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1.
Cell ; 185(22): 4206-4215.e11, 2022 10 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36206754

ABSTRACT

Mucus protects the epithelial cells of the digestive and respiratory tracts from pathogens and other hazards. Progress in determining the molecular mechanisms of mucus barrier function has been limited by the lack of high-resolution structural information on mucins, the giant, secreted, gel-forming glycoproteins that are the major constituents of mucus. Here, we report how mucin structures we determined enabled the discovery of an unanticipated protective role of mucus: managing the toxic transition metal copper. Using two juxtaposed copper binding sites, one for Cu2+ and the other for Cu1+, the intestinal mucin, MUC2, prevents copper toxicity by blocking futile redox cycling and the squandering of dietary antioxidants, while nevertheless permitting uptake of this important trace metal into cells. These findings emphasize the value of molecular structure in advancing mucosal biology, while introducing mucins, produced in massive quantities to guard extensive mucosal surfaces, as extracellular copper chaperones.


Subject(s)
Copper , Mucins , Mucins/metabolism , Mucin-2 , Copper/analysis , Copper/metabolism , Intestines , Mucus/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism
2.
Cell ; 183(3): 717-729.e16, 2020 10 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33031746

ABSTRACT

The respiratory and intestinal tracts are exposed to physical and biological hazards accompanying the intake of air and food. Likewise, the vasculature is threatened by inflammation and trauma. Mucin glycoproteins and the related von Willebrand factor guard the vulnerable cell layers in these diverse systems. Colon mucins additionally house and feed the gut microbiome. Here, we present an integrated structural analysis of the intestinal mucin MUC2. Our findings reveal the shared mechanism by which complex macromolecules responsible for blood clotting, mucociliary clearance, and the intestinal mucosal barrier form protective polymers and hydrogels. Specifically, cryo-electron microscopy and crystal structures show how disulfide-rich bridges and pH-tunable interfaces control successive assembly steps in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Remarkably, a densely O-glycosylated mucin domain performs an organizational role in MUC2. The mucin assembly mechanism and its adaptation for hemostasis provide the foundation for rational manipulation of barrier function and coagulation.


Subject(s)
Biopolymers/metabolism , Mucins/metabolism , von Willebrand Factor/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Disulfides/metabolism , Female , Glycosylation , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Models, Molecular , Mucins/chemistry , Mucins/ultrastructure , Peptides/chemistry , Protein Domains , Protein Multimerization , von Willebrand Factor/chemistry , von Willebrand Factor/ultrastructure
3.
EMBO J ; 42(2): e111869, 2023 01 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36245281

ABSTRACT

Mucus is made of enormous mucin glycoproteins that polymerize by disulfide crosslinking in the Golgi apparatus. QSOX1 is a catalyst of disulfide bond formation localized to the Golgi. Both QSOX1 and mucins are highly expressed in goblet cells of mucosal tissues, leading to the hypothesis that QSOX1 catalyzes disulfide-mediated mucin polymerization. We found that knockout mice lacking QSOX1 had impaired mucus barrier function due to production of defective mucus. However, an investigation on the molecular level revealed normal disulfide-mediated polymerization of mucins and related glycoproteins. Instead, we detected a drastic decrease in sialic acid in the gut mucus glycome of the QSOX1 knockout mice, leading to the discovery that QSOX1 forms regulatory disulfides in Golgi glycosyltransferases. Sialylation defects in the colon are known to cause colitis in humans. Here we show that QSOX1 redox control of sialylation is essential for maintaining mucosal function.


Subject(s)
Glycosyltransferases , Golgi Apparatus , Intestinal Mucosa , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors , Animals , Mice , Colon/metabolism , Disulfides/metabolism , Glycoproteins , Glycosyltransferases/metabolism , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Mucins/chemistry , Mucins/metabolism , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(15): e2116790119, 2022 04 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35377815

