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Mycobacterium tuberculosis modulates host immune responses through proteins and complex glycolipids. Here, we report that the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor phosphatidyl-myo-inositol hexamannosides PIM6 or PIM2 exert potent anti-inflammatory activities. PIM strongly inhibited the Toll-like receptor (TLR4) and myeloid differentiation protein 88 (MyD88)-mediated release of NO, cytokines, and chemokines, including tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin 12 (IL-12) p40, IL-6, keratinocyte-derived chemokine, and also IL-10 by lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated macrophages. This effect was independent of the presence of TLR2. PIM also reduced the LPS-induced MyD88-independent, TIR domain-containing adaptor protein inducing interferon β (TRIF)-mediated expression of co-stimulatory receptors. PIM inhibited LPS/TLR4-induced NFκB translocation. Synthetic PIM1 and a PIM2 mimetic recapitulated these in vitro activities and inhibited endotoxin-induced airway inflammation, TNF and keratinocyte-derived chemokine secretion, and neutrophil recruitment in vivo. Mannosyl, two acyl chains, and phosphatidyl residues are essential for PIM anti-inflammatory activity, whereas the inosityl moiety is dispensable. Therefore, PIM exert potent antiinflammatory effects both in vitro and in vivo that may contribute to the strategy developed by mycobacteria for repressing the host innate immunity, and synthetic PIM analogs represent powerful anti-inflammatory leads.Multifold interactions between Mycobacterium tuberculosis and host phagocytes determine immune responses to M. tuberculosis and tuberculosis pathogenesis (for review, see Refs. 1 and 2). Alveolar macrophages, the primary host cells for M. tuberculosis, and dendritic cells that carry mycobacterial antigens from the infection site to the draining lymph nodes to establish a T cell-mediated immune response contribute to modulate the innate immune response by secreting cytokines after recognition of microbial motives. Among them, TNF2 is an essential mediator for granuloma formation and containment of M. tuberculosis infection. Similarly, IL-12, interferon γ, but also IL-1, IL-18, IL-23, and nitric oxide are required for host defense (16). Phagocytes are also a source of immuno-modulatory cytokines, such as IL-10 and transforming growth factor-β, which dampen the immune response and inflammation. Mycobacteria-derived molecules down-modulating the immune system have been described, including the protein ESAT-6, mannose-capped lipoarabinomannan (ManLAM), and lipomannans (LM) (712). Here, we report that phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIM), the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor structure of LAM and LM, exert strong anti-inflammatory activities.Mycobacterial cell wall LAM, LM, and PIM are recognized by macrophages and dendritic cells through various pattern recognition receptors, including Toll-like receptors (TLRs) (1316) and C-type lectins such as mannose receptor (MR/CD206) and dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3 grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN/CD209), central to M. tuberculosis binding and internalization by human dendritic cells (1720). DC-SIGN and mannose receptor were proposed to mediate ManLAM inhibition of LPS-induced IL-12 production in dendritic cells, an activity ascribed to the mannosylated cap (8, 9). We showed recently that mycobacterial LM have a dual potential for pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory effects (11), tri- and tetra-acylated LM fractions exerting stimulatory effects through TLR2, TLR4, and MyD88 (21), whereas diacylated LM inhibit LPS-induced cytokine response independently of TLR2, SIGN-R1, and mannose receptor (12).PIM are biosynthetic precursors of LM and LAM (2225). Dimannoside (PIM2) and hexamannoside (PIM6) PIM are the two most abundant classes of PIM found in M. tuberculosis H37Rv and Mycobacterium bovis BCG (see Fig. 1). PIM purification and molecular chemical characterization revealed four major acyl forms, mono- to tetra-acylated (lyso-PIM for one acyl, PIM for two acyl, Ac1PIM for three acyl, and Ac2PIM for four acyl, respectively; see Fig. 1) for both PIM2 and PIM6 (2629). Higher order PIM with mannose cap-like structures were found to preferentially associate with human MR and to contribute to phagosome-lysosome fusion (20). The degree of acylation influenced higher order PIM association with the MR, whereas PIM2 was recognized by DC-SIGN independently of its acylation degree. The complete synthesis of the different PIM has recently been reported (3033).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Natural PIM and synthetic PIM1 and PIM2 mimetics used in the study. Shown is a schematic representation of natural lyso-PIM6, PIM6, Ac1PIM6, Ac2PIM6, and PIM2 (A) and synthetic PIM1 (B) showing the C16 and C18 acyl groups on glycerol chain positions sn-2 and sn-1, the precursor PI, a synthetic mimetic of PIM2 (PIM2 mimetic) bearing C16 and C18 acyl chains, the de-acylated control molecule precursor of the PIM2 mimetic (de-AcPIM2 mimetic), and a PIM2 mimetic with replacement of the phosphodiester moiety by a carbonate.Here, we analyzed isolated acyl forms of PIM and identified PIM2 and PIM6 but also synthetic PIM1 and a mimetic of PIM2 as strong inhibitors of endotoxin-induced proinflammatory responses in vitro and in vivo. Using macrophages from genetically modified mice, we characterized PIM inhibitory effects on MyD88, TRIF, and NFκB signaling pathways. Hence, not only complex mycobacterial lipoglycans like ManLAM and LM but also small molecular weight PIM analogues are potent inhibitors of host inflammatory responses.  相似文献   

3.
A decade after its inception, MALDI imaging mass spectrometry has become a unique technique in the proteomics arsenal for biomarker hunting in a variety of diseases. At this stage of development, it is important to ask whether we can consider this technique to be sufficiently developed for routine use in a clinical setting or an indispensable technology used in translational research. In this report, we consider the contributions of MALDI imaging mass spectrometry and profiling technologies to clinical studies. In addition, we outline new directions that are required to align these technologies with the objectives of clinical proteomics, including: 1) diagnosis based on profile signatures that complement histopathology, 2) early detection of disease, 3) selection of therapeutic combinations based on the individual patient''s entire disease-specific protein network, 4) real time assessment of therapeutic efficacy and toxicity, 5) rational redirection of therapy based on changes in the diseased protein network that are associated with drug resistance, and 6) combinatorial therapy in which the signaling pathway itself is viewed as the target rather than any single “node” in the pathway.MS has become a versatile tool that we are familiar with in large part due to important electronic and informatics advancements. The ability to obtain the molecular weight is one of the first steps in the identification of a molecule. With the addition of primary structural information mass spectrometry has become a useful technique to identify molecules within complex mixtures.Biological specimens, such as tissues, urine, or plasma, are complex and highly heterogeneous, which makes them inherently difficult to analyze. Further research and developments are necessary to achieve reliable biological models for understanding and studying pathologies. Therefore, it is of primary importance to identify the constituents of these systems and subsequently understand how they function within the framework of the tissue. With regard to clinical proteomics, there is the added dimension of disease, and therefore, the main goal is to characterize the cellular circuitry with a focus on the impact of the disease and/or therapy on these cellular networks.Mass spectrometry has become a centerpiece technology predominantly in the field of proteomics. Nonetheless a more comprehensive understanding of the constituents of biological systems will be aided by determining the constituent distribution. This anatomical dimension has been added through mass spectrometry imaging (MSI)1 especially using MALDI-MSI.MALDI is an ion source that is well compatible with the introduction of raw materials and surfaces. Shortly after its introduction, MALDI was used for direct tissue profiling. The first applications were neurobiological studies on dissected organs from the mollusk Lymnaea stagnalis (18), crustaceans (9), and other mollusks (10, 11). More recently, MALDI was used to generate profiles from tissue sections and ion images using a scanning method to analyze the surface (12) (Fig. 1). This led to the first MALDI MS tissue section imaging micrographs in 1997 (1315). These studies were followed by 10 years of intense efforts to improve the sensitivity, reproducibility, data processing, tissue preservation, and preparation treatments to fully characterize the proteome leading to a clear improvement of molecular images (1639) (Fig. 2).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.Schematic representation of the MALDI-MSI work flow. After tissue sectioning and transfer onto a conductive and transparent sample plate, the MALDI matrix is deposited, and data are acquired by recording mass spectra according to a raster of points covering the surface to be analyzed. Mass spectra recorded with their coordinates on the tissue are processed, and molecular images of the localization of molecules can be reconstructed. a.u., arbitrary units; ITO, idium tin oxide.Open in a separate windowFig. 2.Ten years'' evolution from one of the first MALDI images presented in 1999 at the 47th ASMS Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Allied Topics (left) (reprinted with permission of Caprioli and co-workers (84)) and molecular images obtained by our group for mouse stem cells injected in brain tissue sections (right) (M. Wisztorski, C. Meriaux, M. Salzet, and I. Fournier, unpublished results).These developments led to clinical studies using MALDI-MSI technology. Clinical proteomics has many objectives including 1) diagnosis based on signatures as a complement to histopathology, 2) early disease detection, 3) individualized selection of therapeutic combinations that best target the patient''s entire disease-specific protein network, 4) real time assessment of therapeutic efficacy and toxicity, 5) rational redirection of therapy based on changes in the diseased protein network that are associated with drug resistance, and 6) combinatorial therapy in which the signaling pathway itself is viewed as the target rather than any single “node” in the pathway.Based on these key objectives, can we consider MALDI-MSI a mature technology for use in clinical studies? What is the potential impact of this technology in anatomy/pathology and disease? By reviewing each objective, do we have sufficient evidence that MALDI-MSI satisfies the criteria imposed by clinical proteomics? We will now specifically address each of these key points.  相似文献   

4.
