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1.
The activity of outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is regulated by reversible dimerization. However, native OMPLA reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles was found to be present as a dimer but nevertheless inactive. To investigate the importance of dimerization for control of OMPLA activity, a covalent OMPLA dimer was constructed and its properties were compared to native OMPLA both in a micellar detergent and after reconstitution in a phospholipid bilayer. Unlike native OMPLA, activity of the covalent OMPLA dimer was independent of type and concentration of detergent in micellar systems. In such systems, the covalent OMPLA dimer invariantly displayed high calcium affinity. In contrast, high calcium concentrations were required to activate a covalent OMPLA dimer when present in intact vesicles. Solubilization of the vesicles increased the affinity for calcium, suggesting that in an intact bilayer the dimer interface is not properly formed. This was supported by the observation that OMPLA variants having an impaired dimeric interface also lacked high affinity calcium binding. A covalent linkage was not able to restore high affinity calcium binding in these variants, demonstrating that a proper dimer interface is essential for optimal catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
Ebie Tan A  Fleming KG 《Biochemistry》2008,47(46):12095-12103
Despite the key roles of oligomeric membrane proteins (MPs) in many known cellular pathways, the principles governing their oligomer stability are not well-understood. Previous work with the alpha-helical MPs bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and glycophorin A (GpA) shows that lost buried surface area linearly correlated with perturbations in protein stability. Although this is a significant discovery, the predictive power of this correlation is limited by the data. Because both bR and GpA have alpha-helical secondary structural motifs, it is unclear whether this correlation would be observed for MPs with a beta-barrel motif. We addressed this question by measuring the thermodynamic consequences of interfacial amino acid changes at the dimer interface of beta-barrel MP outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA). We created sequence variants to reduce the contact surface area of the OMPLA dimer interface by introducing single-alanine substitutions and used sedimentation equilibrium analytical ultracentrifugation to determine the dimerization free energies for these variants. The integrity of each variant was verified by two functional assays: specific activity and resistance to thermal denaturation, which showed that structural changes were restricted to the local environment. Using this information, we calculated the anticipated packing defects due to side chain deletion and compared this to the free energy perturbations for each residue. Contrary to the findings with bR and GpA, our study found no correlation between the contact surface area lost and the perturbations to OMPLA dimer stability. We conclude that van der Waals packing may not be a strong predictor of stability for all membrane proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The hydrogen bonding of polar side-chains has emerged as an important theme for membrane protein interactions. The crystal structure of the dimeric state of the transmembrane beta-barrel protein outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) revealed an intermolecular hydrogen bond mediated by a highly conserved glutamine side-chain (Q94). It has been shown that the introduction of a polar residue can drive the association of model helices, and by extension it was presumed that the glutamine hydrogen bond played a key role in stabilizing the OMPLA dimer. However, a thermodynamic investigation using sedimentation equilibrium ultracentrifugation in detergent micelles reveals that the hydrogen bond plays only a very modest role in stabilizing the dimer. The Q94 side-chain is hydrogen bonded intramolecularly to residues Y92 and S96, but amino acid substitutions at these positions suggest these intramolecular interactions are not responsible for attenuating the strength of the intermolecular Q94 hydrogen bond. Other substitutions suggested that hydration of the local environment around Q94 may be responsible for the modest strength of the hydrogen bond. Heat inactivation experiments with the variants suggest that the Y92-Q94-S96 network may instead be important for thermal stability of the monomer. These results highlight the context dependence and broad range of interactions that can be mediated by polar residues in membrane proteins.  相似文献   

4.
OMPLA is a phospholipase found in the outer membranes of many Gram-negative bacteria. Enzyme activation requires calcium-induced dimerisation plus bilayer perturbation. As the conformation of OMPLA in the different crystal forms (monomer versus dimer; with/without bound Ca(2+)) is remarkably similar we have used multi-nanosecond molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to probe possible differences in conformational dynamics that may be related to enzyme activation. Simulations of calcium-free monomeric OMPLA, of the Ca(2+)-bound dimer, and of the Ca(2+)-bound dimer with a substrate analogue covalently linked to the active site serine have been performed, all with the protein embedded in a phospholipid (POPC) bilayer. All simulations were stable, but differences in the dynamic behaviour of the protein between the various states were observed. In particular, the stability of the active site and the hydrophobic substrate-binding cleft varied. Dimeric OMPLA is less flexible than monomeric OMPLA, especially around the active site. In the absence of bound substrate analogue, the hydrophobic substrate-binding cleft of dimeric OMPLA collapses. A model is proposed whereby the increased stability of the active site in dimeric OMPLA is a consequence of the local ordering of water around the nearby calcium ion. The observed collapse of the substrate-binding cleft may explain the experimentally observed occurrence of multiple dimer conformations of OMPLA, one of which is fully active while the other shows significantly reduced activity.  相似文献   

