Abstract
KaiC, the core oscillator of the cyanobacterial circadian clock, is composed of an N-terminal C1 domain and a C-terminal C2 domain, and assembles into a double-ring hexamer upon ATP binding. Cyclic phosphorylation and dephosphorylation at Ser431 and Thr432 in the C2 domain proceed with a period of approximately 24 h in the presence of other clock proteins, KaiA and KaiB, but recent studies have revealed a crucial role for the C1 ring in determining the cycle period. In this study, we mapped dynamic structural changes of the C1 ring in solution using a combination of site-directed tryptophan mutagenesis and fluorescence spectroscopy. We found that the C1 ring undergoes a structural transition, coupled with ATPase activity and the phosphorylation state, while maintaining its hexameric ring structure. This transition triggered by ATP hydrolysis in the C1 ring in specific phosphorylation states is a necessary event for recruitment of KaiB, limiting the overall rate of slow complex formation. Our results provide structural and kinetic insights into the C1-ring rearrangements governing the slow dynamics of the cyanobacterial circadian clock.
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Introduction
Circadian clocks are endogenous time-measuring systems used by various organisms to adapt their physiological activities to daily alterations in the environment. Cyanobacteria are the simplest organisms known to exhibit a circadian rhythm1. Their clock oscillator is composed of three proteins, KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC2. In the presence of KaiA and KaiB, KaiC rhythmically alters its own ATPase activity3, auto-phosphorylation/auto-dephosphorylation activities4, and assembly state with other Kai proteins5 with a period of approximately 24 h (Kai oscillator). The period of these rhythmic phenomena is minimally dependent on the temperature; this property, termed temperature compensation, is common to circadian systems from multiple species. KaiC is the core element of the Kai oscillator and provides a practical means for studying the essence of the clock mechanism6.
KaiC is composed of tandemly duplicated domains, an N-terminal (C1) domain and a C-terminal (C2) domain, and it forms a double-ring hexamer upon binding of ATP7. Cyclic phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of two residues (S431 and T432) in the C2 domain proceeds as follows: S/pT → pS/pT → pS/T → S/T → S/pT (where ‘S’ represents S431, ‘pS’ represents phosphorylated S431, ‘T’ represents T432, and ‘pT’ represents phosphorylated T432, respectively)8,9,10. KaiA promotes the auto-phosphorylation of KaiC, whereas KaiB attenuates the effect of KaiA11. Starting from these findings, the C2-ring structure has been studied in relation to phosphorylation state using various physicochemical techniques. Small-angle x-ray scattering measurements have shown that KaiC expands and contracts its C2 ring in a phosphorylation-dependent manner to control the timing of intermolecular interactions12. In addition, NMR studies using phospho-mimicking KaiC mutants have revealed that the flexibility of the C2 ring depends on its phosphorylation state13.
Subsequent studies focused on the C1 ring. A recent crystallographic study by our group revealed that a structural change of the C1 ring upon slow ATP hydrolysis (~11 ATP d−1) is a determinant of the period of the Kai oscillator14. Other groups reported that the C1 ring binds KaiB15,16. Accordingly, a dynamical aspect linking the two functions is of great interest as a key step to transmit slowness from intra-molecular to inter-molecular scales.
We performed a dynamic structural analysis of the C1 ring in solution using fluorescence spectroscopy. Using a series of KaiC mutants harboring a fluorescence probe for the C1-ring structure, we obtained evidence that the structural transition of the C1 ring is coupled with ATPase activity and the phosphorylation state and is the origin of the basic timing cue for assembly with KaiB.
Results
Design of KaiC mutants
KaiC intrinsically contains three Trp residues; one (W92) is located in the C1 domain, and the other two (W331 and W462) are in the C2 domain (Fig. 1). Initially, we tried to mask out the fluorescent contributions of these residues by replacing each tryptophan with phenylalanine. In contrast to the W92F substitution, however, both the W331F and W462F substitutions seriously impaired the robustness and/or circadian rhythmicity of the KaiC phosphorylation cycle (Supplementary Fig. S1). In addition, the expression levels of W331F/W462F, W92F/W462F, or W92F/W331F mutant in E. coli were much lower (<10%) than that of wild-type KaiC (KaiCWT). These results illustrate the practical difficulty of designing a tryptophan-free but functionally intact KaiC molecule.
