| Literature DB >> 33816576 |
Zimei Shu1, Jiahui Wan1, Randy J Read2, Robin W Carrell2, Aiwu Zhou1.
Abstract
The angiotensin peptides that control blood pressure are released from the non-inhibitory plasma serpin, angiotensinogen, on cleavage of its extended N-terminal tail by the specific aspartyl-protease, renin. Angiotensinogen had previously been assumed to be a passive substrate, but we describe here how recent studies reveal an inherent conformational mechanism that is critical to the cleavage and release of the angiotensin peptides and consequently to the control of blood pressure. A series of crystallographic structures of angiotensinogen and its derivative forms, together with its complexes with renin show in molecular detail how the interaction with renin triggers a profound shift of the amino-terminal tail of angiotensinogen with modulation occurring at several levels. The tail of angiotensinogen is restrained by a labile disulfide bond, with changes in its redox status affecting angiotensin release, as demonstrably so in the hypertensive complication of pregnancy, pre-eclampsia. The shift of the tail also enhances the binding of renin through a tail-in-mouth allosteric mechanism. The N-terminus is now seen to insert into a pocket equivalent to the hormone-binding site on other serpins, with helix H of angiotensinogen unwinding to form key interactions with renin. The findings explain the precise species specificity of the interaction with renin and with variant carbohydrate linkages. Overall, the studies provide new insights into the physiological regulation of angiotensin release, with an ability to respond to local tissue and temperature changes, and with the opening of strategies for the development of novel agents for the treatment of hypertension.Entities:
Keywords: allosteric; angiotensinogen; hypertension; pre-eclampsia; redox switch; renin; serpin; tail-in-mouth
Year: 2021 PMID: 33816576 PMCID: PMC8012498 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.645123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1The crystal structure of human glycosylated angiotensinogen (9). (A) N-terminal tail sequence, indicating renin and ACE (angiotensin converting enzyme) cleavage sites, the glycosylation site and conserved disulfide bond. (B) Structure of angiotensinogen shown as a cartoon. Serpin template in gray, helix A in marine, A-sheet light blue, and the disordered reactive center loop (RCL) in red dashes. Angiotensin-I tail in green with the scissile bond shown as magenta and green spheres. Cys18 in the amino tail forms a disulfide bond with Cys138 of the CD-loop (brown). The glycan attached to Asn14 is shown as green sticks. The segment from Glu20-Pro29 (dashed, pale green) is disordered in the structure and modeled for illustration. Surface representation of the main body of AGT, with the extra N-terminus (1-63) shown in cartoon representation. The Angiotensin-I peptide is mainly stabilized by hydrophobic interactions with the main body (colored as yellow surface), and the scissile bond (shown as spheres) is buried in the hydrophobic cavity formed by residues in the CD-loop (V131, P132, and W133), helix A (L68, M72, L76, and F79) and helix D (L142 and V147). The figure was adapted from our previous publication (9) with modifications.
Figure 2Tail-into-mouth shift of N-terminal tail on binding with Renin (10). (A) Side view of angiotensinogen showing the rearrangement of the tail (magenta and green) that takes place on the complexing with renin in (B). The scissile bond, Leu10-Phe11 (magenta and green spheres) becomes exposed and the tail is anchored at its terminus by docking into what in other serpins is the hormone-binding pocket, between helix H, the B beta-sheet, and helix A (as circled). Docking of the terminus is accompanied by an unfolding of helix H to reveal sidechains essentially involved in the binding of renin. The S-S bridge between Cys18 of the tail and Cys138 of the displaced CD loop of angiotensinogen is arrowed. Also apparent: the potential influence on cleavage kinetics of glycan variations at Asn14, adjacent to the scissile bond. The clear electron density for the glycan linked to Asn14 is shown in gray mesh and the fragments without clear electron density are shown with dashed lines for illustration. The figure was adapted from our previous publication (10) with modifications.