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1.
Ma H  Azuma M  Shearer TR 《FEBS letters》2005,579(30):6745-6748
Opacities (cataracts) in the lens of the eye are a leading cause of preventable blindness. Aquaporins function as water channels, and the C-terminus is postulated as a regulatory domain. The C-terminal domain of aquaporin 0 (AQP0) develops numerous truncation sites during lens aging. The purpose of the present experiment was to determine if the calcium-activated protease m-calpain (EC 3.4.22.17) was responsible for truncation of human AQP0. AQP0 was isolated from young human donors, incubated with recombinant m-calpain, and the cleavage sites on the released peptides were determined by on-line electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. We found that four cleavage sites on human AQP0 could be tentatively assigned to m-calpain. This is the first evidence for possible calpain activity in human lens. Because the cause(s) of 17 other cleavage sites was unknown, the data also suggested that other, as yet unknown, proteases or non-enzymatic mechanisms are more active than calpain in human lens.  相似文献   

2.
Schey KL  Gutierrez DB  Wang Z  Wei J  Grey AC 《Biochemistry》2010,49(45):9858-9865
Fatty acid acylation of proteins is a well-studied co- or posttranslational modification typically conferring membrane trafficking signals or membrane anchoring properties to proteins. Commonly observed examples of protein acylation include N-terminal myristoylation and palmitoylation of cysteine residues. In the present study, direct tissue profiling mass spectrometry of bovine and human lens sections revealed an abundant signal tentatively assigned as a lipid-modified form of aquaporin-0. LC/MS/MS proteomic analysis of hydrophobic tryptic peptides from lens membrane proteins revealed both N-terminal and C-terminal peptides modified by 238 and 264 Da which were subsequently assigned by accurate mass measurement as palmitoylation and oleoylation, respectively. Specific sites of modification were the N-terminal methionine residue and lysine 238 revealing, for the first time, an oleic acid modification via an amide linkage to a lysine residue. The specific fatty acids involved reflect their abundance in the lens fiber cell plasma membrane. Imaging mass spectrometry indicated abundant acylated AQP0 in the inner cortical region of both bovine and human lenses and acylated truncation products in the lens nucleus. Additional analyses revealed that the lipid-modified forms partitioned exclusively to a detergent-resistant membrane fraction, suggesting a role in membrane domain targeting.  相似文献   

3.
Aquaporin 0 (AQP0), also known as major intrinsic protein of lens, is the most abundant membrane protein in the lens and it undergoes a host of C-terminally directed posttranslational modifications. The C-terminal region containing the major phosphorylation sites is a putative calmodulin-binding site, and calmodulin has been shown to regulate AQP0 water permeability. The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the role of AQP0 phosphorylation on calmodulin binding. AQP0 C-terminal peptides were synthesized with and without serine phosphorylation on S231 and S235, and the ability of these peptides to bind dansyl-labeled calmodulin and the calcium dependence of the interaction was assessed using a fluorescence binding assay. The AQP0 C-terminal phosphorylated peptides were found to have 20-50-fold lower affinities for calmodulin than the unphosphorylated peptide. Chemical cross-linking studies revealed specific sites of AQP0-calmodulin interaction that are significantly reduced by AQP0 phosphorylation. These data suggest that AQP0 C-terminal phosphorylation affects calmodulin binding in vivo and has a role in regulation of AQP0 function.  相似文献   