Folding and stability are parameters that control protein behavior. The possibility of conferring additional stability on proteins has implications for their use in vivo and for their structural analysis in the laboratory. Cyclic polypeptides ranging in size from 14 to 78 amino acids occur naturally and often show enhanced resistance toward denaturation and proteolysis when compared with their linear counterparts. Native chemical ligation and intein-based methods allow production of circular derivatives of larger proteins, resulting in improved stability and refolding properties. Here we show that circular proteins can be made reversibly with excellent efficiency by means of a sortase-catalyzed cyclization reaction, requiring only minimal modification of the protein to be circularized.Sortases are bacterial enzymes that predominantly catalyze the attachment of surface proteins to the bacterial cell wall (1, 2). Other sortases polymerize pilin subunits for the construction of the covalently stabilized and covalently anchored pilus of the Gram-positive bacterium (35). The reaction catalyzed by sortase involves the recognition of short 5-residue sequence motifs, which are cleaved by the enzyme with the concomitant formation of an acyl enzyme intermediate between the active site cysteine of sortase and the carboxylate at the newly generated C terminus of the substrate (1, 68). In many bacteria, this covalent intermediate can be resolved by nucleophilic attack from the pentaglycine side chain in a peptidoglycan precursor, resulting in the formation of an amide bond between the pentaglycine side chain and the carboxylate at the cleavage site in the substrate (9, 10). In pilus construction, alternative nucleophiles such as lysine residues or diaminopimelic acid participate in the transpeptidation reaction (3, 4).When appended near the C terminus of proteins that are not natural sortase substrates, the recognition sequence of Staphylococcus aureus sortase A (LPXTG) can be used to effectuate a sortase-catalyzed transpeptidation reaction using a diverse array of artificial glycine-based nucleophiles (Fig. 1). The result is efficient installation of a diverse set of moieties, including lipids (11), carbohydrates (12), peptide nucleic acids (13), biotin (14), fluorophores (14, 15), polymers (16), solid supports (1618), or peptides (15, 19) at the C terminus of the protein substrate. During the course of our studies to further expand sortase-based protein engineering, we were struck by the frequency and relative ease with which intramolecular transpeptidation reactions were occurring. Specifically, proteins equipped with not only the LPXTG motif but also N-terminal glycine residues yielded covalently closed circular polypeptides (Fig. 1). Similar reactivity using sortase has been described in two previous cases; however, rigorous characterization of the circular polypeptides was absent (16, 20). The circular proteins in these reports were observed as minor components of more complex reaction mixtures, and the cyclization reaction itself was not optimized.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Protein substrates equipped with a sortase A recognition sequence (LPXTG) can participate in intermolecular transpeptidation with synthetic oligoglycine nucleophiles (left) or intramolecular transpeptidation if an N-terminal glycine residue is present (right).Here we describe our efforts toward applying sortase-catalyzed transpeptidation to the synthesis of circular and oligomeric proteins. This method has general applicability, as illustrated by successful intramolecular reactions with three structurally unrelated proteins. In addition to circularization of individual protein units, the multiprotein complex AAA-ATPase p97/VCP/CDC48, with six identical subunits containing the LPXTG motif and an N-terminal glycine, was found to preferentially react in daisy chain fashion to yield linear protein fusions. The reaction exploited here shows remarkable similarities to the mechanisms proposed for circularization of cyclotides, small circular proteins that have been isolated from plants (2123).  相似文献   

5.
The Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing strains are a family highly prevalent in Asia and have recently spread worldwide, causing a number of epidemics, suggesting that they express virulence factors not found in other M. tuberculosis strains. Accordingly, we looked for putative characteristic compounds by comparing the lipid profiles of several Beijing and non-Beijing strains. All the Beijing strains analyzed were found to synthesize structural variants of two well known characteristic lipids of the tubercle bacillus, namely phthiocerol dimycocerosates (DIM) and eventually phenolglycolipids (PGL). These variants were not found in non-Beijing M. tuberculosis isolates. Structural elucidation of these variants showed that they consist of phthiotriol and glycosylated phenolphthiotriol dimycocerosates, eventually acylated with 1 mol of palmitic acid, in addition to the conventional acylation of the β-diol by mycocerosic acids. We demonstrated that this unusual lipid profile resulted from a single point mutation in the Rv2952 gene, which encodes the S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferase participating to the O-methylation of the third hydroxyl of the phthiotriol and phenolphthiotriol in the biosynthetic pathway of DIM and PGL. Consistently, the mutated enzyme exhibited in vitro a much lower O-methyltransferase activity than did the wild-type Rv2952. We finally demonstrated that the structural variants of DIM and PGL fulfill the same function in the cell envelope and virulence than their conventional counterparts.The factors contributing to the development of tuberculosis after infection with the etiologic agent of this disease, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, are not completely understood. It is currently thought that the genetic traits of both host and pathogen influence the outcome of the disease (1, 2). On the pathogen side, molecular epidemiological studies have differentiated clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis into defined genetically related lineages (3). One of the most important worldwide lineages, the “Beijing” lineage, was initially described by van Soolingen et al. (4) who showed that more than 85% of M. tuberculosis isolates from the Beijing region belong to this genetically conserved genotype. The Beijing strains were grouped together on the basis of their highly similar multicopy IS6110 restriction fragment polymorphism patterns, the deletion of spacers 1–34 in the direct repeat region found in all M. tuberculosis strains, and the insertion of IS6110 into the dnaA-dnaN locus (5). This genotype family of M. tuberculosis is highly prevalent in Southeast Asia, where more than 50% of the strains isolated correspond to the Beijing genotype (6). However, these strains have spread worldwide and have been responsible for major outbreaks of tuberculosis. The “W” strain responsible for a multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in the New York region, for example, belongs to this genotype (7, 8). A Beijing strain was introduced into Gran-Canaria Island in 1993 and rapidly spread; this strain accounted for 27.1% of tuberculosis cases on the island in 1996 (9). This spread of Beijing strains from the region of the world in which they are endemic to other areas in which they have become epidemic suggests that these strains may be more virulent than others. Consistent with this hypothesis, several studies have demonstrated that mice infected with Beijing strains die more rapidly than mice infected with other strains (1013). This hypervirulence phenotype has been associated with a failure of Beijing strains to induce or to maintain an adequate Th1-type immune response (10, 12) and with more severe pneumonia resulting in the death of the infected animals. A recent study suggests that patients infected with Beijing strains are more likely to develop extrathoracic tuberculosis than people infected with strains of other lineages (14). This observation is consistent with the results obtained in a rabbit model with the Beijing strain HN878, which was found more likely to infect the brain and to disseminate (15). A recent study in Vietnam pointed out that the typical lineage of Beijing genotype strains is more frequently found in patients who received a Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccination. This suggests that bacteria of this lineage are more capable of circumventing Bacillus Calmette-Guérin-induced immunity (16).In the case of the HN878 strain, the production of a phenolic glycolipid (PGL)3 was shown to be important for the hypervirulent phenotype. The disruption of pks15/1, a PGL biosynthetic gene (17), in strain HN878 increased the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines by infected murine bone marrow macrophages and decreased the virulence of the bacterium in the mouse and rabbit disease models (13, 15). PGL are very unusual molecules with a lipid core and a saccharide domain. The lipid core is formed by a long chain β-diol, naturally occurring as a diester of polymethyl-branched fatty acids and common to phthiocerol dimycocerosates (DIM), another group of lipids found in the cell envelope of M. tuberculosis and a few other slow-growing Mycobacterium species (18) (Fig. 1A). In the major form of PGL from M. tuberculosis (PGL-tb), this lipid core is ω-terminated by an aromatic nucleus glycosylated with a 2,3,4-tri-O-methyl-l-fucopyranosyl-(α1→3)-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(α1→3)-2-O-methyl-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(α1→) (19) (Fig. 1A). This structure is specific to M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium canettii (18, 20). Only a few M. tuberculosis strains synthesize PGL-tb because of a natural frameshift mutation in the pks15/1 gene (17). Thus, based on the results of Reed et al. (13), it was thought that the production of this glycolipid was the principal cause of hypervirulence in Beijing strains. However, even within the Beijing lineage, only a minority of isolates produce PGL-tb (21, 22). In addition, complementation of the laboratory strain H37Rv with a functional pks15/1 allele, allowing the production of PGL-tb, does not significantly increase the virulence of this strain in the mouse and rabbit models (22). The molecular reasons for the higher virulence of strains of the Beijing lineage therefore remain unclear.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.DIM and PGL profile in M. tuberculosis Beijing strains. A, structure of phthiocerol dimycocerosates and related compounds in M. tuberculosis and role of Rv2951c and Rv2952 enzymes in the last steps of DIM and PGL formation. In M. tuberculosis, p, p′ = 3–5; n, n′ = 16–18; m1 = 20–22; m2 = 15–17; R = -CH2-CH3 or -CH3. B, TLC analysis of lipid extracts from bacterial cells of H37Rv, Mt103, HN878, 94-1707, and 1237 strains. Lipid extracts were dissolved in CHCl3 and run in petroleum ether/diethyl ether (90:10) for DIM analysis. Lipids were visualized by spraying the TLC plate with 10% phosphomolybdic acid in ethanol, followed by heating. The positions of DIM A, DIM B, triglycerides (TAG) are indicated. C and D, TLC analysis of lipid extracts from [14C]propionate-labeled bacterial cell of H37Rv, H37Rv:pPET1, HN878, and 94-1707. Lipid extracts were dissolved in CHCl3 and run in petroleum ether/diethyl ether (90:10) for DIM analysis (C) and in CHCl3/CH3OH (95:5) for PGL analysis (D). Lipids were visualized with a Typhoon PhosphorImager. Positions of DIM A, DIM B, compounds X, and PGL are indicated.In this study, we identified a mutation specific to the Beijing lineage that affected the activity of an enzyme involved in PGL-tb and DIM biosynthetic pathways. We analyzed the impact of this mutation on the structure of these compounds and explored the potential changes in cell envelope function and virulence induced by this mutation.  相似文献   

