| Literature DB >> 14754895 |
Paul Towler1, Bart Staker, Sridhar G Prasad, Saurabh Menon, Jin Tang, Thomas Parsons, Dominic Ryan, Martin Fisher, David Williams, Natalie A Dales, Michael A Patane, Michael W Pantoliano.
Abstract
The angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-related carboxypeptidase,Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2004 PMID: 14754895 PMCID: PMC7980034 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M311191200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157
FOverview of the native ACE2 crystal structure.A, α-carbon trace of the native ACE2 structure looking down into the metallopeptidase active site cleft. The metallopeptidase catalytic domain is colored red. The active site zinc ion is shown as a yellow sphere, and the single bound chloride ion is shown as a green sphere. The S1′ subsite for inhibitor and substrate binding is to the right of the zinc ion, and the S1 subsite is to the left. The collectrin homology domain at the C terminus is disordered and denoted by the green dotted line. B, ribbon diagram of native ACE2 showing the secondary structure and also the two subdomains (I and II) that form the two sides of the active site cleft. The two subdomains are defined as follows: the N terminus- and zinc-containing subdomain I (red), composed of residues 19-102, 290-397, and 417-430; and the C terminus-containing subdomain II (blue), composed of residues 103-289, 398-416, and 431-615. This definition is based on motion observed upon inhibitor binding (see Fig. 4). Zinc and chloride ions are denoted as described for A.
FSuperposition of the native and inhibitor-bound ACE2 structures.A, the 409 α-carbon atoms corresponding to subdomain II of the native and inhibitor-bound ACE2 structures were superimposed with an r.m.s. deviation of 1.41 Å. Native ACE2 is colored red, and inhibitor-bound ACE2 is colored green. The zinc ion is shown as a yellow sphere, and the inhibitor MLN-4760 is shown in a ball-and-stick rendering with default atom coloring: gray, carbon; blue, nitrogen; red, oxygen; green, chlorine. This view is looking down the length of the active site cleft and is rotated 90° from that shown in Fig. 3. This perspective illustrates the ∼16° hinge-bending movement of subdomain I relative to subdomain II that occurs upon inhibitor binding to ACE2. B, shown is a close-up view of the active sites of the superimposed native (red) and inhibitor-bound (green) ACE2 structures. This is the same superposition of subdomain II for both structures as described for A. In this perspective, the residues of subdomain I within the active site are shown to move upon inhibitor binding relative to those in subdomain II. The inhibitor MLN-4760 is shown in stick rendering with the same atom color code as described for A. The average movement for residues near the active site is 6-9 Å. The yellow spheres are the two positions of the zinc atom in the native and inhibitor-bound structures. This figure was prepared using MOE 2003.02 software (Chemical Computing Group, Inc.).
Heavy atom data statistics for human native ACE2
pCMB, p-chloromercuribenzoate; PIP, di-μ-iodobis(ethylenediamine) diplatinum(II) nitrate; NA, not applicable.
| Derivative | Native (Zu) | HgCl2 | PIP | K2PtCl4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heavy atom | Zn | Hg | Hg | Pt | Pt |
| Molarity (m | NA | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Length of soak (day(s)) | NA | 3.5 | 30 | 1 | 30 |
| No. sites/asymmetric unit | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Wavelength (Å) | 1.2824 | 1.009 | 1.009 | 1.072 | 1.072 |
| Unique reflections | 49,286 | 21,652 | 17,421 | 13,152 | 14,087 |
| Resolution (Å) | 40-2.2 | 30-2.9 | 30-3.0 | 30-3.4 | 30-3.3 |
| Completeness (%) | 96.3 | 96.6 | 90.6 | 95.4 | 94.2 |
| 5.7 | 10.5 | 10.4 | 9.7 | 11.6 | |
| NA | 21.3 | 37.6 | 20.6 | 21.8 | |
| 0.94 | 0.73 | 0.93 | 0.96 | 0.97 | |
| Phasing power | 1.57 | 1.51 | 0.66 | 0.45 | 0.39 |
Each asymmetric unit contains one human ACE2 protein.
Data were collected at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (NSLS, beam line X25) or at the Argonne National Laboratory (APS, beam line sector 32, COM-CAT). The wavelength for the native (zinc) data set was 1.2824 Å to maximize the anomalous signal at the zinc absorption edge.
