Journal:JBSD:39

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<b>Molecular Tour</b><br>
<b>Molecular Tour</b><br>
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Background: Plant proteinase Inhibitors (PIs) are ubiquitous in the plant kingdom and have been extensively studied as plant defense molecules, which inhibit hydrolytic enzymes of the insect gut <ref name="Green">PMID: 17836138</ref>. Among various PI families, Serine PI Pin-II/Pot-II family displays a remarkable structural and functional diversity at the gene and protein level <ref name="Kong">PMID: 18315854</ref>. Wound, herbivory and stress induced up-regulation of these PIs clearly link them to plant defense <ref name="Green">PMID: 17836138</ref>. Previous studies using transgenic systems or in vivo assays have positively correlated the advantage offered by Pin-II PI expression in plants against insect attack <ref name="Johnson">PMID: 2602379</ref> <ref name="Duan">PMID: 9630927</ref>. Precursor proteins of Pin-II PIs consist of 1- to 8- inhibitory repeat domains (IRDs) connected by proteolytic-sensitive linkers, which releases IRD units upon cleavage. Each IRD is a peptide of around 50 aa length with a molecular mass of ~6 KDa. The aa sequence of IRDs shows variations, at the same time the 8 cysteine residues that form disulfide bridge are conserved (Nielsen et al., 1995; Scanlon et al., 1999; Lee et al., 1999; Schirra et al., 2001). One structural feature of Pin-II IRD is a disordered loop with triple stranded &#946; sheet scaffold. The disordered solvent exposed reactive loop is anchored by the four conserved disulfide bonds (C4-C41, C7-C25, C8-C37 and C14-C50) (Schirra et al., 2005; Schirra et al., 2008). Among the four disulfide bonds, C8-C37 has been found to be very crucial for maintaining active conformation, whereas C4-C41 has an important role in maintaining the flexibility of the reactive loop (Schirra et al., 2010). Thus, any selective loss of disulfide bond is expected to have evolutionary significance leading to functional differentiation of inhibitors (Li et al., 2011).
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Background: Plant proteinase Inhibitors (PIs) are ubiquitous in the plant kingdom and have been extensively studied as plant defense molecules, which inhibit hydrolytic enzymes of the insect gut <ref name="Green">PMID: 17836138</ref>. Among various PI families, Serine PI Pin-II/Pot-II family displays a remarkable structural and functional diversity at the gene and protein level <ref name="Kong">PMID: 18315854</ref>. Wound, herbivory and stress induced up-regulation of these PIs clearly link them to plant defense <ref name="Green">PMID: 17836138</ref>. Previous studies using transgenic systems or in vivo assays have positively correlated the advantage offered by Pin-II PI expression in plants against insect attack <ref name="Johnson">PMID: 2602379</ref> <ref name="Duan">PMID: 9630927</ref>. Precursor proteins of Pin-II PIs consist of 1- to 8- inhibitory repeat domains (IRDs) connected by proteolytic-sensitive linkers, which releases IRD units upon cleavage. Each IRD is a peptide of around 50 aa length with a molecular mass of ~6 KDa. The aa sequence of IRDs shows variations, at the same time the 8 cysteine residues that form disulfide bridge are conserved <ref name="Nielsen">PMID: 7578034</ref> <ref name="Scanlon">PMID: 10425681</ref> <ref name="Lee">PMID: 10360353</ref> <ref name="Schirra">PMID: 11178894</ref>. One structural feature of Pin-II IRD is a disordered loop with triple stranded &#946; sheet scaffold. The disordered solvent exposed reactive loop is anchored by the four conserved disulfide bonds (C4-C41, C7-C25, C8-C37 and C14-C50) (Schirra et al., 2005; Schirra et al., 2008). Among the four disulfide bonds, C8-C37 has been found to be very crucial for maintaining active conformation, whereas C4-C41 has an important role in maintaining the flexibility of the reactive loop (Schirra et al., 2010). Thus, any selective loss of disulfide bond is expected to have evolutionary significance leading to functional differentiation of inhibitors (Li et al., 2011).
[A] Functionality: To assess the effect of aa variations on activity and structural stability different biochemical studies and 20 ns MD simulations was performed on IRD structures. Inhibition kinetic studies displayed a sigmoidal pattern with increasing concentrations of the inhibitors suggesting reversible and competitive inhibition with tight binding. IRD-9 turned out to be a stronger inhibitor of bovine trypsin (IC50 ~0.0022 mM) than IRD-7 (IC50 ~0.135 mM) and IRD-12 (IC50 ~0.065 mM).
[A] Functionality: To assess the effect of aa variations on activity and structural stability different biochemical studies and 20 ns MD simulations was performed on IRD structures. Inhibition kinetic studies displayed a sigmoidal pattern with increasing concentrations of the inhibitors suggesting reversible and competitive inhibition with tight binding. IRD-9 turned out to be a stronger inhibitor of bovine trypsin (IC50 ~0.0022 mM) than IRD-7 (IC50 ~0.135 mM) and IRD-12 (IC50 ~0.065 mM).
[B] Structural Variability: In accordance with the structure of a typical IRD belonging to Pin-II PI family, the predicted structures of CanPI also have three antiparallel &#946; sheets joined by disordered loops containing the reactive site and stabilized by four disulfide bonds. It was thought that the disulfide bonds act as structural scaffold to hold the reactive site in a relatively rigid conformation and provide thermal and proteolytic stability. A single 310, helix of one turn is also present in the structure, the disordered loop is held by disulfide bond in IRD-7 and -12 whereas by a network of intra molecular hydrogen bonds in IRD-9. Furthermore, Post-simulation analysis of the intramolecular hydrogen bonds illustrated that IRD-9 with two disulfide bonds (C7-C25 and C8-C37) less, has a relatively higher density of intra-molecular hydrogen bonds as compared to IRD-7 and -12. These intramolecular hydrogen bonds might be substituting the two lost disulfide bonds of IRD-9 to stabilize the protein structure in the active conformation and might be protecting the molecules from a hydrophobic collapse. The replaced serine residues in the place of two cysteines C7 and C8 in IRD-9 may be contributing to the increased number of hydrogen bonds.
[B] Structural Variability: In accordance with the structure of a typical IRD belonging to Pin-II PI family, the predicted structures of CanPI also have three antiparallel &#946; sheets joined by disordered loops containing the reactive site and stabilized by four disulfide bonds. It was thought that the disulfide bonds act as structural scaffold to hold the reactive site in a relatively rigid conformation and provide thermal and proteolytic stability. A single 310, helix of one turn is also present in the structure, the disordered loop is held by disulfide bond in IRD-7 and -12 whereas by a network of intra molecular hydrogen bonds in IRD-9. Furthermore, Post-simulation analysis of the intramolecular hydrogen bonds illustrated that IRD-9 with two disulfide bonds (C7-C25 and C8-C37) less, has a relatively higher density of intra-molecular hydrogen bonds as compared to IRD-7 and -12. These intramolecular hydrogen bonds might be substituting the two lost disulfide bonds of IRD-9 to stabilize the protein structure in the active conformation and might be protecting the molecules from a hydrophobic collapse. The replaced serine residues in the place of two cysteines C7 and C8 in IRD-9 may be contributing to the increased number of hydrogen bonds.

