| Literature DB >> 24688705 |
Thomas Scior1, Christian Alexander2, Ulrich Zaehringer2.
Abstract
There is literature evidence gathered throughout the last two decades reflecting unexpected species differences concerning the immune response toEntities:
Keywords: MD-2; Toll-like receptors; lipopolysaccharide
Year: 2013 PMID: 24688705 PMCID: PMC3962135 DOI: 10.5936/csbj.201302012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Struct Biotechnol J ISSN: 2001-0370 Impact factor: 7.271
Figure 1Structures of a typical enterobacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), lipid A, precursor lipid IVa (compound 406) and Eritoran (E5564). In their general architecture LPS molecules consist of the membrane-anchoring lipid A domain and an oligo- or polysaccharide region of variable length and chemical composition (panel A). The prototypic E.coli Lipid A shows a hydrophobic region composed of six (hydroxy-) acyl chains of 12 and 14 carbon atoms (panel B). In addition, five experimental values of reduction in human monocyte activation due to the lack of the indicated structural elements are given (panel B). The tetra-acylated biosynthetic precursor Lipid IVa of mammalian LPS/lipid A and its synthetic analogue compound 406 are displayed (panel C) next to the tetra-acyl compound Eritoran (E5564) (panel D). See text for details.
Figure 2Pairwise superimposition of monomeric units of the murine and human TLR4/MD-2 or MD-2 crystal structures in complex with lipid IVa or LPS/lipid A. (A) m(TLR4/MD-2/L4a)2 of 3VQ1 [15] and m(TLR4/MD-2/Re-LPS)2 of 3VQ2 [15] with only lipid A shown. (B) m(TLR4/MD-2/L4a)2 of 3VQ1 [15] and h(MD-2/L4a) of 2E59 [11]. (C) h(TLR4/MD-2/Ra-LPS)2of 3FXi [8] and h(MD-2/L4a) of 2E59 [11]. (D) h(TLR4/MD-2/Ra-LPS)2 of 3FXi [8] and m(TLR4/MD-2 /Re-LPS)2 of 3VQ2 [15] with only lipid A shown. Color codes: Protein backbones are colored in bluish for the solenoid TLR4 ectodomain and in orange/brownish for MD-2 in all panels (A-D). In panel A: 3VQ2 appears darker than 3VQ1; in panel B: 2E59; in panel C: 2E59; and in panel D: 3VQ2 again. Ligands: Lipid IVa: always green in panels A to C; but yellow for the second lipid IVa in m(TLR4/MD-2/L4a)2 of 3VQ1 [15] in panel B; lipid A partial structure of Re-LPS: yellow in panel A and green in panel D. Ra-LPS: yellow (panels C,D).
Blockwise listing of structure-activity relationships concerning TLR4/MD-2 complexes and its ligand recognition mechanism.
| Key aspects | Bibliographic sources |
|---|---|
| Review on the advances about pattern recognition receptors (PRR) and other concepts of molecular host response to lipopolysaccharide infections. | [ |
| Lipopolysaccharides are very pontent immunoactivating agents from the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Their lipid A domains represent the substructures responsible for the strong response of vertebrate immune system. | [ |
| The major lipid A structure present in | [ |
| LPS is bound into a symmetrical “m”-shaped homodimer of two TLR4/MD-2 complexes, while antagonistic Eritoran or lipid IVa crystallize in a TLR4/MD-2/Lig or MD-2 complex, respectively. The TLR4/MD-2/LPS multi-protein complex illustrates the remarkable versatility of the ligand recognition mechanisms employed by the TLR family, which is essential for defense against diverse microbial infection. | [ |
| Review of pathogen recognition by TLR proteins and the downstream immune response of TLR signaling. | [ |
| Despite the stiff appearance made by the horseshoe-like TLR4 ectomain fragments complexed with MD-2 in the LPS- or lipid IVa liganded crystal structures (PDB codes: 3FXI, 3VQ2) show a C-terminal domain rotation upon dimerization relative to the unliganded 1:1 mTLR4/MD-2 structure (PDB code: 2Z64). | [ |
| The Phe126 loop of MD-2 undergoes localized structural changes compared to other known human and mouse MD-2. A more comprehensive description of the horseshoe-like TLR4 and beta-cup folded MD-2 structures is found in the original work of two crystallographer groups. | [ |
| Single amino acids have been identified to be essential for the agonistic activity of lipid IVa in the murine system by directed mutagenesis on MD-2 by Muroi and Tanamoto in 2006 and on TLR4 by Meng | [ |