Values do not include Bijvoet pairs. Inclusion of Bijvoet pairs increases the number of reflections to 91,550 for native (zinc) ACE2 and 41,716 for the p-chloromercuribenzoate derivative.
, where I is the intensity of the measured reflection and I is the mean intensity of all symmetry-related reflections.
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Phasing power = FH/ERMS, where ERMS is the residual lack of closure.
Refinement statistics for native and inhibitor-bound ACE2 structures
Numbers in parentheses represent final shell of data. PDB, Protein Data Bank.
| Native ACE2 (PDB code 1R42) | Inhibitor-bound ACE2 (PDB code 1R4L) | |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution (Å) | 46.7-2.20 (2.34-2.20) | 43.3-3.0 (3.19-3.00) |
| No. reflections | 47,465 (5982) | 17,228 (2250) |
| 5.7 (40.8) | 7.0 (20.4) | |
| Completeness (%) | 96.3 (81.8) | 96.8 (85.1) |
| Space group | C2 | C2 |
| 103.64 | 100.53 | |
| 89.46 | 86.51 | |
| 112.40 | 105.86 | |
| β | 109.15 | 103.65 |
| Unit cell volume (Ås) | 986,854 | 894,383 |
| Solvent content (%) | 53 | 53 |
| Molecules/asymmetric unit | 1 | 1 |
| Reflections used in | 4798 | 1723 |
| No. protein atoms | 5165 | 5147 |
| No. solvent atoms | 302 | 13 |
| No. zinc atoms | 1 | 1 |
| No. chloride atoms | 1 | 1 |
| No. sugar atoms | 42 | 28 |
| 23.5 (37.9) | 25.3 (37.9) | |
| 28.7 (39.8) | 33.7 (46.0) | |
| r.m.s. deviations from ideal stereochemistry | ||
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.008 | 0.008 |
| Bond angles | 1.4° | 1.5° |
| Dihedrals | 21.7° | 22.2° |
| Impropers | 0.92° | 0.97° |
| Mean | 59.9 | 74.5 |
See Footnote d of Table I.
Vsolvent = 1-1.23/V, where V is the volume of protein in the unit cell/volume of unit cell, assuming one molecule/asymmetric unit and four asymmetric units in the monoclinic unit cell.
FSequence alignment of the metallopeptidase domains of human ACE2, sACE, and tACE. The sequences of the catalytic domain of tACE and the C-terminal catalytic domain of sACE are identical (48, 49). The human sACE and ACE2 sequences were obtained from the GenBank™/EBI Data Bank (accession numbers P12821 and AAF99721, respectively). The ClustalW Alignment Tool was used for these sequence alignments (50). The secondary structural elements for native ACE2 were assigned using STRIDE software (51) and are denoted as follows: α-helical segments,- - ▸; 310 helical elements, - - >; and β-structural segments, - - •. These secondary structural elements are color-coded red for subdomain I and blue for subdomain II (subdomains are defined in Fig. 3). Identical residues for all three enzymes are colored red. The zinc-binding residues in all three enzymes are shown in green, and the chloride ion-binding residues in all enzymes are shown in orange. Residues in ACE2 within H-bonding distance of the inhibitor MLN-4760 or in tACE within H-bonding distance of lisinopril are colored blue (13). The Cys residues conserved between ACE2 and ACE are colored magenta. The six predicted N-linked glycosylation sites for the metallopeptidase region of ACE2 are shown (gray N). The beginning of the collectrin homology domain (23) in ACE2 is indicated (▾).
FExperimental electron density maps for native and inhibitor-bound ACE2 structures.a,an omit electron density map of the zinc-binding site of the native ACE2 structure (His374-His378, His401-Glu406), calculated with phases from the refined model at 2.2-Å resolution. The map is contoured at 3σ. b, an omit electron density map of MLN-4760, zinc, and the three metal-binding ligands of the protein (His374, His378, and Glu402), calculated with phases from the refined model at 3.0-Å resolution. The map is contoured at 3σ.
FBinding interactions of the inhibitor MLN-4760 at the active site of ACE2.A, the residues of ACE2 that contribute direct binding interactions with the inhibitor MLN-4760 are shown. MLN-4760 is shown in stick rendering with the same atom color code as described in the legend to Fig. 4A, except carbon is orange. The α-helix 11 segment derived from subdomain I has the α-carbon wire colored red, and turns and β-elements derived from subdomain II have the α-carbon wire colored blue. Probable H-bonding interactions are shown as black dashed lines. The zinc ion is shown as a yellow sphere. ACE2 residues coordinating the zinc ion are shown in stick rendering. B, shown is a schematic view of MLN-4760 binding interactions. MLN-4760 is shown in black. Residues derived from subdomain I are red, and residues derived from subdomain II are blue. The equivalent residues in tACE are in given in parentheses. Distances are measured in angstroms.
