The intersubunit lock-and-key motif in human glutathione transferase A1-1: role of the key residues Met51 and Phe52 in function and dimer stability (original) (raw)
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FEBS Letters, 2000
A hydrophobic lock-and-key intersubunit motif involving a phenylalanine is a major structural feature conserved at the dimer interface of classes alpha, mu and pi glutathione transferases. In order to determine the contribution of this subunit interaction towards the function and stability of human class alpha GSTA1-1, the interaction was truncated by replacing the phenylalanine 'key' Phe-51 with serine. The F51S mutant protein is dimeric with a native-like core structure indicating that Phe-51 is not essential for dimerization. The mutation impacts on catalytic and ligandin function suggesting that tertiary structural changes have occurred at/near the active and non-substrate ligand-binding sites. The active site appears to be disrupted mainly at the glutathione-binding region that is adjacent to the lock-and-key intersubunit motif. The F51S mutant displays enhanced exposure of hydrophobic surface and ligandin function. The lock-and-key motif stabilizes the quaternary structure of hGSTA1-1 at the dimer interface and the protein concentration dependence of stability indicates that the dissociation and unfolding processes of the mutant protein remain closely coupled.
Functional role of the lock and key motif at the subunit interface of glutathione transferase p1-1
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2004
The glutathione transferases (GSTs) represent a superfamily of dimeric proteins. Each subunit has an active site, but there is no evidence for the existence of catalytically active monomers. The lock and key motif is responsible for a highly conserved hydrophobic interaction in the subunit interface of pi, mu, and alpha class glutathione transferases. The key residue, which is either Phe or Tyr (Tyr 50 in human GSTP1-1) in one subunit, is wedged into a hydrophobic pocket of the other subunit. To study how an essentially inactive subunit influences the activity of the neighboring subunit, we have generated the heterodimer composed of subunits from the fully active human wild-type GSTP1-1 and the nearly inactive mutant Y50A obtained by mutation of the key residue Tyr 50 to Ala. Although the key residue is located far from the catalytic center, the k cat value of mutant Y50A decreased about 1300-fold in comparison with the wild-type enzyme. The decrease of the k cat value of the heterodimer by about 27-fold rather than the expected 2-fold in comparison with the wild-type enzyme indicates that the two active sites of the dimeric enzyme work synergistically. Further evidence for cooperativity was found in the nonhyperbolic GSH saturation curves. A network of hydrogen-bonded water molecules, found in crystal structures of GSTP1-1, connects the two active sites and the main chain carbonyl group of Tyr 50 , thereby offering a mechanism for communication between the two active sites. It is concluded that a subunit becomes catalytically competent by positioning the key residue of one subunit into the lock pocket of the other subunit, thereby stabilizing the loop following the helix ␣2, which interacts directly with GSH.
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
An N-capping box and a hydrophobic staple motif are strictly conserved in the core of all known glutathione S-transferases (GST). In the present work, mutations of hGSTA1-1 enzyme residues forming these motifs have been generated. The analysis of S154A, D157A, and S154A/D157A capping mutants indicate that the removal of this local signal destabilizes the protein. The fact that the third helical residue D157A mutation (N-3) was much more destabilizing than the first helical residue S154A mutation (N-cap) suggests that the appropriate conformation of the conserved substructure formed by the ␣6-helix and preceding loop (GST motif II) is crucial for the overall protein stability. The refolding study of GSTA1-1 variants supports the prediction that this subdomain could represent a nucleation site of refolding. The analysis of L153A, I158A, L153G, and L153A/I158A hydrophobic staple mutants indicate that the removal of this motif destabilizes the GSTA1-1 structure as well as its refolding transition state. The hydrophobic staple interaction favors essential inter-domain contacts and, thereby, in contrast to capping interactions, accelerates the enzyme reactivation. Its strict conservation in the GST system supports the suggestion that this local signal could represent an evolutionarily conserved determinant for rapid folding.
Journal of Molecular Biology, 2005
The C-terminal region in class Alpha glutathione transferase A1-1 (GSTA1-1), which forms an amphipathic a-helix (helix 9), is known to contribute to the catalytic and non-substrate ligand-binding functions of the enzyme. The region in the apo protein is proposed to be disordered which, upon ligand binding at the active-site, becomes structured and localised. Because Ile219 plays a pivotal role in the stability and localisation of the region, the role of tertiary interactions mediated by Ile219 in determining the conformation and dynamics of the C-terminal region were studied. Ligand-binding microcalorimetric and X-ray structural data were obtained to characterise ligand binding at the active-site and the associated localisation of the C-terminal region. In the crystal structure of the I219A hGSTA1-1$ S-hexylglutathione complex, the C-terminal region of one chain is mobile and not observed (unresolved electron density), whereas the corresponding region of the other chain is localised and structured as a result of crystal packing interactions. In solution, the mutant C-terminal region of both chains in the complex is mobile and delocalised resulting in a hydrated, less hydrophobic active-site and a reduction in the affinity of the protein for S-hexylglutathione. Complete dehydration of the active-site, important for maintaining the highly reactive thiolate form of glutathione, requires the binding of ligands and the subsequent localisation of the C-terminal region. Thermodynamic data demonstrate that the mobile C-terminal region in apo hGSTA1-1 is structured and does not undergo ligand-induced folding. Its close proximity to the surface of the wild-type protein is indicated by the concurrence between the observed heat capacity change of complex formation and the type and amount of surface area that becomes buried at the ligand-protein interface when the C-terminal region in the apo protein assumes the same localised structure as that observed in the wild-type complex.