ABSTRACT

The glycoprotein von Willebrand factor (VWF) contributes to hemostasis by stanching injuries in blood vessel walls. A distinctive feature of VWF is its assembly into long, helical tubules in endothelial cells prior to secretion. When VWF is released into the bloodstream, these tubules unfurl to release linear polymers that bind subendothelial collagen at wound sites, recruit platelets, and initiate the clotting cascade. VWF evolved from gel-forming mucins, the polymeric glycoproteins that coat and protect exposed epithelia. Despite the divergent function of VWF in blood vessel repair, sequence conservation and shared domain organization imply that VWF retained key aspects of the mucin bioassembly mechanism. Here, we show using cryo-electron microscopy that the ability to form tubules, a property hitherto thought to have arisen as a VWF adaptation to the vasculature, is a feature of the amino-terminal region of mucin. This segment of the human intestinal gel-forming mucin (MUC2) was found to self-assemble into tubules with a striking resemblance to those of VWF itself. To facilitate a comparison, we determined the residue-resolution structure of tubules formed by the homologous segment of VWF. The structures of the MUC2 and VWF tubules revealed the flexible joints and the intermolecular interactions required for tubule formation. Steric constraints in full-length MUC2 suggest that linear filaments, a previously observed supramolecular assembly form, are more likely than tubules to be the physiological mucin storage intermediate. Nevertheless, MUC2 tubules indicate a possible evolutionary origin for VWF tubules and elucidate design principles present in mucins and VWF.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Mucin-1 , von Willebrand Factor , Mucin-1/chemistry , Protein Domains , Protein Structure, Secondary , von Willebrand Factor/chemistry
5.
Blood ; 140(26): 2835-2843, 2022 12 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36179246

ABSTRACT

The von Willebrand factor (VWF) glycoprotein is stored in tubular form in Weibel-Palade bodies (WPBs) before secretion from endothelial cells into the bloodstream. The organization of VWF in the tubules promotes formation of covalently linked VWF polymers and enables orderly secretion without polymer tangling. Recent studies have described the high-resolution structure of helical tubular cores formed in vitro by the D1D2 and D'D3 amino-terminal protein segments of VWF. Here we show that formation of tubules with the helical geometry observed for VWF in intracellular WPBs requires also the VWA1 (A1) domain. We reconstituted VWF tubules from segments containing the A1 domain and discovered it to be inserted between helical turns of the tubule, altering helical parameters and explaining the increased robustness of tubule formation when A1 is present. The conclusion from this observation is that the A1 domain has a direct role in VWF assembly, along with its known activity in hemostasis after secretion.


Subject(s)
Endothelial Cells , von Willebrand Factor , von Willebrand Factor/metabolism , Endothelial Cells/metabolism , Weibel-Palade Bodies/metabolism , Hemostasis
6.
EMBO J ; 38(15): e102743, 2019 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31328793

ABSTRACT

ATF6 is a major signal transducer for cellular reprogramming in response to protein mis-folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. However, the mechanism by which ATF6 senses unfolded proteins and becomes activated is not yet known. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Oka et al show that ERp18, a single-domain member of the protein disulfide isomerase family, interacts preferentially with ATF6 under stress conditions and regulates ATF6 transport to the Golgi apparatus. Furthermore, ERp18 impacts the ATF6 cleavage product generated in the Golgi, ultimately determining whether or not ATF6 becomes a functional transcription factor and induces the unfolded protein response.


Subject(s)
Activating Transcription Factor 6 , Golgi Apparatus , Endoplasmic Reticulum , Transcription Factors , Unfolded Protein Response
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(44): 27374-27380, 2020 11 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33077585

ABSTRACT

The complex environment of biological cells and tissues has motivated development of three-dimensional (3D) imaging in both light and electron microscopies. To this end, one of the primary tools in fluorescence microscopy is that of computational deconvolution. Wide-field fluorescence images are often corrupted by haze due to out-of-focus light, i.e., to cross-talk between different object planes as represented in the 3D image. Using prior understanding of the image formation mechanism, it is possible to suppress the cross-talk and reassign the unfocused light to its proper source post facto. Electron tomography based on tilted projections also exhibits a cross-talk between distant planes due to the discrete angular sampling and limited tilt range. By use of a suitably synthesized 3D point spread function, we show here that deconvolution leads to similar improvements in volume data reconstructed from cryoscanning transmission electron tomography (CSTET), namely a dramatic in-plane noise reduction and improved representation of features in the axial dimension. Contrast enhancement is demonstrated first with colloidal gold particles and then in representative cryotomograms of intact cells. Deconvolution of CSTET data collected from the periphery of an intact nucleus revealed partially condensed, extended structures in interphase chromatin.