4.
Aquaporin-0 (AQP0), previously known as major intrinsic protein (MIP), is the only water pore protein expressed in lens fiber cells. AQP0 is highly specific to lens fiber cells and constitutes the most abundant intrinsic membrane protein in these cells. The protein is initially expressed as a full-length protein in young fiber cells in the lens cortex, but becomes increasingly cleaved in the lens core region. Reconstitution of AQP0 isolated from the core of sheep lenses containing a proportion of truncated protein, produced double-layered two-dimensional (2D) crystals, which displayed the same dimensions as the thin 11 nm lens fiber cell junctions, which are prominent in the lens core. In contrast reconstitution of full-length AQP0 isolated from the lens cortex reproducibly yielded single-layered 2D crystals. We present electron diffraction patterns and projection maps of both crystal types. We show that cleavage of the intracellular C terminus enhances the adhesive properties of the extracellular surface of AQP0, indicating a conformational change in the molecule. This change of function of AQP0 from a water pore in the cortex to an adhesion molecule in the lens core constitutes another manifestation of the gene sharing concept originally proposed on the basis of the dual function of crystallins.  相似文献   

5.
With age, long-lived proteins in the human body deteriorate, which can have consequences both for aging and disease. The aging process is often associated with the formation of covalently crosslinked proteins. Currently our knowledge of the mechanism of formation of these crosslinks is limited. In this study, proteomics was used to characterize sites of covalent protein-protein crosslinking and identify a novel mechanism of protein-protein crosslinking in the adult human lens. In this mechanism, Lys residues are crosslinked to C-terminal Asp residues that are formed by non-enzymatic protein truncation. Ten different crosslinks were identified in major lens proteins such as αA-crystallin, αB-crystallin and AQP0. Crosslinking in AQP0 increased significantly with age and also increased significantly in cataract lenses compared with normal lenses. Using model peptides, a mechanism of formation of the Lys-Asp crosslink was elucidated. The mechanism involves spontaneous peptide cleavage on the C-terminal side of Asp residues which can take place in the pH range 5–7.4. Cleavage appears to involve attack by the side chain carboxyl group on the adjacent peptide bond, resulting in the formation of a C-terminal Asp anhydride. This anhydride intermediate can then either react with water to form Asp, or with a nucleophile, such as a free amine group to form a crosslink. If an ε-amino group of Lys or an N-terminal amine group attacks the anhydride, a covalent protein-protein crosslink will be formed. This bi-phasic mechanism represents the first report to link two spontaneous events: protein cleavage and crosslinking that are characteristic of long-lived proteins.  相似文献   

6.
alphaA-crystallin is a major protein component of the human lens. It is known to undergo posttranslational modification. This study was done to further elucidate the temporal and spatial nature of these posttranslational modifications and to correlate the modified forms with electrophoretic migration. We dissected normal human lenses into concentric shells of fiber cells, separated the proteins by two-dimensional electrophoresis, and identified modified forms by mass spectrometry. We found that alphaA-crystallin migrated as a major spot and in over 20 additional protein spots. The extent of modification correlated with the age of the fiber cells and the depth within a lens. A correlation was also seen between these parameters and the concentration of modified forms that had full-length sequences but migrated at more acidic positions. These proteins were phosphorylated, acetylated, and/or deamidated. A few proteins migrated to a more basic position than the major form of alphaA-crystallin. The locations of several species that were truncated after C-terminal residues Ser172 and Ser162 were identified. Each of these species had intact N termini. The similarity of the C-terminal cleavage sites found in alphaA- and alphaB-crystallins was noted.  相似文献   

7.
Using immunohistochemistry and mass spectrometry, differentiation-dependent changes in the subcellular distribution and processing of aquaporin-0 (AQP0) have been mapped in the rat lens. Sections labelled with C-terminal tail AQP0 antibodies yielded two concentric rings of labelling with minimal signal in the lens core. The rings were separated by a transient zone of decreased labelling located prior to the transition of differentiating fiber (DF) cells into mature denucleated fiber (MF) cells. Mass spectrometry showed that the loss of core labelling was due to AQP0 cleavage, while the transient loss of labelling was more likely caused by masking of the antibody epitope. AQP0 subcellular distribution changed with radial distance into the lens. In peripheral DF cells, AQP0 was found throughout both broad and narrow side membranes. In deeper-lying DF cells, AQP0 aggregated into plaque-like structures located on the broad sides. This shift occurred prior to the transient loss of AQP0 signal, and coincided with formation of broad-side membrane invaginations between adjacent fiber cells to which filensin, a known binding partner of AQP0, was also localized. After nuclei loss, AQP0 was once again distributed throughout MF cell membranes. In the absence of protein synthesis, the observed subcellular redistribution of AQP0 in DF and subsequent cleavage of AQP0 in MF are suggestive of a switch in the function of AQP0 from a water channel to a junctional protein.  相似文献   