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The gene rapL lies within the region of the Streptomyces hygroscopicus chromosome which contains the biosynthetic gene cluster for the immunosuppressant rapamycin. Introduction of a frameshift mutation into rapL by ΦC31 phage-mediated gene replacement gave rise to a mutant which did not produce significant amounts of rapamycin. Growth of this rapL mutant on media containing added l-pipecolate restored wild-type levels of rapamycin production, consistent with a proposal that rapL encodes a specific l-lysine cyclodeaminase important for the production of the l-pipecolate precursor. In the presence of added proline derivatives, rapL mutants synthesized novel rapamycin analogs, indicating a relaxed substrate specificity for the enzyme catalyzing pipecolate incorporation into the macrocycle.Rapamycin is a 31-member macrocyclic polyketide produced by Streptomyces hygroscopicus NRRL 5491 which, like the structurally related compounds FK506 and immunomycin (Fig. (Fig.1),1), has potent immunosuppressive properties (24). Such compounds are potentially valuable in the treatment of autoimmune diseases and in preventing the rejection of transplanted tissues (16). The biosynthesis of rapamycin requires a modular polyketide synthase, which uses a shikimate-derived starter unit (11, 20) and which carries out a total of fourteen successive cycles of polyketide chain elongation that resemble the steps in fatty acid biosynthesis (2, 27). l-Pipecolic acid is then incorporated (21) into the chain, followed by closure of the macrocyclic ring, and both these steps are believed to be catalyzed by a pipecolate-incorporating enzyme (PIE) (18), the product of the rapP gene (8, 15). Further site-specific oxidations and O-methylation steps (15) are then required to produce rapamycin. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Structures of rapamycin, FK506, and immunomycin.The origin of the pipecolic acid inserted into rapamycin has been previously established (21) to be free l-pipecolic acid derived from l-lysine (although the possible role of d-lysine as a precursor must also be borne in mind) (9). Previous work with other systems has suggested several alternative pathways for pipecolate formation from lysine (22), but the results of the incorporation of labelled lysine into the pipecolate moiety of immunomycin (Fig. (Fig.1)1) clearly indicate loss of the α-nitrogen atom (3). More recently, the sequencing of the rap gene cluster revealed the presence of the rapL gene (Fig. (Fig.2),2), whose deduced gene product bears striking sequence similarity to two isoenzymes of ornithine deaminase from Agrobacterium tumefaciens (25, 26). Ornithine deaminase catalyzes the deaminative cyclization of ornithine to proline, and we have proposed (15) that the rapL gene product catalyzes the analogous conversion of l-lysine to l-pipecolate (Fig. (Fig.3).3). Open in a separate windowFIG. 2A portion of the rapamycin biosynthetic gene cluster which contains ancillary (non-polyketide synthase) genes (15, 27). PKS, polyketide synthase.Open in a separate windowFIG. 3(A) The conversion of l-ornithine to l-proline by ornithine cyclodeaminase (17). (B) Proposed conversion of l-lysine to l-pipecolic acid by the rapL gene product.Here, we report the use of ΦC31 phage-mediated gene replacement (10) to introduce a frameshift mutation into rapL and the ability of the mutant to synthesize rapamycins in the absence or presence of added pipecolate or pipecolate analogs.  相似文献   

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FTY720, a sphingosine analog, is in clinical trials as an immunomodulator. The biological effects of FTY720 are believed to occur after its metabolism to FTY720 phosphate. However, very little is known about whether FTY720 can interact with and modulate the activity of other enzymes of sphingolipid metabolism. We examined the ability of FTY720 to modulate de novo ceramide synthesis. In mammals, ceramide is synthesized by a family of six ceramide synthases, each of which utilizes a restricted subset of acyl-CoAs. We show that FTY720 inhibits ceramide synthase activity in vitro by noncompetitive inhibition toward acyl-CoA and uncompetitive inhibition toward sphinganine; surprisingly, the efficacy of inhibition depends on the acyl-CoA chain length. In cultured cells, FTY720 has a more complex effect, with ceramide synthesis inhibited at high (500 nm to 5 μm) but not low (<200 nm) sphinganine concentrations, consistent with FTY720 acting as an uncompetitive inhibitor toward sphinganine. Finally, electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry demonstrated, unexpectedly, elevated levels of ceramide, sphingomyelin, and hexosylceramides after incubation with FTY720. Our data suggest a novel mechanism by which FTY720 might mediate some of its biological effects, which may be of mechanistic significance for understanding its mode of action.FTY720 (2-amino-(2-2-[4-octylphenyl]ethyl)propane 1,3-diol hydrochloride), also known as Fingolimod, is an immunosuppressant drug currently being tested in clinical trials for organ transplantation and autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (1). FTY720 is a structural analog of sphingosine, a key biosynthetic intermediate in sphingolipid (SL)2 metabolism (see Fig. 1). In vivo, FTY720 is rapidly phosphorylated by sphingosine kinase 2 (2, 3) to form FTY720 phosphate (FTY720-P), an analog of sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) (see Fig. 1A). FTY720-P binds to S1P receptors (S1PRs) (4, 5) and thereby induces a variety of phenomena such as T-lymphocyte migration from lymphoid organs (69); accordingly, FTY720 treatment results in lymphopenia as lymphocytes (especially T-cells) become sequestered inside lymphoid organs (1012). The ability of FTY720 to sequester lymphocytes has stimulated its use in treatment of allograft rejection and autoimmune diseases (13), and FTY720 is currently under phase III clinical trials for treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (14).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.SL structure and metabolism. A, structures of SLs and SL analogs used in this study. B, metabolic inter-relationships between SLs and the metabolism of FTY720. The enzymes are denoted in italics. LPP3, lipid phosphate phosphatase 3; LPP1α, lipid phosphate phosphatase 1α.Apart from the binding of FTY720-P to S1PRs, the ability of FTY720 to inhibit S1P lyase (15) (see Fig. 1B), and its inhibitory effect on cytosolic phospholipase A2 (16), whose activity can be modulated by ceramide 1-phosphate (17), little is known about whether FTY720 or FTY720-P can modulate the activity of other enzymes of SL metabolism. Because FTY720 is an analog of sphingosine, one of the two substrates of ceramide synthase (CerS) (see Fig. 1), we now examine whether FTY720 can modulate CerS activity. CerS utilizes fatty acyl-CoAs to N-acylate sphingoid long chain bases. Six CerS exist in mammals, each of which uses a restricted subset of acyl-CoAs (1823). We demonstrate that FTY720 inhibits CerS activity and that the extent of inhibition varies according to the acyl chain length of the acyl-CoA substrate. Surprisingly, FTY720 inhibits CerS activity toward acyl-CoA via noncompetitive inhibition and toward sphinganine via uncompetitive inhibition. Finally, the mode of interaction of FTY720 with CerS in cultured cells depends on the amount of available sphinganine. Together, we show that FTY720 modulates ceramide synthesis, which may be of relevance for understanding its biological effects in vivo and its role in immunomodulation.  相似文献   

10.
The FAD-dependent choline oxidase has a flavin cofactor covalently attached to the protein via histidine 99 through an 8α-N(3)-histidyl linkage. The enzyme catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine betaine, forming betaine aldehyde as an enzyme-bound intermediate. The variant form of choline oxidase in which the histidine residue has been replaced with asparagine was used to investigate the contribution of the 8α-N(3)-histidyl linkage of FAD to the protein toward the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Decreases of 10-fold and 30-fold in the kcat/Km and kcat values were observed as compared with wild-type choline oxidase at pH 10 and 25 °C, with no significant effect on kcat/KO using choline as substrate. Both the kcat/Km and kcat values increased with increasing pH to limiting values at high pH consistent with the participation of an unprotonated group in the reductive half-reaction and the overall turnover of the enzyme. The pH independence of both D(kcat/Km) and Dkcat, with average values of 9.2 ± 3.3 and 7.4 ± 0.5, respectively, is consistent with absence of external forward and reverse commitments to catalysis, and the chemical step of CH bond cleavage being rate-limiting for both the reductive half-reaction and the overall enzyme turnover. The temperature dependence of the Dkred values suggests disruption of the preorganization in the asparagine variant enzyme. Altogether, the data presented in this study are consistent with the FAD-histidyl covalent linkage being important for the optimal positioning of the hydride ion donor and acceptor in the tunneling reaction catalyzed by choline oxidase.A number of enzymes, including dehydrogenases (13), monooxygenases (47), halogenases (811), and oxidases (7, 12, 13), employ flavin cofactors (FAD or FMN) for their catalytic processes. About a tenth of all flavoproteins have been shown to contain a covalently attached cofactor, which may be linked at the C8M position via histidyl, tyrosyl, or cysteinyl side chains or at the C6M position via a cysteinyl side chain (14). Glucooligosaccharide oxidase (15, 16), hexose oxidase (17), and berberine bridge enzyme (18, 19) are examples of flavoproteins (FAD as cofactor) with both linkages present in one flavin molecule. The covalent linkages in flavin-dependent enzymes have been shown to stabilize protein structure (2022), prevent loss of loosely bound flavin cofactors (23), modulate the redox potential of the flavin microenvironment (20, 2327), facilitate electron transfer reactions (28), and contribute to substrate binding as in the case of the cysteinyl linkage (20). However, no study has implicated a mechanistic role of the flavin covalent linkages in enzymatic reactions in which a hydride ion is transferred by quantum mechanical tunneling.The discovery of quantum mechanical tunneling in enzymatic reactions, in which hydrogen atoms, protons, and hydride ions are transferred, has attracted considerable interest in enzyme studies geared toward understanding the mechanisms underlying the several orders of magnitudes in the rate enhancements of protein-catalyzed reactions compared with non-enzymatic ones. Tunneling mechanisms have been shown in a wide array of cofactor-dependent enzymes, including flavoenzymes. Examples of flavoenzymes in which the tunneling mechanisms have been demonstrated include morphinone reductase (29, 30), pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase (29), glucose oxidase (3133), and choline oxidase (34). Mechanistic data on Class 2 dihydroorotate dehydrogenases, also with a flavin cofactor (FMN) covalently linked to the protein moiety (35, 36), could only propose a mechanism that is either stepwise or concerted with significant quantum mechanical tunneling for the hydride transfer from C6 and the deprotonation at C5 in the oxidation of dihydroorotate to orotate (37). This leaves choline oxidase as the only characterized enzyme with a covalently attached flavin cofactor (12, 38), where the oxidation of its substrate occurs unequivocally by quantum mechanical tunneling.Choline oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis catalyzes the two-step FAD-dependent oxidation of the primary alcohol substrate choline to glycine betaine with betaine aldehyde, which is predominantly bound to the enzyme and forms a gem-diol species, as intermediate (Scheme 1). Glycine betaine accumulates in the cytoplasm of plants and bacteria as a defensive mechanism against stress conditions, thus making genetic engineering of relevant plants of economic interest (3945), and the biosynthetic pathway for the osmolyte is a potential drug target in human microbial infections of clinical interest (4648). The first oxidation step catalyzed by choline oxidase involves the transfer of a hydride ion from a deprotonated choline to the protein-bound flavin followed by reaction of the anionic flavin hydroquinone with molecular oxygen to regenerate the oxidized FAD (for a recent review see Ref. 50). The gem-diol choline, i.e. hydrated betaine aldehyde, is the substrate for the second oxidation step (49), suggesting that the reaction may follow a similar mechanism. The isoalloxazine ring of the flavin cofactor, which is buried within the protein, is physically constrained through a covalent linkage via the C(8) methyl of the flavin and the N(3) atom of the histidine side chain at position 99 (Fig. 1) (12). Also contributing to the physical constrain are the proximity of Ile-103 to the pyrimidine ring and the interactions of the backbone atoms of residues His-99 through Ile-103 with the isoalloxazine ring. The rigid positioning of the isoalloxazine ring could only permit a solvent-excluded cavity of ∼125 Å3 adjacent to the re face of the FAD to accommodate a 93-Å3 choline molecule in the substrate binding domain (12). Mechanistic data thus far obtained on choline oxidase, coupled with the crystal structure of the wild-type enzyme resolved to 1.86 Å, are consistent with a quantum tunneling mechanism for the hydride ion transfer occurring within a highly preorganized enzyme-substrate complex (Scheme 2) (12, 34, 50). Exploitation of the tunneling mechanism requires minimal independent movement of the hydride ion donor and acceptor, with the only dynamic motions permitted being the ones that promote the hydride transfer reaction.Open in a separate windowSCHEME 1.Two-step, four-electron oxidation of choline catalyzed by choline oxidase.