Therefore, we updated our strategy by inserting a Trp residue as a probe into the KaiCWT background, and then separating its fluorescence contribution from the other three residues. Substitutions were designed to cover potential structural changes of the C1 ring, as revealed in a previous study by our group14 (Fig. 1): S157W, to monitor fraying of the α7 helix on the inner-radius side of the hexamer; S146W, to detect the cis/trans peptide isomerization near the ATPase active site; and S229W, to monitor the protomer–protomer interface on the outer-radius side of the hexamer. KaiCW92F was the exceptional Trp-masking mutant12 that enabled us to inspect the protein interior near W92 via comparison with KaiCWT. In the presence of KaiA and KaiB, both KaiCS229W and KaiCW92F were rhythmic with a prolonged period relative to that of KaiCWT, while stable oscillation was not observed for KaiCS146W and KaiCS157W (Supplementary Fig. S2).
The C1 ring undergoes a conformational change in solution during auto-dephosphorylation process
Figure 2 shows the time course of Trp fluorescence intensity (FI) integrated from 320 to 370 nm during auto-dephosphorylation of KaiC. As reported previously12, the apparent FI value (FIapp, white circles in Fig. 2a) of KaiCWT alone increased concomitantly with changes in the relative phosphorylation-state abundances (blue circles, red triangles, green squares, and orange diamonds in Fig. 2a) determined by densitmetric analysis of corresponding bands separated on SDS-PAGE gels17. Consistent with our previous observation12, the W92F substitution had minimum impact on the amplitude of the FIapp time course (Fig. 2b). On the other hand, the amplitudes of the FIapp increase of KaiCS157W and KaiCS229W were approximately 5- and 4-fold larger than that of KaiCWT, respectively, but exhibited somewhat similar temporal patterns (Fig. 2c,d). For KaiCS146W, the FIapp value exhibited a sharp increase during the first 2 h, followed by a gradual decrease (Fig. 2e).
Using these data, we estimated the FI value of each phosphorylation state as described previously12. In brief, FIapp(t) is assumed as a linear summation of the contributions from four phosphorylation states,
where Ai(t) is the relative phosphorylation-state abundance (i = S/pT, pS/pT, pS/T, S/T) pre-determined experimentally (blue circles, red triangles, green squares, and orange diamonds in Fig. 2). The FIi values were then estimated by fitting equation (1) to FIapp(t) (see details in Methods). Slightly jagged appearance was seen in the resultant fits (red lines in Fig. 2) as a natural consequence of using the relative abundances pre-determined experimentally. Next, we estimated the fluorescence contributions of each Trp probe as the FIi difference (ΔFIi) between KaiCWT and the Trp-inserted/-masked KaiC mutant (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Fig. S3). Although the fluorescence emission from W92 (bars a–d, Fig. 3) was almost insensitive to phosphorylation state, the emissions of W146 (bars f–i, Fig. 3) and W157 (bars k–n, Fig. 3) were changed depending on the phosphorylation state. The state-dependent variation of W146 and W157 clearly indicates that the C1 ring undergoes a structural change in solution.