8.
Aquaporin 0 (AQP0) is a transmembrane channel that constitutes ∼45% of the total membrane protein of the fiber cells in mammalian lens. It is critical for lens transparency and homeostasis as mutations and knockout cause autosomal dominant lens cataract. AQP0 functions as a water channel and as a cell-to-cell adhesion (CTCA) molecule in the lens. Our recent in vitro studies showed that the CTCA function of AQP0 could be crucial to establish lens refractive index gradient (RING). However, there is a lack of in vivo data to corroborate the role of AQP0 as a fiber CTCA molecule which is critical for creating lens RING. The present investigation is undertaken to gather in vivo evidence for the involvement of AQP0 in developing lens RING. Lenses of wild type (WT) mouse, AQP0 knockout (heterozygous, AQP0+/−) and AQP0 knockout lens transgenically expressing AQP1 (heterozygous AQP0+//AQP1+/) mouse models were used for the study. Data on AQP0 protein profile of intact and N- and/or C-terminal cleaved AQP0 in the lens by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and SDS–PAGE revealed that outer cortex fiber cells have only intact AQP0 of ∼28 kDa, inner cortical and outer nuclear fiber cells have both intact and cleaved forms, and inner nuclear fiber cells have only cleaved forms (∼26–24 kDa). Knocking out of 50% of AQP0 protein caused light scattering, spherical aberration (SA) and cataract. Restoring the lost fiber cell membrane water permeability (Pf) by transgene AQP1 did not reinstate complete lens transparency and the mouse lenses showed light scattering and SA. Transmission and scanning electron micrographs of lenses of both mouse models showed increased extracellular space between fiber cells. Water content determination study showed increase in water in the lenses of these mouse models. In summary, lens transparency, CTCA and compact packing of fiber cells were affected due to the loss of 50% AQP0 leading to larger extracellular space, more water content and SA, possibly due to alteration in RING. To our knowledge, this is the first report identifying the role of AQP0 in RING development to ward off lens SA during focusing.  相似文献   

9.
Aquaporin (AQP) 1 and AQP0 water channels are expressed in lens epithelial and fiber cells, respectively, facilitating fluid circulation for nourishing the avascular lens to maintain transparency. Even though AQP0 water permeability is 40-fold less than AQP1, AQP0 is selectively expressed in the fibers. Delimited AQP0 fiber expression is attributed to a unique structural role as an adhesion protein. To validate this notion, we determined if wild type (WT) lens ultrastructure and fiber cell adhesion are different in AQP0−/−, and TgAQP1+/+/AQP0−/− mice that transgenically express AQP1 (TgAQP1) in fiber cells without AQP0 (AQP0−/−). In WT, lenses were transparent with ‘Y’ sutures. Fibers contained opposite end curvature, lateral interdigitations, hexagonal shape, and were arranged as concentric growth shells. AQP0−/− lenses were cataractous, lacked ‘Y’ sutures, ordered packing and well-defined lateral interdigitations. TgAQP1+/+/AQP0−/− lenses showed improvement in transparency and lateral interdigitations in the outer cortex while inner cortex and nuclear fibers were severely disintegrated. Transmission electron micrographs exhibited tightly packed fiber cells in WT whereas AQP0−/− and TgAQP1+/+/AQP0−/− lenses had wide extracellular spaces. Fibers were easily separable by teasing in AQP0−/− and TgAQP1+/+/AQP0−/− lenses compared to WT. Our data suggest that the increased water permeability through AQP1 does not compensate for loss of AQP0 expression in TgAQP1+/+/AQP0−/− mice. Fiber cell AQP0 expression is required to maintain their organization, which is a requisite for lens transparency. AQP0 appears necessary for cell-to-cell adhesion and thereby to minimize light scattering since in the AQP0−/− and TgAQP1+/+/AQP0−/− lenses, fiber cell disorganization was evident.  相似文献   