Subject(s)
Electron Microscope Tomography/methods , Image Enhancement/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning Transmission/methods , Algorithms , Cell Line , Frozen Sections , Gold Colloid , Humans
8.
Nature ; 593(7859): 343-344, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33953388
10.
Mol Cell ; 51(3): 281-2, 2013 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23932712

ABSTRACT

In this issue, Lee et al. (2013) exhibit methionine sulfoxidation in a new light. By bringing together two antagonistic enzymes affecting methionine redox state, the authors demonstrate that methionine oxidation constitutes a reversible, posttranslational regulatory mechanism, akin to protein phosphorylation.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Macrophages/metabolism , Methionine Sulfoxide Reductases/genetics , Methionine/metabolism , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Mixed Function Oxygenases/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Animals , Microfilament Proteins
11.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(8): e1007207, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31442220

ABSTRACT

Antibodies developed for research and clinical applications may exhibit suboptimal stability, expressibility, or affinity. Existing optimization strategies focus on surface mutations, whereas natural affinity maturation also introduces mutations in the antibody core, simultaneously improving stability and affinity. To systematically map the mutational tolerance of an antibody variable fragment (Fv), we performed yeast display and applied deep mutational scanning to an anti-lysozyme antibody and found that many of the affinity-enhancing mutations clustered at the variable light-heavy chain interface, within the antibody core. Rosetta design combined enhancing mutations, yielding a variant with tenfold higher affinity and substantially improved stability. To make this approach broadly accessible, we developed AbLIFT, an automated web server that designs multipoint core mutations to improve contacts between specific Fv light and heavy chains (http://AbLIFT.weizmann.ac.il). We applied AbLIFT to two unrelated antibodies targeting the human antigens VEGF and QSOX1. Strikingly, the designs improved stability, affinity, and expression yields. The results provide proof-of-principle for bypassing laborious cycles of antibody engineering through automated computational affinity and stability design.


Subject(s)
Antibody Affinity , Drug Design , Immunoglobulin Variable Region/genetics , Protein Engineering/methods , Animals , Antibody Affinity/genetics , Computational Biology , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Immunoglobulin Fragments/chemistry , Immunoglobulin Fragments/genetics , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains/chemistry , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains/genetics , Immunoglobulin Light Chains/chemistry , Immunoglobulin Light Chains/genetics , Immunoglobulin Variable Region/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutation , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/antagonists & inhibitors , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/immunology , Peptide Library , Protein Engineering/statistics & numerical data , Protein Stability , Software , Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A/antagonists & inhibitors , Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A/immunology
12.
Chem Rev ; 118(3): 1169-1198, 2018 02 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28699750

ABSTRACT

Cysteine thiols are among the most reactive functional groups in proteins, and their pairing in disulfide linkages is a common post-translational modification in proteins entering the secretory pathway. This modest amino acid alteration, the mere removal of a pair of hydrogen atoms from juxtaposed cysteine residues, contrasts with the substantial changes that characterize most other post-translational reactions. However, the wide variety of proteins that contain disulfides, the profound impact of cross-linking on the behavior of the protein polymer, the numerous and diverse players in intracellular pathways for disulfide formation, and the distinct biological settings in which disulfide bond formation can take place belie the simplicity of the process. Here we lay the groundwork for appreciating the mechanisms and consequences of disulfide bond formation in vivo by reviewing chemical principles underlying cysteine pairing and oxidation. We then show how enzymes tune redox-active cofactors and recruit oxidants to improve the specificity and efficiency of disulfide formation. Finally, we discuss disulfide bond formation in a cellular context and identify important principles that contribute to productive thiol oxidation in complex, crowded, dynamic environments.


Subject(s)
Disulfides/chemistry , Proteins/metabolism , Sulfhydryl Compounds/chemistry , Bacteria/enzymology , Bacteria/metabolism , Glutathione Peroxidase/chemistry , Glutathione Peroxidase/metabolism , Periplasm/metabolism , Peroxiredoxins/chemistry , Peroxiredoxins/metabolism , Protein Disulfide-Isomerases/chemistry , Protein Disulfide-Isomerases/metabolism , Protein Folding , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Proteins/chemistry
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(47): 13384-13389, 2016 11 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27815530

ABSTRACT

Laminin, an ∼800-kDa heterotrimeric protein, is a major functional component of the extracellular matrix, contributing to tissue development and maintenance. The unique architecture of laminin is not currently amenable to determination at high resolution, as its flexible and narrow segments complicate both crystallization and single-particle reconstruction by electron microscopy. Therefore, we used cross-linking and MS, evaluated using computational methods, to address key questions regarding laminin quaternary structure. This approach was particularly well suited to the ∼750-Šcoiled coil that mediates trimer assembly, and our results support revision of the subunit order typically presented in laminin schematics. Furthermore, information on the subunit register in the coiled coil and cross-links to downstream domains provide insights into the self-assembly required for interaction with other extracellular matrix and cell surface proteins.