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.x-ray crystal structure of the active site of wild-type choline oxidase resolved to 1.86 Å (PDB 2jbv). Note the significant distortion of the flavin ring at the C(4a) atom, which is due to the presence of a C(4a) adduct (69).Open in a separate windowSCHEME 2.The hydride ion transfer reaction from the α-carbon of the activated choline alkoxide species to the N(5) atom of the isoalloxazine ring of the enzyme-bound flavin in choline oxidase.In the present study, the contribution of the physically constrained flavin isoalloxazine ring to the reaction catalyzed by choline oxidase has been investigated in a variant enzyme in which the histidine residue at position 99 was replaced with an asparagine. The results suggest that, although not being required per se, the covalent linkage in choline oxidase contributes to the hydride tunneling reaction by either preventing independent movement or contributing to the optimal positioning of the flavin acting as hydride ion acceptor with respect to the alkoxide species acting as a donor. However, the covalent linkage is not required for the reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Mammalian glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) is a homohexameric enzyme that catalyzes the reversible oxidative deamination of l-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate using NAD(P)+ as coenzyme. Unlike its counterparts from other animal kingdoms, mammalian GDH is regulated by a host of ligands. The recently discovered hyperinsulinism/hyperammonemia disorder showed that the loss of allosteric inhibition of GDH by GTP causes excessive secretion of insulin. Subsequent studies demonstrated that wild-type and hyperinsulinemia/hyperammonemia forms of GDH are inhibited by the green tea polyphenols, epigallocatechin gallate and epicatechin gallate. This was followed by high throughput studies that identified more stable inhibitors, including hexachlorophene, GW5074, and bithionol. Shown here are the structures of GDH complexed with these three compounds. Hexachlorophene forms a ring around the internal cavity in GDH through aromatic stacking interactions between the drug and GDH as well as between the drug molecules themselves. In contrast, GW5074 and bithionol both bind as pairs of stacked compounds at hexameric 2-fold axes between the dimers of subunits. The internal core of GDH contracts when the catalytic cleft closes during enzymatic turnover. None of the drugs cause conformational changes in the contact residues, but all bind to key interfaces involved in this contraction process. Therefore, it seems likely that the drugs inhibit enzymatic turnover by inhibiting this transition. Indeed, this expansion/contraction process may play a major role in the inter-subunit communication and allosteric regulation observed in GDH.Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH)2 is found in all living organisms and catalyzes the reversible oxidative deamination of l-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate using NAD(P)+ as coenzyme (1). In eukaryotic organisms, GDH resides within the inner mitochondrial matrix where it catabolizes glutamate to feed 2-oxoglutarate to the Krebs cycle. Although there is some debate as to the directionality of the reaction, the high Km for ammonium in the reductive amination reaction seems to prohibit the reverse reaction under normal conditions in most organisms (2). GDH from animals, but not other kingdoms (3), is allosterically regulated by a wide array of ligands (39). GTP (911), and with ∼100-fold lower affinity, ATP (3), is a potent inhibitor of the reaction and acts by increasing the binding affinity for the product, thereby slowing down enzymatic turnover (11). Hydrophobic compounds such as palmitoyl-CoA (12), steroid hormones (13), and steroid hormone analogs such as diethylstilbestrol (5) are also potent inhibitors. ADP is an activator of GDH (3, 6, 10, 11, 14) that acts in an opposite manner to GTP by facilitating product release. Leucine is a poor substrate for GDH but is also an allosteric activator for the enzyme (8). Its activation is akin to ADP but acts at site distinct from ADP (15).The crystal structures of the bacterial (1618) and animal forms (19, 20) of GDH have shown that the general architecture and the locations of the catalytically important residues have remained unchanged throughout evolution. The structure of GDH (Fig. 1) is essentially two trimers of subunits stacked directly on top of each other with each subunit being composed of at least three domains (1922). The bottom domain makes extensive contacts with a subunit from the other trimer. Resting on top of this domain is the “NAD binding domain” that has the conserved nucleotide binding motif. Animal GDH has a long protrusion, “antenna,” rising above the NAD binding domain that is not found in bacteria, plants, fungi, and the vast majority of protists. The antenna from each subunit lies immediately behind the adjacent, counterclockwise neighbor within the trimer. Because these intertwined antennae are only found in the forms of GDH that are allosterically regulated by numerous ligands, it is reasonable to speculate that it plays a role in regulation.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Conformational transitions and locations of ligand binding sites in bovine glutamate dehydrogenase. A, a ribbon diagram of apo-bovine glutamate dehydrogenase with each of the identical subunits represented by different colors. The subunit arrangement is that of a trimer of dimers where anti-parallel β-strands form extensive interactions between the subunits stacked on top of each other. This pairing is represented by different shades of the same color. The conformational changes that during substrate binding are shown by the numbered arrows. As substrate binds, the NAD+ binding domain closes (1). The ascending helix of the antenna moves toward the pivot helix of the adjacent subunit (2). The short helix of the descending strand of the antenna becomes extended and distorted at the carboxyl end (3). Finally, the internal cavity of the helix compresses, bringing the three pairs closer together (4). B shows the structure of ADP (green spheres) bound to the apo-form of GDH and the location of Arg-463 (mauve spheres) that is involved in ADP activation (22). C shows the location of the inhibitor, GTP (mauve spheres), bound to the NADH (gray spheres), and glutamate (orange spheres) abortive complex. The green arrow notes the approximate location of one of the two sites (Lys-420) modified by 5′-FSBA (48). Comparing B and C, the closing of the catalytic cleft and the movement of the pivot helix is evident.From the structures GDH alone and complexed with various ligands, it is clear that GDH undergoes large conformational changes during each catalytic cycle (1922) (the locations of these changes are summarized in Fig. 1). Substrate binds to the deep recesses of the cleft between the coenzyme binding domain and the lower domain. Coenzyme binds along the coenzyme binding domain surface of the cleft. Upon binding, the coenzyme binding domain rotates by ∼18° to firmly close down upon the substrate and coenzyme (Fig. 1, arrow 1). As the catalytic cleft closes, the base of each of the long ascending helices in the antenna appears to rotate out in a counterclockwise manner to push against the “pivot” helix of the adjacent subunit (Fig. 1, arrow 2). There is a short helix in the descending loop of the antenna that becomes distended and shorter as the mouth closes in a manner akin to an extending spring (Fig. 1, arrow 3). The pivot helix rotates in a counterclockwise manner along the helical axes as well as rotating counterclockwise around the trimer 3-fold axis. Finally, the entire hexamer seems to compress as the mouth closes (Fig. 1, arrow 4). The three pairs of subunits that sit on top of each other move as a rigid units toward each other, compressing the cavity at the core of the hexamer. This last conformational change will be further examined in this work. Allosteric regulation is likely exacted by controlling some or all of these conformational changes.The reason for complex animal regulation came from studies that linked GDH regulation with insulin and ammonia homeostasis. The connection between GDH and insulin regulation was initially established using a non-metabolizable analog of leucine (7, 23), BCH (β-2-aminobicycle[2.2.1]-heptane-2-carboxylic acid). These studies demonstrated that activation of GDH was tightly correlated with increased glutaminolysis and release of insulin. In addition, it has also been noted that factors that regulate GDH also affect insulin secretion (24). The in vivo importance of GDH in glucose homeostasis was demonstrated by the discovery that a genetic hypoglycemic disorder, the hyperinsulinemia/hyperammonemia (HHS) syndrome, is caused by loss of GTP regulation of GDH (2527). Children with HHS have increased β-cell responsiveness to leucine and susceptibility to hypoglycemia following high protein meals (28). This is likely due to uncontrolled catabolism of amino acids yielding high ATP levels that stimulate insulin secretion as well as high serum ammonium levels. During glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in normal individuals, it has been proposed that the generation of high energy phosphates inhibits GDH and promotes conversion of glutamate to glutamine, which, alone or combined, might amplify the release of insulin (29, 30). Further support for this contention came from studies on the inhibitory effects of the polyphenolic compounds from green tea on BCH-stimulated insulin secretion (31). This not only lent support for the contention that GDH plays a significant role in insulin homeostasis, but also suggests that the HHS disorder might be directly controlled pharmaceutically. The role of GDH in insulin homeostasis is summarized in Fig. 2.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 2.Link between GDH and insulin homeostasis. This figure shows the role of GDH in BCH stimulated insulin secretion and how GDH inhibitors affect this process (29, 30). In energy-depleted β-cells, a BCH ramp stimulates insulin secretion. Here, the major energy source is glutaminolysis via phosphate-dependent glutaminase and GDH, because the concentration of GDH inhibitors (ATP/GTP) have been depleted and the phosphate-dependent glutaminase activator Pi (inorganic phosphate) has been increased. BCH stimulates glutamine utilization via GDH activation, thus providing the ATP signal necessary for insulin secretion. GDH inhibitors block this process by inhibiting GDH activity.To both find a more stable pharmaceutical agent to control HHS and to better understand the allosteric regulation of GDH, a high throughput screen was performed to identify new GDH inhibitors (32). Of the ∼30,000 compounds tested, ∼20 demonstrated significant activity. Three of the most active compounds, hexachlorophene, GW5074, and bithionol, were chosen for further analysis in this study. As shown here, all three compounds exhibit essentially non-competitive inhibition of the reaction and therefore do not compete with either substrate or coenzyme. Structural studies are presented here that demonstrate that six hexachlorophene (HCP) molecules bind to the inner core of the GDH hexamer, forming an internal ring via aromatic interactions. In contrast, bithionol and GW5074 bind as pairs between dimers of GDH subunits further away from the core of the enzyme. None of these compounds induce significant conformational changes in their immediate vicinity, and the mechanism of action is not clear from the location of their binding sites. However, detailed analysis of the various GDH complexes shows all of the drugs are binding to contact areas in the core of the hexamer that appear to be expanding and contracting during catalytic turnover. Therefore, inhibition is likely due interference with this “breathing” process.  相似文献   

12.