10.
Racemization is one of the most abundant modifications in long‐lived proteins. It has been proposed that the accumulation of such modifications over time could lead to changes in tissues and ultimately human age‐related diseases. Serine is one of the main amino acids involved in racemization; however, the site of D‐Ser in any aged protein has yet to be reported. In this study, racemization of two residues, Ser 59 and Ser 62, has been demonstrated in an unstructured region of the small heat shock protein, αA‐crystallin. αA‐crystallin is also the most abundant structural protein in the human lens. D‐Ser increased linearly with age in normal lenses, until it accounted for approximately 35% of the Ser at both sites by the age of 75 years. In agreement with a possible role in human age‐related disease, levels were significantly higher in cataract lenses. It is likely that such prevalent age‐related changes contribute to the denaturation of α‐crystallin, and therefore its ability to act as a chaperone. Racemization of amino acids, such as serine, in flexible regions of long‐lived proteins, could be associated with the development of human age‐related conditions such as cataract.  相似文献   

11.
Fujii N  Kawaguchi T  Sasaki H  Fujii N 《Biochemistry》2011,50(40):8628-8635
The lens proteins are composed of α-, β-, and γ-crystallins that interact with each other to maintain the transparency and refractive power of the lens. Because the lens crystallins are long-lived proteins, they undergo various post-translational modifications including racemization, isomerization, deamidation, oxidation, glycation, and truncation. In βB2-crystallin, which is the most abundant β-crystallin, the deamidation of asparagine and glutamine residues has been reported. Here, we found that the aspartyl (Asp) residue at position 4 of βB2-crystallin in the lenses of elderly human individuals undergoes a significant degree of inversion and isomerization to the biologically uncommon residue D-β-Asp. Surprisingly, the D/L ratio of β-Asp at position 4 in βB2-crystallin from elderly donors (67-77 year old) was 0.88-3.21. A D/L ratio of amino acids greater than 1.0 is defined as an inversion of configuration from the L- to D-form, rather than a racemization. These extremely high D/L ratios are equivalent to those of Asp-58 and Asp-151 (D/L ratio: 3.1 for Asp-58 and 5.7 for Asp-151) in αA-crystallin from elderly donors (~80 year old) as reported previously. Initially, we identified specific Asp residues in the β-crystallin family of proteins that undergo a high degree of inversion. These results show that the isomerization and inversion of Asp residues occurs both in the α- and β-crystallins of the lens. Inversion of these Asp residues directly affects the higher order structure of the protein. Hence, this modification may change crystallin-crystallin interactions and disrupt the function of crystallins in the lens.  相似文献   

12.
Aquaporin-0 (AQP0) is the major intrinsic protein of lens fiber cells and the founder member of the water channel gene family. Here we show that disruption of the AQP0 gene by an early transposon (ETn) element results in expression of a chimeric protein, comprised of approximately 75% AQP0 and approximately 25% ETn long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence, in the cataract Fraser (CatFr) mouse lens. Immunoblot analysis showed that mutant AQP0-LTR was similar in mass to wild-type AQP0. However, immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that AQP0-LTR was localized to intracellular membranes rather than to plasma membranes of lens fiber cells. Heterozygous CatFr lenses were similar in size to wild-type but displayed abnormal regions of translucence and light scattering. Scanning electron microscopy further revealed that mature fiber cells within the core of the heterozygous CatFr lens failed to stratify into uniform, concentric growth shells, suggesting that the AQP0 water channel facilitates the development of the unique cellular architecture of the crystalline lens.  相似文献   