Subject(s)
Cross-Linking Reagents/chemistry , Laminin/chemistry , Animals , Computational Biology/methods , Mass Spectrometry , Mice , Models, Molecular , Protein Structure, Quaternary
14.
Biochemistry ; 57(32): 4776-4787, 2018 08 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29979586

ABSTRACT

Many mutations that cause familial hypercholesterolemia localize to ligand-binding domain 5 (LA5) of the low-density lipoprotein receptor, motivating investigation of the folding and misfolding of this small, disulfide-rich, calcium-binding domain. LA5 folding is known to involve non-native disulfide isomers, yet these folding intermediates have not been structurally characterized. To provide insight into these intermediates, we used nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to follow LA5 folding in real time. We demonstrate that misfolded or partially folded disulfide intermediates are indistinguishable from the unfolded state when focusing on the backbone NMR signals, which provide information on the formation of only the final, native state. However, 13C labeling of cysteine side chains differentiated transient intermediates from the unfolded and native states and reported on disulfide bond formation in real time. The cysteine pairings in a dominant intermediate were identified using 13C-edited three-dimensional NMR, and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations were used to investigate the preference of this disulfide set over other non-native arrangements. The transient population of LA5 species with particular non-native cysteine connectitivies during folding supports the conclusion that cysteine pairing is not random and that there is a bias toward certain structural ensembles during the folding process, even prior to the binding of calcium.


Subject(s)
Receptors, LDL/chemistry , Receptors, LDL/metabolism , Disulfides/chemistry , Kinetics , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Mass Spectrometry , Protein Binding , Protein Folding
15.
Glycobiology ; 28(8): 580-591, 2018 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29757379

ABSTRACT

Quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase 1 (QSOX1) catalyzes the formation of disulfide bonds in protein substrates. Unlike other enzymes with related activities, which are commonly found in the endoplasmic reticulum, QSOX1 is localized to the Golgi apparatus or secreted. QSOX1 is upregulated in quiescent fibroblast cells and secreted into the extracellular environment, where it contributes to extracellular matrix assembly. QSOX1 is also upregulated in adenocarcinomas, though the extent to which it is secreted in this context is currently unknown. To achieve a better understanding of factors that dictate QSOX1 localization and function, we aimed to determine how post-translational modifications affect QSOX1 trafficking and activity. We found a highly conserved N-linked glycosylation site to be required for QSOX1 secretion from fibroblasts and other cell types. Notably, QSOX1 lacking a glycan at this site arrives at the Golgi, suggesting that it passes endoplasmic reticulum quality control but is not further transported to the cell surface for secretion. The QSOX1 transmembrane segment is dispensable for Golgi localization and secretion, as fully luminal and transmembrane variants displayed the same trafficking behavior. This study provides a key example of the effect of glycosylation on Golgi exit and contributes to an understanding of late secretory sorting and quality control.


Subject(s)
Fibroblasts/metabolism , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/metabolism , Cell Line , Fibroblasts/cytology , Glycosylation , Golgi Apparatus/genetics , Humans , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/genetics , Protein Transport/physiology
16.
Nature ; 488(7411): 414-8, 2012 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22801504

