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Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation

Ecotin is a homodimeric serine protease inhibitor produced by many commensal and pathogenic microbes. It functions as a virulence factor, enabling survival of various pathogens in the blood. The ecotin dimer binds two protease molecules, and each ecotin protomer has two protease-binding sites: site1...

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Autores principales: Nagy, Zoltán Attila, Héja, Dávid, Bencze, Dániel, Kiss, Bence, Boros, Eszter, Szakács, Dávid, Fodor, Krisztián, Wilmanns, Matthias, Kocsis, Andrea, Dobó, József, Gál, Péter, Harmat, Veronika, Pál, Gábor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9136129/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35483450
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.101985
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author Nagy, Zoltán Attila
Héja, Dávid
Bencze, Dániel
Kiss, Bence
Boros, Eszter
Szakács, Dávid
Fodor, Krisztián
Wilmanns, Matthias
Kocsis, Andrea
Dobó, József
Gál, Péter
Harmat, Veronika
Pál, Gábor
author_facet Nagy, Zoltán Attila
Héja, Dávid
Bencze, Dániel
Kiss, Bence
Boros, Eszter
Szakács, Dávid
Fodor, Krisztián
Wilmanns, Matthias
Kocsis, Andrea
Dobó, József
Gál, Péter
Harmat, Veronika
Pál, Gábor
author_sort Nagy, Zoltán Attila
collection PubMed
description Ecotin is a homodimeric serine protease inhibitor produced by many commensal and pathogenic microbes. It functions as a virulence factor, enabling survival of various pathogens in the blood. The ecotin dimer binds two protease molecules, and each ecotin protomer has two protease-binding sites: site1 occupies the substrate-binding groove, whereas site2 engages a distinct secondary region. Owing to the twofold rotational symmetry within the ecotin dimer, sites 1 and 2 of a protomer bind to different protease molecules within the tetrameric complex. Escherichia coli ecotin inhibits trypsin-like, chymotrypsin-like, and elastase-like enzymes, including pancreatic proteases, leukocyte elastase, key enzymes of blood coagulation, the contact and complement systems, and other antimicrobial cascades. Here, we show that mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-1 (MASP-1) and MASP-2, essential activators of the complement lectin pathway, and MASP-3, an essential alternative pathway activator, are all inhibited by ecotin. We decipher in detail how the preorganization of site1 and site2 within the ecotin dimer contributes to the inhibition of each MASP enzyme. In addition, using mutated and monomeric ecotin variants, we show that site1, site2, and dimerization contribute to inhibition in a surprisingly target-dependent manner. We present the first ecotin:MASP-1 and ecotin:MASP-2 crystal structures, which provide additional insights and permit structural interpretation of the observed functional results. Importantly, we reveal that monomerization completely disables the MASP-2-inhibitory, MASP-3-inhibitory, and lectin pathway–inhibitory capacity of ecotin. These findings provide new opportunities to combat dangerous multidrug-resistant pathogens through development of compounds capable of blocking ecotin dimer formation.
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spelling pubmed-91361292022-06-04 Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation Nagy, Zoltán Attila Héja, Dávid Bencze, Dániel Kiss, Bence Boros, Eszter Szakács, Dávid Fodor, Krisztián Wilmanns, Matthias Kocsis, Andrea Dobó, József Gál, Péter Harmat, Veronika Pál, Gábor J Biol Chem Research Article Ecotin is a homodimeric serine protease inhibitor produced by many commensal and pathogenic microbes. It functions as a virulence factor, enabling survival of various pathogens in the blood. The ecotin dimer binds two protease molecules, and each ecotin protomer has two protease-binding sites: site1 occupies the substrate-binding groove, whereas site2 engages a distinct secondary region. Owing to the twofold rotational symmetry within the ecotin dimer, sites 1 and 2 of a protomer bind to different protease molecules within the tetrameric complex. Escherichia coli ecotin inhibits trypsin-like, chymotrypsin-like, and elastase-like enzymes, including pancreatic proteases, leukocyte elastase, key enzymes of blood coagulation, the contact and complement systems, and other antimicrobial cascades. Here, we show that mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-1 (MASP-1) and MASP-2, essential activators of the complement lectin pathway, and MASP-3, an essential alternative pathway activator, are all inhibited by ecotin. We decipher in detail how the preorganization of site1 and site2 within the ecotin dimer contributes to the inhibition of each MASP enzyme. In addition, using mutated and monomeric ecotin variants, we show that site1, site2, and dimerization contribute to inhibition in a surprisingly target-dependent manner. We present the first ecotin:MASP-1 and ecotin:MASP-2 crystal structures, which provide additional insights and permit structural interpretation of the observed functional results. Importantly, we reveal that monomerization completely disables the MASP-2-inhibitory, MASP-3-inhibitory, and lectin pathway–inhibitory capacity of ecotin. These findings provide new opportunities to combat dangerous multidrug-resistant pathogens through development of compounds capable of blocking ecotin dimer formation. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2022-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC9136129/ /pubmed/35483450 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.101985 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Nagy, Zoltán Attila
Héja, Dávid
Bencze, Dániel
Kiss, Bence
Boros, Eszter
Szakács, Dávid
Fodor, Krisztián
Wilmanns, Matthias
Kocsis, Andrea
Dobó, József
Gál, Péter
Harmat, Veronika
Pál, Gábor
Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
title Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
title_full Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
title_fullStr Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
title_full_unstemmed Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
title_short Synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of MASP enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
title_sort synergy of protease-binding sites within the ecotin homodimer is crucial for inhibition of masp enzymes and for blocking lectin pathway activation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9136129/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35483450
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.101985
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