Biochemistry, 2006
Canonical glutathione (GSH) transferases are dimeric proteins with subunits composed of an N-terminal GSH binding region (domain 1) and a C-terminal helical region (domain 2). The stabilities of several GSH transferase dimers are dependent upon two groups of interactions between domains 1 and 2 of opposing subunits: a hydrophobic ball-and-socket motif and a buried charge cluster motif. In rGSTM1-1, these motifs involve residues F56 and R81, respectively. The structural basis for the effects of mutating F56 to different residues on dimer stability and function has been reported Biochemistry 44, 10605-10612). Here, we show that the simultaneous disruption of both motifs in the F56S/R81A mutant causes complete dissociation of the dimer to a monomeric protein on the basis of gel filtration chromatography and multiple-angle laser light scattering. The fluorescence and far-UV CD properties of the double mutant as well as the kinetics of amide H/D exchange along the polypeptide backbone suggest that the monomer has a globular structure that is similar to a single subunit in the native protein. However, the mutant monomer has severely impaired catalytic activity, suggesting that the dimer interface is vital for efficient catalysis. Backbone amide H/D exchange kinetics in the F56S and F56S/R81A mutants indicate that a reorganization of the loop structure between helix R2 and strand 3 near the active site is responsible for the decreased catalytic activity of the monomer. In addition, the junction between the R4 and R5 helices in F56S/R81R shows decreased H/D exchange, indicating another structural change that may affect catalysis. Although the native subunit interface is important for dimer stability, urea-induced unfolding of the F56S/R81A mutant suggests that the interface is not essential for the thermodynamic stability of individual subunits. The H/D exchange data reveal a possible molecular basis for the folding cooperativity observed between domains 1 and 2.
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
In human glutathione transferase P1-1 (hGSTP1-1) position 146 is occupied by a glycine residue, which is located in a bend of a long loop that together with the ␣6-helix forms a substructure (GST motif II) maintained in all soluble GSTs. In the present study G146A and G146V mutants were generated by site-directed mutagenesis in order to investigate the function played by this conserved residue in folding and stability of hG-STP1-1. Crystallographic analysis of the G146V variant, expressed at the permissive temperature of 25°C, indicates that the mutation causes a substantial change of the backbone conformation because of steric hindrance. Stability measurements indicate that this mutant is inactivated at a temperature as low as 32°C. The structure of the G146A mutant is identical to that of the wild type with the mutated residue having main-chain bond angles in a high energy region of the Ramachandran plot. However even this Gly 3 Ala substitution inactivates the enzyme at 37°C. Thermodynamic analysis of all variants confirms, together with previous findings, the critical role played by GST motif II for overall protein stability. Analysis of reactivation in vitro indicates that any mutation of Gly-146 alters the folding pathway by favoring aggregation at 37°C. It is hypothesized that the GST motif II is involved in the nucleation mechanism of the protein and that the substitution of Gly-146 alters this transient substructure. Gly-146 is part of the buried local sequence GXXh(T/S)XXDh (X is any residue and h is a hydrophobic residue), conserved in all GSTs and related proteins that seems to behave as a characteristic structural module important for protein folding and stability.
Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography, 2006
Human glutathione transferase A1-1 is a well studied enzyme, but despite a wealth of structural and biochemical data a number of aspects of its catalytic function are still poorly understood. Here, five new crystal structures of this enzyme are described that provide several insights. Firstly, the structure of a complex of the wild-type human enzyme with glutathione was determined for the first time at 2.0 Å resolution. This reveals that glutathione binds in the G site in a very similar fashion as the glutathione portion of substrate analogues in other structures and also that glutathione binding alone is sufficient to stabilize the C-terminal helix of the protein. Secondly, we have studied the complex with a decarboxylated glutathione conjugate that is known to dramatically decrease the activity of the enzyme. The T68E mutant of human glutathione transferase A1-1 recovers some of the activity that is lost with the decarboxylated glutathione, but our structures of this mutant show that none of the earlier explanations of this phenomenon are likely to be correct. Thirdly, and serendipitously, the apo structures also reveal the conformation of the crucial C-terminal region that is disordered in all previous apo structures. The C-terminal region can adopt an ordered helix-like structure even in the apo state, but shows a strong tendency to unwind. Different conformations of the C-terminal regions were observed in the apo states of the two monomers, which suggests that cooperativity could play a role in the activity of the enzyme.
Biochemistry, 1998
Solvent-induced equilibrium unfolding of a homodimeric class sigma glutathione transferase (GSTS1-1, EC 2.5.1.18) was characterized by tryptophan fluorescence, anisotropy, enzyme activity, 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) binding, and circular dichroism. Urea induces a triphasic unfolding transition with evidence for two well-populated thermodynamically stable intermediate states of GSTS1-1. The first unfolding transition is protein concentration independent and involves a change in the subunit tertiary structure yielding a partially active dimeric intermediate (i.e., N 2 T I 2). This is followed by a protein concentration dependent step in which I 2 dissociates into compact inactive monomers (M) displaying enhanced hydrophobicity. The third unfolding transition, which is protein concentration independent, involves the complete unfolding of the monomeric state. Increasing NaCl concentrations destabilize N 2 and appear to shift the equilibrium toward I 2 whereas the stability of the monomeric intermediate M is enhanced. The binding of substrate or product analogue (i.e., glutathione or S-hexylglutathione) to the protein's active site stabilizes the native dimeric state (N 2), causing the first two unfolding transitions to shift toward higher urea concentrations. The stability of M was not affected. The data implicate a region at/near the active site in domain I (most likely R-helix 2) as being highly unstable/flexible which undergoes local unfolding, resulting initially in I 2 formation followed by a disruption in quaternary structure to a monomeric intermediate. The unfolding/refolding pathway is compared with those observed for other cytosolic GSTs and discussed in light of the different structural features at the subunit interfaces, as well as the evolutionary selection of this GST as a lens crystallin.