5.
Escherichia coli outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme. OMPLA is active as a homodimer and requires calcium as a cofactor. The crystal structures of the monomeric and the inhibited dimeric enzymes were recently determined [Snijder, H. J., et al. (1999) Nature 401, 717-721] and revealed that OMPLA monomers are folded into a 12-stranded antiparallel beta-barrel. The active site consists of previously identified essential residues Ser144 and His142 in an arrangement resembling the corresponding residues of a serine hydrolase catalytic triad. However, instead of an Asp or Glu that normally is present in the triad of serine hydrolases, a neutral asparagine (Asn156) was found in OMPLA. In this paper, the importance of the catalytic Asn156 is addressed by site-directed mutagenesis studies. All variants were purified at a 30 mg scale, and were shown to be properly folded using SDS-PAGE and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Using chemical cross-linking, it was shown that all variants were not affected in their calcium-dependent dimerization properties. The Asn156Asp variant exhibited a 2-fold lower activity than wild-type OMPLA at neutral pH. Interestingly, the activity of the variant is 1 order of magnitude higher than that of the wild type at pH >10. Modest residual activities (5 and 2.5%, respectively) were obtained for the Asn156Ala and Asn156Gln mutants, showing that the active site of OMPLA is more tolerant toward replacements of this third residue of the catalytic triad than other serine hydrolases, and that the serine and histidine residues are minimally required for catalysis. In the X-ray structure of dimeric OMPLA, the cofactor calcium is coordinating the putative oxyanion via two water molecules. We propose that this may lessen the importance for the asparagine in the catalytic triad of OMPLA.  相似文献   

6.
In the cell, the activity of outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is strictly regulated to prevent uncontrolled breakdown of the membrane lipids. Previously, it has been shown that the enzymatic activity is modulated by reversible dimerization. The current studies were carried out to define the oligomeric state of OMPLA in a membrane and to investigate the activation process. Three single-cysteine variant proteins H26C, H234C, and S144C were produced and purified to homogeneity. Using maleimido-based homo-bifunctional cross-linking reagents, H26C could be efficiently cross-linked as assessed by SDS-PAGE, whereas S144C and H234C could not be cross-linked. These data suggest that residue 26 is located close to the dimer symmetry axis. H26C was specifically labeled with 5-({[(2-iodoacetyl)amino]ethyl}amino)naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid and N,N'-dimethyl-N-(iodoacetyl)-N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1, 3-diazol-4-yl)ethylenediamine as the fluorescent energy donor and acceptor, respectively, and dimerization was investigated using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). Quenching of the donor in the presence of the acceptor demonstrated the dimeric nature of OMPLA, in agreement with cross-linking data. The observed FRET effect was dependent on the cofactor calcium, and the presence of substrate, indicating the specificity of the dimerization process. The labeled protein was reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles. In bilayers, OMPLA exhibited low activity and was dimeric as assessed by FRET. Addition of detergent resulted in a 70-fold increase in activity, while the protein remained dimeric. The results are discussed in terms of the activation of dimeric OMPLA due to changes in the physical state of the bilayer which occur upon perturbation of the membrane integrity.  相似文献   

7.
This study represents an extension to the outer membrane phospholipase A protein (OMPLA) of the docking-based protocols previously developed for quaternary structure predictions of transmembrane oligomeric proteins and for estimating mutational effects on the thermodynamics of protein–protein and protein–DNA association.Predictions of the likely architecture of OMPLA homo-dimers were carried out on 31 different forms of the monomer, 30 of which were variants of the unbound state. In all the test cases but the ones characterized by combined deletions of the 98–110 and 145–153 segments (L2 and L3, respectively), native-like complexes could be predicted, independent of the bound or unbound state of the structural model, of side chain conformation and presence or absence of amino acid deletions at the putative inter-monomer interface.The protocol for estimating mutational effects on the thermodynamics of protein–protein association proved effective as well. In fact, it was possible to estimate correctly the effects of five mutants on the free energy of dimerization of the sulfonylated form of OMPLA.The integrity of L2 and either one of the L1, L3 and L4 loops turned out to be more important than sulfonylation for the achievement of the native dimeric architecture. On the other hand, sulfonylation seems to be essential for a favorable dimerization energetics.  相似文献   