All of the 2,6-dideoxy sugars contained within the structure of chromomycin A3 are derived from d-glucose. Enzyme assays were used to confirm the presence of hexokinase, phosphoglucomutase, UDPG pyrophosphorylase (UDPGP), and UDPG oxidoreductase (UDPGO), all of which are involved in the pathway of glucose activation and conversion into 2,6-dideoxyhexoses during chromomycin biosynthesis. Levels of the four enzymes in Streptomyces spp. cell extracts were correlated with the production of chromomycins. The pathway of sugar activation in Streptomyces spp. involves glucose 6-phosphorylation by hexokinase, isomerization to G-1-P catalyzed by phosphoglucomutase, synthesis of UDPG catalyzed by UDPGP, and formation of UDP-4-keto-6-deoxyglucose by UDPGO.Dideoxy sugars occur commonly in the structures of cardiac glycosides from plants, in antibiotics like chromomycin A3 (Fig. (Fig.1),1), and in macrolides produced by microorganisms. On the basis of stable isotope-labeling experiments, biosynthetic studies conducted in Rosazza’s laboratory have indicated that all the deoxy sugars of chromomycin A3 are derived from d-glucose (21). While the assembly of the polyketide aglycone is reasonably well understood, relatively little is known of the details of 2,6-dideoxy sugar biogenesis in streptomycetes. Earlier studies with Streptomyces rimosus indicated that TDP-mycarose is synthesized from TDP-d-glucose (TDPG) and S-adenosyl-l-methionine (10, 23). The reaction requires NADPH as a cofactor, and TDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-d-glucose is an intermediate. Formation of TDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-d-glucose was catalyzed by the enzyme TDPG oxidoreductase (TDPG-4,6-dehydratase; EC 4.2.1.46). Similar 4-keto sugar nucleotides are intermediates for the biosynthesis of polyene macrolide antibiotic amino sugars (18). Similar pathways have been elaborated for the formation of 2,6-dideoxy-d-threo-4-hexulose of granaticin in Escherichia coli (6, 25) and 2,6-dideoxy-d-arabino-hexose of chlorothricin (12). The initial 6-deoxygenation of glucose during 3,6-dideoxy sugar formation involves a similar mechanism (32). In all of these processes, glucose is first activated by conversion into a sugar nucleotide such as UDPG followed by NAD+ oxidation of the 4 position to the corresponding 4-oxo derivative. Position 6 deoxygenation involves a general tautomerization, dehydration, and NADH,H+-catalyzed reduction process (6, 12, 25). A similar tautomerization and dehydration followed by reduction may produce C-3-deoxygenated products, such as CDP-3,6-dideoxyglucose (27). The pathway for formation of 3,6-dideoxyhexoses from CDPG in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was clearly elucidated by Liu and Thorson (14). However, none of this elegant work was focused on the earlier steps of hexose nucleotide formation. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Structures of chromomycins A2 and A3.On the basis of previous work (7), it is reasonable to postulate that the biosynthesis of 2,6-dideoxyglucose in Streptomyces griseus involves phosphorylation to glucose-6-phosphate by hexokinase (HK; E.C.2.7.7.1), as in glycolysis; conversion to glucose-1-phosphate by phosphoglucomutase (PGM; EC 2.7.5.1); reaction with UTP to form UDPG in a reaction catalyzed by UDPG pyrophosphorylase (UDPGP) (glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase; EC 2.7.7.9), and C-6 deoxygenation catalyzed by UDP-d-glucose-4,6-dehydratase with NAD+ as a cofactor (Fig. (Fig.2).2). UDPG and GDPG have been detected in cell extracts of S. griseus and Streptomyces sp. strain MRS202, suggesting that these compounds are active sugar nucleotides involved in the formation of dideoxyhexoses (15). UDPGP genes from several bacteria have been cloned and sequenced (1, 3, 4, 11, 29, 30). Although nucleotidyl diphosphohexose-4,6-dehydratases (NDP-hexose-4,6-dehydratases) have been purified and characterized from several sources (5, 8, 9, 13, 19, 25, 26, 31, 33), the occurrence of the glucose-activating enzymes HK, PGM, UDPGP, and UDPG oxidoreductase (UDPGO) involved in 2,6-dideoxyhexose formation has not been established in streptomycetes. This work provides evidence for the presence of these enzymes involved in the biosynthetic activation of glucose to the 2,6-dideoxyhexoses in chromomycin A3.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2Proposed pathway for the formation of 2,6-dideoxy sugars in streptomycetes involving HK, PGM, UDPGP, and UDPGO.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The study of metabolically labeled or probe-modified proteins is an important area in chemical proteomics. Isolation and purification of the protein targets is a necessary step before MS identification. The biotin-streptavidin system is widely used in this process, but the harsh denaturing conditions also release natively biotinylated proteins and non-selectively bound proteins. A cleavable linker strategy is a promising approach for solving this problem. Though several cleavable linkers have been developed and tested, an efficient, easily synthesized, and inexpensive cleavable linker is a desirable addition to the proteomics toolbox. Here, we describe the chemical proteomics application of a vicinal diol cleavable linker. Through easy-to-handle chemistry we incorporate this linker into an activity-based probe and a biotin alkyne tag amenable for bioorthogonal ligation. With these reagents, background protein identifications are significantly reduced relative to standard on-bead digestion.The covalent modification of proteins by small molecules within a complex proteome is a major theme in chemical biology and proteomics. An effective method for the detection of posttranslational modifications of proteins is the metabolic incorporation of modified biomolecules such as tagged carbohydrates or lipids (1). Reversible interactions of enzyme inhibitors, natural products, or drugs can be detected when one appends photocrosslinking agents, thereby facilitating target discovery (2, 3). A particularly interesting example of protein labeling is activity-based protein profiling (ABPP)1 (4, 5), which utilizes the intrinsic catalytic activity of a target enzyme for the covalent attachment of an affinity or visualization tag. ABPP makes use of small molecules (activity-based probes (ABPs)) that react with the active form of a specific enzyme or enzyme class by means of a “warhead,” which is often derived from a mechanism-based enzyme inhibitor (Fig. 1A). DCG-04, for example, is based on the naturally occurring inhibitor E-64 and targets the papain family of cysteine proteases via covalent attachment of the epoxysuccinate group to the active site cysteine (Fig. 1B) (6).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.The cleavable linker strategy in ABPP. A, the elements of an ABP. B, the example ABP DCG-04, an epoxysuccinate-containing probe for clan CA cysteine proteases. DCG-04 is based on the naturally occurring protease inhibitor E-64. C, schematic strategy of cleavable linker-mediated target identification. D, the cleavage mechanism of a vicinal diol.Bulky fluorophore or biotin tags on chemical probes might interfere with efficient protein binding. Moreover, they can negatively influence the cell permeability of probes, which therefore limits their applicability in in vitro experiments. Bioorthogonal chemistries, such as the Bertozzi-Staudinger ligation (7) and the 1,3-bipolar cycloaddition of an azide and an alkyne (click chemistry) (8), allow tandem labeling strategies in which a biotin or a fluorophore is attached to an enzyme probe complex in a separate step. Consequently, the probes themselves only carry azide or alkyne groups as “mini-tags.” Tandem labeling using bioorthogonal chemistry has now become a widely used strategy to label biomolecules in lysates and in live cells (911).An essential step in ABPP, as well as in other chemical proteomics approaches, is the elucidation of the tagged proteins. This usually involves a biotin-mediated enrichment step followed by mass-spectrometry-based identification. Although the streptavidin-biotin interaction allows efficient enrichment as a result of the strong binding affinity (Kd ∼ 10−15 m), it also has limitations. The quantitative elution of biotinylated proteins requires harsh conditions (12), which lead to contamination of the sample by endogenous biotinylated and non-specifically bound proteins. These other proteins will be identified together with the real protein targets. Given that subsequent target validation with secondary assays can be a costly and time-consuming process, a reduction in false positive identifications is highly desirable. For cleaner protein identification, cleavable linker strategies (13) that allow the selective release of target proteins have been developed (Fig. 1C). The commercially available disulfide linker can be cleaved under mild conditions, but it suffers from premature cleavage in reducing media such as the intracellular environment and reducing buffers used for click chemistry and in vitro reactions of cysteine proteases. Therefore, a variety of alternative linkers for proteomics applications have been reported, including a sterically hindered disulfide (14), diazobenzenes (1519), hydrazones (20, 21), silanes (22), light sensitive linkers (2325), tobacco etch virus protease sensitive linkers (26, 27), and a levulinoyl-based linker (28). The synthesis of some of these linkers is lengthy or difficult to scale up, which limits their general application in chemical proteomics.Ideally, a cleavable linker is stable under a wide variety of conditions, is efficiently and selectively cleaved, and can be synthesized in a low number of easy chemical transformations. We aimed to meet these requirements by using a vicinal diol as a cleavable linker system. When vicinal diols are treated with sodium periodate (NaIO4), the carbon–carbon bond is cleaved (Fig. 1D). Periodate treatment of proteins can result in side-reactions, such as the cleavage of linked carbohydrates or the oxidation of N-terminal serine and threonine residues. However, these N-termini rarely occur in proteins and are therefore of minor concern. In general, the mild, neutral conditions of periodate cleavage are compatible with proteins. This has been illustrated in the past, for example, by its application in the detection of protein–protein interactions (29) and the creation of unliganded MHC class I molecules (30). In this article, we report the chemical proteomics application of diol cleavable linker probes. We show that the synthesis of the linker and its probe derivatives is straightforward, that the linker is compatible with tandem click labeling, that enrichment and release of probe targets is efficient, and that the identification of targets takes place with significantly lower background than in on-bead digestion protocols.  相似文献   

15.