| The crystal structure of chicken MD-1 (cMD-1) complexed with lipid IVa is compared with MD-2. The ligand flipping of lipid IVa with respect to LPS is also discussed. The bound lipid IVa in cMD-1 displays the same backbone orientation as elsewhere observed LPS bound to hMD-2. In contrast, when complexed with hMD-2, lipid IVa is in a reversed orientation of antagonists 4. | [ |
| The antagonists flipped horizontally, i.e. their backbone is rotated with respect to the crystal structure of LPS They are more deeply bound, acyl and amide groups are hidden in MD-2 pocket, no phosphate group interacts with counter-TLR4, no dimerization (two copies of TLR4/MD-2/Lig) takes place. | [ |
| Enzymatic removal of the two phosphate groups on the LPS backbone detoxifies LPS through intestinal phosphatases, | [ |
| Different binding modes for LPS, lipid IVa and Eritoran in the human system. Compared to both tetra-acylated antagonists bound to MD-2, the binding position of agonistic LPS is more solvent-exposed, which in turn enables bridging both TLR4/MD-2/LPS units to form a dimer (TLR4/MD-2/LPS)2. The terminal part of the amide-linked fatty acid FA-1 in position 2 on glucosamine GlcN-1 is exposed to the interface between MD-2 and counter TLR4. In LPS the phosphorylated diglucosamine backbone is displaced by 5 Å towards the solvent area. The respective backbones on lipid IVa and Eritoran become less solvent exposed than the lipid A domain of LPS does and are bound in an inverse orientation (horizontal rotation by 180° as compared to lipid A) to the MD-2 pocket in addition. The relative upward displacement of lipid A as compared to both of the antagonists in the human system allows its phosphate groups to assist dimerization by forming ionic interactions with a cluster of positively charged residues in TLR4 and MD-2. The 180° turn formed by the unique cis-double bond in the octadecanoyl chain present in Eritoran provides an analogous binding mode of this particular long chain acyl residue in the MD-2 pocket as compared to the C14/C12 acyl chain units of lipid A and lipid IVa. | [ |
| The binding of a bacterial diphosphoryl moiety like LPS or lipid A into the ectodomain complex can be seen as a functional analogy to intracellular signal transduction by protein phosphorylation evidenced by the lower activity of monophosphoryl lipid A or its loss by unphosphorylated derivatives thereof. | [ |
| The phosphorylation status also affects biological activity. The phosphate groups at 1-, and 4’-positions are crucial for the lipid A activity as agonist, | [ |
| The lipid A domain of LPS interacts with a large hydrophobic pocket of MD-2. Its glucosamine backbone is phosphorylated on either side. The docked pose allows both phosphates to form ion bridges to positively charged side chains on TLR4 or MD-2, all of which contribute to complex formation (see also last table entry). | [ |
| The number and length of the acyl chains determine the agonistic property of lipid A. In particular, hexa-acylated lipid A from | [ |
| Endotoxicity (agonism) drops when either phosphate group of the diphosphoryl backbone is deleted. | [ |
| LPS with 6 fatty acids (FA) is more deeply buried into the MD-2 pocket than ligands with 5 FA or just 4 FA. Their molecular volume decreases in the same proportions. LPS with two phosphate groups produces higher endotoxic activity than monophosphoryl derivative of lipid A or other LPS forms with just one phosphate group. | [ |
| Species-dependency differences: Agonistic activities show hexa-acylated lipid A in human, mouse and horse ( | [ |
| Lipid A is the substructure of LPS which is responsible for endotoxic effects. The most potent member of the bacterial family of lipopolysaccharides stems from | [ |
| A hexa-acylated form of | [ |
| Both phosphates and hexa-acylation of the lipid A backbone are absolutely required for endotoxicity while hypo-acylatation weakens cell activation. For instance, lipid A present in | [ |
