| Literature DB >> 24816101 |
Navdeep S Sidhu1, Kathrin Schreiber1, Kevin Pröpper2, Stefan Becker3, Isabel Usón4, George M Sheldrick2, Jutta Gärtner1, Ralph Krätzner1, Robert Steinfeld1.
Abstract
Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (Sanfilippo A syndrome), a fatal childhood-onset neurodegenerative disease with mild facial, visceral and skeletal abnormalities, is caused by an inherited deficiency of the enzyme N-sulfoglucosamine sulfohydrolase (SGSH; sulfamidase). More than 100 mutations in the SGSH gene have been found to reduce or eliminate its enzymatic activity. However, the molecular understanding of the effect of these mutations has been confined by a lack of structural data for this enzyme. Here, the crystal structure of glycosylated SGSH is presented at 2 Å resolution. Despite the low sequence identity between this unique N-sulfatase and the group of O-sulfatases, they share a similar overall fold and active-site architecture, including a catalytic formylglycine, a divalent metal-binding site and a sulfate-binding site. However, a highly conserved lysine in O-sulfatases is replaced in SGSH by an arginine (Arg282) that is positioned to bind the N-linked sulfate substrate. The structure also provides insight into the diverse effects of pathogenic mutations on SGSH function in mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA and convincing evidence for the molecular consequences of many missense mutations. Further, the molecular characterization of SGSH mutations will lay the groundwork for the development of structure-based drug design for this devastating neurodegenerative disorder.Entities:
Keywords: mucopolysaccharidosis IIIA; sulfamidase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24816101 PMCID: PMC4014121 DOI: 10.1107/S1399004714002739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Data-collection and refinement statistics
The number of atoms is the occupancy sum; B factors are occupancy-weighted means. Solvent atoms were excluded when calculating the mean B factors for individual chains.
| Crystal form | S | L |
|---|---|---|
| PDB code |
|
|
| Space group |
|
|
| Unit-cell parameters | ||
|
| 61.4 | 103.0 |
|
| 107.9 | 211.6 |
|
| 79.8 | 108.4 |
| () | 104.1 | 102.7 |
| Data collection | ||
| Wavelength () | 0.99989 | 0.99989 |
| Resolution range | 44.32.00 (2.102.00) | 48.92.40 (2.502.40) |
| No. of reflections measured | 452472 | 599199 |
| No. of unique reflections | 67940 | 174779 |
| Multiplicity | 6.65 (6.38) | 3.41 (3.45) |
|
| 0.0886 (0.6539) | 0.0702 (0.4723) |
|
| 0.0500 (0.5504) | 0.0594 (0.4917) |
| Completeness | 99.9 (99.8) | 99.3 (98.7) |
| Mean | 11.20 (1.85) | 11.03 (2.08) |
| Refinement | ||
| Resolution limit () | 44.32.00 | 48.852.40 |
|
| 0.2299 (3447) | 0.2447 (8462) |
|
| 0.1920 | 0.2157 |
| Total No. of reflections (working set) | 64437 | 166273 |
| Solvent content (%) | 45.9 | 53.0 |
| No. of molecules in the asymmetric unit | 2 | 8 |
| No. of non-H atoms refined | 7968 | 31122 |
| No. of water molecules refined | 205 | 475 |
| Mean | ||
| Protein atoms | 44.7 | 64.5 |
| Backbone atoms | 43.5 | 64.2 |
| Side-chain atoms | 45.9 | 64.8 |
| Water atoms | 39.0 | 37.6 |
| Chain | 45.5 | 48.9 |
| Chain | 43.9 | 44.1 |
| Chain | 48.3 | |
| Chain | 44.9 | |
| Chain | 85.5 | |
| Chain | 75.8 | |
| Chain | 79.6 | |
| Chain | 93.0 | |
| R.m.s.d.s from ideal geometry | ||
| Bond lengths () | 0.0125 | 0.0028 |
| Bond angles () | 1.564 | 0.683 |
| Ramachandran statistics | ||
| Favored region (%) | 97.1 (933/961) | 97.2 (3727/3835) |
| Allowed region (%) | 99.8 (959/961) | 99.7 (3823/3835) |
| Outlier region (%) | 0.21 (2/961) | 0.31 (12/3835) |
Values in parentheses are for the outermost resolution shell.
