Glycolytic pyruvate kinase moonlighting activities in DNA replication initiation and elongation
Steff Horemans, Matthaios Pitoulias, Alexandria Holland, Panos, Soultanas (UON), Laurent Janniere (UMR 8030)

TL;DR
This study reveals that glycolytic pyruvate kinase (PykA) in Bacillus subtilis has moonlighting roles in DNA replication, affecting initiation and elongation independently of its metabolic activity, through interactions involving its distinct domains.
Contribution
The paper uncovers non-metabolic functions of PykA in DNA replication, demonstrating domain-specific roles and interactions that influence replication processes beyond its enzymatic activity.
Findings
PykA mutants show replication defects unrelated to metabolic activity.
Cat domain influences replication fork speed positively and negatively.
PEPut domain stimulates replication initiation depending on Cat-PEPut interaction.
Abstract
Cells have evolved a metabolic control of DNA replication to respond to a wide range of nutritional conditions. Accumulating data suggest that this poorly understood control depends, at least in part, on Central Carbon Metabolism (CCM). In Bacillus subtilis , the glycolytic pyruvate kinase (PykA) is intricately linked to replication. This 585 amino-acid-long enzyme comprises a catalytic (Cat) domain that binds to phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and ADP to produce pyruvate and ATP, and a C-terminal domain of unknown function. Interestingly, the C-terminal domain termed PEPut interacts with Cat and is homologous a domain that, in other metabolic enzymes, are phosphorylated at a conserved TSH motif at the expense of PEP and ATP to drive sugar import and catalytic or regulatory activities. To gain insights into the role of PykA in replication, DNA synthesis was analyzed in various Cat and PEPut…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAmino Acid Enzymes and Metabolism · DNA Repair Mechanisms · Enzyme Structure and Function