The lysine acetylation of proteins is a reversible post-translational modification that plays a critical regulatory role in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes. Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a facultative intracellular pathogen and the causative agent of tuberculosis. Increasing evidence shows that lysine acetylation may play an important role in the pathogenesis of M. tuberculosis. However, only a few acetylated proteins of M. tuberculosis are known, presenting a major obstacle to understanding the functional roles of reversible lysine acetylation in this pathogen. We performed a global acetylome analysis of M. tuberculosis H37Ra by combining protein/peptide prefractionation, antibody enrichment, and LC-MS/MS. In total, we identified 226 acetylation sites in 137 proteins of M. tuberculosis H37Ra. The identified acetylated proteins were functionally categorized into an interaction map and shown to be involved in various biological processes. Consistent with previous reports, a large proportion of the acetylation sites were present on proteins involved in glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, the citrate cycle, and fatty acid metabolism. A NAD+-dependent deacetylase (MRA_1161) deletion mutant of M. tuberculosis H37Ra was constructed and its characterization showed a different colony morphology, reduced biofilm formation, and increased tolerance of heat stress. Interestingly, lysine acetylation was found, for the first time, to block the immunogenicity of a peptide derived from a known immunogen, HspX, suggesting that lysine acetylation plays a regulatory role in immunogenicity. Our data provide the first global survey of lysine acetylation in M. tuberculosis. The dataset should be an important resource for the functional analysis of lysine acetylation in M. tuberculosis and facilitate the clarification of the entire metabolic networks of this life-threatening pathogen.Mycobacterium tuberculosis was responsible for 1.3 million deaths and 8.6 million new cases of tuberculosis (TB)1 worldwide in 2012 (1). This global public health crisis remains a serious problem, with the emergence of drug-resistant M. tuberculosis, especially multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant M. tuberculosis, and also the emergence of coinfections of TB and human immunodeficiency virus (2, 3). To counter the increasing threat of TB, it is critical to understand fundamental aspects of TB-related biology. Such studies will not only provide new drug targets for the design of novel therapeutic agents, but also facilitate the development of novel diagnostic tools and new vaccines.Acetylation is one of the important protein modifications and occurs both co- and post-translationally on the α-amino group at the N terminus of the protein, so-called “N-terminal acetylation,” or on the ε-amino group on the side chain of lysine (4). Lysine acetylation is one of the most common post-translational modifications to proteins in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes. As a dynamic and reversible process, protein acetylation plays important roles in many cellular physiological processes, including cell-cycle regulation and apoptosis, cell morphology (5), metabolic pathways (68), protein interactions (9), and enzymatic activity (8, 10). In recent years, great advances have been made in proteomic studies, and a large number of lysine-acetylated proteins have been identified in many eukaryotes, including human (5, 11, 12), rat (13), mouse (11), Drosophila (14), Arabidopsis (15, 16), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (17), and protozoans (18, 19). The global analysis of lysine acetylation has also been reported in bacteria, including Escherichia coli (2022), Erwinia amylovora (23), Bacillus subtilis (24), and Salmonella enterica (6). These acetylome studies have generated large datasets of bacterial proteins acetylated on lysine residues and have demonstrated the diverse cellular functions of lysine acetylation in bacteria.Increasing evidence shows that protein acetylation occurs and plays an important regulatory role in mycobacteria (8, 2531). For example, Lange et al. reported the N-terminal acetylation of early secreted antigenic target 6 (ESAT-6) protein (31). Rv1151c is reported to be an NAD+-dependent protein deacetylase in M. tuberculosis that deacetylates and thus regulates the activity of acetyl-CoA synthase (25, 32). Two cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-binding proteins in M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis (MSMEG_5458 and Rv0998, respectively) show similarity to the GNAT family of acetyltransferases and could acetylate a universal stress protein (USP, MSMEG_4207) (30). Subsequent structural studies revealed the fine mechanisms of how cAMP regulates the protein lysine acetyltransferase in mycobacteria (27, 28). Very recently, reversible lysine acetylation was shown to regulate the activity of several fatty acyl-CoA synthetases in M. tuberculosis (8, 26), and also to regulate acetate and propionate metabolism in M. smegmatis (8, 26). However, to the best of our knowledge, only a few acetylated proteins in M. tuberculosis have been identified, presenting a major obstacle to further understanding the regulatory roles of reversible lysine acetylation in this life-threatening pathogen.To fill this gap in our knowledge, we undertook a systematic study of the functional roles of lysine acetylation in M. tuberculosis. We performed an acetylomic analysis of M. tuberculosis H37Ra using high-accuracy MS combined with the identification of 226 unique lysine acetylation sites on 137 proteins. This set of M. tuberculosis proteins acetylated on lysine residues supports the emerging view that lysine acetylation is a general and fundamental regulatory process, and is not restricted to eukaryotes. It also opens the way for its detailed functional and evolutionary analysis of lysine acetylation in M. tuberculosis. The identified acetylated proteins that are involved in several important biological processes were functionally categorized into an interaction map. This is the first time that an interaction network of acetylated proteins in M. tuberculosis has been constructed, and should allow us to better understand the significance of acetylation in key cellular mechanisms in M. tuberculosis. To further explore the effects of lysine acetylation on the physiology of M. tuberculosis H37Ra, MRA_1161, the gene encoding the only known protein deacetylase in this bacterium, was deleted. The roles of MRA_1161 in the colony morphology, carbon source utilization, heat stress tolerance, and biofilm formation of M. tuberculosis were analyzed. The effect of lysine acetylation on the immunogenicity of a known immunogen, HspX, was also tested.  相似文献   

16.
An epoxide hydrolase from Rhodococcus erythropolis DCL14 catalyzes the hydrolysis of limonene-1,2-epoxide to limonene-1,2-diol. The enzyme is induced when R. erythropolis is grown on monoterpenes, reflecting its role in the limonene degradation pathway of this microorganism. Limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase was purified to homogeneity. It is a monomeric cytoplasmic enzyme of 17 kDa, and its N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined. No cofactor was required for activity of this colorless enzyme. Maximal enzyme activity was measured at pH 7 and 50°C. None of the tested inhibitors or metal ions inhibited limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase activity. Limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase has a narrow substrate range. Of the compounds tested, only limonene-1,2-epoxide, 1-methylcyclohexene oxide, cyclohexene oxide, and indene oxide were substrates. This report shows that limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase belongs to a new class of epoxide hydrolases based on (i) its low molecular mass, (ii) the absence of any significant homology between the partial amino acid sequence of limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase and amino acid sequences of known epoxide hydrolases, (iii) its pH profile, and (iv) the inability of 2-bromo-4′-nitroacetophenone, diethylpyrocarbonate, 4-fluorochalcone oxide, and 1,10-phenanthroline to inhibit limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase activity.Epoxides are highly reactive compounds which readily react with numerous biological compounds, including proteins and nucleic acids. Consequently, epoxides are cytotoxic, mutagenic, and potentially carcinogenic, and there is considerable interest in biological degradation mechanisms for these compounds.In bacteria, epoxides are formed during the metabolism of alkenes (23) and halohydrins (15, 26, 34, 49). Enzymes belonging to a large number of enzyme classes, including dehydrogenases (17), lyases (21), carboxylases (1, 43), glutathione S-transferases (6, 8), isomerases (24), and hydrolases (7, 19, 44), are involved in the microbial degradation of epoxides.Epoxide hydrolases are enzymes catalyzing the addition of water to epoxides forming the corresponding diol. This group of enzymes has been extensively studied in mammals, while only limited information is available on bacterial epoxide hydrolases. Three functions for epoxide hydrolases are recognized (42). In bacteria, epoxide hydrolases are involved in the degradation of several hydrocarbons, including 1,3-dihalo-2-propanol (34), 2,3-dihalo-1-propanol (15, 26), epichlorohydrin (46), propylene oxide (16), 9,10-epoxy fatty acids (30, 36), trans-2,3-epoxysuccinate (2), and cyclohexene oxide (14). Other epoxide hydrolases, such as microsomal and cytosolic epoxide hydrolase from mammals (for reviews, see references 4, 8, and 44), are involved in the detoxification of epoxides formed due to the action of P-450-dependent monooxygenases (8). Epoxide hydrolases are also involved in biosynthesis of hormones, such as leukotrienes and juvenile hormone (40, 45), and plant cuticular elements (11). Remarkably, the bacterial and eukaryotic epoxide hydrolases described so far form a homogeneous group of enzymes belonging to the α/β-hydrolase fold superfamily (10, 38).Rhodococcus erythropolis DCL14, a gram-positive bacterium, is able to grow on both (+)- and (−)-limonene as the sole source of carbon and energy (47). Cells grown on limonene contained a novel epoxide hydrolase that does not belong to the α/β-hydrolase fold superfamily. This limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase converts limonene-1,2-epoxide to limonene-1,2-diol (p-menth-8-ene-1,2-diol [Fig. 1]). In this report, we describe the purification and characterization of this enzyme and show that limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase belongs to a novel class of epoxide hydrolases. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Reaction catalyzed by limonene-1,2-epoxide hydrolase.  相似文献   

17.