8.
Kingma RL  Egmond MR 《FEBS letters》2002,516(1-3):31-34
Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) activity is regulated by reversible dimerisation with the dimer being the active species. Observed lag phases in activity indicated that dimerisation may be slow relative to turnover. A covalent OMPLA dimer indeed did not display lag phase behaviour. A model for OMPLA kinetics was proposed accounting for a slow dimerisation step. Preincubation conditions determined the initial amount of monomer and influenced both lag times and final activities. Under the conditions used, substrate concentrations higher than 50 mol% inhibited OMPLA activity and increased lag times. Our results may shed more light on mechanisms controlling OMPLA activity in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is a unique, integral membrane enzyme found in Gram-negative bacteria and is an important virulence factor for pathogens such as Helicobacter pylori. This broad-specificity lipase degrades a variety of lipid substrates, and it plays a direct role in adjusting the composition and permeability of bacterial membranes under conditions of stress. Interestingly, OMPLA shows little preference for the lipid headgroup and, instead, the length of the hydrophobic acyl chain is the strongest determinant for substrate selection by OMPLA, with the enzyme strongly preferring substrates with chains equal to or longer than 14 carbon atoms. The question remains as to how a hydrophobic protein like OMPLA can achieve this specificity, particularly when the shorter chains can be accommodated in the binding pocket. Using a series of sulfonyl fluoride inhibitors with various lengths of acyl chain, we show here that the thermodynamics of substrate-induced OMPLA dimerization are guided by the acyl chain length, demonstrating that OMPLA uses a unique biophysical mechanism to select its phospholipid substrate.  相似文献   

10.
The energetics of transmembrane (TM) helix dimerization in membranes and the thermodynamic principles behind receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) TM domain interactions during signal transduction can be studied using Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET). For instance, FRET studies have yielded the stabilities of wild-type fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) TM domains and two FGFR3 pathogenic mutants, Ala391Glu and Gly380Arg, in the native bilayer environment. To further our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of deregulated FGFR3 signaling underlying different pathologies, we determined the effect of the Gly382Asp FGFR3 mutation, identified in a multiple myeloma cell line, on the energetics of FGFR3 TM domain dimerization. We measured dimerization energetics using a novel FRET acquisition and processing method, termed “emission-excitation FRET (EmEx-FRET),” which improves the precision of thermodynamic measurements of TM helix association. The EmEx-FRET method, verified here by analyzing previously published data for wild-type FGFR3 TM domain, should have broad utility in studies of protein interactions, particularly in cases when the concentrations of fluorophore-tagged molecules cannot be controlled.  相似文献   

11.
Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme that hydrolyses phospholipids requiring Ca(2+) as cofactor. In vitro studies have shown that OMPLA is only active as a dimer. The structures of monomeric and dimeric OMPLA provided possible clues to the activation process. In the inhibited dimeric species calcium ions are located at the dimer interface ideally suited to stabilise the oxyanion intermediates formed during catalysis. The side chain hydroxyl function of Ser152 is one of the ligands of this interfacial calcium. In the crystal structure of monomeric OMPLA the interfacial calcium site is lacking, but calcium was found to bind at a site involving the carboxylates of Asp149 and Asp184. In the current study the relevance of the identified calcium sites has been studied by site-directed mutagenesis. The Ser152Asn variant confirmed the importance of the interfacial calcium site for catalysis, and also demonstrated that this site is essentially involved in the dimerisation process. Replacements of the ligands in monomeric OMPLA, i.e. Asp149Asn, Asp149Ala and Asp184Asn, only showed minor effects on catalytic activity and dimerisation. A stronger effect observed for the variant Asp184Ala was explained by the proximity of Asp184 to the catalytically important Ser152 residue. We propose that Asp149 and Asp184 provide an electronegative funnel that may facilitate Ca(2+) transfer to the interfacial calcium site.  相似文献   

