A subtype of phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) deficiency that responds to cofactor (tetrahydrobiopterin, BH4) supplementation has been associated with phenylketonuria (PKU) mutations. The underlying molecular mechanism of this responsiveness is as yet unknown and requires a detailed in vitro expression analysis of the associated mutations. With this aim, we optimized the analysis of the kinetic and cofactor binding properties in recombinant human PAH and in seven mild PKU mutations, i.e., c.194T>C (p.I65T), c.204A>T (p.R68S), c.731C>T (p.P244L), c.782G>A (p.R261Q), c.926C>T (p.A309V), c.1162G>A (p.V388M), and c.1162G>A (p.Y414C) expressed in E. coli. For p.I65T, p.R68S, and p.R261Q, we could in addition study the equilibrium binding of BH4 to the tetrameric forms by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). All the mutations resulted in catalytic defects, and p.I65T, p.R68S, p.P244L, and most probably p.A309V, showed reduced binding affinity for BH4. The possible stabilizing effect of the cofactor was explored using a cell-free in vitro synthesis assay combined with pulse-chase methodology. BH4 prevents the degradation of the proteins of folding variants p.A309V, p.V388M, and p.Y414C, acting as a chemical chaperone. In addition, for wild-type PAH and all mild PKU mutants analyzed in this study, BH4 increases the PAH activity of the synthesized protein and protects from the rapid inactivation observed in vitro. Catalase and superoxide dismutase partially mimic this protection. All together, our results indicate that the response to BH4 substitution therapy by PKU mutations may have a multifactorial basis. Both effects of BH4 on PAH, i.e., the chemical chaperone effect preventing protein misfolding and the protection from inactivation, may be relevant mechanisms of the responsive phenotype.
Human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPAH) is a tetrameric enzyme that catalyzes the hydroxylation of L-phenylalanine (L-Phe) to L-tyrosine; a dysfunction of this enzyme causes phenylketonuria. Each subunit in hPAH contains an N-terminal regulatory domain (Ser2-Ser110), a catalytic domain (Asp112-Arg410), and an oligomerization domain (Ser411-Lys452) including dimerization and tetramerization motifs. Two partially overlapping transitions are seen in differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) thermograms for wild-type hPAH in 0.1 M Na-Hepes buffer, 0.1 M NaCl, pH 7.0. Although these transitions are irreversible, studies on their scan-rate dependence support that the equilibrium thermodynamics analysis is permissible in this case. Comparison with the DSC thermograms for truncated forms of the enzyme, studies on the protein and L-Phe concentration effects on the transitions, and structure-energetic calculations based on a modeled structure support that the thermal denaturation of hPAH occurs in three stages: (i) unfolding of the four regulatory domains, which is responsible for the low-temperature calorimetric transition; (ii) unfolding of two (out of the four) catalytic domains, which is responsible for the high-temperature transition; and (iii) irreversible protein denaturation, which is likely responsible for the observed exothermic distortion in the high-temperature side of the high-temperature transition. Stages 1 and 2 do not appear to be two-state processes. We present an approach to the analysis of ligand effects on DSC transition temperatures, which is based on the general binding polynomial formalism and is not restricted to two-state transitions. Application of this approach to the L-Phe effect on the DSC thermograms for hPAH suggests that (i) there are no binding sites for L-Phe in the regulatory domains; therefore, contrary to the common belief, the activation of PAH by L-Phe seems to be the result of its homotropic cooperative binding to the active sites. (ii) The regulatory domain appears to be involved in cooperativity through its interactions with the catalytic and oligomerization domains; thus, upon regulatory domain unfolding, the cooperativity in the binding of L-Phe to the catalytic domains seems to be lost and the value of the L-Phe concentration corresponding to half-saturation is increased. Overall, our results contribute to the understanding of the conformational stability and the substrate-induced cooperative activation of this important enzyme.
Using an IgG1 antibody as a model system, we have studied the mechanisms by which multidomain proteins aggregate at physiological pH when incubated at temperatures just below their lowest thermal transition. In this temperature interval, only minor changes to the protein conformation are observed. Light scattering consistently showed two coupled phases: an initial fast phase followed by several hours of exponential growth of the scattered intensity. This is the exact opposite of the lagtime behavior typically observed in protein fibrillation. Dynamic light scattering showed the rapid formation of an aggregate species with a hydrodynamic radius of about 25 nm, which then increased in size throughout the experiment. Theoretical analysis of our light scattering data showed that the aggregate number density goes through a maximum in time providing compelling evidence for a coagulation mechanism in which aggregates fuse together. Both the analysis as well as size-exclusion chromatography of incubated samples showed the actual increase in aggregate mass to be linear and reach saturation long before all molecules had been converted to aggregates. The CH2 domain is the only domain partly unfolded in the temperature interval studied, suggesting a pivotal role of this least stable domain in the aggregation process. Our results show that for multidomain proteins at temperatures below their thermal denaturation, transient unfolding of a single domain can prime the molecule for aggregation, and that the formation of large aggregates is driven by coagulation.
An important sequence motif identified by sequence analysis is shared by the ACT domain family, which has been found in a number of diverse proteins. Most of the proteins containing the ACT domain seem to be involved in amino acid and purine synthesis and are in many cases allosteric enzymes with complex regulation enforced by the binding of ligands. Here we explore the current understanding of the ACT domain function including its role as an allosteric module in a selected group of enzymes. We will further describe in more detail three of the proteins where some understanding is available on function and structure: i) the archetypical ACT domain protein E. coli 3PGDH, which catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of L-Ser, ii) the bifunctional chorismate mutase/prephenate dehydratase (P-protein) from E. coli, which catalyzes the first two steps in the biosynthesis of L-Phe, and iii) the mammalian aromatic amino acid hydroxylases, with special emphasis on phenylalanine hydroxylase, which catalyzes the first step in the catabolic degradation of L-phenylalanine (L-Phe). The ACT domain is commonly involved in the binding of a small regulatory molecule, such as the amino acids L-Ser and L-Phe in the case of 3PGDH and P-protein, respectively. On the other hand, for PAH, and probably for other enzymes, this domain appears to have been incorporated as a handy, flexible small module with the potential to provide allosteric regulation via transmission of finely tuned conformational changes, not necessarily initiated by regulatory ligand binding at the domain itself.
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