| Literature DB >> 31949908 |
Junsoo Kim1, Haemin Lee1, Yeon Jin Roh1, Han-Ul Kim2, Donghyuk Shin3, Sorah Kim1, Jonghyeon Son1, Aro Lee1, Minseo Kim1, Junga Park1, Seong Yun Hwang4, Kyunghwan Kim4, Yong Kwon Lee5, Hyun Suk Jung2, Kwang Yeon Hwang1, Byung Cheon Lee1.
Abstract
MICAL is an oxidoreductase that participates in cytoskeleton reorganization via actin disassembly in the presence of NADPH. Although three MICALs (MICAL1, MICAL2 and MICAL3) have been identified in mammals, only the structure of mouse MICAL1 has been reported. Here, the first crystal structure of human MICAL3, which contains the flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO) and calponin-homology (CH) domains, is reported. MICAL3 has an FAD/NADP-binding Rossmann-fold domain for mono-oxygenase activity like MICAL1. The FMO and CH domains of both MICAL3 and MICAL1 are highly similar in structure, but superimposition of the two structures shows a different relative position of the CH domain in the asymmetric unit. Based on kinetic analyses, the catalytic efficiency of MICAL3 dramatically increased on adding F-actin only when the CH domain was available. However, this did not occur when two residues, Glu213 and Arg530, were mutated in the FMO and CH domains, respectively. Overall, MICAL3 is structurally highly similar to MICAL1, which suggests that they may adopt the same catalytic mechanism, but the difference in the relative position of the CH domain produces a difference in F-actin substrate specificity. © Junsoo Kim et al. 2020.Entities:
Keywords: F-actin; MICAL; X-ray crystallography; actin depolymerization; calponin-homology domain; enzyme mechanisms; monooxygenases; protein structure; refinement; structure determination
Year: 2020 PMID: 31949908 PMCID: PMC6949599 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252519015409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 4.769
Figure 1Overall structure and characterization of human MICAL3FMOCH. (a) Sequence alignment of human MICAL3, human MICAL2, human MICAL1 and mouse MICAL1. Strictly conserved residues are boxed in red, while similar residues are shown as red letters. The sequence-alignment tools used were ClustalW and ESPript. 310-Helices are represented by η, strict β-turns are represented by TT and strict α-turns by TTT. (b) The crystal structure of human MICAL3. The N- and C-termini are labeled N and C, respectively. The FMO domain is shown in yellow and the CH domain is in green. (c) The FAD-binding site. FAD is shown as a stick model and the 2F o − F c map for the FAD molecule is contoured at 2σ. The distances between residues and FAD were calculated using PISA. The stick model of human MICAL3 is shown in yellow, white, red and blue, whereas the ribbon model is shown in yellow; the stick and ribbon models of mouse MICAL1 are shown in black.
Data-collection and refinement statistics for hMICAL3FMOCH
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| Data collection | |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.9794 |
| Space group |
|
|
| 65.211, 93.466, 71.568 |
| α, β, γ (°) | 90, 92.366, 90 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 47.2–2.30 (2.38–2.30) |
| Completeness (%) | 99.7 (99.8) |
|
| 0.143 (0.48) |
|
| 16.89 (2.72) |
| Redundancy | 4.85 (4.8) |
| Total reflections | 38165 |
| Refinement statistics | |
| Resolution range (Å) | 47.2–2.30 (2.38–2.30) |
| Unique reflections | 3817 |
|
| 17.2 (19.6) |
|
| 21.5 (24.6) |
| R.m.s. deviations | |
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.009 |
| Bond angles (°) | 0.097 |
| Ramachandran favored (%) | 97.9 |
| Ramachandran outliers (%) | 0 |
R sym = , where I (hkl) is the observed intensity of reflection i, 〈I(hkl)〉 is the average intensity and i counts through all symmetry-related reflections.