13.
The eye lens is dependent upon a network of gap junction-mediated intercellular communication to facilitate its homeostasis and development. Three gap junction-forming proteins are expressed in the lens of which two are in lens fibers, namely connexin (Cx) 45.6 and 56. Major intrinsic protein (MIP), also known as aquaporin-0 (AQP0), is the most abundant membrane protein in lens fibers. However, its role in the lens is not clear. Our previous studies show that MIP(AQP0) associates with gap junction plaques formed by Cx45.6 and Cx56 during the early stages of embryonic chick lens development but not in late embryonic and adult lenses. We report here that MIP(AQP0) directly interacts with Cx45.6 but not with Cx56. We further identified the intracellular loop of Cx45.6 as the interacting domain for the MIP(AQP0) C terminus. Surface plasmon resonance experiments indicated that the C-terminal domain of MIP(AQP0) interacts with two binding sites within the intracellular loop region of Cx45.6 with a K(D(app)) of 7.5 and 10.3 microm, respectively. The K(D(app)) for the full-length loop region is 7.7 microm. The cleavage at the intracellular loop of Cx45.6 was observed during lens development, and the C terminus of MIP(AQP0) did not interact with the loop-cleaved form of Cx45.6. Thus, the dissociation between these two proteins that occurs in the mature fibers of late lens development is likely caused by this cleavage. Finally this interaction had no impact on Cx45.6-mediated intercellular communication, suggesting that the Cx45.6-MIP(AQP0) interaction plays a novel unidentified role in lens fibers.  相似文献   

14.

Background

Investigate the impact of natural N- or C-terminal post-translational truncations of lens mature fiber cell Aquaporin 0 (AQP0) on water permeability (Pw) and cell-to-cell adhesion (CTCA) functions.

Methods

The following deletions/truncations were created by site-directed mutagenesis (designations in parentheses): Amino acid residues (AA) 2–6 (AQP0-N-del-2-6), AA235–263 (AQP0-1-234), AA239–263 (AQP0-1-238), AA244–263 (AQP0-1-243), AA247–263 (AQP0-1-246), AA250–263 (AQP0-1-249) and AA260–263 (AQP0-1-259). Protein expression was studied using immunostaining, fluorescent tags and organelle-specific markers. Pw was tested by expressing the respective complementary ribonucleic acid (cRNA) in Xenopus oocytes and conducting osmotic swelling assay. CTCA was assessed by transfecting intact or mutant AQP0 into adhesion-deficient L-cells and performing cell aggregation and adhesion assays.

Results

AQP0-1-234 and AQP0-1-238 did not traffic to the plasma membrane. Trafficking of AQP0-N-del-2-6 and AQP0-1-243 was reduced causing decreased membrane Pw and CTCA. AQP0-1-246, AQP0-1-249 and AQP0-1-259 mutants trafficked properly and functioned normally. Pw and CTCA functions of the mutants were directly proportional to the respective amount of AQP0 expressed at the plasma membrane and remained comparable to those of intact AQP0 (AQP0-1-263).

Conclusions

Post-translational truncation of N- or C-terminal end amino acids does not alter the basal water permeability of AQP0 or its adhesive functions. AQP0 may play a role in adjusting the refractive index to prevent spherical aberration in the constantly growing lens.

General significance

Similar studies can be extended to other lens proteins which undergo post-translational truncations to find out how they assist the lens to maintain transparency and homeostasis for proper focusing of objects on to the retina.  相似文献   