| Certain derivatives of LPS were identified as inhibiting agents or agonists according to the applied cell tests. The existence of traces of the highly potent LPS could lead to false positive activity observations in analogy to the residual presence of lipoproteins in reported cases of TLR2-activating LPS preparations. Meanwhile, the situation has improved with the advent of newer analytical technologies to identify and purify smallest amounts of test substances in the picomolar range. A further complication in understanding lipid A biology is its heterogeneity due to natural variations like penta or hexa-acylated forms found in lab strains. Many experiments use lipid A from lab strains that contain a structural mixture (number and length of lipid chains). LPS isolated from | [ |
| Review about the mechanisms of TLR-mediated control of innate and adaptive immune system. After aligning onto their common diglucosamine backbones, both antagonists of the human system appear horizontally rotated around 180° (i.e. flipped) with respect to complexed LPS. | [ |
| All fatty acids of both antagonists are docked deeply into the hydrophobic binding pocket of MD-2. Quite in contrast, the LPS complex shows an unburied primary fatty acid chain (FA-1 of LPS) not observed in both antagonist complexes. | [ |
| The importance of the number of acyl chains for the activity of LA-like structures is illustrated by the properties of a library of synthetic monosaccharide lipid A mimetics (the aminoalkyl glucosaminide phosphate compounds) in which both the number and carbon length of the acyl chains are crucial to generate an active compound. The explanation for why hypo-acylated lipid A causes less cell activation than hexa-acylated lipid A is likely to involve an alteration to the interaction between lipid A and the LPS receptor complex, such that receptor activation is reduced. Both the number and the length of the acyl chains are essential for the full agonist activity of LA. In fact, the production of an under-acylated lipid A and resulting evasion of innate immunity may be associated with virulence in pathogens such as | [ |
| Review about the TLR2 agonist activities of certain putative bacterial compounds is most likely due to contaminating highly active natural lipoproteins and/or lipopeptides. Endotoxicity strength of LPS with 6 fatty acids (FA) is larger than other derivatives with 5 FA or others with just 4 FA. The acyl chain length is longer on LPS from | [ |
Listing of experimental findings concerning the amino acid sequences, as well as site directed mutagenesis research describing MD-2 and TLR4 protein involvement.
| Article | Used observations | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Diphosphoryl lipid A obtained from the nontoxic lipo-polysaccharide of | RSLA blocks LPS activity of | [ |
| Lipopolysaccharide from | In equine monocytes Rs-LPS is a potent agonist of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) production but it inhibits the response to LPS of | [ |
| Structural regions of MD-2 that determine the agonist-antagonist activity of lipid IV A. | The species-specific activity of lipid IVa reflects species differences in mouse and humanMD-2 structures. Amino acid regions 57-79 and 108-135 determine the species-specific activity of lipid IVa. The replacement of Thr57, Val61, and Glu122 of mMD-2 with corresponding hMD-2 residues Ser57, Leu61 and Lys122 or alanines impaired the mouse-type agonistic activity of lipid IVa, and human-type antagonistic activity became evident. | [ |
| Elucidation of the TLR4 / MD-2 interface required for signaling by lipid IVa. | Human residues 57 to 107 changed into the equivalent horse sequence in hMD-2 confer agonist activity of lipid IVa. Conversely, when replacing residues 57-66 and 82-89 on eMD-2 by the corresponding human residues confers agonist activity of hMD-2. Concerning TLR4 a single point mutation changing one horse into a human residue (Arg385Gly) reduced the partial agonist activity of horse toward human response (antagonism). | [ |
| Essential roles of hydrophobic residues in both MD-2 and Toll-like receptor 4 in activation by endotoxin. | The role of acyl chains of lipid A and lipid IVa, in particular, FA1 in the interface of human and murine MD-2 counter TLR4, respectively. | [ |
| MD-2-mediated ionic interactions between lipid A and TLR4 are essential for receptor activation. | Murine agonist activity is recovered on an mMD-2 / hTLR4 upon single, double or triple mutations at the dimerization interface of the TLR4 in the wedge: hGlu369B into mLys367B, and hGln436B into mArg434B or hLys388B, into mSer386B. | [ |
