| Literature DB >> 24362575 |
Sunny Li-Yun Chang, Chia-Hung Hsieh, Yen-Ju Chen, Chien-Ming Wang, Chung-Shiuan Shih, Pei-Wen Huang, Asif Mir, Hsien-Yuan Lane, Guochuan E Tsai, Hao-Teng Chang1.
Abstract
The schizophrenia-related protein G72 plays a unique role in the regulation of D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) in great apes. Several psychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, are linked to overexpression of DAO and G72. Whether G72 plays a positive or negative regulatory role in DAO activity, however, has been controversial. Exploring the molecular basis of the relationship between G72 and DAO is thus important to understand how G72 regulates DAO activity. We performed yeast two-hybrid experiments and determined enzymatic activity to identify potential sites in G72 involved in binding DAO. Our results demonstrate that residues 123-153 and 138-153 in the long isoform of G72 bind to DAO and enhance its activity by 22% and 32%, respectively. A docking exercise indicated that these G72 peptides can interact with loops in DAO that abut the entrance of the tunnel that substrate and cofactor must traverse to reach the active site. We propose that a unique gating mechanism underlies the ability of G72 to increase the activity of DAO. Because upregulation of DAO activity decreases d-serine levels, which may lead to psychiatric abnormalities, our results suggest a molecular mechanism involving interaction between DAO and the C-terminal region of G72 that can regulate N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor-mediated neurotransmission.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24362575 PMCID: PMC3907796 DOI: 10.3390/ijms15010029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1.G72 interacts with d-amino acid oxidase (DAO). (A) Yeast co-transformed with plasmids containing the genes for AD-DAO and BD-G72 were viable on SD/-2 and SD/-4 plates; (B) Western blotting confirmed that AD-DAO and BD-G72 were expressed in the yeast system. Anti-c-Myc was used to detect the DNA-binding domain (BD), and anti-HA was used to detect the activation domain (AD); and (C) Relative interaction strength between DAO and G72 was determined using the β-galactosidase activity assay. *** p < 0.001 compared with the interaction of BD and AD.
Figure 2.Truncated fragments of G72. (A) Schematics of the G72 constructs co-transfected with activation domain (AD)-DAO in yeast; and (B) The amino acid sequence alignment of the three G72 isoforms. The residues of the C-terminal sequence that are identical in the isoforms are shown in blue.
Figure 3.The C-terminal region of G72 interacts with DAO. (A) Upper panel. Only yeast co-transformed with plasmids containing the genes for AD-DAO and BD-G72 were viable on SD/-2 and SD/-4 plates. Yeast co-transformed with AD-DAO and a truncated form of the BD-G72 gene was not viable on SD/-4 plates. Lower panel. Western blotting to confirm that AD-DAO and BD-G72 and truncated forms of BD-G72 were expressed in the yeast system; and (B) The relative strengths of the interactions between DAO and G72 or a truncated form of G72 were determined by the level of β-galactosidase activity and normalized to the activity in yeast co-transformed with the AD and BD tags. *** p < 0.001.
Figure 4.Pull-down assay to assess the interactions between DAO and G72123–153 or G72138–153. DAO was mixed with biotinylated G72123–153 or G72138–153. After isolating the pulled-down fraction, the amount of recovered DAO was determined by SDS-PAGE with the relative binding ability of each peptide determined by the intensity of the corresponding DAO band. * p < 0.05.
Figure 5.G72, G72123–153, and G72138–153 enhance DAO activity. The initial velocity (V0) of DAO activity was enhanced by G72, G72123–153, and G72138–153 but not by the control peptides LL37 and 3× FLAG. *** p < 0.001; ** p < 0.01; * p < 0.05.
Initial velocity (V0) of DAO in the presence of G72-related or non-related peptides.
| Peptide (M) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| 0 | 1 | 3 | 10 | |
| G72 | 2.225 ± 0.223 (1) | 3.593 ± 0.285 (1.61) | 4.785 ± 0.249 (2.15) | 8.056 ± 0.769 (3.62) |
| G72123 | 2.225 ± 0.223 (1) | 2.360 ± 0.219 (1.06) | 2.563 ± 0.157 (1.15) | 2.710 ± 0.063 (1.22) |
| G72138 | 2.225 ± 0.223 (1) | 2.425 ± 0.205 (1.10) | 2.430 ± 0.075 (1.10) | 2.938 ± 0.118 (1.32) |
| LL37 | 2.225 ± 0.223 (1) | 2.280 ± 0.176 (1.02) | 2.386 ± 0.037 (1.07) | 2.271 ± 0.035 (1.02) |
| 3× FLAG | 2.225 ± 0.223 (1) | 2.106 ± 0.042 (0.95) | 2.305 ± 0.149 (1.04) | 2.319 ± 0.236 (1.04) |
The numbers in the parentheses are the relative fold changes in DAO activity expressed as V0 in the presence of G72 or a truncated form of G72 divided by V0 in the absence of G72 or a truncated form of G72.
p < 0.05;
p < 0.01;
p < 0.001.
Figure 6.G72123–153 and G72138–153 bind at similar sites on DAO. The predicted structures of (A) G72123–153 (brown ribbon diagram) and (B) G72138–153 (grey ribbon diagram) were docked with DAO (the DAO residues are shown as stick models). DAO residues that reside within 3.5 Å of residues in the G72 peptides are labeled (see Results for the involved DAO residues).
Primers used in this study.
| ID | Sequence |
|---|---|
| DAO-R′- | 5′-TATA |
| DAO-F′- | 5′-ATAT |
| G72-F′- | 5′-ATAT |
| G72-R′- | 5′-TATA |
| G72-R′- | 5′-TATA |
| G7295–153-F′- | 5′-ATAT |
| G721–137-R′- | 5′-TATA |
| G72-60-F′ | 5′-TCCAGATATACATTG |
| G72-60-R′ | 5′-GAAGTAGATTTT |
| G72-105-F′ | 5′-AGCATTCTTCTGAGC |
| G72-105-R′ | 5′-AGAGTTTTCAGA |
| G72-180-F′ | 5′-ACAAGGAAAGAAGGA |
| G72-180-R′ | 5′-ATGCCTTCTCTT |
| G72-270-F′ | 5′-TCTTACCTTCCTCAG |
| G72-270-R′ | 5′-AAGCTCTGCATA |
| G72-366-F′ | 5′-GCCTCTAAGGACCGC |
| G72-366-R′ | 5′-TTCTAGAGGCTG |
The bolded characters are restriction enzyme sites. The sites underlined are BclI.