Lajoie Daniel M, Roberts Sue A, Zobel-Thropp Pamela A, Delahaye Jared L, Bandarian Vahe, Binford Greta J, Cordes Matthew H J
From the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 and.
the Department of Biology, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon 97219.
J Biol Chem. 2015 Apr 24;290(17):10994-1007. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M115.636951. Epub 2015 Mar 9.
Venoms of the sicariid spiders contain phospholipase D enzyme toxins that can cause severe dermonecrosis and even death in humans. These enzymes convert sphingolipid and lysolipid substrates to cyclic phosphates by activating a hydroxyl nucleophile present in both classes of lipid. The most medically relevant substrates are thought to be sphingomyelin and/or lysophosphatidylcholine. To better understand the substrate preference of these toxins, we used (31)P NMR to compare the activity of three related but phylogenetically diverse sicariid toxins against a diverse panel of sphingolipid and lysolipid substrates. Two of the three showed significantly faster turnover of sphingolipids over lysolipids, and all three showed a strong preference for positively charged (choline and/or ethanolamine) over neutral (glycerol and serine) headgroups. Strikingly, however, the enzymes vary widely in their preference for choline, the headgroup of both sphingomyelin and lysophosphatidylcholine, versus ethanolamine. An enzyme from Sicarius terrosus showed a strong preference for ethanolamine over choline, whereas two paralogous enzymes from Loxosceles arizonica either preferred choline or showed no significant preference. Intrigued by the novel substrate preference of the Sicarius enzyme, we solved its crystal structure at 2.1 Å resolution. The evolution of variable substrate specificity may help explain the reduced dermonecrotic potential of some natural toxin variants, because mammalian sphingolipids use primarily choline as a positively charged headgroup; it may also be relevant for sicariid predatory behavior, because ethanolamine-containing sphingolipids are common in insect prey.
刺客蛛的毒液含有磷脂酶D酶毒素,可导致人类严重的皮肤坏死甚至死亡。这些酶通过激活两类脂质中存在的羟基亲核试剂,将鞘脂和溶血磷脂底物转化为环状磷酸酯。人们认为,与医学关系最为密切的底物是鞘磷脂和/或溶血磷脂酰胆碱。为了更好地了解这些毒素的底物偏好,我们使用磷-31核磁共振(³¹P NMR)来比较三种相关但系统发育不同的刺客蛛毒素对多种鞘脂和溶血磷脂底物的活性。三种毒素中有两种对鞘脂的周转明显快于溶血磷脂,并且三种毒素都强烈偏好带正电荷的(胆碱和/或乙醇胺)而非中性的(甘油和丝氨酸)头部基团。然而,令人惊讶的是,这些酶对鞘磷脂和溶血磷脂酰胆碱的头部基团胆碱与乙醇胺的偏好差异很大。来自特罗斯刺客蛛(Sicarius terrosus)的一种酶对乙醇胺的偏好远高于胆碱,而来自亚利桑那褐蛛(Loxosceles arizonica)的两种旁系同源酶要么偏好胆碱,要么没有明显偏好。受刺客蛛酶这种新的底物偏好的启发,我们以2.1埃的分辨率解析了它的晶体结构。可变底物特异性的进化可能有助于解释一些天然毒素变体皮肤坏死潜力降低的原因,因为哺乳动物鞘脂主要使用胆碱作为带正电荷的头部基团;这也可能与刺客蛛的捕食行为有关,因为含乙醇胺的鞘脂在昆虫猎物中很常见。