Minor differences in the emission of W229 among the four phosphorylation states (bars p–s, Fig. 3) suggest that the conformations around the protomer interface on the outer-radius side are slightly altered. To inspect the change in the global shape of the hexameric ring, we prepared quasi-monodispersed monomeric forms of KaiC and its mutants18, and then measured their fluorescence emissions as a reference (Fig. 4a and Supplementary Fig. S4). Emissions of the monomeric forms were dramatically more intense than those of the hexameric forms (Fig. 4a). W229 fluorescence in monomeric form (bar t, Fig. 3), which can be estimated from the difference between monomeric KaiCWT and monomeric KaiCS229W (orange area in Fig. 4a), was approximately 6-fold greater than that in hexameric KaiCS229W (bars p–s, Fig. 3). By contrast, W92 fluorescence in monomeric form (bar e, Fig. 3) was comparable to that in hexameric form (bars a–d, Fig. 3). These contrasting results imply that W229 fluorescence is significantly quenched specifically in the hexameric form, whereas W92 fluorescence is quenched irrespective of the oligomerization state. This interpretation was further supported by the crystal structure of a C1-domain truncation, KaiC1S229W. The backbone RMSD value between KaiC1S229W and KaiC1WT was 0.38 Å (Fig. 4b), indicating that the mutation had minimal impact on the overall structure of the C1 ring. W92 is located in the interior of the C1 domain, and its solvent-accessible surface area (SASA) is quite small (22 Å2) in both the monomer and hexamer. In sharp contrast, because W229 is located near the C1–protomer interface of the hexamer, the SASA of W229 is buried by 36 Å2 following the monomer-to-hexamer transition (142 to 106 Å2). In fact (Fig. 4b), one edge of the indole ring of W229 is in close proximity to potential quenchers, including the adenine ring of bound ATP19 and a main-chain oxygen atom of I23920, and the other edge is nearly in contact with H3321. Collectively, these results indicate that the C1 ring undergoes a structural change while maintaining its hexameric structure.
Fluorescence detection of the C1-ring deformation during assembly with KaiB
We found that W157 fluorescence is sensitive not only to the conformational change of the C1 ring (bars k–n, Fig. 3), but also to KaiB binding that is known to occur in the C1 ring15,16. We constructed a series of phospho-mimicking mutants of KaiCS157W by introducing S431D (pS/T mimic), S431D/T432E (pS/pT mimic), S431A/T432A (S/T mimic), or T432E (S/pT mimic), and measured fluorescence spectra of these proteins after 24 h incubation at 30 °C with or without an equimolar concentration of KaiB (monomer basis). The co-incubation with KaiB resulted in quenching selectively for KaiCS157W-D/E and KaiCS157W-D/T (Fig. 5a). By contrast, the FI values of any phospho-mimicking mutants of KaiCWT (no artificial Trp probes) were unaffected by the addition of KaiB (Supplementary Fig. S5). Because wild-type KaiB lacks Trp residues, these observations illustrate that W157 can be used to monitor the conformational change of the C1 ring during complex formation with KaiB. Gel-filtration chromatography analysis, revealing KaiB binding with KaiCS157W-D/E but not with KaiCS157W-A/A (Fig. 5b,c), further supports our interpretation that fluorescence quenching of KaiCS157W-D/E (Fig. 5a) reflects KaiB binding on the C1 ring. Consistently to the previous works22,23,24, these results demonstrate that the binding affinity of KaiB to the C1 ring is dependent on the phosphorylation state.
We also studied the kinetics of the structural change of the C1 ring upon addition of KaiB. For this purpose, pre-incubated KaiCS157W-D/E was mixed with KaiB, and then the mixture was subjected to time-resolved fluorescence measurement. Figure 5d shows the time course of the FIapp value of KaiCS157W-D/E after addition of an equimolar concentration of KaiB. Without any detectable burst phase, the FIapp value decreased slowly with t1/2 of 2.4 ± 0.04 h (n = 3), indicating slow complex formation with KaiB, as reported previously5,25,26,27.
