| Literature DB >> 25071597 |
Anrui Lu1, Qiaoli Zhang1, Jie Zhang1, Bing Yang1, Kai Wu1, Wei Xie1, Yun-Xia Luan1, Erjun Ling1.
Abstract
Insect prophenoloxidase (PPO) is an important innate immunity protein due to its involvement in cellular and humoral defense. It belongs to a group of type-3 copper-containing proteins that occurs in almost all organisms. Insect PPO has been studied for over a century, and the PPO activation cascade is becoming clearer. The insect PPO activation pathway incorporates several important proteins, including pattern-recognition receptors (PGRP, β GRP, and C-type lectins), serine proteases, and serine protease inhibitors (serpins). Due to their complexity, PPO activation mechanisms vary among insect species. Activated phenoloxidase (PO) oxidizes phenolic molecules to produce melanin around invading pathogens and wounds. The crystal structure of Manduca sexta PPO shows that a conserved amino acid, phenylalanine (F), can block the active site pocket. During activation, this blocker must be dislodged or even cleaved at the N-terminal sequence to expose the active site pockets and allow substrates to enter. Thanks to the crystal structure of M. sexta PPO, some domains and specific amino acids that affect PPO activities have been identified. Further studies of the relationship between PPO structure and enzyme activities will provide an opportunity to examine other type-3 copper proteins, and trace when and why their various physiological functions evolved. Recent researches show that insect PPO has a relationship with neuron activity, longevity, feces melanization (phytophagous insects) and development, which suggests that it is time for us to look back on insect PPO beyond the view of immunity in this review.Entities:
Keywords: insect; melanization; prophenoloxidase; protein structure; type-3 copper proteins
Year: 2014 PMID: 25071597 PMCID: PMC4092376 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2014.00252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Three mechanisms of insect PPO activation. The terminal serine protease cleaves PPO differently among insect species (Ashida and Brey, 1997; Lee et al., 1998; Kim et al., 2002; Kanost and Gorman, 2008). And the three mechanisms diverge based on these differences. Here, we consider only BmPPO1 (Accession: NP_001037335), MsPPO1 (Accession: O44249), and HdPPO1 (Accession: BAC15603) as a summary. The conserved bonds 51RF52 in BmPPO1 (A), 51RF52 in MsPPO1 (B), and 50RF51 in HdPPO1 (C) were cleaved by serine proteases separately in the same way, as shown. F85 in BmPPO1, F85 in MsPPO1, and F84 HdPPO1 (labeled in blue) function as the place holder in the respective active site pockets, and may block substrates until they are dislodged. In HdPPO1, 162RA163 was further cleaved to form a fragment at 60 kD with PO activity (C). The corresponding sequences in BmPPO1 (A) and MsPPO1 (B) are also shown in red. In B. mori, BmPPO was cleaved by PPAE to produce PO (Ashida and Brey, 1997) (A). In M. sexta, PAPs cleaved MsPPO in the same place as in B. mori to produce PO fragments with low enzyme activity. When SPHs were added, PO activity increased significantly (Kanost and Gorman, 2008) (B). In H. diomphalia, HdPPO was cleaved as in BmPPO and MsPPO by PPAF-I at the conserved bond 50RF51. However, the large fragment had no PO activity unless PPAF-I, PPAF-II, and PPAF-III were combined, and was cleaved again at 162RA163 to produce a fragment at 60 kD; this fragment had PO activity (Lee et al., 1998; Kim et al., 2002) (C). In an in vitro assay, commercial α-chymotrypsin cleaved D. melanogaster recombinant PPO1 (Accession: AAF57775) (rPPO1) in at least three places to produce a fragment, also of ~60 kD, with direct enzyme activity (Lu et al., 2014a) (D).
Figure 2Electrostatic surfaces of MsPPO1 and MsPPO2. Crystal structures of two Manduca sexta PPOs (PDB ID code 3HHS) were aligned using the PyMOL Molecular Graphics System (http://pymol.org/). (A–C) Secondary structure (Backbone ribbons) of two M. sexta PPOs. PPO1 crystal structure (A). The N-terminus residue is D3, and C-terminus residue is E679 as indicated by arrows. PPO2 crystal structure (B). The N-terminus residue is D3, and C-terminus residue is E692 as indicated by arrows. (C). Alignment of PPO1 and PPO2 at the same angle. (D,E) The electrostatic surfaces of two M. sexta PPOs after being generated using the PyMOL software. The backbone ribbons and electrostatic surfaces of each PPO are surveyed from the same view. Red is negative, and blue is positive. MsPPO1 (D) and MsPPO2 (E) have different surface electrical charges. In (D), the circled negative area is composed of I97D98, A221D222 residues. In (E), the circled negative area is composed of N97E98, D101, S225A226S227, E229, V232, S355V356L357 residues. (F). Alignment of PPO1 and PPO2 at the same angle.
Figure 3Maximum-likelihood tree of insect prophenoloxidases calculated using the RAxML method via the CIPRES Science Gateway (Miller et al., . Crustacean PPOs were used as an outgroup. The PPO genes from various insect species are indicated along with their NCBI accession numbers.
Figure 4Comparison of the amino acid sequences of . The online CLUSTALW multiple sequence alignment software (http://www.genome.jp/tools/clustalw/) was used for the slow and accurate pairwise alignment analysis. “*,” Fully conserved residues; “:,” conserved substitutions; “.,” semi-conserved substitution as previously described (Grasela et al., 2008). Copper-binding regions A and B are underlined. The histidine residues marked with “▲” are the ligands proposed to coordinate two copper ions in the active site pocket.