Department of Chemistry, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122, United States.
Department of Medical Genetics & Molecular Biochemistry, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, 3440 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19140, United States.
Biochemistry. 2022 Aug 16;61(16):1669-1682. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00224. Epub 2022 Jul 27.
FOXO1, a member of the family of winged-helix motif Forkhead box (FOX) transcription factors, is the most abundantly expressed FOXO member in mature B cells. Sequencing of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) tumors and cell lines identified specific mutations in the forkhead domain linked to loss of function. Differential scanning calorimetry and thermal shift assays were used to characterize how eight of these mutations affect the stability of the FOX domain. Mutations L183P and L183R were found to be particularly destabilizing. Electrophoresis mobility shift assays show these same mutations also disrupt FOXO1 binding to their canonical DNA sequences, suggesting that the loss of function is due to destabilization of the folded structure. Computational modeling of the effect of mutations on FOXO1 folding was performed using alchemical free energy perturbation (FEP), and a Markov model of the entire folding reaction was constructed from massively parallel molecular simulations, which predicts folding pathways involving the late folding of helix α3. Although FEP can qualitatively predict the destabilization from L183 mutations, we find that a simple hydrophobic transfer model, combined with estimates of unfolded-state solvent-accessible surface areas from molecular simulations, is able to more accurately predict changes in folding free energies due to mutations. These results suggest that the atomic detail provided by simulations is important for the accurate prediction of mutational effects on folding stability. Corresponding disease-associated mutations in other FOX family members support further experimental and computational studies of the folding mechanism of FOX domains.
FOXO1 是 winged-helix motif Forkhead box (FOX) 转录因子家族的成员之一,是成熟 B 细胞中表达最丰富的 FOXO 成员。对弥漫性大 B 细胞淋巴瘤 (DLBCL) 肿瘤和细胞系的测序确定了与功能丧失相关的特定 forkhead 结构域突变。差示扫描量热法和热位移测定用于表征这八种突变如何影响 FOX 结构域的稳定性。发现突变 L183P 和 L183R 特别不稳定。电泳迁移率变动分析显示,这些相同的突变也破坏了 FOXO1 与其典型 DNA 序列的结合,这表明功能丧失是由于折叠结构的不稳定。使用自由能摄动(FEP)对突变对 FOXO1 折叠的影响进行了计算建模,并使用大规模并行分子模拟构建了整个折叠反应的 Markov 模型,该模型预测了涉及螺旋 α3 晚期折叠的折叠途径。虽然 FEP 可以定性地预测 L183 突变引起的不稳定,但我们发现,简单的疏水性转移模型结合分子模拟中未折叠状态溶剂可及表面积的估计,可以更准确地预测突变引起的折叠自由能变化。这些结果表明,模拟提供的原子细节对于准确预测突变对折叠稳定性的影响是重要的。其他 FOX 家族成员中的相应疾病相关突变支持 FOX 结构域折叠机制的进一步实验和计算研究。