KaiB exclusively selects a post-hydrolysis conformation of the C1 ring for specific binding
The above results showed that KaiC alters the C1 ring conformation during complex formation, but it remained unclear whether the conformational change of the C1 ring occurs before binding with KaiB or is induced by KaiB-binding. To address this question, the dependence of the relaxation kinetics on KaiB concentration was examined by mixing a fixed concentration of KaiCS157W-D/E (3.5 µM) with 0.9–10.5 µM KaiB (Fig. 6a). Both total FIapp change between the initial and final time points (Fig. 6b) and the inverse of half-life time (1/t1/2) (Fig. 6c) revealed unique dependencies on the KaiB concentration. The total FIapp change was enhanced as KaiB concentration increased, and then became saturated at a KaiB concentration around 3.5 µM. This observation indicates that the total decrease in the FIapp value reflects the amount of KaiB bound to the C1 ring. Moreover, the plot of 1/t1/2 that decreased hyperbolically with increasing the KaiB concentration (Fig. 6c) is reminiscent of a conformational selection mechanism in which the conformational change in the protein occurs before ligand binding (Supplementary Fig. S7)28. Hence, our result suggests that KaiC changes the C1-ring conformation in order to bind with KaiB.
Finally, to investigate origins of the conformational selection of the C1 ring prior to KaiB binding, we investigated the effect of KaiC ATPase on the kinetics. We found that the value of 1/t1/2 at a KaiB concentration of 10.5 µM (~0.5 h−1) (Fig. 6c) was close to the measured ATPase activity of KaiCS157W-D/E in the absence of KaiB (12 ± 1 d−1 [n = 3]). Furthermore, exchanging external ATP with its non-hydrolyzable analog, adenylyl-imidophosphate (AMP-PNP), resulted in disappearance of the time-dependent change in FIapp after addition of KaiB (Fig. 6d). Under such solution condition, stable KaiB–KaiC complex was not detected even after long-term incubation (Fig. 6e,f). At the same time, it must be noted that inability of KaiCS157W-A/A to recruit KaiB (Fig. 5b,c) is not due to a deficiency of ATPase activity (31 ± 2 d−1 [n = 4]). Taken together, the complex formation between the C1 ring and KaiB is regulated both by the phosphorylation state (Fig. 5a) and by ATP hydrolysis-driven conformational change of the C1 ring (Fig. 6) to effect a rate-limiting step of the complex formation.
Discussion
Tryptophan fluorescence is often used in studies of protein folding29, enzyme kinetics30, and protein–substrate interactions21 because of its high sensitivity to the local environment of the protein structure. In this study, we investigated the conformational change of the C1 ring using a series of Trp fluorescent probes incorporated into the C1 domain, enabling us to detect changes in the emission of W146 (bars f–i, Fig. 3) and W157 (bars k–n, Fig. 3). These changes were dependent on the phosphorylation state, clearly indicating that the C1 ring undergoes a structural transition in solution.
Fluorescence of Trp residues situated in or near protein–protein interfaces is often quenched31,32,33 or dequenched34,35 upon assembly or disassembly of protein molecules. Consistent with this, fluorescence of W229, near the C1–protomer interface, was dramatically quenched following the monomer-to-hexamer transition (bars p–t, Fig. 3). Thus, W229 fluorescence serves as a sensitive probe for C1-ring formation. By contrast, the phosphorylation state–dependent variation of W229 fluorescence (bars p–s, Fig. 3) was negligibly small. Therefore, the KaiC hexamer undergoes structural arrangement while maintaining the framework of the hexameric C1 ring.
It is worth discussing the state-dependent variation of the emission of W146 and W157 in terms of the structure transition of the C1 ring upon ATP hydrolysis. W146 fluorescence was dramatically dequenched during the transition from the S/pT to pS/pT states, and then quenched during the transition to the S/T state via the pS/T state. The radical increase and decrease in ΔFI indicate a substantial rearrangement of W146 during auto-dephosphorylation. Although the interpretation of W146 fluorescence is not straightforward, the drastic change in ΔFI is reminiscent of cis-to-trans isomerization of the D145S146 peptide upon ATP hydrolysis in the C1 domain14.
S157 controls N-terminal fraying of the α7 helix, which can adopt at least four different conformations dependent on the status of ATP hydrolysis in the C1 domain14. Exceptional quenching of W157 fluorescence in the S/pT state (bar k, Fig. 3) is likely due to these hydrolysis-coupled transitions.