| Essential roles of hydrophobic residues in both MD-2 and toll-like receptor 4 in activation by endotoxin. | In the human TLR4 sequence, Phe440 and Phe463 of counter TLR4 (B chain) as well as three hydrophobic amino acids Val82, Met85, and Leu87 of MD-2 (C chain) together with a fatty acid side chain of hexa-acylated lipid A form a hydrophobic interface between TLR4/MD-2 and counter-TLR4 for innate immune activation. Mutations of Phe440A or Phe463A render TLR4 unresponsive, whereas the Phe440Trp mutant retained full activity. B chain Lys388 is considered irrelevant in contrast to reports by Meng | [ |
| MD-2 residues tyrosine 42, arginine 69, aspartic acid 122, and leucine 125 provide species specificity for lipid IVa. | MD-2 in presence of TLR4 was found necessary for lipid IVa signaling activity in the mouse system. Site-directed mutagenesis studies show Tyr42, Arg69, Glu122 and Leu125 of MD-2 infer lipid IVa species specificity. Lysine in position 122 of mMD-2 (Glu122C) was mutated into glutamate (Lys122Glu) reducing lipid IVa agonist activity. The dimerization interface was also described. | [ |
Listing of available crystal structures concerning the biological unit of TLR4/MD-2.
| PDB Code | Species ( Components in complex) | Resolution (Å) |
|---|---|---|
|
| Human (MD-2 / L4a)1 | |
| 2006 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF HUMAN MD-2 IN COMPLEX WITH LIPID IVA | 2.21 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Human (MD-2)1 | |
| 2006 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF HUMAN MD-2 | 2 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Human (TLR4 fragment)1 | |
| 2007 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF THE TV3 HYBRID OF HUMAN TLR4 AND HAGFISH VLRB.61 | 1.7 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Human (TLR4 fragment)1 | |
| 2007 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF THE TV8 HYBRID OF HUMAN TLR4 AND HAGFISH VLRB.61 | 2 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Mouse (TLR4 fragment / MD-2)1 | |
| 2007 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF MOUSE TLR4 AND MOUSE MD-2 COMPLEX | 2.84 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Human (TLR4 / MD-2 / Eri)2 | |
| 2007 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF THE HUMAN TLR4 TV3 HYBRID-MD-2-ERITORAN COMPLEX | 2.7 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Human (TLR4 fragment)4 | |
| 2007 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF THE VT3 HYBRID OF HUMAN TLR4 AND HAGFISH VLRB.61 | 1.9 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Human (TLR4 / MD-2 / Ra-LPS)2 | |
| 2009 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF THE HUMAN TLR4-HUMAN MD-2-E.COLI LPS RA COMPLEX | 3.1 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Chicken (MD-1 / L4a)2 | |
| 2010 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF CHICKEN MD-1 COMPLEXED WITH LIPID IVA | 2.4 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Chicken (MD-1 / - * -)2 | |
| 2010 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF CHICKEN MD-1 | 2 |
|
[ | (* but MD-1 is liganded) | |
|
| Mouse (TLR4/MD-2/L4a)2 | |
| 2012 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF MOUSE TLR4/MD-2/LIPID IVA COMPLEX | 2.7 |
|
[ | ||
|
| Mouse (TLR4/MD-2/LPS)2 | |
| 2012 | CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF MOUSE TLR4/MD-2/LPS COMPLEX | 2.48 |
|
[ |
Correlations between ligand orientation, its position and function are listed for available crystal structures. First two columns show the complexes with the ligands. Third column shows their interrelatedness according to position and effects. Last column shows the relative orientation of the glucosamine backbone of LPS, lipid A or lipid IVa. LPS in 3FXI [8] serves as a reference with its backbone orientation in the MD-2 pocket arbitrarily designated as “fit”, and the inverse orientation of the di-phosphorylated di-glucosmine backbone i.e. the binding mode in an 180° horizontal backbone rotation is termed “flipped”. The corresponding pairwise superimpositions of monomeric units of the murine and human TLR4/MD-2 or MD-2 crystal structures in complex with lipid IVa or LPS/lipid A in are shown in Figure 2.