Figure 1Schematic representations of the SGSH structure. (a) Mapping of SGSH primary and secondary structures. β-Strands, red arrows; α-helices, blue striped rectangles; 310-helices, violet rectangles; the two disulfide bridges are shown as orange lines and the four glycosylated asparagines as yellow filled circles. Functionally important residues (active site and glycosylation sites) are shown in red; some of the residues at the dimer interface are shown in blue. The phenotype of the missense mutation sites is indicated below the sequence as follows: early-onset disease (E), red; intermediate-onset (I), orange; late-onset (L), blue; phenotype not reported in the literature (N), grey. (b) Topology diagram (not drawn to scale). Colour coding is similar to that in Fig. 1 ▶(a), with α-helices shown as blue cylinders and the N-terminus and C-terminus as blue and red circles, respectively. Divalent metal-binding residues are labelled M1 (Asp31, Asp32), M2 (FGly70) and M3 (Asp273, Asn274). Secondary-structure elements are named as indicated in the main text.
Figure 2Three-dimensional structure of SGSH. (a) Monomer. The approximate locations of domains 1 and 2 are shown (square brackets), with β-sheets in domain 2 labelled β2 and β3. β-Strands are shown in red, α-helices in blue and loops in yellow. Cystine bridges are shown in orange (Cys#1, 183–194; Cys#2, 481–495). The N-terminus (N) is shown as a blue ball and the C-terminus (C) as an orange ball. The formylglycine (FGly) 70 side chain is shown as a stick model in standard colours. The Ca2+ ion is shown as a grey ball. Glycosylation sites (‘NAG-’ followed by the asparagine residue number) are shown as green sticks. (b) Dimer. The dimer noncrystallographic symmetry axis lies vertically in the plane of the paper, with subunit centroids in the approximate paper plane on either side of it. FGly70, cystine bridges and glycosylations are shown as orange stick models. Other representations are as in Figs. 1 ▶ and 2 ▶(a). (c) A short tunnel from a surface cleft leads to the active site. The inset on the left shows an enlargement of the boxed area. The two dimer subunits are shown in blue and cyan, FGly is shown as yellow spheres or sticks and glycosylations as green sticks. (d) Active site as viewed from its entry (stick models; the major interactions shown are described in the main text).
Figure 3Active site and enzyme inhibition. (a) Schematic of the active-site region in SGSH. A Ca2+ ion is coordinated by side-chain P atoms from Asp31, Asp32, Asp273, Asn274 and the phosphorylated FGly70, which is in turn stabilized by interactions with the side chains of residues Arg74, Lys123, His125, His181, Asp273 and Arg282. (b) Inhibition of SGSH acitivity by phosphate and sulfate. The IC50 of phosphate was determined to be 1 mM; the IC50 of sulfate was 5 mM.
Structurally equivalent active-site residues classified by (putative) function in SGSH and closely homologous sulfatases with known atomic structures
ASA, arylsulfatase A (also known as human lysosomal cerebroside-3-sulfate 3-sulfohydrolase; Lukatela et al., 1998 ▶); ASB, arylsulfatase B (human lysosomal N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfate 4-sulfohydrolase (Bond et al., 1997 ▶); PAS, arylsulfatase from P. aeruginosa (Boltes et al., 2001 ▶); ES, human oestrone/dehydroepiandrosterone sulfatase (Hernandez-Guzman et al., 2003 ▶); GALNS, human lysosomal (N-acetyl)galactosamine-6-sulfatase (Rivera-Coln et al., 2012 ▶); BcPMH, sulfatase/hydrolase from B. caryophylli PG2952 (van Loo et al., 2010 ▶). Sequence identities were calculated for protein sequences using the PROMALS3D server (Pei et al., 2008 ▶) and ClustalW2 (BcPMH; Goujon et al., 2010 ▶). R.m.s.d.s were calculated using Coot. Lys123 (SGSH numbering) and its equivalent residues in homologues also participate in sulfate binding.
