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Interactions among the Epidermal Growth Factor-like Modules of Thrombospondin-1
Authors:Yuanyuan Liu   Douglas S. Annis     Deane F. Mosher
Affiliation:From the Departments of Biomolecular Chemistry and Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract:Epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like modules are defined in part by six cysteines joined by disulfides in a 1–3, 2–4, and 5–6 pattern. Thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) is a multimodular glycoprotein with three EGF-like modules, E1, E2, and E3, arranged in tandem. These modules likely propagate conformational changes between surrounding C-terminal and N-terminal elements of TSP-1 and interact with other extracellular molecules. E1, E2, and their homologs in other TSPs are unique among EGF-like modules in having two residues rather than one between Cys-4 and Cys-5. In addition, E2 has a calcium-binding site and an unusually long loop between Cys-5 and Cys-6. The structure of E1, E2, or E3 expressed alone changed little upon heating as monitored by far-UV CD, whereas more marked changes occurred in E12, E23, and E123 tandem constructs. The individual modules denatured in differential scanning calorimetry experiments only at >85 °C. E12, E23, or E123 tandem constructs, however, had a transition in the range of 44–70 °C. The temperature of the transition was higher when calcium was present and higher with E123 than with E12 or E23. Isothermal titration calorimetry demonstrated KD values of binding of calcium to E2, E12, E23, or E123 at 25 °C of 11.5, 2.9, 2.2, or 0.3 μm, respectively. Monoclonal antibodies HB8432 and C6.7, which recognize epitopes in E2, bound to E12, E23, or E123 with greater affinity than to E2 alone. These results indicate that interactions among the modules of E123 influence the tertiary structure and calcium binding of E2.Thrombospondins (TSPs)2 are multimodule, calcium-binding extracellular glycoproteins with various functions (1). TSP-1, which was the first TSP to be discovered and remains the best characterized, and TSP-2 are trimers. Each subunit is composed of an N-terminal module, oligomerization domain, von Willebrand factor type C module, three properdin or TSP type 1 modules, and the C-terminal signature domain that includes three EGF-like modules (E123), 13 aspartate-rich calcium-binding repeats of the wire module, and a lectin-like module (24). The five mammalian TSPs fall into two groups, trimeric (TSP-1 and TSP-2) and pentameric (TSP-3, TSP-4, and TSP-5) (1). All have a signature domain, with the major difference being the presence of four rather than three EGF-like modules in the signature domain of pentameric TSPs.EGF-like modules exist in more than 300 human extracellular proteins and play important roles in biological processes such as blood clotting and cell-cell signaling (57). The modules are 30–50 residues long and characterized by six cysteine residues that form three disulfide bonds in the order 1–3, 2–4, and 5–6 (Fig. 1) (6, 7). The backbone structure of the EGF-like modules consists of two submodules, referred to as the major (N-terminal) and minor (C-terminal) submodules (6, 8, 9).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Model of the structure of E123. The model is built based on the crystal structure of EGF modules in the TSP-2 signature domain (Protein Data Bank code 1YO8) using SYBYL 7.0. E1 is shown in red, E2 in pink, and E3 in purple. The cysteines are colored yellow; the backbones of the residues between the fourth and fifth Cys are in blue; Glu-609 recognized by HB8432 and C6.7 is shown in green; and the long loop in E2 between the fifth and sixth Cys is hot pink. Ca2+ bound to the binding site on E2 near the interface between E1 and E2 is depicted as a red ball.The crystal structure of the three EGF-like modules of TSP-2 has been solved as part of the TSP-2 signature domain in 2 mm calcium (Ca2+) (Fig. 1) (4). All have the 1–3, 2–4, and 5–6 disulfide pattern. There is one Ca2+-binding site in the second EGF-like module (E2), located near the interface between the first and second EGF-like modules (E1 and E2) (Fig. 1). There is only one residue between the fourth and fifth cysteines in most EGF-like modules (6). However, E1 and E2 of TSP-1 and TSP-2 and three of the four EGF-like modules (E1, E2, and E2′) of pentameric TSPs have two residues between the fourth and fifth Cys. This difference is potentially important because the N-terminal major submodule of the repeat containing the 1–3 and 2–4 disulfides and the C-terminal submodule with the 5–6 disulfide have the potential to undergo hinge-like motions around the residues between the fourth and fifth Cys (6, 8, 9). Having two rather than one residue between these two Cys increases the potential flexibility. In addition, E2 modules in all five TSPs contain an unusually long loop of 23 residues between the fifth and sixth Cys (Fig. 1). In the TSP-2 signature domain structure, residues from the long loop interact with repeat 12N of the wire module (4). E3, which has one residue between the fourth and fifth Cys, interacts with the wire and the lectin-like module (3, 4). A common polymorphism (N700S) in wire repeat 1C of human TSP-1 influences the stability of the EGF-like modules (10). This finding suggests that the interactions between the EGF-like modules and more C-terminal elements of the signature domain allow conformational changes in the more C-terminal elements to be propagated N-terminally.The EGF-like modules (E123) of TSP-1 denature in differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) with a melting temperature of ∼68 °C in 2 mm Ca2+ (10), although most EGF-like modules are stable to heating (7). We have investigated this transition in detail to learn its origins and the influence of Ca2+. The results indicate interactions among the modules of E123 that enhance Ca2+ binding and influence the tertiary structure of E2.
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