ABSTRACT

Protein stability, assembly, localization and regulation often depend on the formation of disulphide crosslinks between cysteine side chains. Enzymes known as sulphydryl oxidases catalyse de novo disulphide formation and initiate intra- and intermolecular dithiol/disulphide relays to deliver the disulphides to substrate proteins. Quiescin sulphydryl oxidase (QSOX) is a unique, multi-domain disulphide catalyst that is localized primarily to the Golgi apparatus and secreted fluids and has attracted attention owing to its overproduction in tumours. In addition to its physiological importance, QSOX is a mechanistically intriguing enzyme, encompassing functions typically carried out by a series of proteins in other disulphide-formation pathways. How disulphides are relayed through the multiple redox-active sites of QSOX and whether there is a functional benefit to concatenating these sites on a single polypeptide are open questions. Here we present the first crystal structure of an intact QSOX enzyme, derived from a trypanosome parasite. Notably, sequential sites in the disulphide relay were found more than 40 Å apart in this structure, too far for direct disulphide transfer. To resolve this puzzle, we trapped and crystallized an intermediate in the disulphide hand-off, which showed a 165° domain rotation relative to the original structure, bringing the two active sites within disulphide-bonding distance. The comparable structure of a mammalian QSOX enzyme, also presented here, shows further biochemical features that facilitate disulphide transfer in metazoan orthologues. Finally, we quantified the contribution of concatenation to QSOX activity, providing general lessons for the understanding of multi-domain enzymes and the design of new catalytic relays.


Subject(s)
Disulfides/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Trypanosoma brucei brucei/enzymology , Amino Acid Motifs , Animals , Biocatalysis , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Humans , Mice , Models, Molecular , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Conformation , Rotation
17.
Mol Cell ; 40(5): 685-6, 2010 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21145477

ABSTRACT

In this issue of Molecular Cell, Ron and colleagues (Zito et al., 2010b) show that an enzyme responsible for cleaning up hydrogen peroxide in the endoplasmic reticulum can contribute productively to disulfide bond formation.

18.
Nature ; 473(7348): 540-3, 2011 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21532589

ABSTRACT

Molecular replacement procedures, which search for placements of a starting model within the crystallographic unit cell that best account for the measured diffraction amplitudes, followed by automatic chain tracing methods, have allowed the rapid solution of large numbers of protein crystal structures. Despite extensive work, molecular replacement or the subsequent rebuilding usually fail with more divergent starting models based on remote homologues with less than 30% sequence identity. Here we show that this limitation can be substantially reduced by combining algorithms for protein structure modelling with those developed for crystallographic structure determination. An approach integrating Rosetta structure modelling with Autobuild chain tracing yielded high-resolution structures for 8 of 13 X-ray diffraction data sets that could not be solved in the laboratories of expert crystallographers and that remained unsolved after application of an extensive array of alternative approaches. We estimate that the new method should allow rapid structure determination without experimental phase information for over half the cases where current methods fail, given diffraction data sets of better than 3.2 Å resolution, four or fewer copies in the asymmetric unit, and the availability of structures of homologous proteins with >20% sequence identity.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Models, Molecular , Proteins/chemistry , Structural Homology, Protein , Crystallography, X-Ray , Databases, Protein , Electrons , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
19.
Proteins ; 84 Suppl 1: 34-50, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26473983

ABSTRACT

The Critical Assessment of protein Structure Prediction (CASP) experiment would not have been possible without the prediction targets provided by the experimental structural biology community. In this article, selected crystallographers providing targets for the CASP11 experiment discuss the functional and biological significance of the target proteins, highlight their most interesting structural features, and assess whether these features were correctly reproduced in the predictions submitted to CASP11. Proteins 2016; 84(Suppl 1):34-50. © 2015 The Authors. Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/statistics & numerical data , Models, Molecular , Models, Statistical , Proteins/chemistry , Software , Bacteria/chemistry , Computational Biology/methods , Computer Graphics , Crystallography, X-Ray , Databases, Protein , Humans , International Cooperation , Protein Folding , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Protein Multimerization , Protein Structure, Secondary , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Viruses/chemistry
20.
Nature ; 459(7245): 371-8, 2009 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19458713

ABSTRACT

Intramembrane proteolysis is increasingly seen as a regulatory step in a range of diverse processes, including development, organelle shaping, metabolism, pathogenicity and degenerative disease. Initial scepticism over the existence of intramembrane proteases was soon replaced by intense exploration of their catalytic mechanisms, substrate specificities, regulation and structures. Crystal structures of metal-dependent and serine intramembrane proteases have revealed active sites embedded in the plane of the membrane but accessible by water, a requirement for hydrolytic reactions. Efforts to understand how these membrane-bound proteases carry out their reactions have started to yield results.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism , Animals , Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases/metabolism , Cell Membrane/enzymology , Humans , Hydrolysis , Metalloproteases/metabolism , Serine Endopeptidases/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
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