| Enzyme | SGSH | PAS | ASA | ASB | GALNS | ES | BcPMH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDB code |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Sequence identity (%) | 100 | 22.4 | 22.2 | 19.7 | 22.8 | 19.1 | 24.6 |
| R.m.s.d. () (No. of residues) | 0.00 (482) | 2.17 (341) | 2.21 (331) | 2.18 (312) | 1.97 (336) | 1.95 (303) | 1.98 (345) |
| Desulfation | FGly70 | FGly51 | FGly69 | FGly91 | FGly79 | FGly75 | FGly57 |
| Metal | Ca2+ | Ca2+ | Mg2+ (Ca2+) | Ca2+ | Ca2+ | Ca2+ | Fe |
| Metal binding | Asp31 | Asp13 | Asp29 | Asp53 | Asp39 | Asp35 | Asp12 |
| Asp32 | Asp14 | Asp30 | Asp54 | Asp40 | Asp36 | ||
| Asp273 | Asp317 | Asp281 | Asp300 | Asp288 | Asp342 | Asp324 | |
| Asn274 | Asn318 | Asn282 | Asn301 | Asn289 | Gln343 | His325 | |
| FGly binding | Arg74 | Arg55 | Arg73 | Arg95 | Arg83 | Arg79 | Arg61 |
| Lys123 | Lys113 | Lys123 | Lys145 | Lys140 | Lys134 | Tyr105 | |
| His125 | His115 | His125 | His147 | His142 | His136 | Thr107 | |
| Sulfate binding | His181 | His211 | His229 | His242 | His236 | His290 | His218 |
| Arg282 | Lys375 | Lys302 | Lys318 | Lys310 | Lys368 | Lys337 |
The identity of the divalent cation was later demonstrated to be Ca2+ in ASA structures with PDB codes 1n2k and 1n2l (Chruszcz et al., 2003 ▶).
Figure 4Superposition of the SGSH backbone on those of five related sulfatases: SGSH (red), ASA (orange), ASB (yellow), PAS (blue), GALNS (green) and BcPMH (brown). SGSH shares a common fold with O-sulfatases consisting of a large central β-sheet with decorating helices (‘conserved region’, top); the loops form a more variable region (‘nonconserved region’, bottom). For orientation, the SGSH N-terminus and C-terminus are shown (N and C, respectively), as are some secondary-structure elements (as in Fig. 2 ▶ a) and some atoms in the active site in ball representation: Ca2+ (dark grey), phosphate O atoms (orange), FGly Cβ (light grey) and free hydroxyl O atom (red).
Figure 5Proposed reaction mechanism in SGSH (schematic). The active-site formylglycine (FGly70), which is intrinsically reactive, undergoes hydration to form the resting state of the enzyme with a gem-diol group (step 1). Coordination of one of the hydroxyl groups of the gem-diol to a Ca2+ ion facilitates the development of a negative charge on the O atom as its proton is lost to a base. The negatively charged O atom nucleophilically attacks the sulfur centre of the N-linked sulfate group on the glucosamine substrate (step 2), resulting in a covalently bound enzyme–substrate complex with a pentavalent sulfur transition state. An acid (possibly His181) facilitates the cleavage of the S—N bond by protonating the bridging N atom to form an amine leaving group on the N-desulfated substrate, which diffuses away, leaving an O-sulfated enzyme (step 3). Finally, in a step that underlines the importance of the formylglycine residue, another base (His125) deprotonates the second hydroxyl group, resulting in a negatively charged O atom (step 4) that forms a double bond with the Cβ atom as the C—O bond between it and the bridging O atom of the sulfate group breaks, eliminating the sulfate ion and regenerating the formylglycine residue (step 5).
Figure 6Hypothetical model showing some proposed interactions between the terminal N-sulfoglucosamine residue (GlcNS; C atoms in green, other atoms in standard colours) of the substrate with the enzyme in the active site (C atoms in light grey). His181 acts as the acid facilitating desulfation of the substrate. Other residues that help to bind and orient the substrate include the side chains of FGly70, Lys123, Arg282 and His368 and the main-chain amide N atom of Asp401.
