| Literature DB >> 35120130 |
Stephen G Aller1, Jere P Segrest2.
Abstract
ABCA1 and ABCA4 are enigmatic because they transport substrates in opposite directions yet share >50% amino acid identity. ABCA4 imports lipid conjugates but ABCA1 exports lipids. Both hydrolyze ATP to drive transport, and both contain cytoplasmic regulatory domains (RDs) following nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) in the primary structure. The tertiary structures of several ABC importers, including ABCA4, show that each RD forms a domain-swapped latch that locks onto the opposing RD and holds the NBDs close together. Crucially, sequences encoding the RDs and their bridges are among the most conserved in the entire ABC-A subfamily. In the original cryo-EM structure of ABCA1, the RDs were modeled without crossover. After close inspection of that cryo-EM density map and the recent structure of ABCA4, we propose that the RDs of ABCA1 also form a domain-swapped latch. A refined ABCA1 model containing latches exhibited significantly improved overall protein geometry. Critically, the conserved crossover sequence leading to the RD-domain swap is directly supported by the original cryo-EM density map of ABCA1 and appears to have been overlooked. Our refined ABCA1 model suggests the possibility that ABCA1, despite being an exporter, has highly restrained NBDs that suggest a transport mechanism that is distinct from 'alternating access'.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35120130 PMCID: PMC8815970 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0262746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 4Conservation of the crossover and flanking sequences in the ABC-A subfamily.
Panel A shows the two crossover motifs as modeled in the ABCA4. The first crossover with flanking sequences are shown as green spheres and connects NBD1 with RD1 by crossing over the pseudo two-fold axis of symmetry. The second motif, which we call the “crossback” is symmetrically related to the first, and connects NBD2 with RD2 (shown as red spheres). Panel B shows the alignment of ABC-A crossover and crossback sequences for mouse- and human- transporters. The secondary structure from ABCA4 is overlaid at the top of each alignment with C = coil, S = β-sheet and H = α-helix. The amino acid residue that resides at the exact axis of symmetry for the first crossover is an invariantly conserved Threonine (human ABCA1 Thr1242). A highly conserved symmetrically related Threonine is present at the axis of symmetry for the crossback (Human ABCA1 Thr2211).
Fig 1Phylogenetic relationships between mammalian ABC-A subfamily members.
The optimal tree is drawn to scale using mouse- and human- ABC-A sequences with branch lengths in the same units as those of the evolutionary distances used to infer the tree. Distances are in the units of the number of amino acids substitutions per site. The percentage of replicate trees in which the associated taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test using 500 replicates [37] and are shown at the branchpoints.
Refinement and model statistics for structures of ABCA1 and ABCA4.
| Human ABCA1 | Human ABCA1 (refined) | Human ABCA4 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| PDB 5XJY | PDB 7ROQ | PDB 7LKP | |
| CC (mask) | 0.76 | 0.71 | 0.74 |
| CC (volume) | 0.74 | 0.69 | 0.74 |
| CC (peaks) | 0.52 | 0.47 | 0.53 |
| Mean CC for ligands | 0.70 | 0.62 | 0.63 |
| Clashscore, all atoms | 9.20 | 11.8 | 19.9 |
| Rotamer outliers | 1.27% | 0% | 0.60% |
| Ramachandran outliers | 0.16% | 0.00% | 0.05% |
| Ramachandran favored | 85.8% | 93.6% | 94.3% |
| Rama-Z, whole (RMSD) | -6.01 (0.13) | -0.58 (0.20) | -0.89 (0.19) |
| Rama-Z, helix (RMSD) | -3.43 (0.11) | 1.30 (0.18) | 0.84 (0.16) |
| Rama-Z, sheet (RMSD) | -5.20 (0.28) | -1.24 (0.47) | -1.90 (0.39) |
| Cβ deviations | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| MolProbity score | 2.21 | 2.07 | 2.18 |
ahttp://molprobity.biochem.duke.edu (using electron-cloud x-H bond-lengths and no N/Q/H flips).
bMolProbity score combines the clashscore, rotamer, and Ramachandran evaluations into a single value.