Figure 2Binding site between the CH domain and the FMO domain in human MICAL3. Residues that participate in the interaction between the FMO and CH domains are labeled. The FMO domain is shown in yellow and the CH domain is shown in green. The binding residues between the FMO domain and the CH domain in human MICAL3 are shown as stick models. The dotted lines indicate the interaction distances between residues.
Figure 3Steady-state kinetic analysis of MICAL forms. Initial velocity (v) was measured in an F-buffer-based mixture at various NADPH concentrations. The initial velocity of each reaction was divided by the total enzyme concentration (E, 400 nM).
Steady-state kinetic parameters of various MICALs
| Protein | F-actin |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| — | 0.0006 | 266.9 | 2.0776 |
| 8 µ | 0.0169 | 543.8 | 30.9857 | |
|
| — | 0.0023 | 1237 | 1.8238 |
| 8 µ | 0.0027 | 234.1 | 11.4267 | |
|
| — | 0.0031 | 1264 | 2.4794 |
| 8 µ | 0.0024 | 817.2 | 2.8793 | |
|
| — | 0.0005 | 573.7 | 0.8911 |
| 8 µ | 0.0006 | 752.6 | 0.8330 | |
|
| — | 0.0033 | 1438 | 2.3282 |
| 8 µ | 0.0025 | 1053 | 2.4169 |
Figure 4Superimposition of the FMO and CH domains of human MICAL3 and mouse MICAL1. In the upper panel, the FMO domain of human MICAL3 is shown in yellow and the FMO domain of mouse MICAL1 is shown in black. In the lower panel, the CH domain of human MICAL3 is shown in green and the CH domain of mouse MICAL1 is shown in black. The red helix is the actin-binding helix of human MICAL3 and the cyan helix is the actin-binding helix of mouse MICAL1.
Figure 5(a) Possible orientation of the CH domain in the asymmetric unit. We inferred that the interaction between the FMO and CH domains of human MICAL3 occurs in the A position. Straight lines indicate the shortest distance from the C-terminus of the FMO domain to the N-terminus of the CH domain. (b) Backflip of the CH domain of human MICAL3. Green and red indicate the CH domain and actin-binding helix of human MICAL3, respectively; black and cyan indicate the CH domain and actin-binding helix of mouse MICAL1, respectively. The green arrow indicates the direction from the N-terminus to the C-terminus of the human MICAL3 CH domain; the black arrow indicates the same direction for mouse MICAL1.
Figure 6Electron-microscopic analysis of human MICAL3FMOCH and a model of MICAL3FMOCH–F-actin interaction. (a) Structural comparison taken from 3D analysis: representative surface views of the reconstructed 3D structure (top row) and the corresponding views of 2D class averages (middle row) and raw particles (bottom row). The 10 nm scale bar applies to all of the panels in (a). (b) Superimposition of an equivalent view of the crystal structure (yellow) on the 3D envelope of negatively stained human MICAL3. (c) The initial model was built by manually docking human MICAL3FMOCH to F-actin (PDB entry 3lue; Galkin et al., 2010 ▸). The CH domain (dark blue cartoon) was oriented first and the FMO domain (purple cartoon) was arranged so that the active site was close to actin. Each actin monomer is represented in a different color (tinted surfaces).
Figure 7Comparison of the FMO domain and CH domain of MICALs from human and mouse. The sequence alignments between the MICALs are shown on the right for the comparison regions shown on the left. The boxes on the left have the same colors as those highlighting the corresponding sequences in Fig. 1 ▸. In the top left panel, the loop region of the FMO domain of human MICAL3 is in yellow and red indicates the FMO domain of mouse MICAL1 (PDB entry 4txi). The middle and bottom left panels show the superimposition of the CH domain of human MICAL3 in yellow, human MICAL2 (PDB entry 2e9k; RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative, unpublished work) in cyan and human MICAL1 (PDB entry 2dk9; Sun et al., 2006 ▸) in red.