| Literature DB >> 29063292 |
Candan Ariöz1, Yaozong Li2, Pernilla Wittung-Stafshede3.
Abstract
Wilson Disease (WD) is a hereditary genetic disorder, which coincides with a dysfunctional copper (Cu) metabolism caused by mutations in ATP7B, a membrane-bound P1B-type ATPase responsible for Cu export from hepatic cells. The N-terminal part (~ 600 residues) of the multi-domain 1400-residue ATP7B constitutes six metal binding domains (MBDs), each of which can bind a copper ion, interact with other ATP7B domains as well as with different proteins. Although the ATP7B's MBDs have been investigated in vitro and in vivo intensively, it remains unclear how these domains modulate overall structure, dynamics, stability and function of ATP7B. The presence of six MBDs is unique to mammalian ATP7B homologs, and many WD causing missense mutations are found in these domains. Here, we have summarized previously reported in vitro biophysical data on the MBDs of ATP7B and WD point mutations located in these domains. Besides the demonstration of where the research field stands today, this review showcasts the need for further biophysical investigation about the roles of MBDs in ATP7B function. Molecular mechanisms of ATP7B are important not only in the development of new WD treatment but also for other aspects of human physiology where Cu transport plays a role.Entities:
Keywords: ATP7B; Atox1; Cu transport; Disease-causing mutations; Metal-binding domains; Wilson disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29063292 PMCID: PMC5684295 DOI: 10.1007/s10534-017-0058-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biometals ISSN: 0966-0844 Impact factor: 2.949
Fig. 1The structural organization of ATP7B. Cartoon illustrates the major functional domains and important motifs for Cu-ATPases. ATP7B and other P-type ATPases consist of three cytoplasmic domains; nucleotide binding domain (N-domain, blue), phosphorylation domain (P-domain, pink), actuator/dephosphorylation domain (A-domain, purple). A combination of N- and P-domains are usually referred as ATP-binding domain. ATP7B hydrolyzes ATP and the invariant aspartate (D) located at the DKTGT motif accepts γ-phosphate from ATP during the catalytic cycle forming a transient phosphorylated intermediate (E1P). SEHPL is a conserved motif among all ATPases transporting transition metals (P1-type ATPases or CPx-ATPases) and includes H1069 which is believed be involved in correct positioning of ATP prior to transfer of the γ-phosphate (Tsivkovskii et al. 2003). TGE motif in the A-domain is responsible for the removal of γ-phosphate from the DKTGT motif (dephosphorylation). The N-terminal contains six metal-binding domains (MBD1-MBD6, cyan) with conserved CxxC Cu-binding motifs. The transmembrane domain (TMD) encompasses eight transmembrane helices and position of residues that are predicted to be involved in Cu-coordination within the membrane are depicted as CPC, YN and MXXXS. The two leucine motifs (1459LL and 1487LL) located at the C-terminal have been shown to be essential for endocytosis and/or TGN relocalization from plasma membrane
Fig. 3An all-atom full-length model of MBD1-6. A The initial model. B The optimized model. Six subdomains are colored differently, and their unstructured linkers are colored in cyan. NMR structures in Table 2 were used. The initial domain arrangement was determined based on the sequence length of linkers and electrostatic complementarity of the protein surfaces between different domains. 3D coordinates of the missing linkers were generated by SWISS-MODEL (Biasini et al. 2014) server using the arranged model as a template, leading to a full-length model of MBD1-6 without the inclusion of the first 56 residues. The initial model was then optimized by MD simulations using NAMD (version 2.12) (Phillips et al. 2005) for 5 nanoseconds (ns). The solvent was presented in the generalized Born/solvent-accessible surface area implicit solvent model (Tanner et al. 2011), and the protein system was described in CHARMM36 force field (Huang and MacKerell 2013). C The schematic representation of N-terminal MBDs of ATP7B in tandem. The length of each MBD and linkers (as the position of amino acids) in between is indicated according to the PDB structures of the respective MBDs (Table 2). A linker is defined as the segment between folded 70-aa MBDs except only for MBD6 which is 68-aa long. TMD represents the transmembrane part of ATP7B and the linker between MBD6 and transmembrane helix 1 (TMD1) is 20-aa long (Lorinczi et al. 2008)
Wilson disease-causing mutations localized in MBDs of ATP7B and their reported effects on ATP7B function
| MBD Domain | Mutation | Impact of mutation | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| MBD1 | N41S | Partially defective trafficking | Braiterman et al. ( |