Missense point mutations in SGSH and their expected effect based on the atomic structure of SGSH
Abbreviations: NR, not reported; Interm., intermediate; sc, side chain, H bond, hydrogen bond; NASA, normalized accessible surface area per atom per residue (as a percentage of the maximal value for any internal residue in SGSH).
| Protein | Codon | Phenotype | NASA | Type | Effect of mutation on structure | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M1V | 1A>G | NR | Signal peptide | Part of signal peptide | Pollard | |
| L12Q | 35T>A | Late | Signal peptide | Part of signal peptide | Valstar | |
| A30P | 88G>C | NR | 0 | Buried | Steric clash close to Ca2+-binding site; loss of H bond to Thr271 | Pollard |
| D32G | 95A>G | Early | 1 | Metal binding | Disruption of Ca2+ binding | Beesley |
| D32E | 96C>A/G | Late | 1 | Metal binding | Altered Ca2+ binding | Meyer |
| G33R | 97G>A | NR | 4 | Buried | Introduces bulky sc next to Ca2+-binding Asp32 | Pollard |
| Y40N | 118T>A | Interm. | 13 | Surface | Loss of H bonding to Leu294 and Phe60, and of -stacking interactions; next to glycosylation site | Di Natale |
| N42K | 126C>A | Early | 6 | Surface | Loss of H bonding to Ala44, Ile45 and Tyr240; steric clash | Lee-Chen |
| A44T | 130G>A | Early | 31 | Surface | Steric clash at surface site | Di Natale |
| S66W | 197C>G | Early | 2 | Buried | Introduction of bulky sc in buried position in loop close to active site | Blanch |
| R74C | 220C>T | Early | 0 | Buried | Disruption of ion pairs/H bonds with Ca2+-binding Asp31, FGly70 and Asp273; possible interference with disulfide-bridge formation | Bunge |
| R74H | 221G>A | Early | 0 | Buried | Disruption of ion pairs/H bonds with Ca2+-binding Asp31, FGly70 and Asp273 | Bunge |
| T79P | 235A>C | Early | 0 | Buried | Disruption of H bonding to Ala75, Ser76 and Leu81 | Weber |
| H84Y | 250C>T | Early | 1 | Buried | Loss of H bond to Ser364 and Thr475; steric clash in buried position | Beesley |
| Q85R | 254A>G | Early | 3 | Buried | Steric clash | Montfort |
| M88T | 263T>C | NR | 0 | Buried | Destabilizes van der Waals interactions in buried position; steric clash | Fiorentino |
| G90R | 268G>A | Early | 0 | Buried | Gain of bulky sc in buried position; change of / angles | Bunge |
| S106R | 318C>A | Late | 0 | Buried | Loss of H bond to Leu109, Val131; clash possibly accommodated within longer, partially surface-exposed loop | Muschol |
| T118P | 352A>C | NR | 0 | Buried | Loss of H bonds to Asp135; destabilizes -sheet | Zhang Huiping (2008 |
| G122R | 364G>A | Interm. | 1 | Buried | Bulky sc in buried position; Gly / angles | Bunge |
| P128L | 383C>T | Late | 22 | Surface | Favourably surface-exposed to minimize steric clash; in loop with FGly-binding His125 and Lys123 | Di Natale |
| V131M | 391G>A | Early | 1 | Buried | Bulky sc in buried position; destabilizes loop with FGly-binding residues | Weber |
| T139M | 416C>T | Early | 1 | Buried | Bulky sc in buried position; loss of H bond to Glu141 | Weber |
| L146P | 437T>C | Early | 11 | Surface | Loss of H bond to Ser144; some clash at surface; destabilizes helix 5; close to glycosylation site (Asn151) | Di Natale |
| R150W | 448C>T | Early | 1 | Buried | Introduction of bulky aromatic sc; loss of salt bridge with Asp179, H bonding to His181 | Beesley |
| R150Q | 449G>A | Early | 1 | Buried | Loss of ion pair with Asp179, H bonding to His181; next to glycosylated Asn151 | Bunge |
| L163P | 488T>C | Early | 8 | Buried | Disruption of hydrophobic interactions, H bond to Val159; clash; destabilizes helix 6 | Muschol |
