Fu Ling, Liang Jack J-N
Center for Ophthalmic Research, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and the Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2003 Mar;44(3):1155-9. doi: 10.1167/iovs.02-0950.
A recent study demonstrated the presence of protein-protein interactions among lens crystallins in a mammalian cell two-hybrid system assay and speculated about the significance of these interactions for protein solubility and lens transparency. The current study extends those findings to the following crystallin genes involved in some congenital cataracts: CRYAA (R116C), CRYAB (R120G), and CRYGC (T5P).
A mammalian two-hybrid system was used to assay the protein-protein interactions. Congenital cataract crystallin genes were cloned and fused into the two-hybrid system vectors (target and prey proteins). Together, with the third vector containing a reporter gene, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT), they were cotransfected into human HeLa cells. The presence of protein-protein interactions and the strength of these interactions were assayed by CAT ELISA.
The pattern of changes in protein-protein interactions of those congenital cataract gene products with the three major crystallins, alphaA- or alphaB-, betaB2-, and gammaC-crystallins, differed. For the T5P gammaC-crystallin, most of the interactions were decreased; for the R116C alphaA-crystallin, the interactions with betaB2- and gammaC-crystallin decreased and those with alphaB-crystallin and heat-shock protein (Hsp)27 increased; and for the R120G alphaB-crystallin, the interactions with alphaA- and alphaB-crystallin decreased, but those with betaB2- and gammaC-crystallin increased slightly. An attempt was made to interpret the results on the basis of conformational change and disruption of dimeric interaction involving beta-strands.
The results clearly indicate that crystallin mutations involved in congenital cataracts altered protein-protein interactions, which may contribute to decreased protein solubility and formation of cataract.
最近一项研究在哺乳动物细胞双杂交系统分析中证明了晶状体晶状体蛋白之间存在蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用,并推测了这些相互作用对蛋白质溶解性和晶状体透明度的意义。当前研究将这些发现扩展到一些先天性白内障所涉及的以下晶状体蛋白基因:CRYAA(R116C)、CRYAB(R120G)和CRYGC(T5P)。
使用哺乳动物双杂交系统分析蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用。将先天性白内障晶状体蛋白基因克隆并融合到双杂交系统载体(靶蛋白和诱饵蛋白)中。与包含报告基因氯霉素乙酰转移酶(CAT)的第三个载体一起,将它们共转染到人宫颈癌细胞系HeLa细胞中。通过CAT ELISA分析蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用的存在及其强度。
这些先天性白内障基因产物与三种主要晶状体蛋白(αA-或αB-、βB2-和γC-晶状体蛋白)之间的蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用变化模式不同。对于T5P γC-晶状体蛋白,大多数相互作用减弱;对于R116C αA-晶状体蛋白,与βB2-和γC-晶状体蛋白的相互作用减弱,而与αB-晶状体蛋白和热休克蛋白(Hsp)27的相互作用增强;对于R120G αB-晶状体蛋白,与αA-和αB-晶状体蛋白的相互作用减弱,但与βB2-和γC-晶状体蛋白的相互作用略有增强。尝试基于构象变化和涉及β链的二聚体相互作用破坏来解释结果。
结果清楚地表明,先天性白内障所涉及的晶状体蛋白突变改变了蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用,这可能导致蛋白质溶解性降低和白内障形成。