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result(s) for
"Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry"
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An enzyme-based biosensor for monitoring and engineering protein stability in vivo
by
Mencius, Jun
,
Ren, Chang
,
Wen, Xin
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - genetics
,
Acylphosphatase
2021
Protein stability affects the physiological functions of proteins and is also a desirable trait in many protein engineering tasks, yet improving protein stability is challenging because of limitations in methods for directly monitoring protein stability in cells. Here, we report an in vivo stability biosensor wherein a protein of interest (POI) is inserted into a microbial enzyme (CysGA) that catalyzes the formation of endogenous fluorescent compounds, thereby coupling POI stability to simple fluorescence readouts. We demonstrate the utility of the biosensor in directed evolution to obtain stabilized, less aggregation-prone variants of two POIs (including nonamyloidogenic variants of human islet amyloid polypeptide). Beyond engineering applications, we exploited our biosensor in deep mutational scanning for experimental delineation of the stability-related contributions of all residues throughout the catalytic domain of a histone H3K4 methyltransferase, thereby revealing its scientifically informative stability landscape. Thus, our highly accessible method for in vivo monitoring of the stability of diverse proteins will facilitate both basic research and applied protein engineering efforts.
Journal Article
Structural Evolution of Bacterial Polyphosphate Degradation Enzyme for Phosphorus Cycling
by
Zhang, Dong
,
Hua, Yuejin
,
Huang, Cheng
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - genetics
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - metabolism
2024
Living organisms ranging from bacteria to animals have developed their own ways to accumulate and store phosphate during evolution, in particular as the polyphosphate (polyP) granules in bacteria. Degradation of polyP into phosphate is involved in phosphorus cycling, and exopolyphosphatase (PPX) is the key enzyme for polyP degradation in bacteria. Thus, understanding the structure basis of PPX is crucial to reveal the polyP degradation mechanism. Here, it is found that PPX structure varies in the length of ɑ‐helical interdomain linker (ɑ‐linker) across various bacteria, which is negatively correlated with their enzymatic activity and thermostability – those with shorter ɑ‐linkers demonstrate higher polyP degradation ability. Moreover, the artificial DrPPX mutants with shorter ɑ‐linker tend to have more compact pockets for polyP binding and stronger subunit interactions, as well as higher enzymatic efficiency (kcat/Km) than that of DrPPX wild type. In Deinococcus‐Thermus, the PPXs from thermophilic species possess a shorter ɑ‐linker and retain their catalytic ability at high temperatures (70 °C), which may facilitate the thermophilic species to utilize polyP in high‐temperature environments. These findings provide insights into the interdomain linker length‐dependent evolution of PPXs, which shed light on enzymatic adaption for phosphorus cycling during natural evolution and rational design of enzyme. This study demonstrates an interdomain linker‐based exopolyphosphatase (PPX) structural evolution in bacteria. The length of ɑ‐linker in PPX, which involves phosphate cycling, is varied among bacteria and has impacts on protein's conformation and quaternary structure, thus posing an impact on enzyme activity and thermostability. These results suggest a potential relationship between PPX structural evolution and bacterial environmental adaptability.
Journal Article
Rad50 zinc hook functions as a constitutive dimerization module interchangeable with SMC hinge
by
Lim, Chew Theng
,
Konno, Hiroki
,
Shinohara, Akira
in
147/3
,
631/337/1427/2122
,
631/337/1427/2190
2020
The human Mre11/Rad50 complex is one of the key factors in genome maintenance pathways. Previous nanoscale imaging by atomic force microscopy (AFM) showed that the ring-like structure of the human Mre11/Rad50 complex transiently opens at the zinc hook of Rad50. However, imaging of the human Mre11/Rad50 complex by high-speed AFM shows that the Rad50 coiled-coil arms are consistently bridged by the dimerized hooks while the Mre11/Rad50 ring opens by disconnecting the head domains; resembling other SMC proteins such as cohesin or condensin. These architectural features are conserved in the yeast and bacterial Mre11/Rad50 complexes. Yeast strains harboring the chimeric Mre11/Rad50 complex containing the SMC hinge of bacterial condensin MukB instead of the RAD50 hook properly functions in DNA repair. We propose that the basic role of the Rad50 hook is similar to that of the SMC hinge, which serves as rather stable dimerization interface.
The Mre11/Rad50 complex, which functions in genome surveillance, possesses antiparallel coiled-coil arms forming a ring-like structure similar to that of the SMC family proteins. Here the authors find that the Rad50 zinc hook functions similarly to the hinge of the SMC protein, and that the ring structure of the Mre11/Rad50 dimer also opens by disconnecting its globular head domains.