Four class IIa bacteriocins (pediocin PA-1, enterocin A, sakacin P, and curvacin A) were purified to homogeneity and tested for activity toward a variety of indicator strains. Pediocin PA-1 and enterocin A inhibited more strains and had generally lower MICs than sakacin P and curvacin A. The antagonistic activity of pediocin-PA1 and enterocin A was much more sensitive to reduction of disulfide bonds than the antagonistic activity of sakacin P and curvacin A, suggesting that an extra disulfide bond that is present in the former two may contribute to their high levels of activity. The food pathogen Listeria monocytogenes was among the most sensitive indicator strains for all four bacteriocins. Enterocin A was most effective in inhibiting Listeria, having MICs in the range of 0.1 to 1 ng/ml. Sakacin P had the interesting property of being very active toward Listeria but not having concomitant high levels of activity toward lactic acid bacteria. Strains producing class IIa bacteriocins displayed various degrees of resistance toward noncognate class IIa bacteriocins; for the sakacin P producer, it was shown that this resistance is correlated with the expression of immunity genes. It is hypothesized that variation in the presence and/or expression of such immunity genes accounts in part for the remarkably large variation in bacteriocin sensitivity displayed by lactic acid bacteria.Many lactic acid bacteria (LAB), including members of the genera Lactococcus, Lactobacillus, Carnobacterium, Enterococcus, and Pediococcus, are known to secrete small, ribosomally synthesized antimicrobial peptides called bacteriocins (26, 29, 34). Some of these peptides undergo posttranslational modifications (class I bacteriocins), whereas others are not modified (class II bacteriocins) (29, 34). Class II bacteriocins contain between 30 and 60 residues and are usually positively charged at a neutral pH. Studies of a large number of class II bacteriocins have led to subgrouping of these compounds (29, 34). One of the subgroups, class IIa, contains bacteriocins that are characterized by the presence of YGNG and CXXXXCXV sequence motifs in their N-terminal halves as well as by their strong inhibitory effect on Listeria (e.g., 3, 4, 22, 23, 27, 28, 31, 38, 45) (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Because of their effectiveness against the food pathogen Listeria, class IIa bacteriocins have potential as antimicrobial agents in food and feed. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Sequence alignment of class IIa bacteriocins. Residue numbering is according to the sequence of pediocin PA-1. Cysteine residues are printed in boldface; the two known class IIa bacteriocins with four cysteine residues are in the upper group. No attempt was made to optimize the alignment in the C-terminal halves of the peptides. Piscicolin 126 is identical to piscicocin V1a (4). Carnobacteriocin BM1 most probably is identical to piscicocin V1b (4). Sakacin P most probably is identical to bavaricin A (30). Curvacin A is identical to sakacin A (2). The consensus sequence includes residues conserved in at least 8 of the 12 sequences shown; 100% conserved residues are underlined.Class IIa bacteriocins act by permeabilizing the membrane of their target cells (1, 5, 6, 9, 10, 26, 28). The most recent studies on the mode of action of these bacteriocins indicate that antimicrobial activity does not require a specific receptor and is enhanced by (but not fully dependent on) a membrane potential (9, 28). Little is known about bacteriocin structure, and unravelling the relationships between structure and function is one of the great challenges in current bacteriocin research. A logical starting point for structure-function studies is a thorough study of the differences in activity and target cell specificity between naturally occurring homologous bacteriocins. A few such studies have been described, but these suffer from either a very limited number of tested indicator strains or the use of culture supernatants instead of purified bacteriocins (3, 4, 17, 45). The use of purified bacteriocins for comparative analyses is absolutely essential, since it is becoming increasingly evident that bacteriocin producers produce more than one bacteriocin (4, 8, 38, 48; this study).In the present study, the activities of four pure class IIa bacteriocins (pediocin PA-1, enterocin A, curvacin A, and sakacin P) (Fig. (Fig.1)1) were tested against a large number of LAB as well as several strains of the food pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. The bacteriocins were purified from their respective producer strains by use of an optimized purification protocol yielding highly pure samples. The contribution of disulfide formation was assessed and found to be important for activity. The effects of the purified bacteriocins on (noncognate) class IIa bacteriocin-producing strains are described, and the implications of our findings for immunity and resistance are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, we report that the purified wild-type FANCI (Fanconi anemia complementation group I) protein directly binds to a variety of DNA substrates. The DNA binding domain roughly encompasses residues 200–1000, as suggested by the truncation study. When co-expressed in insect cells, a small fraction of FANCI forms a stable complex with FANCD2 (Fanconi anemia complementation group D2). Intriguingly, the purified FANCI-FANCD2 complex preferentially binds to the branched DNA structures when compared with either FANCI or FANCD2 alone. Co-immunoprecipitation with purified proteins indicates that FANCI interacts with FANCD2 through its C-terminal amino acid 1001–1328 fragment. Although the C terminus of FANCI is dispensable for direct DNA binding, it seems to be involved in the regulation of DNA binding activity. This notion is further enhanced by two C-terminal point mutations, R1285Q and D1301A, which showed differentiated DNA binding activity. We also demonstrate that FANCI forms discrete nuclear foci in HeLa cells in the absence or presence of exogenous DNA damage. The FANCI foci are colocalized perfectly with FANCD2 and partially with proliferating cell nuclear antigen irrespective of mitomycin C treatment. An increased number of FANCI foci form and become resistant to Triton X extraction in response to mitomycin C treatment. Our data suggest that the FANCI-FANCD2 complex may participate in repair of damaged replication forks through its preferential recognition of branched structures.Fanconi anemia (FA)3 is a genetic disorder characterized by chromosome instability, predisposition to cancer, hypersensitivity to DNA cross-linking agents, developmental abnormalities, and bone marrow failure (19). There are at least 13 distinct FA complementation groups, each of which is associated with an identified gene (2, 9, 10). Eight of them are components of the FA core complex (FANC A, B, C, E, F, G, L, and M) that is epistatic to the monoubiquitination of both FANCI and FANCD2, a key event to initiate interstrand cross-link (ICL) repair (2, 9, 11). Downstream of or parallel to the FANCI and FANCD2 monoubiquitination are the proteins involved in double strand break repair and breast cancer susceptibility (i.e. FANCD1/BRCA2, FANCJ/BRIP1, and FANCN/PALB2) (2, 9).FANCI is the most recently identified FA gene (1113). FANCI protein is believed to form a FANCI-FANCD2 (ID) complex with FANCD2, because they co-immunoprecipitate with each other from cell lysates and their stabilities are interdependent of each other (9, 11, 13). FANCI and FANCD2 are paralogs to each other, since they share sequence homology and co-evolve in the same species (11). Both FANCI and FANCD2 can be phosphorylated by ATR/ATM (ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related/ataxia telangiectasia-mutated) kinases under genotoxic stress (11, 14, 15). The phosphorylation of FANCI seems to function as a molecular switch to turn on the FA repair pathway (16). The monoubiquitination of FANCD2 at lysine 561 plays a critical role in cellular resistance to DNA cross-linking agents and is required for FANCD2 to form damage-induced foci with BRCA1, BRCA2, RAD51, FANCJ, FANCN, and γ-H2AX on chromatin during S phase of the cell cycle (1725). In response to DNA damage or replication stress, FANCI is also monoubiquitinated at lysine 523 and recruited to the DNA repair nuclear foci (11, 13). The monoubiquitination of both FANCI and FANCD2 depends on the FA core complex (11, 13, 26), and the ubiquitination of FANCI relies on the FANCD2 monoubiquitination (2, 11). In an in vitro minimally reconstituted system, FANCI enhances FANCD2 monoubiquitination and increases its specificity toward the in vivo ubiquitination site (27).FANCI is a leucine-rich peptide (14.8% of leucine residues) with limited sequence information to indicate which processes it might be involved in. Besides the monoubiquitination site Lys523 and the putative nuclear localization signals (Fig. 1A), FANCI contains both ARM (armadillo) repeats and a conserved C-terminal EDGE motif as FANCD2 does (11, 28). The EDGE sequence in FANCD2 is not required for monoubiquitination but is required for mitomycin C (MMC) sensitivity (28). The ARM repeats form α-α superhelix folds and are involved in mediating protein-protein interactions (11, 29). In addition, FANCI, at its N terminus, contains a leucine zipper domain (aa 130–151) that could be involved in mediating protein-protein or protein-DNA interactions (Fig. 1A) (3033). FANCD2, the paralog of FANCI, was reported to bind to double strand DNA ends and Holliday junctions (34).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Purified human FANCI binds to DNA promiscuously. A, schematic diagram of predicted FANCI motifs and mutagenesis strategy to define the DNA binding domain. The ranges of numbers indicate how FANCI was truncated (e.g. 801–1328 represents FANCI-(801–1328)). NLS, predicted nuclear localization signal (aa 779–795 and 1323–1328); K523, lysine 523, the monoubiquitination site. The leucine zipper (orange bars, aa 130–151), ARM repeats (green bars), and EDGE motif (blue bars) are indicated. Red bars with a slash indicate the point mutations shown on the left. B, SDS-PAGE of the purified proteins stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250. R1285Q and D1301A are two point mutants of FANCI. All FANCI variants are tagged by hexahistidine. FANCD2 is in its native form. Protein markers in kilodaltons are indicated. C, titration of WT-FANCI for the DNA binding activity. Diagrams of the DNA substrates are shown at the top of each set of reactions. *, 32P-labeled 5′-end. HJ, Holliday junction. Concentrations of FANCI were 0, 20, 40, 60, and 80 nm (ascending triangles). The substrate concentration was 1 nm. Protein-DNA complex is indicated by an arrow. D, supershift assay. 1 nm of ssDNA was incubated with PBS (lane 1), 80 nm FANCI alone (lane 2), and 80 nm FANCI preincubated with a specific FANCI antibody (lane 3) in the condition described under “Experimental Procedures.”In order to delineate the function of FANCI protein, we purified the recombinant FANCI from the baculovirus expression system. In this study, we report the DNA binding activity of FANCI. Unlike FANCD2, FANCI binds to different DNA structures, including single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), double-stranded DNA (dsDNA), 5′-tailed, 3′-tailed, splayed arm, 5′-flap, 3′-flap, static fork, and Holliday junction with preference toward branched structures in the presence of FANCD2. Our data suggest that the dynamic DNA binding activity of FANCI and the preferential recognition of branched structures by the ID complex are likely to be the mechanisms to initiate downstream repair events.  相似文献   

19.
