Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0601 United States.
Acc Chem Res. 2022 Dec 6;55(23):3303-3311. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00497. Epub 2022 Oct 31.
Water-soluble proteins as well as membrane-bound proteins associate with membrane surfaces and bind specific lipid molecules in specific sites on the protein. Membrane surfaces include the traditional bilayer membranes of cells and subcellular organelles formed by phospholipids. Monolayer membranes include the outer monolayer phospholipid surface of intracellular lipid droplets of triglycerides and various lipoproteins including HDL, LDL, VLDL, and chylomicrons. These lipoproteins circulate in our blood and lymph systems and contain triglycerides, cholesterol, cholesterol esters, and proteins in their interior, and these are sometimes interspersed on their surfaces. Similar lipid-water interfaces also occur in mixed micelles of phospholipids and bile acids in our digestive system, which may also include internalized triglycerides and cholesterol esters. Diacyl phospholipids constitute the defining molecules of biological membranes. Phospholipase A (PLA) hydrolyzes phospholipid acyl chains at the -1 position of membrane phospholipids, phospholipase A (PLA) hydrolyzes acyl chains at the -2 position, phospholipase C (PLC) hydrolyzes the glycerol-phosphodiester bond, and phospholipase D (PLD) hydrolyzes the polar group-phosphodiester bond. Of the phospholipases, the PLAs have been the most well studied at the mechanistic level. The PLA superfamily consists of 16 groups and numerous subgroups, and each is generally described as one of 6 types. The most well studied of the PLAs include extensive genetic and mutational studies, complete lipidomics specificity characterization, and crystallographic structures. This Account will focus principally on results from deuterium exchange mass spectrometric (DXMS) studies of PLA interactions with membranes and extensive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of their interactions with membranes and specific phospholipids bound in their catalytic and allosteric sites. These enzymes either are membrane-bound or are water-soluble and associate with membranes before extracting their phospholipid substrate molecule into their active site to carry out their enzymatic hydrolytic reaction. We present evidence that when a PLA associates with a membrane, the membrane association can result in a conformational change in the enzyme whereby the membrane association with an allosteric site on the enzyme stabilizes the enzyme in an active conformation on the membrane. We sometimes refer to this transition from a "closed" conformation in aqueous solution to an "open" conformation when associated with a membrane. The enzyme can then extract a single phospholipid substrate into its active site, and catalysis occurs. We have also employed DXMS and MD simulations to characterize how PLAs interact with specific inhibitors that could lead to potential therapeutics. The PLAs constitute a paradigm for how membranes interact allosterically with proteins, causing conformational changes and activation of the proteins to enable them to extract and bind a specific phospholipid from a membrane for catalysis, which is probably generalizable to intracellular and extracellular transport and phospholipid exchange processes as well as other specific biological functions. We will focus on the four main types of PLA, namely, the secreted (sPLA), cytosolic (cPLA), calcium-independent (iPLA), and lipoprotein-associated PLA (Lp-PLA) also known as platelet-activating factor acetyl hydrolase (PAF-AH). Studies on a well-studied specific example of each of the four major types of the PLA superfamily demonstrate clearly that protein subsites can show precise specificity for one of the phospholipid hydrophobic acyl chains, often the one at the -2 position, including exquisite sensitivity to the number and position of double bonds.
水溶性蛋白质以及膜结合蛋白与膜表面结合,并在蛋白质的特定部位结合特定的脂质分子。膜表面包括细胞的传统双层膜和由磷脂形成的亚细胞器的单层膜。单层膜包括细胞内甘油三酯和各种脂蛋白(包括高密度脂蛋白、低密度脂蛋白、极低密度脂蛋白和乳糜微粒)的脂质滴的外层单层磷脂表面。这些脂蛋白在我们的血液和淋巴系统中循环,其内部含有甘油三酯、胆固醇、胆固醇酯和蛋白质,有时这些物质也会散布在其表面。在我们的消化系统中,类似的脂 - 水界面也存在于磷脂和胆汁酸的混合胶束中,其中可能还包括内吞的甘油三酯和胆固醇酯。二酰基磷脂是生物膜的定义分子。磷脂酶 A(PLA)在膜磷脂的-1 位水解磷脂酰基链,磷脂酶 A(PLA)在-2 位水解酰基链,磷脂酶 C(PLC)水解甘油磷酸二酯键,而磷脂酶 D(PLD)水解极性基团 - 磷酸二酯键。在磷脂酶中,PLA 在机制水平上的研究最为广泛。PLA 超家族由 16 个组和许多亚组组成,通常每个组被描述为 6 种类型之一。研究最为广泛的 PLA 包括广泛的遗传和突变研究、完整的脂质组学特异性特征描述以及晶体结构。本账户将主要关注 PLA 与膜相互作用的氘交换质谱(DXMS)研究结果,以及其与膜和特定磷脂在催化和变构位点结合的广泛分子动力学(MD)模拟。这些酶要么与膜结合,要么是水溶性的,在提取其磷脂底物分子进入其活性部位进行酶水解反应之前,与膜结合。我们提供的证据表明,当 PLA 与膜结合时,膜结合可以导致酶的构象变化,其中酶与变构部位的膜结合稳定了酶在膜上的活性构象。我们有时将这种从水溶液中的“封闭”构象到与膜结合时的“开放”构象的转变称为“开放”构象。然后,酶可以将单个磷脂底物提取到其活性部位,并进行催化。我们还利用 DXMS 和 MD 模拟来表征 PLA 如何与特定抑制剂相互作用,这些抑制剂可能导致潜在的治疗方法。PLA 构成了膜与蛋白质变构相互作用的范例,导致蛋白质构象变化和激活,使它们能够从膜中提取并结合特定的磷脂进行催化,这可能适用于细胞内和细胞外运输以及磷脂交换过程以及其他特定的生物学功能。我们将重点介绍四大主要类型的 PLA,即分泌型(sPLA)、胞质型(cPLA)、钙非依赖性(iPLA)和脂蛋白相关 PLA(Lp-PLA),也称为血小板激活因子乙酰水解酶(PAF-AH)。对 PLA 超家族的每一种主要类型的一个经过充分研究的特定例子的研究清楚地表明,蛋白质亚基位点可以对一个磷脂疏水性酰基链表现出精确的特异性,通常是-2 位的酰基链,包括对双键的数量和位置的敏感性。