| Literature DB >> 30120254 |
Nicolina Clemente1, Alaa Abdine2, Iban Ubarretxena-Belandia2,3, Chunyu Wang4,5.
Abstract
Intramembrane-cleaving proteases (I-CLiPs) play crucial roles in physiological and pathological processes, such as Alzheimer's disease and cancer. However, the mechanisms of substrate recognition by I-CLiPs remain poorly understood. The aspartic I-CLiP presenilin is the catalytic subunit of the γ-secretase complex, which releases the amyloid-β peptides (Aβs) through intramembrane proteolysis of the transmembrane domain of the amyloid precursor protein (APPTM). Here we used solution NMR to probe substrate docking of APPTM to the presenilin homologs (PSHs) MCMJR1 and MAMRE50, which cleaved APPTM in the NMR tube. Chemical shift perturbation (CSP) showed juxtamembrane regions of APPTM mediate its docking to MCMJR1. Binding of the substrate to I-CLiP decreased the magnitude of amide proton chemical shifts δH at the C-terminal half of the substrate APPTM, indicating that the docking to the enzyme weakens helical hydrogen bonds and unwinds the substrate transmembrane helix around the initial ε-cleavage site. The APPTM V44M substitution linked to familial AD caused more CSP and helical unwinding around the ε-cleavage site. MAMRE50, which cleaved APPTM at a higher rate, also caused more CSP and helical unwinding in APPTM than MCMJR1. Our data suggest that docking of the substrate transmembrane helix and helical unwinding is coupled in intramembrane proteolysis and FAD mutation modifies enzyme/substrate interaction, providing novel insights into the mechanisms of I-CLiPs and AD drug discovery.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30120254 PMCID: PMC6098081 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30015-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Intramembrane proteolysis of APPTM in solution NMR. (A) Overlaid NMR structures of WT (green) and FAD V44M (orange) APPTM, with residue 44 in stick mode. (B) Structure of PSH (grey) overlaid on presenilin (blue) with an RMSD of 3.1 Å. (C) Intramembrane proteolysis activity of MAMRE50, MCMJR1 and a control intramembrane protease against MBP-APPTM measured by SDS-PAGE after incubation at 37 °C for 12 hrs. Intramembrane proteolysis activity of MCMJR1 (D) and MAMRE50 (E) in solution NMR, evidenced by decreasing APPTM peak intensity and the appearance of sharp peaks in 2D 15N-1H HSQC at 40 °C over 24 hours, with enzyme:substrate at 1:1 molar ratio. Similar results were obtained for WT APPTM (data not shown). (F) Determination of the cleavage rate of APPTM from variation of peak intensity over time for select well-resolved peaks with high S/N.
Figure 2Solution NMR mapping of APPTM interaction with MCMJR1. (A) MCMJR1 titration into 15N labeled WT and V44M-APPTM at enzyme:substrate molar ratios from 0:1 to 15:1. (B) Combined 15N and 1H CSP vs. residue number for WT-APPTM (red) and V44M-APPTM (blue) at an enzyme:substrate molar ratio of 10:1. The largest combined CSPs were observed at the juxtamembrane region of APPTM. V44M experienced more combined CSP than WT, especially near the C-terminus. (C) Combined CSP mapped onto the structures of WT and V44M, colored from red (largest combined CSP) to blue (smallest combined CSP) in a rainbow color gradient. (D) Amide hydrogen chemical shift perturbation (ΔδH) at 10:1 molar ratio of MCMJR1 to APPTM for both WT-APPTM (red) and V44M-APPTM (blue). The data show a pattern of decreasing amide proton chemical shift at the C-terminal half of APPTM, indicating decreasing helical hydrogen bond strength and helical unwinding in the substrate. More unwinding was observed for the FAD mutant V44M than WT. Cut sites for Aβ40 and Aβ42 generation are indicated by arrows in (B) and (D).
Figure 3MAMRE50 caused more CSP and helical unwinding in APPTM than MCMJR1. (A) Combined CSPs in V44M-APPTM due to MAMRE50 (blue) and MCMJR1 (red) at at an enzyme to substrate molar ratio of 1:1. (B) CSP difference (ΔCSP) plot between CSP caused by MAMRE50 and that caused by MCMJR1 at an enzyme to substrate molar ratio of 1:1. (C) Change in amide proton chemical shift (ΔδH) in V44M-APPTM due to MAMRE50 (blue) and MCMJR1 (red). X indicates missing data.