Copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD, SOD1 protein) is an abundant copper- and zinc-containing protein that is present in the cytosol, nucleus, peroxisomes, and mitochondrial intermembrane space of human cells. Its primary function is to act as an antioxidant enzyme, lowering the steady-state concentration of superoxide, but when mutated, it can also cause disease. Over 100 different mutations have been identified in the sod1 genes of patients diagnosed with the familial form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (fALS). These mutations result in a highly diverse group of mutant proteins, some of them very similar to and others enormously different from wild-type SOD1. Despite their differences in properties, each member of this diverse set of mutant proteins causes the same clinical disease, presenting a challenge in formulating hypotheses as to what causes SOD1-associated fALS. In this review, we draw together and summarize information from many laboratories about the characteristics of the individual mutant SOD1 proteins in vivo and in vitro in the hope that it will aid investigators in their search for the cause(s) of SOD1-associated fALS.
Mutations in the SOD1 gene cause the autosomal dominant, neurodegenerative disorder familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS). In spinal cord neurons of human FALS patients and in transgenic mice expressing these mutant proteins, aggregates containing FALS SOD1 are observed. Accumulation of SOD1 aggregates is believed to interfere with axonal transport, protein degradation and anti-apoptotic functions of the neuronal cellular machinery. Here we show that metal-deficient, pathogenic SOD1 mutant proteins crystallize in three different crystal forms, all of which reveal higher-order assemblies of aligned beta-sheets. Amyloid-like filaments and water-filled nanotubes arise through extensive interactions between loop and beta-barrel elements of neighboring mutant SOD1 molecules. In all cases, non-native conformational changes permit a gain of interaction between dimers that leads to higher-order arrays. Normal beta-sheet-containing proteins avoid such self-association by preventing their edge strands from making intermolecular interactions. Loss of this protection through conformational rearrangement in the metal-deficient enzyme could be a toxic property common to mutants of SOD1 linked to FALS.
The dissociation of apo-and metal-bound human copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) dimers induced by the chaotrope guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) or the reductant Tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) has been analyzed using analytical ultracentrifugation. Global fitting of sedimentation equilibrium data under native solution conditions (without GdnHCl or TCEP) demonstrate that both the apo-and metal-bound forms of SOD1 are stable dimers. Sedimentation velocity experiments show that apo-SOD1 dimers dissociate cooperatively over the range 0.5-1.0 M GdnHCl. In contrast, metal-bound SOD1 dimers possess a more compact shape and dissociate at significantly higher GdnHCl concentrations (2.0 -3.0 M). Reduction of the intrasubunit disulfide bond within each SOD1 subunit by 5-10 mM TCEP promotes dissociation of apo-SOD1 dimers, whereas the metal-bound enzyme remains a stable dimer under these conditions. The Cys-57 3 Ser mutant of SOD1, a protein incapable of forming the intrasubunit disulfide bond, sediments as a monomer in the absence of metal ions and as a dimer when metals are bound. Taken together, these data indicate that the stability imparted to the human SOD1 dimer by metal binding and the formation of the intrasubunit disulfide bond are mediated by independent molecular mechanisms. By combining the sedimentation data with previous crystallographic results, a molecular explanation is provided for the existence of different SOD1 macromolecular shapes and multiple SOD1 dimeric species with different stabilities.
The relative stabilities and structural properties of a representative set of 20 ALS-mutant Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase apoproteins were examined by using differential scanning calorimetry and hydrogen-deuterium (H͞D) exchange followed by MS. Contrary to recent reports from other laboratories, we found that ALS-mutant apoproteins are not universally destabilized by the disease-causing mutations. For example, several of the apoproteins with substitutions at or near the metal binding region (MBR) (MBR mutants) exhibited melting temperatures (Tm) in the range 51.6°C to 56.2°C, i.e., similar to or higher than that of the WT apoprotein (Tm ؍ 52.5°C). The apoproteins with substitutions remote from the MBR (WT-like mutants) showed a wide range of Tms, 40.0°C to 52.4°C. The H͞D exchange properties of the mutants were also wideranging: the MBR mutant apoproteins exhibited H͞D exchange kinetics similar to the WT apoprotein, as did some of the more stable WT-like mutant apoproteins, whereas the less stable apoproteins exhibited significantly less protection from H͞D exchange than the WT apoprotein. Most striking were the three mutant apoproteins, D101N, E100K, and N139K, which have apparently normal metallation properties, and differ little from the WT apoprotein in either thermal stability or H͞D exchange kinetics. Thus, the ALS mutant Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase apoproteins do not all share reduced global stability, and additional properties must be identified and understood to explain the toxicity of all of the mutant proteins.differential scanning calorimetry ͉ hydrogen-deuterium exchange ͉ protein stability ͉ protein aggregation ͉ neurodegenerative disease P rotein misfolding and aggregation have been linked to many diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, cystic fibrosis, transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, and ALS, but the pathways followed by pathogenic proteins from translation to disease-causing states are not completely understood (1-3). In some cases, partial or complete unfolding from the native state precedes protein aggregation, and thus the stability of a protein's native state may provide one measure of its propensity to aggregate. However, many familial protein misfolding diseases are caused by proteins that are not destabilized relative to their WT counterparts (4-6), implying that additional intrinsic or extrinsic factors may be required for protein aggregation.Our recent studies of a large number of ALS-mutant Cu,Znsuperoxide dismutase (SOD1) proteins have revealed that there is great diversity in the biophysical properties of these proteins (7-12). In contrast, Lindberg et al. (13) reported in 2002 that instability of the apoproteins of ALS-mutant SOD1 proteins is a ''common denominator'' among the nearly 100 known ALSlinked SOD1 mutations. More recently, Furukawa and O'Halloran (14) have reported that some of the destabilized mutant apoproteins studied by Lindberg et al. are further destabilized when the intrasubunit disulfide bond is reduced, again suggesting that protein destabilization is ...
More than 90 point mutations in human CuZn superoxide dismutase lead to the development of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, known also as motor neuron disease. A growing body of evidence suggests that a subset of mutations located close to the dimeric interface can lead to a major destabilization of the mutant enzymes. We have determined the crystal structures of the Ala4Val (A4V) and Ile113Thr (I113T) mutants to 1.9 and 1.6 Å, respectively. In the A4V structure, small changes at the dimer interface result in a substantial reorientation of the two monomers. This effect is also seen in the case of the I113T crystal structure, but to a smaller extent. X-ray solution scattering data show that in the solution state, both of the mutants undergo a more pronounced conformational change compared with wild-type superoxide dismutase (SOD) than that observed in the A4V crystal structure. Shape reconstructions from the x-ray scattering data illustrate the nature of this destabilization. Comparison of these scattering data with those for bovine CuZn SOD measured at different temperatures shows that an analogous change in the scattering profile occurs for the bovine enzyme in the temperature range of 70 -80°C. These results demonstrate that the A4V and I113T mutants are substantially destabilized in comparison with wild-type SOD1, and it is possible that the pathogenic properties of this subset of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis mutants are at least in part due to this destabilization.human superoxide dismutase ͉ crystal structure ͉ x-ray solution scattering ͉ neurodegenerative disease
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