15.
Gap junctions are important in maintaining lens transparency and metabolic homeostasis. In this paper, we report that the gap junction-forming protein, connexin (Cx) 45.6, was specifically truncated during lens development and that the majority of the truncated fragments were located in the differentiated lens fibers. When isolated lens membranes were treated by caspase-3, the truncated fragments of Cx45.6 were reproduced, and this truncation occurred at the COOH terminus of Cx45.6. Moreover, when primary lens cells were treated with apoptosis-inducing reagents, Cx45.6 was cleaved similarly as the in vitro treatment by caspase-3, and this cleavage was blocked by a caspase-3 inhibitor. These results suggest that caspase-3 is responsible for the development-associated cleavage of Cx45.6. The cleavage site of Cx45.6 was identified between amino acid residues Glu(367) and Gly(368). We have shown previously that Ser(363) is an in vivo phosphorylated site by casein kinase II, and this specific phosphorylation leads to a rapid turnover of Cx45.6. Interestingly, we found here that when Ser(363) was phosphorylated by casein kinase II, the cleavage of Cx45.6 catalyzed by caspase-3 was inhibited. This study, for the first time, demonstrates that a connexin can be a direct target of an apoptotic protease and that cleavage by caspase-3-like protease leads to the development-associated truncation of a lens connexin. Finally, caspase-3-mediated cleavage can be regulated by casein kinase II-mediated phosphorylation, suggesting that Cx45.6 turnover and specific cleavage by caspase-3-like protease is alternatively modulated.  相似文献   

16.
Insulin treatment of Drosophila melanogaster Kc 167 cells induces the multiple phosphorylation of a Drosophila ribosomal protein, as judged by its decreased electrophoretic mobility on two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels. The extent to which insulin induces this response is potentiated by cycloheximide and blocked by pretreatment with rapamycin. Isolation and mass spectrometric analysis revealed that the multiply phosphorylated protein was the larger of two Drosophila melanogaster orthologues of mammalian 40S ribosomal protein S6, termed here DS6A. Proteolytic cleavage of DS6A derived from stimulated Kc 167 cells with the endoproteinase Lys-C released a number of peptides, one of which contained all the putative phosphorylation sites. Conversion of phosphoserines to dehydroalanines with Ba(OH)(2) showed that the sites of phosphorylation reside at the carboxy terminus of DS6A. The sites of phosphorylation were identified by Edman degradation after conversion of the phosphoserine residues to S-ethylcysteine as Ser(233), Ser(235), Ser(239), Ser(242), and Ser(245). Finally, phosphopeptide mapping of individual phosphoderivatives, isolated from two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels, indicated that DS6A phosphorylation, in analogy to mammalian S6 phosphorylation, appears to proceed in an ordered fashion. The importance of these observations in cell growth and development is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The scope of this investigation was to understand the role of aquaporin 5 (AQP5) for maintaining lens transparency and homeostasis. Studies were conducted using lenses of wild-type (WT) and AQP5 knockout (AQP5-KO) mice. Immunofluorescent staining verified AQP5 expression in WT lens sections and lack of expression in the knockout. In vivo and ex vivo, AQP5-KO lenses resembled WT lenses in morphology and transparency. Therefore, we subjected the lenses ex vivo under normal (5.6 mM glucose) and hyperglycemic (55.6 mM glucose) conditions to test for cataract formation. Twenty-four hours after incubation in hyperglycemic culture medium, AQP5-KO lenses showed mild opacification which was accelerated several fold at 48 h; in contrast, WT lenses remained clear even after 48 h of hyperglycemic treatment. AQP5-KO lenses displayed osmotic swelling due to increase in water content. Cellular contents began to leak into the culture medium after 48 h. We reason that water influx through glucose transporters and glucose cotransporters into the cells could mainly be responsible for creating hyperglycemic osmotic swelling; absence of AQP5 in fiber cells appears to cause lack of required water efflux, challenging cell volume regulation and adding to osmotic swelling. This study reveals that AQP5 could play a critical role in lens microcirculation for maintaining transparency and homeostasis, especially by providing protection under stressful conditions. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report providing evidence that AQP5 facilitates maintenance of lens transparency and homeostasis by regulating osmotic swelling caused by glucose transporters and cotransporters under hyperglycemic stressful conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Aquaporin-0 (AQP0) is the major membrane protein in vertebrate eye lenses. It has been proposed that AQP0 tetramers mediate contact between membranes of adjacent lens fiber cells, which would be consistent with the extraordinarily narrow inter-cellular spacing. We have obtained 3D crystals of recombinant bovine AQP0 that diffract to 7.0 A resolution. The crystal packing was determined by molecular replacement and shows that, within the cubic lattice, AQP0 tetramers are associated head-to-head along their 4-fold axes. Oligomeric states larger than the tetramer were also observed in solution by native gel electrophoresis and analytical ultracentrifugation methods. In the crystals, there are no direct contacts between octamers, and it can thus be inferred that crystalline order is mediated solely by the detergent belts surrounding the membrane protein. Across the tetramer-tetramer interface, extracellular loops A and C interdigitate at the center and the perimeter of the octamer, respectively. The octamer structure is compared with that of the recently determined structure of truncated ovine AQP0 derived from electron diffraction of 2D crystals. Intriguingly, also in these crystals, octamers are observed, but with significantly different relative tetramer-tetramer orientations. The interactions observed in the loosely packed 3D crystals reported here may in fact represent an in vivo association mode between AQP0 tetramers from juxtaposed membranes in the eye lens.  相似文献   