| D179N | 535G>A | Early | 1 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridges with Arg150, Arg245 | Di Natale |
| P180L | 539C>T | Late | 0 | Buried | Some steric clash next to active site-residues Asp31 and His181 | Valstar |
| R182C | 544C>T | Interm. | 4 | Buried | Loss of ion pair with Asp235, H bond to Pro277 close to active site; possible interference with disulfide-bridge formation | Di Natale |
| G191R | 571G>A | Early | 11 | Surface | Surface-exposed but steric clash with scs of Glu195 and Lys196; Gly / angles | Muschol |
| F193L | 579C>G | NR | 0 | Buried | Disrupts -stacking next to active-site loop (His181) | Bunge |
| R206P | 617G>C | Late | 73 | Surface | Suface-exposed; Arg206 has no backbone amide H bond to lose; close to glycosylated Asn151; change in / angles | Montfort |
| P227R | 680C>G | Early | 0 | Buried | Steric clash from bulky substitution disrupts packing in buried position | Di Natale |
| A234G | 701C>G | Early | 51 | Surface | Unclear; possibly destabilization of helix 7 | Weber |
| D235N | 703G>A | Early | 1 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridge with Arg182 and of H-bond acceptor | Beesley |
| D235V | 704A>T | NR | 1 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridge with Arg182 and of H bonds to Thr192 and Thr407 | Bunge |
| T242T | 726C>T | NR | 0 | Buried | Unclear | Valstar |
| R245H | 734G>A | Early | 0 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridge with Asp179 and H bonds to Asp179 and Cys194; clash; packing of helix 7 | Blanch |
| D247H | 739G>C | NR | 1 | Buried | Loss of H bonding to Leu50; clash | Valstar |
| G251A | 752G>C | Late | 13 | Surface | Some clash with sc of His49 in surface-exposed site | Meyer |
| D273N | 817G>A | Early | 2 | Metal binding | Disrupts Ca2+ binding | Beesley |
| Y286S | 857A>C | NR | 4 | Buried | Disruption of H bond to Glu437 and of -stacking interactions | Yogalingam Hopwood (2001 |
| P288S | 862C>T | Early | 5 | Buried | Possibly unsatisfied H bonding in sc of Ser in buried position | Emre |
| P288L | 863C>T | NR | 5 | Buried | Steric clash | Pollard |
| E292K | 874G>A | Late | 0 | Buried | Buried water might offer space to accommodate larger sc | Piotrowska |
| P293T | 877C>A | NR | 3 | Buried | Steric clash; loss of Pro from three-residue loop | Di Natale |
| P293S | 877C>T | Early | 3 | Buried | Unclear; loss of Pro from three-residue loop | Lee-Chen |
| S298P | 892T>C | Late | 1 | Buried | Loss of H bonds to Glu300, His301, but steric clash milder as buried water offers substitution space; favourable / angles (Ser297, Ser298) | Bunge |
| E300V | 899A>T | Early | 48 | Surface | Unclear; loss of surface salt bridge with Arg23; little steric clash | Bekri |
| R304L | 911G>T | NR | 7 | Surface | Loss of surface salt bridge with Glu355 and of H bonds to Ala351 and Gln307; some steric clash | Di Natale |
| Q307P | 920A>C | Early | 38 | Surface | Loss of surface H bonds to Arg304; steric clash; destabilization of strand 8 | Bekri |
| A311D | 932C>A | NR | 3 | Buried | Steric clash; buried charge; unsatisfied H bonding | Pollard |
| D317H | 949G>C | NR | 4 | Buried | Steric clash; loss of H bonds to Ser314, Arg346 | Pollard |
| T321A | 961A>G | NR | 0 | Buried | Loss of H bonds to Asp317, Leu348 and of van der Waals interactions | Bunge |
| I322S | 965T>G | Late | 0 | Buried | Loss of van der Waals interactions, but I322S can H-bond to Leu318 | Beesley |
| S347Y | 1040C>A | NR | 15 | Surface | Bulky aromatic in solvent-exposed position, but with minimal steric clash; loss of H bonds to Asp324, Leu349 | Valstar |
| S347F | 1040C>T | Late | 15 | Surface | Bulky aromatic in solvent-exposed position, but with minimal steric clash; loss of H bonds to Asp324, Leu349 | Miyazaki |
