The glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) domain of phosphoinositol 4-phosphate adaptor protein-2 (FAPP2): Structure drives preference for simple neutral glycosphingolipids |
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Authors: | Ravi Kanth Kamlekar Dhirendra K. Simanshu Yong-guang Gao Roopa Kenoth Helen M. Pike Franklyn G. Prendergast Lucy Malinina Julian G. Molotkovsky Sergei Yu Venyaminov Dinshaw J. Patel Rhoderick E. Brown |
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Affiliation: | 1. The Hormel Institute, University of Minnesota, Austin, MN, USA;2. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA;3. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN, USA;4. CIC BioGUNE, Parque Tecnológico de Vizcaya, Derio 48160, Spain;5. Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Moscow 117997, Russia |
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Abstract: | Phosphoinositol 4-phosphate adaptor protein-2 (FAPP2) plays a key role in glycosphingolipid (GSL) production using its C-terminal domain to transport newly synthesized glucosylceramide away from the cytosol-facing glucosylceramide synthase in the cis-Golgi for further anabolic processing. Structural homology modeling against human glycolipid transfer protein (GLTP) predicts a GLTP-fold for FAPP2 C-terminal domain, but no experimental support exists to warrant inclusion in the GLTP superfamily. Here, the biophysical properties and glycolipid transfer specificity of FAPP2-C-terminal domain have been characterized and compared with other established GLTP-folds. Experimental evidence for a GLTP-fold includes: i) far-UV circular dichroism (CD) showing secondary structure with high alpha-helix content and a low thermally-induced unfolding transition (~ 41 °C); ii) near-UV-CD indicating only subtle tertiary conformational change before/after interaction with membranes containing/lacking glycolipid; iii) Red-shifted tryptophan (Trp) emission wavelength maximum (λmax ~ 352 nm) for apo-FAPP2-C-terminal domain consistent with surface exposed intrinsic Trp residues; iv) ‘signature’ GLTP-fold Trp fluorescence response, i.e., intensity decrease (~ 30%) accompanied by strongly blue-shifted λmax (~ 14 nm) upon interaction with membranes containing glycolipid, supporting direct involvement of Trp in glycolipid binding and enabling estimation of partitioning affinities. A structurally-based preference for other simple uncharged GSLs, in addition to glucosylceramide, makes human FAPP2-GLTP more similar to fungal HET-C2 than to plant AtGLTP1 (glucosylceramide-specific) or to broadly GSL-selective human GLTP. These findings along with the distinct mRNA exon/intron organizations originating from single-copy genes on separate human chromosomes suggest adaptive evolutionary divergence by these two GLTP-folds. |
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Keywords: | Glycosphingolipid binding and transfer GLTP superfamily Membrane interaction Tryptophan fluorescence Near-UV and far-UV circular dichroism Divergent evolution |
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