12.
The structure of the detergent in crystals of outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) has been determined using neutron diffraction contrast variation. Large crystals were soaked in stabilising solutions, each containing a different H(2)O/D(2)O contrast. From the neutron diffraction at five contrasts, the 12 A resolution structure of the detergent micelle around the protein molecule was determined. The hydrophobic beta-barrel surfaces of the protein molecules are covered by rings of detergent. These detergent belts are fused to neighbouring detergent rings forming a continuous three-dimensional network throughout the crystal. The thickness of the detergent layer around the protein varies from 7-20 A. The enzyme's active site is positioned just outside the hydrophobic detergent zone and is thus in a proper location to catalyse the hydrolysis of phospholipids in a natural membrane. Although the dimerisation face of OMPLA is covered with detergent, the detergent density is weak near the exposed polar patch, suggesting that burying this patch in the enzyme's dimer interface may be energetically favourable. Furthermore, these results indicate a crucial role for detergent coalescence during crystal formation and contribute to the understanding of membrane protein crystallisation.  相似文献   

13.
Outer-membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is one of the few enzymes present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. The enzymatic activity of OMPLA is strictly regulated to prevent uncontrolled breakdown of the surrounding phospholipids. The activity of OMPLA can be induced by membrane perturbation and concurs with dimerization of the enzyme. The recently elucidated crystal structures of the inactive, monomeric and an inhibited dimeric form of the enzyme provide detailed structural insight into the functional properties of the enzyme. OMPLA is a serine hydrolase with a unique Asn-156-His-142-Ser-144 catalytic triad. Only in the dimeric state, complete substrate binding pockets and functional oxyanion holes are formed. A model is proposed for the activation of OMPLA in which membrane perturbation causes the formation of non-bilayer structures, resulting in the presentation of phospholipids to the active site of OMPLA and leading to the formation of the active dimeric species. Possible roles for OMPLA in maintaining the cell envelope integrity and in pathogenicity are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Bacteriocin release protein is known to activate outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA), which results in the release of colicin from Escherichia coli. In vivo chemical cross-linking experiments revealed that the activation coincides with dimerization of OMPLA. Permeabilization of the cell envelope and dimerization were characterized by a lag time of 2 h.  相似文献   

15.
Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme that hydrolyses phospholipids requiring Ca2+ as cofactor. In vitro studies have shown that OMPLA is only active as a dimer. The structures of monomeric and dimeric OMPLA provided possible clues to the activation process. In the inhibited dimeric species calcium ions are located at the dimer interface ideally suited to stabilise the oxyanion intermediates formed during catalysis. The side chain hydroxyl function of Ser152 is one of the ligands of this interfacial calcium. In the crystal structure of monomeric OMPLA the interfacial calcium site is lacking, but calcium was found to bind at a site involving the carboxylates of Asp149 and Asp184. In the current study the relevance of the identified calcium sites has been studied by site-directed mutagenesis. The Ser152Asn variant confirmed the importance of the interfacial calcium site for catalysis, and also demonstrated that this site is essentially involved in the dimerisation process. Replacements of the ligands in monomeric OMPLA, i.e. Asp149Asn, Asp149Ala and Asp184Asn, only showed minor effects on catalytic activity and dimerisation. A stronger effect observed for the variant Asp184Ala was explained by the proximity of Asp184 to the catalytically important Ser152 residue. We propose that Asp149 and Asp184 provide an electronegative funnel that may facilitate Ca2+ transfer to the interfacial calcium site.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The calcium-induced formation of a complex between two isoforms of cobra venom phospholipase A2 reveals a novel interplay between the monomer-dimer and activity-inactivity transitions. The monodispersed isoforms lack activity in the absence of calcium ions while both molecules gain activity in the presence of calcium ions. At concentrations higher than 10 mg/ml, in the presence of calcium ions, they dimerize and lose activity again. The present study reports the crystal structure of a calcium-induced dimer between two isoforms of cobra phospholipase A2. In the complex, one molecule contains a calcium ion in the calcium binding loop while the second molecule does not possess an intramolecular calcium ion. However, there are two calcium ions per dimer in the structure. The second calcium ion is present at an intermolecular site and that is presumably responsible for the dimerization. The calcium binding loops of the two molecules adopt strikingly different conformations. The so-called calcium binding loop in the calcium-containing molecule adopts a normal conformation as generally observed in other calcium containing phospholipase A(2) enzymes while the conformation of the corresponding loop in the calcium free monomer deviates considerably with the formation of a unique intraloop Gly33 (N)-Cys27 (O) = 2.74 A backbone hydrogen bond. The interactions of Arg31 (B) with Asp49 (A) and absence of calcium ion are responsible for the loss of catalytic activity in molecule A while interactions of Arg2 (B) with Tyr52 (B) inactivate molecule B.  相似文献   