| M67V | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Mukherjee et al. ( | |
| G85V | Decreased interaction with Atox1 | Hamza et al. ( | |
| Significant residual copper export capacity in HEK293T cells | van den Berghe et al. ( | ||
| Increased interaction with COMMD1 | de Bie et al. ( | ||
| Completely defective catalytic and transport activity/reduced phosphorylation | Huster et al. ( | ||
| MBD2 | R136G | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Mukherjee et al. ( |
| R198G | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Dong et al. ( | |
| MBD3 | G333R | Located at the linker region between MBD3 and MBD4/no change in protein stability | Hinz ( |
| MBD4 | I390V | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No other available information | Dong et al. ( |
| MBD5 | S406A | Normal Cu transport activity/hyperphosphorylation | Huster et al. ( |
| V456L | Partial Cu transport activity/hyperphosphorylation | ||
| A476T | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Lin et al. ( | |
| A486S | Slightly increased interaction with COMMD1 | de Bie et al. ( | |
| L492S | Decreased interaction with Atox1 | Hamza et al. ( | |
| Completely defective catalytic and transport activity/reduced phosphorylation | Huster et al. ( | ||
| Increased interaction with COMMD1 | de Bie et al. ( | ||
| G515V | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Dong et al. ( | |
| V519M | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Kroll et al. ( | |
| Y532H | Normal Cu transport activity/normal protein expression | Hsi et al. ( | |
| Slightly increased interaction with COMMD1 | de Bie et al. ( | ||
| E541K | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Bugbee et al. ( | |
| L549P | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Abdelghaffar et al. ( | |
| Nagasaka et al. ( | |||
| MBD6 | T587M | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Dong et al. ( |
| G591S | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Mukherjee et al. ( | |
| G591D | Decreased interaction with Atox1. Does not interfere with ATP7B trafficking | Pilankatta et al. ( | |
| Normal phosphorylation but its Cu-response was impaired so MBD1-6 can be important for Cu-induced response | Vanderwerf et al. ( | ||
| Increased interaction with COMMD1 | de Bie et al. ( | ||
| Does not interfere with ATP7B trafficking | Hamza et al. ( | ||
| MBD6 | A595T | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Mukherjee et al. ( |
| A604P | Increased interaction with COMMD1 | de Bie et al. ( | |
| R616Q | Reported as disease-causing mutation. No available information | Loudianos et al. ( | |
| Todorov et al. ( | |||
| Mak et al. ( | |||
| Slightly impaired Cu transport activity/normal Cu-dependent trafficking of ATP7B/normal protein expression/might cause structural instability | Scvortova ( | ||
| R616W | Completely defective catalytic and transport activity/hyperphosphorylation | Huster et al. ( | |
| G626A | Partial catalytic and transport activity/reduced phosphorylation | ||
| Normal protein expression/normal Cu-transport activity/normal Cu responsive trafficking | Braiterman et al. ( | ||
| Normal Cu transport activity/is situated in a helix adjacent to the CxxC motif and may have some impact upon copper binding | Hsi et al. ( |
Fig. 2Multiple sequence alignment of individual ATP7B MBDs (MBD1-6) and Atox1. Residues that are highly conserved are highlighted with a dark purple color and color tone decays in parallel with the degree of conservation for that specific residue. Sequences between 3 and 70 for all MBDs and 1–68 for Atox1 were used. Sequence alignment was performed using Jalview version 2.10.2b1 (http://www.jalview.org/)
PDB entries for reported high-resolution structures of the MBDs in ATP7B. All PDB structures represent the metal-free state of the related protein. Structures were determined by solution NMR and protein domains (single or double domain constructs) were recombinantly expressed in E. coli
| PDB no | Domain | Organism | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2N7Y | MBD1 | Homo sapiens | Yu et al. ( |
| 2LQB | MBD2 | Homo sapiens | Dolgova et al. ( |
| 2ROP | MBD3–4 | Homo sapiens | Banci et al. ( |
| 2EW9 | MBD5–6 | Homo sapiens | Achila et al. ( |
Fig. 4The positioning of WD-causing mutations (Table 1) in each MBD. The disease-causing mutations were visualized in magenta using UCSF Chimera molecular-modeling software. For all MBDs Cu-binding cysteines (C1 and C2) are shown with ball-stick representation in cyan. Mutations N41S in MBD1 and S406A, V456L, A476T in MBD5 could not be represented here due to the absence of these positions in reported PDB structures