| Literature DB >> 27455956 |
Linus J Östberg1, Bengt Persson1,2, Jan-Olov Höög3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: All known attempts to isolate and characterize mammalian class V alcohol dehydrogenase (class V ADH), a member of the large ADH protein family, at the protein level have failed. This indicates that the class V ADH protein is not stable in a non-cellular environment, which is in contrast to all other human ADH enzymes. In this report we present evidence, supported with results from computational analyses performed in combination with earlier in vitro studies, why this ADH behaves in an atypical way.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol dehydrogenase; Mutational pressure; Pseudoenzyme; Sequence analysis; Structural calculations
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27455956 PMCID: PMC4960878 DOI: 10.1186/s12858-016-0072-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biochem ISSN: 1471-2091 Impact factor: 4.059
Fig. 1Comparison of dimers of class Iγ ADH and class V ADH after 20 ns of molecular dynamics simulations. The enzyme models of class Iγ ADH (white) and class V ADH (green) have a high level of structural similarity. a: The full dimers of class Iγ ADH and class V ADH after 20 ns of molecular dynamics simulations. b: The dimer interaction region (position 282–320) marked in red in A, rotated 90°. It contains a short β-α motif. The α-helix was not identified by DSSP after two out of three molecular dynamics simulations of the class V ADH model; one such run, with non-α-helical Ramachandran angles, is shown here. This tendency was not observed in any other ADH models (e.g. class Iγ ADH, white), and only in mouse class II ADH among the structures from multicellar organisms available in the RCSB PDB
Unique residues in class V ADH
| Residue | Protein localization | Prevalence class V | Prevalence other classes | Residues in other classes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glu49 | Active site | >80 % | <1 % | Asp in other classes (>95 %). |
| Met50 | Active site | >70 % | 0 % | Asp in class I and IV (>85 %), Ala in class II and III (>95 %), Asp or Asn in class VI (>70 %). |
| Lys51 | Active site | 100 % | 0 % | His in class I and IV (>90 %), His or Thr in class II, Tyr in class III (>99 %), His in class VI (100 %) |
| Gly141 | Active site | >55 % | 0 % | Leu in class I (>65 %), Met in class II (>55 %), Met in class III (>95 %), Met in class IV (>80 %), Phe in class VI (>65 %) |
| Phe255a | Surface | >75 % | 0 % | Lys in class I (>60 %), Ile in class II and III (>60 %), Ser in class IV (>90 %), Met or Val in class VI (>65 %) |
| Arg265 | In central β-sheet | >75 % | 0 % | Ser in class I and III (>95 %), Ala in class II (>80 %), Thr in class IV (>75 %), Ala in class VI (>90 %) |
| Leu295 | Dimer interaction | >55 % | 0 % | Pro in class I (>90 %), Ala in class II (>45 %), Ala in class III (>90 %), Pro in class IV (100 %), Ala in class VI (>80 %) |
| Val299 | Dimer interaction | >55 % | 0 % | Gln in class I (>90 %), Lys in class II (>50 %), Glu in class III (>90 %), Lys in class IV (>90 %), Ser in class VI (>65 %) |
| Gly305 | Dimer interaction | >80 % | 0 % | Pro in others (class I >99 %, class II >65 %, class III >95 %, class IV > 95 %), Ala or Pro in class VI (>98 %) |
| Val359 | Near active site | >80 % | 0 % | Phe in others (class I >99 %, class II >75 %, class III >95 %, class IV >95 %, class VI >70 %) |
aThis position contains Cys in human class V ADH, but Arg is the most common residue among mammalian class V ADHs
Positional numbering according to the human class V ADH protein, Ser1 being the first residue
Fig. 2Conserved amino acid residues in class V ADH with a low prevalence in other ADH classes. The scoring function represents the highest rate of conservation for one residue type at one position in one class compared to the conservation ratio for the same residue type at the same position in the other classes. The labelled peaks represent the position and residue type seen in human class V ADH. Black peaks represent class V ADH and the grey peaks represent class I–IV ADH
Fig. 3Unique residues in class V ADH. The residues listed in Table 1 highlighted on a monomer from a model of class V ADH based on 1u3w after 20 ns of molecular dynamics simulations. White: one subunit of class V ADH, green: the unique residues listed in Table 1, dark grey: Zn2+
Pairwise intra-class sequence identities within each of the six mammalian ADH classes
| ADH class | Median | Mean | Min | dN/dS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | 82.5 % | 84.2 % | 78.2 % | 0.308 |
| II | 73.7 % | 76.6 % | 63.7 % | 0.332 |
| III | 92.5 % | 92.8 % | 86.9 % | 0.126 |
| IV | 83.7 % | 81.5 % | 68.7 % | 0.228 |
| V | 70.0 % | 75.4 % | 64.5 % | 0.385 |
| VI | 76.9 % | 75.9 % | 64.5 % | 0.288 |
Calculated from the sequences of the ten species (Brandt’s bat, Chinese hamster, Chinese tree shrew, cow, deer mouse, little brown bat, prairie vole, rat, water buffalo, yak) that have at least one identified member in each of the classes
Fig. 4Phylogenetic tree of all known mammalian ADH protein sequences available in the major databases as of October 2015. The six mammalian ADH classes are easily identified