FSuperposition of the ACE2 and tACE structures.A, the α-carbon atoms in lisinopril-bound tACE (13) were superimposed onto the equivalent atoms in inhibitor-bound ACE2 (588 residues) with an r.m.s. deviation of 1.80 Å. MLN-4760-bound ACE2 is magenta, and lisinopril-bound tACE is green. MLN-4760 is shown bound to ACE2 with the same color code described in the legend to Fig. 4A. Similarly, the zinc and chloride ions are shown as described in the legend to Fig. 3. The orientation is the same as that shown for native ACE2 in Fig. 3. Structures were superimposed using MOE 2003.02 software. B, the 21 α-carbon atoms at the inhibitor-bound active site of ACE2 (residues 4.5 Å from the inhibitor) were superimposed onto the equivalent atoms of lisinopril-bound tACE (Protein Data Bank code 1O86) with an r.m.s. deviation of 0.53 Å. The active site of ACE2 and MLN-4760 are shown in default colors, with the inhibitor displayed in stick rendering. Labels are for ACE2 residues only. The active site residues of tACE are shown in orange, with the inhibitor lisinopril colored purple in stick rendering. The zinc ion is shown as a yellow sphere, and the second chloride ion of tACE (CL2) is shown as an orange sphere. This chloride ion site does not exist in ACE2 due to the Glu398 substitution for Pro407 (see “Results and Discussion”). Other important differences between ACE2 and tACE are as follows: Arg273versus Gln281, Phe274versus Thr282, and Tyr510versus Val518, respectively.
FStructural homology for the ACE2 catalytic motif to other members of the HEA, shown is the structure-based sequence alignment of ACE2, tACE, thermolysin, and neurolysin. The conserved residues correspond to the catalytic motif for these enzymes (colored red (zinc binding) and magenta). Sequence numbering is for ACE2. B, the catalytic motifs for thermolysin and astacin bound to transition state analogs Z-Pheψ(PO2NH)-Leu-Ala and Z-Pro-Lys-Pheψ(PO2CH2)-dl-Ala-Pro-OMe, respectively (30, 42), are compared with the ACE2 complex with MLN-4760. Distances are measured in angstroms. C, shown is the superposition of the catalytic motifs of ACE2 (red) and thermolysin (green). Eight α-carbon atoms corresponding to residues 345, 346, 374-378, and 402 of MLN-4760 bound ACE2 were superimposed onto the equivalent α-carbon atoms of Z-Pro-Lys-Pheψ(PO2CH2)-dl-Ala-Pro-OMe-bound thermolysin (see sequence alignment in A) with an r.m.s. deviation of 0.49 Å. Bound inhibitors are shown in stick rendering with default atom coloring for MLN-4760 and green coloring for Z-Pro-Lys-Pheψ(PO2CH2)-dl-Ala-Pro-OMe. The zinc ion is shown as a yellow sphere. ACE2 labels are black, and thermolysin labels are blue. ψ indicates replacement of the peptide bond by the group in parentheses.
FProposed mechanism for ACE2-catalyzed hydrolysis of peptide substrates.A, shown is the ES complex and progression to the tetrahedral intermediate. Substrate binding to one subdomain induces a subdomain hinge-bending movement (indicated by large arrows) to close the active site cleft and to bring important residues into position for catalysis. This movement is followed by attack of a zinc-bound water at the carbonyl group of the scissile amide bond to form a tetrahedral intermediate, resulting in transfer of a proton from the attacking water to Glu375 (35). Simultaneously, a proton is transferred from His505 to the leaving nitrogen atom of the P1′ residue. This sp3 hybridized nitrogen is stabilized by H-bonds from Pro346, His505, and/or His345. B, collapse of the tetrahedral intermediate to the products occurs by breaking of the amide C-N bond together with abstraction of a proton from Glu375 by the emerging free nitrogen of the product amino acid. The new emerging product carboxyl group can then transfer a proton back to His505 either directly by exchange between carboxyl oxygen atoms or by exchange with solvent.