Journal Article
Protein Native-State Stabilization by Placing Aromatic Side Chains in N-Glycosylated Reverse Turns
by
Powers, Evan T
,
Kelly, Jeffery W
,
Dhar, Apratim
in
Acetylglucosamine - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acylphosphatase
2011
N-glycosylation of eukaryotic proteins helps them fold and traverse the cellular secretory pathway and can increase their stability, although the molecular basis for stabilization is poorly understood. Glycosylation of proteins at naïve sites (ones that normally are not glycosylated) could be useful for therapeutic and research applications but currently results in unpredictable changes to protein stability. We show that placing a phenylalanine residue two or three positions before a glycosylated asparagine in distinct reverse turns facilitates stabilizing interactions between the aromatic side chain and the first N-acetylglucosamine of the glycan. Glycosylating this portable structural module, an enhanced aromatic sequon, in three different proteins stabilizes their native states by -0.7 to -2.0 kilocalories per mole and increases cellular glycosylation efficiency.
Journal Article
Stabilization of a protein conferred by an increase in folded state entropy
by
Levy, Yaakov
,
Dagan, Shlomi
,
Hagai, Tzachi
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - genetics
,
Acylphosphatase
2013
Entropic stabilization of native protein structures typically relies on strategies that serve to decrease the entropy of the unfolded state. Here we report, using a combination of experimental and computational approaches, on enhanced thermodynamic stability conferred by an increase in the configurational entropy of the folded state. The enhanced stability is observed upon modifications of a loop region in the enzyme acylphosphatase and is achieved despite significant enthalpy losses. The modifications that lead to increased stability, as well as those that result in destabilization, however, strongly compromise enzymatic activity, rationalizing the preservation of the native loop structure even though it does not provide the protein with maximal stability or kinetic foldability.
Journal Article
A Rigidifying Salt-Bridge Favors the Activity of Thermophilic Enzyme at High Temperatures at the Expense of Low-Temperature Activity
by
Sze, Kong-Hung
,
Lam, Sonia Y.
,
Yu, Tsz-Ha
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - genetics
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - metabolism
2011
Thermophilic enzymes are often less active than their mesophilic homologues at low temperatures. One hypothesis to explain this observation is that the extra stabilizing interactions increase the rigidity of thermophilic enzymes and hence reduce their activity. Here we employed a thermophilic acylphosphatase from Pyrococcus horikoshii and its homologous mesophilic acylphosphatase from human as a model to study how local rigidity of an active-site residue affects the enzymatic activity.
Acylphosphatases have a unique structural feature that its conserved active-site arginine residue forms a salt-bridge with the C-terminal carboxyl group only in thermophilic acylphosphatases, but not in mesophilic acylphosphatases. We perturbed the local rigidity of this active-site residue by removing the salt-bridge in the thermophilic acylphosphatase and by introducing the salt-bridge in the mesophilic homologue. The mutagenesis design was confirmed by x-ray crystallography. Removing the salt-bridge in the thermophilic enzyme lowered the activation energy that decreased the activation enthalpy and entropy. Conversely, the introduction of the salt-bridge to the mesophilic homologue increased the activation energy and resulted in increases in both activation enthalpy and entropy. Revealed by molecular dynamics simulations, the unrestrained arginine residue can populate more rotamer conformations, and the loss of this conformational freedom upon the formation of transition state justified the observed reduction in activation entropy.
Our results support the conclusion that restricting the active-site flexibility entropically favors the enzymatic activity at high temperatures. However, the accompanying enthalpy-entropy compensation leads to a stronger temperature-dependency of the enzymatic activity, which explains the less active nature of the thermophilic enzymes at low temperatures.
Journal Article
Amyloid Fibril Formation Can Proceed from Different Conformations of a Partially Unfolded Protein
by
Chiti, Fabrizio
,
Calamai, Martino
,
Dobson, Christopher M.