KaiB-induced fluorescence quenching of KaiCS157W (Fig. 5a) but not KaiCWT (Supplementary Fig. S5) indicates that W157, located on the inner-radius side of the C1 ring, is a sensitive probe for the conformational rearrangements that occur during assembly with KaiB. The crystal structures of the KaiB–KaiC complex from Thermosynechococcus elongatus (PDB code: 5JWO & 5JWQ)15 show that Cβ atom of A158 (S157 in Synechococcus elongatus) is more than 12 Å away from the closest atom of bound KaiB. Therefore, it is reasonable to suggest that fluorescence quenching induced by the addition of KaiB does not originate from a direct contact between W157 and KaiB.
Formation of the KaiB–KaiC complex is a slow process5,25,26,27. Although this slowness is considered as one of the crucial factors responsible for the slow dynamics of the cyanobacterial circadian clock, the mechanism underlying slow but specific KaiB-KaiC interaction remains unknown. In studies of protein–ligand interaction, it is often debated whether a conformational change of a protein occurs before binding with its ligand (conformational selection)36 or is instead induced by ligand binding (induced fit)37, and a kinetic approach is often used to distinguish between the two extreme scenarios38,39. The dependence of relaxation speed on KaiB concentration (Fig. 6c) exhibited the inverse hyperbolic pattern, a clear sign of selecting a particular conformation of KaiC by KaiB28. This is further supported by our observation that exchange of ATP with AMP-PNP abolished the fluorescence decay of KaiCS157W-D/E (W157) upon addition of KaiB and made KaiC unable to form a complex with KaiB (Fig. 6d–f). According to the conformational selection mechanism (Supplementary Fig. S7), the time scale of fluorescence decay at the KaiB-saturating concentration should correspond to the time scale of a conformational selection of the C1 ring before KaiB binding. Consistency between the 1/t1/2 value of ~0.5 h−1 (10.5 µM KaiB in Fig. 6c) for KaiCS157W-D/E and its ATPase activity (12 ± 1 d−1) measured in the absence of KaiB suggests that an event required in prior to KaiB binding is the slow structural change of the C1 ring from pre- into post-hydrolysis states. According to Fig. 5a, the decrease in FIapp was confirmed as the consequence of KaiB binding only for KaiCS157W-D/E and KaiCS157W-D/T, even though other phospho-mimicking KaiCS157W mutants retained the ATPase activity. Thus, the selection of the C1-ring conformation by KaiB is gated likely through a coupled conformational change of ATPase and phosphorylation states.
On the other hand, it must be noted that KaiB also undergoes a structural change to form the KaiB–KaiC complex27. If the structural change of KaiB occurs concomitantly with KaiC binding (induced fit), the hyperbolic pattern in Fig. 6c will be unaffected because of no probes in KaiB in the present study. If KaiC also selects a particular conformation of KaiB as KaiB does on KaiC, the 1/t1/2 value will be affected somehow but should decrease still in a hyperbolic manner as long as the formation rate of KaiC-binding-competent state of KaiB is similar to or larger than that of KaiB-binding-competent state of KaiC (see Supplementary Text for details). Because the KaiB-saturating concentration in Fig. 6c is within the range in which robust circadian rhythm can be observed40, it is reasonable to propose that the selection of the post-hydrolysis C1-ring by KaiB is so important as that of the KaiB conformation by KaiC as a key mechanism to transmit the slow but stable timing cue from the intra-molecular (KaiC ATPase and KaiB fold-switch) to inter-molecular (KaiB–KaiC binding) scales14. In fact, in a recent model of the Kai oscillator41, the ATP hydrolysis in the C1 ring is implemented as a key event driving/switching both structural transitions of KaiC and KaiA/KaiB interactions.
In summary, by installing Trp-fluorescence probes at multiple specific sites, we demonstrated that the C1 domain indeed undergoes conformational changes on the inner-radius interface and in the D145S146 peptide, while maintaining its hexameric ring framework. These C1-ring rearrangements, coupled to ATP hydrolysis events and phosphorylation state, are the origins of the slow circadian period14 and provide the basic timing cue for assembly with KaiB15,16,24,42,43,44.