Malic enzyme has a dimer of dimers quaternary structure in which the dimer interface associates more tightly than the tetramer interface. In addition, the enzyme has distinct active sites within each subunit. The mitochondrial NAD(P)+-dependent malic enzyme (m-NAD(P)-ME) isoform behaves cooperatively and allosterically and exhibits a quaternary structure in dimer-tetramer equilibrium. The cytosolic NADP+-dependent malic enzyme (c-NADP-ME) isoform is noncooperative and nonallosteric and exists as a stable tetramer. In this study, we analyze the essential factors governing the quaternary structure stability for human c-NADP-ME and m-NAD(P)-ME. Site-directed mutagenesis at the dimer and tetramer interfaces was employed to generate a series of dimers of c-NADP-ME and m-NAD(P)-ME. Size distribution analysis demonstrated that human c-NADP-ME exists mainly as a tetramer, whereas human m-NAD(P)-ME exists as a mixture of dimers and tetramers. Kinetic data indicated that the enzyme activity of c-NADP-ME is not affected by disruption of the interface. There are no significant differences in the kinetic properties between AB and AD dimers, and the dimeric form of c-NADP-ME is as active as tetramers. In contrast, disrupting the interface of m-NAD(P)-ME causes the enzyme to be less active than wild type and to become less cooperative for malate binding; the kcat values of mutants decreased with increasing Kd,24 values, indicating that the dissociation of subunits at the dimer or tetramer interfaces significantly affects the enzyme activity. The above results suggest that the tetramer is required for a fully functional m-NAD(P)-ME. Taken together, the analytical ultracentrifugation data and the kinetic analysis of these interface mutants demonstrate the differential role of tetramer organization for the c-NADP-ME and m-NAD(P)-ME isoforms. The regulatory mechanism of m-NAD(P)-ME is closely related to the tetramer formation of this isoform.Malic enzymes catalyze a reversible oxidative decarboxylation of l-malate to yield pyruvate and CO2 with reduction of NAD(P)+ to NAD(P)H. This reaction requires a divalent metal ion (Mg2+ or Mn2+) for catalysis (13). Malic enzymes are found in a broad spectrum of living organisms that share conserved amino acid sequences and structural topology; such shared characteristics reveal a crucial role for the biological functions of these enzymes (4, 5). In mammals, malic enzymes have been divided into three isoforms according to their cofactor specificity and subcellular localization as follows: cytosolic NADP+-dependent (c-NADP-ME),2 mitochondrial NADP+-dependent (m-NADP-ME), and mitochondrial NAD(P)+-dependent (m-NAD(P)-ME). The m-NAD(P)-ME isoform displays dual cofactor specificity; it can use both NAD+ and NADP+ as the coenzyme, but NAD+ is more favored in a physiological environment (68). Dissimilar to the other two isoforms, m-NAD(P)-ME binds malate cooperatively, and it can be allosterically activated by fumarate; the sigmoidal kinetics observed with cooperativity is abolished by fumarate (912). Mutagenesis and kinetic studies demonstrated that ATP is an active-site inhibitor, although it also binds to the exo sites in the tetramer interface (1315). Structural studies also revealed an allosteric binding site for fumarate residing at the dimer interface. Mutation in the binding site significantly affects the activating effects of fumarate (11, 16, 17).The c-NADP-ME and m-NADP-ME isoforms play an important role in lipogenesis by providing NADPH for the biosynthesis of long-chain fatty acids and steroids. Thus, c-NADP-ME together with acetyl-CoA carboxylase, fatty-acid synthase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase are classified as lipogenic enzymes (2, 1821). The m-NAD(P)-ME isoform has attracted much attention because it is involved in glutaminolysis, which is an energy-producing pathway of tumor cells that utilizes glutamine and glutamate. Thus, m-NAD(P)-ME is considered to be a potential target in cancer therapy (2227).Various crystal structures of malic enzymes in complex with substrate, metal ion, coenzyme, regulator, and inhibitor are available in the Protein Data Bank (4, 11, 2832). The overall tertiary structures of these malic enzymes are similar, but there are still some differences that may be significant for catalysis and regulation of the enzyme. Malic enzyme exists as a dimer of dimers with a stronger association of the dimer interface than that of the tetramer interface (Fig. 1A). The dimer interface is formed by subunits A and B or C and D (Fig. 1B), whereas the tetramer interaction consists of contacts between subunits A and D or B and C (Fig. 1C). A hydrophobic interaction is the major driving force for subunit assembly, but hydrogen bonding and ionic interactions also contribute markedly. The homotetramer of the enzyme is composed of four identical monomers each with its own active site. In the structure of human m-NAD(P)-ME, aside from its well defined active site, there are two regulatory sites on the enzyme (Fig. 1A). One of these sites is located at the dimer interface and is occupied by fumarate (Fig. 1B), whereas the other site, which is referred to as the exo site, is located at the tetramer interface and is occupied by either an NAD or an ATP molecule (Fig. 1A). In the ME family, Ascaris suum and human m-NAD(P)-ME were found to be activated by fumarate (11, 1517, 31). However, the relationship between enzyme regulation and subunit-subunit interaction is still unclear.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Dimer and tetramer interfaces of human m-NAD(P)-ME. A, dimer of dimers quaternary structure of human m-NAD(P)-ME (Protein Data Bank code 1PJ3). The active site, fumarate site, and exo site in each subunit are indicated. B, dimer interface between A and B subunits of m-NAD(P)-ME. C, tetramer interface between A and D subunits of m-NAD(P)-ME. The amino acid residues at the dimer interface, Gln-51, Glu-90, Asp-139, His-142, and Asp-568 and C terminus in the tetramer interface, are represented by ball-and-stick modeling. The amino acid residues 51 and 90 in human c-NADP-ME are His and Asp, respectively. This figure was generated with PyMOL (DeLano Scientific LLC, San Carlos, CA).Previous studies have shown that the quaternary structure stability of malic enzyme isoforms is diverse. At neutral pH, pigeon c-NADP-ME exists as a unique tetramer with a sedimentation coefficient of ∼10 S (3335), whereas human m-NAD(P)-ME exists as a mixture of tetramer and dimer of 9.5 S and 6.5 S, respectively (13, 35). Some mutations at the interface will affect the quaternary structure (3437). Although the crystal structure of human c-NADP-ME has not been resolved, it is believed that it is similar to pigeon c-NADP-ME.Here we analyze the essential factors governing quaternary structure stability for human c-NADP-ME and m-NAD(P)-ME. Site-directed mutagenesis at the dimer and tetramer interfaces was used to disrupt the tetramer organization to create a series of c-NADP-ME and m-NAD(P)-ME dimers. Combined with the analytical ultracentrifugation data and kinetic analysis of these interface mutants, we demonstrate the differential role of tetramer organization for the c-NADP-ME and m-NAD(P)-ME isoforms. The regulatory mechanism of m-NAD(P)-ME is highly associated with the tetramer formation of this isoform.  相似文献   

20.
The cytoplasmic N-terminal domain of connexins has been implicated in multiple aspects of gap junction function, including connexin trafficking/assembly and channel gating. A synthetic peptide corresponding to the first 23 amino acids of human connexin37 was prepared, and circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance studies showed that this N-terminal peptide was predominantly α-helical between glycine 5 and glutamate 16. The importance of this structure for localization of the protein at appositional membranes and channel function was tested by expression of site-directed mutants of connexin37 in which amino acids leucine 10 and glutamine 15 were replaced with prolines or alanines. Wild type connexin37 and both substitution mutants localized to appositional membranes between transfected HeLa cells. The proline mutant did not allow intercellular transfer of microinjected neurobiotin; the alanine mutant allowed transfer, but less extensively than wild type connexin37. When expressed alone in Xenopus oocytes, wild type connexin37 produced hemichannel currents, but neither of the double substitution mutants produced detectable currents. The proline mutant (but not the alanine mutant) inhibited co-expressed wild type connexin37. Taken together, our data suggest that the α-helical structure of the connexin37 N terminus may be dispensable for protein localization, but it is required for channel and hemichannel function.Gap junction channels allow intercellular passage of ions and small molecules up to 1000 Da. They are oligomeric assemblies of members of a family of related proteins called connexins (CX)2 (reviewed in Ref. 1). Six connexin monomers assemble to form a hemichannel or connexon (Fig. 1, top panel), which, in turn, forms a complete gap junction channel by docking with a hemichannel from an adjacent cell. Based on sequence similarities, connexins have been separated into subfamilies designated by Greek characters (2, 3). The majority of connexins are members of the α- and β-subfamilies. Connexin polypeptides span the plasma membrane four times and have three cytoplasmic regions: the N terminus (NT), a cytoplasmic loop between the second and third transmembrane domains, and the C terminus (Fig. 1, middle panel). Structural studies of gap junctions have revealed that each hemichannel contains a ring of 24 transmembrane spanning helices (4, 5). Most topological models suggest that the NT of α-subfamily connexins contains 23 amino acids (illustrated for connexin37, CX37, in Fig. 1, bottom panel) and that of β-subfamily connexins contains 22 amino acids.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Diagrams depicting the relationships between a gap junction hemichannel (top), the connexin polypeptide (middle), and the amino acid sequence of the CX37 N-terminal domain (bottom). Thick vertical lines represent the boundaries of the plasma membrane; the intracellular and extracellular spaces are indicated. The transmembrane (M1–M4), extracellular (E1 and E2), and cytoplasmic (NT, N terminus; CL, cytoplasmic loop; and CT, C terminus) domains within a connexin are indicated.The importance of the connexin NT has been emphasized by the identification of a number of connexin mutants that cause amino acid substitutions within this region and are linked to diseases including sensorineural deafness (CX26, CX30, and CX31), Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CX32), oculodentodigital dysplasia (CX43), and congenital cataracts (CX46 and CX50). Among the disease-linked mutants that have been studied, some show impaired protein trafficking to the cell surface, whereas others traffic properly, but show loss or alterations of channel function (616). Heterologous expression of site-directed mutants and chimeric connexins has demonstrated the influence of NT amino acids upon channel properties, including transjunctional voltage (Vj)-dependent gating, unitary conductance, permeability, and sensitivity to regulation by polyamines (1722). Lagree et al. (23) have provided evidence that the NT influences the compatibility of connexin hetero-oligomerization.The structure of the NT domain of a β-group connexin, Cx26, has been investigated through circular dichroism (CD) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) of a synthetic peptide corresponding to part of the predicted CX26NT (24, 25). Based on their data, Purnick et al. (24) proposed a model for the NT of CX26 with an α-helix extending from position 1 to 10 and a critical bend at positions 11 and 12 that was suggested to act as a “hinge” allowing the first 10 amino acids to swing into the pore and block the channel. Oshima et al. (5) have published structural studies of a “permeability” mutant (M34A) of CX26 (26) showing a density within the pore of the channel that they suggested might represent a bundle of N termini acting as a “plug” to close the channel.We have been studying CX37, an α-group connexin that is expressed in endothelial cells (27), which may be important for development of atherosclerotic disease (28) and that can form large conductance channels and hemichannels (27, 29). We have shown that as much as half the length of the CX37NT can be deleted without affecting formation of gap junction plaques, but a full-length N terminus is required for hemichannel gating and intercellular communication (30). These observations suggested that the CX37NT may have a structure that is required for function. Therefore, the present experiments were designed to determine the structure of the NT of CX37 and the importance of that structure for protein localization and formation of functional channels and hemichannels. Differences between our data and those previously reported in studies of CX26 suggest that the structure of the NT in α-group connexins may differ from that in β-group connexins.  相似文献   

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