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - analysis
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - ultrastructure
2005
Protein misfolding and aggregation are interconnected processes involved in a wide variety of nonneuropathic, systemic, and neurodegenerative diseases. More generally, if mutations in sequence or changes in environmental conditions lead to partial unfolding of the native state of a protein, it will often aggregate, sometimes into well-defined fibrillar structures. A great deal of interest has been directed at discovering the characteristic features of metastable partially unfolded states that precede the aggregated states of proteins. In this work, human muscle acylphosphatase (AcP) has been first destabilized, by addition of urea or by means of elevated temperatures, and then incubated in the presence of different concentrations of 2,2,2, trifluoroethanol ranging from 5% to 25% (v/v). The results show that AcP is able to form both fibrillar and nonfibrillar aggregates with a high
β-sheet content from partially unfolded states with very different structural features. Moreover, the presence of
α-helical structure in such a state does not appear to be a fundamental determinant of the ability to aggregate. The lack of ready aggregation under some of the conditions examined here is attributable primarily to the intrinsic properties of the solutions rather than to specific structural features of the partially unfolded states that precede aggregation. Aggregation appears to be favored when the solution conditions promote stable intermolecular interactions, particularly hydrogen bonds. In addition, the structures of the resulting aggregates are largely independent of the conformational properties of their soluble precursors.
Journal Article
Kinetic partitioning of protein folding and aggregation
by
Chiti, Fabrizio
,
Baroni, Fabiana
,
Stefani, Massimo
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - genetics
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - metabolism
2002
We have systematically studied the effects of 40 single point mutations on the conversion of the denatured form of the α/β protein acylphosphatase (AcP) into insoluble aggregates. All the mutations that significantly perturb the rate of aggregation are located in two regions of the protein sequence, residues 16–31 and 87–98, each of which has a relatively high hydrophobicity and propensity to form β-sheet structure. The measured changes in aggregation rate upon mutation correlate with changes in the hydrophobicity and β-sheet propensity of the regions of the protein in which the mutations are located. The two regions of the protein sequence that determine the aggregation rate are distinct from those parts of the sequence that determine the rate of protein folding. Dissection of the protein into six peptides corresponding to different regions of the sequence indicates that the kinetic partitioning between aggregation and folding can be attributed to the intrinsic conformational preferences of the denatured polypeptide chain.
Journal Article
Designing Conditions for in vitro Formation of Amyloid Protofilaments and Fibrils
by
Chiti, Fabrizio
,
Stefani, Massimo
,
Dobson, Christopher M.
in
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - metabolism
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - ultrastructure
1999
We have been able to convert a small α /β protein, acylphosphatase, from its soluble and native form into insoluble amyloid fibrils of the type observed in a range of pathological conditions. This was achieved by allowing slow growth in a solution containing moderate concentrations of trifluoroethanol. When analyzed with electron microscopy, the protein aggregate present in the sample after long incubation times consisted of extended, unbranched filaments of 30-50 angstrom in width that assemble subscquently into higher order structures. This fibrillar material possesses extensive β -sheet structure as revealed by far-UV CD and IR spectroscopy. Furthermore, the fibrils exhibit Congo red birefringence, increased fluorescence with thioflavine T and cause a red-shift of the Congo red absorption spectrum. All of these characteristics are typical of amyloid fibrils. The results indicate that formation of amyloid occurs when the native fold of a protein is destabilized under conditions in which noncovalent interactions, and in particular hydrogen bonding, within the polypeptide chain remain favorable. We suggest that amyloid formation is not restricted to a small number of protein sequences but is a property common to many, if not all, natural polypeptide chains under appropriate conditions.
Journal Article
Rapid oligomer formation of human muscle acylphosphatase induced by heparan sulfate
by
Chiti, Fabrizio
,
Motamedi-Shad, Neda
,
Esposito, Gennaro
in
631/337/470/2284
,
692/699
,
Acid Anhydride Hydrolases - chemistry
2012
Heparan sulfate can promote formation of amyloid fibrils by different proteins. The early steps and kinetics of this process are now studied in detail, using a stopped-flow setup and the protein mAcP. The data and analysis reveal two steps, binding of mAcP to heparan sulfate and conversion to a misfolded state, followed by aggregation of the heparan sulfate–bound proteins.
Many human diseases are caused by the conversion of proteins from their native state into amyloid fibrils that deposit in the extracellular space. Heparan sulfate, a component of the extracellular matrix, is universally associated with amyloid deposits and promotes fibril formation. The formation of cytotoxic prefibrillar oligomers is challenging to study because of its rapidity, transient appearance and the heterogeneity of species generated. The process is even more complex with agents such as heparan sulfate. Here we have used a stopped-flow device coupled to turbidometry detection to monitor the rapid conversion of human muscle acylphosphatase into oligomers with varying heparan sulfate and protein concentrations. We also analyzed mutants of the 15 basic amino acids of acylphosphatase, identifying the residues primarily involved in heparan sulfate–induced oligomerization of this protein and tracing the process with unprecedented molecular detail.
Journal Article