Materials and Methods
Expression and purification of Kai proteins
Site-directed mutagenesis was conducted using the QuikChange Mutagenesis Kit (Stratagene). Recombinant Kai proteins were expressed in E. coli and purified as described previously9.
Biochemical assays of Kai proteins
All experiments on KaiCWT and its mutants, except for KaiCS146W, were carried out in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM EDTA, and 1 mM ATP at pH 8.0. In the case of KaiCS146W, the ATP concentration was increased up to 3 mM to maintain its hexameric conformation stably. KaiC auto-dephosphorylation was initiated by a temperature-jump from an ice bath to 30 °C, and the relative abundances of the phosphorylation states at each time point were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and quantified using LOUPE17. ATPase measurements were performed by HPLC as described previously12.
Fluorescence spectroscopy
Fluorescence emission spectra from Trp residues were collected every 1 nm with a 0.1 s response time and a scan speed of 1200 nm min−1 at an excitation wavelength of 295 nm (Hitachi, F-7000) as described previously12. The observed spectra were normalized against both KaiC concentration and the fluorescence signal of an N-acetyl-L-tryptophanamide (NATA) standard solution with an absorbance of 0.05 at 280 nm.
Data processing and analysis of kinetic measurements
For investigations of the KaiC auto-dephosphorylation process, each sample was stored on ice, transferred to 30 °C, and incubated for 10 min prior to measurements. Time courses were analyzed by using equation (1) (see text). Fitting quality was assessed by the value of residual sum of squares (RSS) between experimental and simulated FIs. For studies of kinetics upon addition of KaiB, KaiC was pre-incubated at 30 °C for at least 2 h, and then mixed with KaiB.
Size exclusion chromatography
KaiB (0.24 mg/ml) and KaiC (1.2 mg/ml) had been pre-incubated separately at 30 °C for 2 h, and then equal volumes of two samples were mixed together (t = 0). An aliquot (500 μL) of the mixture was loaded onto a Superdex 200 10/30 GL column (GE Healthcare) immediately after the mixing (t = ~2 min), or after further incubation at 30 °C for 18 h. The column was equilibrated in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, and 0.5 mM ATP or AMP-PNP at pH 8.0. Analysis was performed at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min at room temperature.
Crystallization and Refinements
Crystallization of KaiC1S229W was conducted as described14. Reflections at 50–2.8 Å were collected at 100 K at BL44XU of SPring-8. The initial structure was determined by molecular replacement using the template model 4TL7 (the crystal structure of KaiC1WT solved at 1.93 Å). Crystallographic statistics and refinement parameters are provided in Supplementary Table S1 (see Supplementary Text for details).
Data availability
The datasets generated and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Change history
11 February 2020
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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Acknowledgements
Diffraction data were collected at the BL44XU beamline of SPring-8 under proposals 2014A6700, 2014B6700, 2015A6700, 2015B6700, 2016A6700, 2016B6700, 2017A6702, and 2017B6702. This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (17H06165 and 16H00785 to S.A.; 25840058 to A.M.; 16K14685 to Y.F.; 24000016 to T.K.) and by the Platform for Drug Discovery, Informatics, and Structural Life Science from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan and the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED). Atomic coordinates and structure factors are deposited in the Protein Data Bank with accession code 5YZ8.
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A.M. and S.A. designed the experiments. A.M. conducted biochemical and fluorescence experiments and analyzed the data with inputs from S.K. J.A. screened initial crystallization condition. Y.F., J.A. and S.A. collected the diffraction data and analyzed the structures with inputs from E.Y. Both A.M. and S.A. drafted the manuscript with input from all authors.
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Mukaiyama, A., Furuike, Y., Abe, J. et al. Conformational rearrangements of the C1 ring in KaiC measure the timing of assembly with KaiB. Sci Rep 8, 8803 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-27131-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-27131-8
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