| A354P | 1060G>C | Early | 58 | Surface | Loss of H bond to Pro350; steric clash with Pro350; change in / angles | Montfort |
| E355K | 1063G>A | Early | 39 | Surface | Loss of surface salt bridge with Arg304 and of H bonds to Ser309, Glu310; charge switch | Beesley |
| S364R | 1092C>G | NR | 1 | Buried | Loss of H bonds to Gln83 and His84; marked steric clash in buried position | Bunge |
| E369K | 1105G>A | Early | 6 | Surface | Loss of H bond to Gln400; charge switch close to active site | Di Natale |
| Y374H | 1120T>C | Early | 2 | Buried | Unsatisfied H bonding; charge | Beesley |
| R377C | 1129C>T | Early | 0 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridge with Asp477 and of H bonds to Ser366, Met376; plausibly interference with disulfide-bridge formation | Di Natale |
| R377H | 1130G>A | Early | 0 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridge with Asp477 and of H bonds to Ser366, Met376 | Weber |
| R377L | 1130G>T | NR | 0 | Buried | Loss of buried salt bridge with Asp477 and of H bonds to Ser366, Met376 | Pollard |
| Q380R | 1139A>G | Early | 2 | Buried | Gain of charge in buried position close to surface; steric clash may affect H bond to Arg382 | Weber |
| L386R | 1157T>G | Early | 0 | Buried | Introduction of charge and steric clash in buried position; disruption of hydrophobic interactions | Montfort |
| V387M | 1159G>A | NR | 2 | Buried | Bulky residue in buried position | Di Natale |
| N389S | 1166A>G | NR | 0 | Buried | Loss of buried H bonds to Ala434, Glu437 | Pollard |
| N389K | 1167C>A | NR | 0 | Buried | Loss of buried H bonds to Ala434, Glu437; steric clash | Bunge |
| L411R | 1232T>G | NR | 1 | Buried | Introduction of charge in buried position; steric clash; disruption of hydrophobic interactions | Valstar |
| T415P | 1243A>C | NR | 34 | Surface | Loss of H bond to Leu411; steric clash with Leu411; kink in helix 11 close to glycosylation site | Pollard |
| T421R | 1262C>G | Late | 16 | Surface | Loss of H bond to Trp423; solvent exposure accommodates bulky sc | Valstar |
| R433W | 1297C>T | Early | 6 | Buried | Loss of buried H bonds to Asn284, Tyr430 and of charge; steric clash | Beesley |
| R433Q | 1298G>A | Early | 6 | Buried | Loss of buried H bonds to Asn284, Tyr430 and of charge; destabilizes packing | Chabs |
| D444G | 1331A>G | Late | 13 | Surface | Loss of surface H bonds to Thr448, Gln449 | Miyazaki |
| E447K | 1339G>A | Early | 8 | Surface | Switch of charge in partly buried location | Blanch |
| Q472H | 1416G>C | NR | 6 | Surface | Loss of H bond to Asp477 | Pollard |
| V486F | 1456G>T | Late | 37 | Dimer interface | Disruption of dimer interface | Beesley |
Figure 7Stereo figure showing missense mutations mapped onto the structure of the SGSH monomer. Cα atoms of residues associated with an early-onset phenotype are shown in red, those associated with an intermediate-onset phenotype in blue and those associated with a late-onset phenotype in yellow. Missense mutations for which the phenotype was not reported are indicated in grey. Most mutations with known phenotype are early-onset mutations. Late-onset mutations appear to map closer to the periphery of the enzyme. Some of the most common mutations are indicated by a larger ball size. These are Ser298, Arg245 (indicated ‘1’), Arg74 (‘2’), Ser66 (‘3’) and Gln380. The orientation shown is the same as for one of the subunits (on the left) of the dimer in Fig. 2 ▶(b); the active site is indicated by FGly70 (stick model; standard colours) and Ca2+ ion (black ball). Glycosylations are shown as green sticks.