| PDB; | PDB; | L1 | L1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3VQ1; dimer: | 3VQ2; dimer: | L4a__LPS; | fit__fit |
| m(TLR4/MD-2/L4a)2 | m(TLR4/MD-2/LPS)2 | AG: AG | |
| 3VQ1; dimer: | 2E59; monomer: | L4a / L4a; | fit / flipped |
| m(TLR4/MD-2/L4a)2 | h(MD-2 /L4a) | AG: AN | |
| 3FXi; dimer: | 2E59; monomer: | LPS / L4a; | fit / flipped |
| h(TLR4 /MD-2 /Ra-LPS)2 | h(MD-2 L4a) | AG: AN | |
| 3FXi; dimer: | 3VQ2; dimer: | LPS | fit |
| h(TLR4 /MD-2 /Ra-LPS)2 | m(TLR4/MD-2/LPS)2 | AG: AG |
The first two rows in each of the three blocks list the residues present in the double mutant postions shown to interchange human and mouse activities of lipid IVa on the TLR4/MD-2 protein complex [37]. The third line of each block adds the equivalent amino acids of the horse protein (eTLR4).
| Species | absolute residue id in complex | equivalent amino acids in TLR4* | known L4A activities | known LPS activities | known Eritoran activities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H | 1011 | GLN436 | AN | AG | AN |
| M | 1282 | ARG434 | AG | AG | AN |
| E | 1289 | GLN437 | partial AG | AG | AN |
| H | 963 | LYS388 | AN | AG | AN |
| M | 1234 | SER386 | AG | AG | AN |
| E | 1241 | LYS389 | partial AG | AG | AN |
| H | 944 | GLU369 | AN | AG | AN |
| M | 1215 | LYS367 | AG | AG | AN |
| E | 1222 | GLU370 | partial AG | AG | AN |
Figure 3Schematic view of the wedge, a triangular space between the three interacting polypeptide chains, A, B and C corresponding to TLR4, secondary or counter-TLR4 (labeled TLR4*) and MD-2 proteins, respectively. The numbering of the TLR4 residues refers to the horse sequence. Due to deletions of a few TLR4 residues their numbers differ slightly at equivalent positions: up to equine position number 297: e = h=c = m + 1; then from equine position 298 to 560: e = m + 3 = h + 1 = c + 1 or h = m + 2 = e-1 = c-1. For instance, comparison of the residues present in (equine) position 322A indicates repulsion effects for the agonistic phosphate group (Pag) of lipid IVa in human (Glu-321A) and canine (Asp-321A) complexes, but strong attraction for murine (Lys-319A) and less for equine (Gly-322A) systems. In mice, the positions 367B and 434B push the phosphate group into Pag. Position 367B destabilizes Pag as phosphate localization in human, equine and canine systems. On the wedge bottom, MD-2 has a cation-reach vestibule to accommodate (Pag-rejected) phosphate groups in Pan except for mice (mGLU122C). Surrounded by conserved residues, Pag/Pan always accommodates the other (second) phosphate group of lipid IVa. The Pan position is occupied by the GlcN II phosphate group of lipid IVa or Eritoran, while the GlcN I phosphate group of LPS / lipid A occupies Pag. In the highly conserved right corner of the wedge is the all species-shared Pag-Pan site holding the complementary phosphate groups of the backbones: either GlcN I phosphate group for lipid IVa and Eritoran, or GlcN II phosphate group for LPS and lipid A.