcineurin dephosphorylates nuclear pore proteins and regulates transport in vivo

Summary

Short linear motifs (SLiMs) drive dynamic protein-protein interactions essential for signaling, but sequence degeneracy and low binding affinities make them difficult to identify. We harnessed unbiased systematic approaches for SLiM discovery to elucidate the regulatory network of calcineurin (CN)/PP2B, the Ca2+-activated phosphatase that recognizes LxVP and PxIxIT motifs. In vitro proteome-wide detection of CN-binding peptides, in vivo SLiM-dependent proximity labeling, and in silico modeling of motif determinants uncovered unanticipated CN interactors, including NOTCH1, which we establish as a CN substrate. Unexpectedly, CN shows SLiM-dependent proximity to centrosomal and nuclear pore complex (NPC) proteins—structures where Ca2+ signaling is largely uncharacterized. CN dephosphorylates human and yeast NPC proteins and promotes accumulation of a nuclear transport reporter, suggesting conserved NPC regulation by CN. The CN network assembled here provides a resource to investigate Ca2+ and CN signaling and demonstrates synergy between experimental and computational methods, establishing a blueprint for examining SLiM-based networks.

Keywords

calcineurin
protein phosphatase
calcium signaling
nuclear pore complex
NPC
Notch1
centrosome
Short Linear Motif
SLiM
in silico motif discovery
proximity-dependent biotinylation
proteomic peptide phage display
ProP-PD

Cited by (0)

10

These authors contributed equally

11

Present address: OSTHUS GmbH, Aachen, Germany

12

Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

13

Present address: Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA

14

Lead Contact