19.
We have previously shown that L-Asp-151 in alphaA-crystallin from the human lens is converted to the biologically uncommon D-isomer. This process was not simple racemization, but stereoinversion, accompanied by isomerization to form the beta-Asp residue, such that L-beta-Asp, D-alpha-Asp and D-beta-Asp were formed. The present study shows that Asp-58 of human alphaA-crystallin is also converted to the D-isomer to a high degree to form the same isomers with age. The D/L ratio of beta-Asp-58 in aged normal lens increased to more than 3.0, showing stereoinversion by the 60 year range, then decreased to 1.0 in the 80 year range, while the isomerization of Asp-58 increased in the 80 year range. We also measured inversion and isomerization of the same residue from cataractous and normal human lenses of the 60 year range. The D/L ratio of Asp-58 from cataractous lenses was significantly lower than that from normal lenses, while the isomerization at Asp-58 in cataractous alphaA-crystallin was significantly higher than that of normal alphaA-crystallin. These results indicate that isomerization to the beta isomer of Asp-58 in cataractous alphaA-crystallin increased more than inversion to the D-isomer, suggesting that there are changes in the native structure of alphaA-crystallin in the human cataractous lens.  相似文献   

20.
Recent studies have suggested that the isomerization/racemization of aspartate residues in proteins increases in aged tissues. One such residue is Asp151 in lens‐specific αA‐crystallin. Although many isomerization/racemization sites have been reported in various proteins, the factors that lead to those modifications in proteins in vivo remain obscure. Therefore, an in vitro system is needed to assess the mechanisms of modifications of Asp under various conditions. Deamidation of Asn to Asp in proteins occurs more rapidly than isomerization/racemization of Asp, although the reaction passes through the same intermediate in both pathways. Here, therefore, we replaced Asp151 in human lens αA‐crystallin with Asn by using site‐directed mutagenesis. The recombinant protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and used to investigate the deamidation/isomerization/racemization of Asn151 after incubation at 50°C for various durations and under different pH. After incubation, the mutant αA‐crystallin was subjected to enzymatic digestion followed by liquid chromatography–MS/MS to evaluate the ratio of modifications in Asn151‐containing peptides. The Asp151Asn αA‐crystallin mutant showed rapid deamidation to Asp with the formation of specific Asp isomers. In particular, deamidation increased greatly under basic conditions. By contrast, subunit–subunit interactions between αA‐crystallin and αB‐crystallin had little effect on the modification of Asn151. Our findings suggest that the Asp151Asn αA‐crystallin mutant represents a good in vitro model protein to assess deamidation, isomerization, and the racemization intermediates. Furthermore, our in vitro results show a different trend from in vivo data, implying the presence of specific factors that induce racemization from L‐Asp to D‐Asp residues in vivo.  相似文献   

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