18.
Erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) homodimerization is an initial regulatory step in erythrocyte formation. Receptor dimers form before ligand binding, suggesting that association between receptor proteins is dependent on the receptor itself. EpoR dimerization is an essential step in erythropoiesis, and misregulation of this dimerization has been implicated in several disease states, including multi-lineage leukemias; nevertheless, how EpoR regulates its own dimerization is unclear. In vivo experiments suggest the single-pass transmembrane helix is the strongest candidate for driving ligand-independent association. To address the self-association potential of this transmembrane segment, we studied its interaction energetics in micelles by utilizing a previously successful Staphylococcal nuclease (SN-EpoR TM) fusion protein. This fusion protein strategy allows expression of the EpoR transmembrane domain in Escherichia coli independent of the other EpoR domains. Sedimentation equilibrium analytical ultracentrifugation of the detergent-solubilized SN-EpoR TM demonstrated that the murine EpoR transmembrane domain self-associates to form dimers. Although this interaction is not as stable as the dimerization of the well-studied glycophorin A transmembrane dimer, the murine EpoR transmembrane domain dimer is more stable than the interactions of the colon carcinoma kinase 4 transmembrane domain. The same experiments with the human EpoR transmembrane domain, which differs from the mouse sequence by only three residues, revealed a less favorable interaction than that of the murine sequence and is only slightly more favorable than that expected for non-preferential binding. These results suggest that the mouse and human receptor proteins may differ in the roles they play in signaling.  相似文献   

19.
Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme that catalyses the hydrolysis of phospholipids. Enzymatic activity is regulated by reversible dimerisation and calcium-binding. We have investigated the role of calcium by X-ray crystallography. In monomeric OMPLA, one calcium ion binds between two external loops (L3L4 site) at 10 A from the active site. After dimerisation, a new calcium-binding site (catalytic site) is formed at the dimer interface in the active site of each molecule at 6 A from the L3L4 calcium site. The close spacing and the difference in calcium affinity of both sites suggests that the L3L4 site may function as a storage site for a calcium ion, which relocates to the catalytic site upon dimerisation. A sequence alignment demonstrates conservation of the catalytic calcium site but evolutionary variation of the L3L4 site. The residues in the dimer interface are conserved as well, suggesting that all outer membrane phospholipases require dimerisation and calcium in the catalytic site for activity. For this family of phospholipases, we have characterised a consensus sequence motif (YTQ-X(n)-G-X(2)-H-X-SNG) that contains conserved residues involved in dimerisation and catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
S A Moore  M N James  D J O'Kane    J Lee 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(5):1767-1774
The molecular structure of the luxF protein from the bioluminescent bacterium Photobacterium leiognathi has been determined by X-ray diffraction techniques and refined to a conventional R-factor of 17.8% at 2.3 A resolution. The 228 amino acid polypeptide exists as a symmetrical homodimer and 33% of the monomer's solvent-accessible surface area is buried upon dimerization. The monomer displays a novel fold that contains a central seven-stranded beta-barrel. The solvent-exposed surface of the monomer is covered by seven alpha-helices, whereas the dimer interface is primarily a flat surface composed of beta-strands. The protein monomer binds two molecules of flavin mononucleotide, each of which has C6 of the flavin isoalloxazine moiety covalently attached to the C3' carbon atom of myristic acid. Both myristyl groups of these adducts are buried within the hydrophobic core of the protein. One of the cofactors contributes to interactions at the dimer interface. The luxF protein displays considerable amino acid sequence homology with both alpha- and beta-subunits of bacterial luciferase, especially the beta-subunit. Conserved amino acid residues shared between luxF and the luciferase subunits cluster predominantly in two distinct regions of the luxF protein molecule. These homologous regions in the luciferase subunits probably share a three-dimensional fold similar to that of the luxF protein.  相似文献   

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