Revision as of 08:16, 12 November 2012

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  1. REF
  2. 2.0 2.1 Green TR, Ryan CA. Wound-Induced Proteinase Inhibitor in Plant Leaves: A Possible Defense Mechanism against Insects. Science. 1972 Feb 18;175(4023):776-7. PMID:17836138 doi:10.1126/science.175.4023.776
  3. Kong L, Ranganathan S. Tandem duplication, circular permutation, molecular adaptation: how Solanaceae resist pests via inhibitors. BMC Bioinformatics. 2008;9 Suppl 1:S22. PMID:18315854 doi:10.1186/1471-2105-9-S1-S22
  4. Johnson R, Narvaez J, An G, Ryan C. Expression of proteinase inhibitors I and II in transgenic tobacco plants: effects on natural defense against Manduca sexta larvae. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1989 Dec;86(24):9871-5. PMID:2602379
  5. Duan X, Li X, Xue Q, Abo-el-Saad M, Xu D, Wu R. Transgenic rice plants harboring an introduced potato proteinase inhibitor II gene are insect resistant. Nat Biotechnol. 1996 Apr;14(4):494-8. PMID:9630927 doi:10.1038/nbt0496-494
  6. Nielsen KJ, Heath RL, Anderson MA, Craik DJ. Structures of a series of 6-kDa trypsin inhibitors isolated from the stigma of Nicotiana alata. Biochemistry. 1995 Nov 7;34(44):14304-11. PMID:7578034
  7. Scanlon MJ, Lee MC, Anderson MA, Craik DJ. Structure of a putative ancestral protein encoded by a single sequence repeat from a multidomain proteinase inhibitor gene from Nicotiana alata. Structure. 1999 Jul 15;7(7):793-802. PMID:10425681
  8. Lee MC, Scanlon MJ, Craik DJ, Anderson MA. A novel two-chain proteinase inhibitor generated by circularization of a multidomain precursor protein. Nat Struct Biol. 1999 Jun;6(6):526-30. PMID:10360353 doi:10.1038/9293
  9. Schirra HJ, Scanlon MJ, Lee MC, Anderson MA, Craik DJ. The solution structure of C1-T1, a two-domain proteinase inhibitor derived from a circular precursor protein from Nicotiana alata. J Mol Biol. 2001 Feb 9;306(1):69-79. PMID:11178894 doi:10.1006/jmbi.2000.4318

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