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Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design

The common Z mutant (Glu342Lys) of α(1)-antitrypsin results in the formation of polymers that are retained within hepatocytes. This causes liver disease whilst the plasma deficiency of an important proteinase inhibitor predisposes to emphysema. The Thr114Phe and Gly117Phe mutations border a surface...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gooptu, Bibek, Miranda, Elena, Nobeli, Irene, Mallya, Meera, Purkiss, Andrew, Leigh Brown, Sarah C., Summers, Charlotte, Phillips, Russell L., Lomas, David A., Barrett, Tracey E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2723994/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19232354
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2009.01.069
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author Gooptu, Bibek
Miranda, Elena
Nobeli, Irene
Mallya, Meera
Purkiss, Andrew
Leigh Brown, Sarah C.
Summers, Charlotte
Phillips, Russell L.
Lomas, David A.
Barrett, Tracey E.
author_facet Gooptu, Bibek
Miranda, Elena
Nobeli, Irene
Mallya, Meera
Purkiss, Andrew
Leigh Brown, Sarah C.
Summers, Charlotte
Phillips, Russell L.
Lomas, David A.
Barrett, Tracey E.
author_sort Gooptu, Bibek
collection PubMed
description The common Z mutant (Glu342Lys) of α(1)-antitrypsin results in the formation of polymers that are retained within hepatocytes. This causes liver disease whilst the plasma deficiency of an important proteinase inhibitor predisposes to emphysema. The Thr114Phe and Gly117Phe mutations border a surface cavity identified as a target for rational drug design. These mutations preserve inhibitory activity but reduce the polymerisation of wild-type native α(1)-antitrypsin in vitro and increase secretion in a Xenopus oocyte model of disease. To understand these effects, we have crystallised both mutants and solved their structures. The 2.2 Å structure of Thr114Phe α(1)-antitrypsin demonstrates that the effects of the mutation are mediated entirely by well-defined partial cavity blockade and allows in silico screening of fragments capable of mimicking the effects of the mutation. The Gly117Phe mutation operates differently, repacking aromatic side chains in the helix F–β-sheet A interface to induce a half-turn downward shift of the adjacent F helix. We have further characterised the effects of these two mutations in combination with the Z mutation in a eukaryotic cell model of disease. Both mutations increase the secretion of Z α(1)-antitrypsin in the native conformation, but the double mutants remain more polymerogenic than the wild-type (M) protein. Taken together, these data support different mechanisms by which the Thr114Phe and Gly117Phe mutations stabilise the native fold of α(1)-antitrypsin and increase secretion of monomeric protein in cell models of disease.
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spelling pubmed-27239942009-08-18 Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design Gooptu, Bibek Miranda, Elena Nobeli, Irene Mallya, Meera Purkiss, Andrew Leigh Brown, Sarah C. Summers, Charlotte Phillips, Russell L. Lomas, David A. Barrett, Tracey E. J Mol Biol Article The common Z mutant (Glu342Lys) of α(1)-antitrypsin results in the formation of polymers that are retained within hepatocytes. This causes liver disease whilst the plasma deficiency of an important proteinase inhibitor predisposes to emphysema. The Thr114Phe and Gly117Phe mutations border a surface cavity identified as a target for rational drug design. These mutations preserve inhibitory activity but reduce the polymerisation of wild-type native α(1)-antitrypsin in vitro and increase secretion in a Xenopus oocyte model of disease. To understand these effects, we have crystallised both mutants and solved their structures. The 2.2 Å structure of Thr114Phe α(1)-antitrypsin demonstrates that the effects of the mutation are mediated entirely by well-defined partial cavity blockade and allows in silico screening of fragments capable of mimicking the effects of the mutation. The Gly117Phe mutation operates differently, repacking aromatic side chains in the helix F–β-sheet A interface to induce a half-turn downward shift of the adjacent F helix. We have further characterised the effects of these two mutations in combination with the Z mutation in a eukaryotic cell model of disease. Both mutations increase the secretion of Z α(1)-antitrypsin in the native conformation, but the double mutants remain more polymerogenic than the wild-type (M) protein. Taken together, these data support different mechanisms by which the Thr114Phe and Gly117Phe mutations stabilise the native fold of α(1)-antitrypsin and increase secretion of monomeric protein in cell models of disease. Elsevier 2009-04-10 /pmc/articles/PMC2723994/ /pubmed/19232354 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2009.01.069 Text en © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Open Access under CC BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) license
spellingShingle Article
Gooptu, Bibek
Miranda, Elena
Nobeli, Irene
Mallya, Meera
Purkiss, Andrew
Leigh Brown, Sarah C.
Summers, Charlotte
Phillips, Russell L.
Lomas, David A.
Barrett, Tracey E.
Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design
title Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design
title_full Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design
title_fullStr Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design
title_full_unstemmed Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design
title_short Crystallographic and Cellular Characterisation of Two Mechanisms Stabilising the Native Fold of α(1)-Antitrypsin: Implications for Disease and Drug Design
title_sort crystallographic and cellular characterisation of two mechanisms stabilising the native fold of α(1)-antitrypsin: implications for disease and drug design
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2723994/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19232354
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2009.01.069
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