Williams Michael R, Lehman Sarah J, Tardiff Jil C, Schwartz Steven D
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721;
Physiological Sciences, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85724;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Mar 22;113(12):3257-62. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1519541113. Epub 2016 Mar 8.
Calcium binding and dissociation within the cardiac thin filament (CTF) is a fundamental regulator of normal contraction and relaxation. Although the disruption of this complex, allosterically mediated process has long been implicated in human disease, the precise atomic-level mechanisms remain opaque, greatly hampering the development of novel targeted therapies. To address this question, we used a fully atomistic CTF model to test both Ca(2+) binding strength and the energy required to remove Ca(2+) from the N-lobe binding site in WT and mutant troponin complexes that have been linked to genetic cardiomyopathies. This computational approach is combined with measurements of in vitro Ca(2+) dissociation rates in fully reconstituted WT and cardiac troponin T R92L and R92W thin filaments. These human disease mutations represent known substitutions at the same residue, reside at a significant distance from the calcium binding site in cardiac troponin C, and do not affect either the binding pocket affinity or EF-hand structure of the binding domain. Both have been shown to have significantly different effects on cardiac function in vivo. We now show that these mutations independently alter the interaction between the Ca(2+) ion and cardiac troponin I subunit. This interaction is a previously unidentified mechanism, in which mutations in one protein of a complex indirectly affect a third via structural and dynamic changes in a second to yield a pathogenic change in thin filament function that results in mutation-specific disease states. We can now provide atom-level insight that is potentially highly actionable in drug design.
心肌细肌丝(CTF)内的钙结合和解离是正常收缩和舒张的基本调节机制。尽管这种由变构介导的复杂过程的破坏长期以来一直被认为与人类疾病有关,但其精确的原子水平机制仍不清楚,这极大地阻碍了新型靶向治疗方法的开发。为了解决这个问题,我们使用了一个完全原子化的CTF模型,来测试野生型和与遗传性心肌病相关的突变肌钙蛋白复合物中Ca(2+)的结合强度以及从N叶结合位点去除Ca(2+)所需的能量。这种计算方法与在完全重构的野生型以及心肌肌钙蛋白T R92L和R92W细肌丝中体外Ca(2+)解离速率的测量相结合。这些人类疾病突变代表了同一残基处已知的替代,位于与心肌肌钙蛋白C中钙结合位点有相当距离的位置,并且不影响结合口袋亲和力或结合结构域的EF手结构。两者都已被证明在体内对心脏功能有显著不同的影响。我们现在表明,这些突变独立地改变了Ca(2+)离子与心肌肌钙蛋白I亚基之间的相互作用。这种相互作用是一种以前未被识别的机制,其中复合物中一种蛋白质的突变通过第二种蛋白质的结构和动态变化间接影响第三种蛋白质,从而导致细肌丝功能的致病性变化,进而导致特定突变的疾病状态。我们现在可以提供在药物设计中可能具有高度可操作性的原子水平见解。