Effects of ligand binding on the stability of aldo–keto reductases: Implications for stabilizer or destabilizer chaperones |
| |
Authors: | Aurangazeb Kabir Ryo P. Honda Yuji O. Kamatari Satoshi Endo Mayuko Fukuoka Kazuo Kuwata |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. United Graduate School of Drug Discovery and Medical Information Sciences, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan;2. Department of Molecular Pathobiochemistry, Graduate School of Medicine, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan;3. Life Science Research Center, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan;4. Laboratory of Biochemistry, Gifu Pharmaceutical University, Gifu, Japan;5. Department of Gene and Development, Graduate School of Medicine, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan |
| |
Abstract: | Ligands such as enzyme inhibitors stabilize the native conformation of a protein upon binding to the native state, but some compounds destabilize the native conformation upon binding to the non‐native state. The former ligands are termed “stabilizer chaperones” and the latter ones “destabilizer chaperones.” Because the stabilization effects are essential for the medical chaperone (MC) hypothesis, here we have formulated a thermodynamic system consisting of a ligand and a protein in its native‐ and non‐native state. Using the differential scanning fluorimetry and the circular dichroism varying the urea concentration and temperature, we found that when the coenzyme NADP+ was absent, inhibitors such as isolithocholic acid stabilized the aldo–keto reductase AKR1A1 upon binding, which showed actually the three‐state folding, but destabilized AKR1B10. In contrast, in the presence of NADP+, they destabilized AKR1A1 and stabilized AKR1B10. To explain these phenomena, we decomposed the free energy of stabilization (ΔΔG) into its enthalpy (ΔΔH) and entropy (ΔΔS) components. Then we found that in a relatively unstable protein showing the three‐state folding, native conformation was stabilized by the negative ΔΔH in association with the negative ΔΔS, suggesting that the stabilizer chaperon decreases the conformational fluctuation of the target protein or increase its hydration. However, in other cases, ΔΔG was essentially determined by the delicate balance between ΔΔH and ΔΔS. The proposed thermodynamic formalism is applicable to the system including multiple ligands with allosteric interactions. These findings would promote the development of screening strategies for MCs to regulate the target conformations. |
| |
Keywords: | medical chaperone stabilizer destabilizer entropy protein conformation aldo– keto reductase Δ Δ G Δ Δ S |
|
|