An alkane hydroxylase from the marine organism Alcanivorax borkumensis (AbAlkB) was purified. The purified protein retained high activity in an assay with purified rubredoxin (AlkG), purified maize ferridoxin reductase, NADPH, and selected substrates. The reaction mechanism of the purified protein was probed using the radical clock substrates bicyclo[4.1.0]heptane (norcarane), bicyclo[3.1.0]hexane (bicyclohexane), methylphenylcyclopropane and deuterated and non-deuterated cyclohexane. The distribution of products from the radical clock substrates supports the hypothesis that purified AbAlkB hydroxylates substrates by forming a substrate radical. Experiments with deuterated cyclohexane indicate that the rate-determining step has significant C-H bond breaking character. The products formed from a number of differently shaped and sized substrates were characterized to determine the active site constraints of this AlkB. AbAlkB can catalyze the hydroxylation of a large number of aromatic compounds and linear and cyclic alkanes. It does not catalyze the hydroxylation of alkanes with a chain length longer than 15 carbons, nor does it hydroxylate sterically hindered C-H bonds.
Mechanistic details of intramembrane aspartyl protease (IAP) chemistry, which is central to many biological and pathogenic processes, remain largely obscure. Here, we investigated the in vitro kinetics of a microbial intramembrane aspartyl protease (mIAP) fortuitously acting on the renin substrate angiotensinogen and the C-terminal transmembrane segment of amyloid precursor protein (C100), which is cleaved by the presenilin subunit of γ-secretase, an Alzheimer disease (AD)-associated IAP. mIAP variants with substitutions in active-site and putative substrate gating residues generally exhibit impaired, but not abolished, activity toward angiotensinogen, and retain the predominant cleavage site (His-Thr). The aromatic ring, but not its hydroxyl substituent, in Tyr of the catalytic Tyr-Asp (YD) motif plays a catalytic role, and the hydrolysis reaction incorporates bulk water as in soluble aspartyl proteases. mIAP hydrolyzes the transmembrane region of C100 at two major presenilin cleavage sites, one corresponding to the AD-associated Aβ42 peptide (Ala-Thr) and the other the nonpathogenic Aβ48 (Thr-Leu). For the former site, we observed more favorable kinetics in lipid bilayer-mimicking bicelles than in detergent solution, indicating that substrate-lipid and substrate-enzyme interactions both contribute to catalytic rates. High-resolution MS analyses across four substrates support a preference for threonine at the scissile bond. However, results from threonine-scanning mutagenesis of angiotensinogen indicate a competing positional preference for cleavage. Our results indicate that IAP cleavage is controlled by both positional and chemical factors, opening up new avenues for selective IAP inhibition for therapeutic interventions. INTRODUCTIONIntramembrane proteases (IPs) cleave within a transmembrane (TM) helix of membranebound substrates to release cytoplasmic or extracellular proteins/peptides, which in turn translocate to different regions of the cell where they elicit their corresponding biological response related to, for example, cell differentiation, development, and metabolism (1). Despite their broad biomedical reach, basic questions surrounding the structure of the active enzyme, how substrates are presented, and how hydrolysis chemistry occurs in an active site sequestered within the hydrophobic lipid membrane, remain active areas of research.The least biochemically understood IP is the intramembrane aspartyl protease (IAP) enzyme class, one of just three bona fide IP types that hydrolyze substrates within the hydrophobic lipid environment by using different catalytic nucleophiles (2). IAPs employ membrane-
Chemical details of intramembrane proteolysis remain elusive despite its prevalence throughout biology. We developed a FRET peptide assay for the intramembrane aspartyl protease (IAP) from Methanoculleus marisnigri JR1 in combination with quantitative mass spectrometry cleavage site analysis. IAP can hydrolyze the angiotensinogen sequence, a substrate for the soluble aspartyl protease renin, at a predominant cut site, His-Thr. Turnover is slow (min(-1) × 10(-3)), affinity and Michaelis constant (Km) values are in the low micromolar range, and both catalytic rates and cleavage sites are the same in detergent as reconstituted into bicelles. Three well-established, IAP-directed inhibitors were directly confirmed as competitive, albeit with modest inhibitor constant (Ki) values. Partial deletion of the first transmembrane helix results in a biophysically similar but less active enzyme than full-length IAP, indicating a catalytic role. Our study demonstrates previously unappreciated similarities with soluble aspartyl proteases, provides new biochemical features of IAP and inhibitors, and offers tools to study other intramembrane protease family members in molecular detail.
Intramembrane aspartyl proteases (IAPs) comprise one of four families of integral membrane proteases that hydrolyze substrates within the hydrophobic lipid bilayer. IAPs include signal peptide peptidase, which processes remnant signal peptides from nascent polypeptides in the endoplasmic reticulum, and presenilin, the catalytic component of the γ-secretase complex that processes Notch and amyloid precursor protein. Despite their broad biomedical reach, basic structure-function relationships of IAPs remain active areas of research. Characterization of membrane-bound proteins is notoriously challenging due to their inherently hydrophobic character. For IAPs, oligomerization state in solution is one outstanding question, with previous proposals for monomer, dimer, tetramer, and octamer. Here we used small angle neutron scattering (SANS) to characterize n-dodecyl-β-D-maltopyranoside (DDM) detergent solutions containing and absent a microbial IAP ortholog. A unique feature of SANS is the ability to modulate the solvent composition to mask all but the enzyme of interest. The signal from the IAP was enhanced by deuteration and, uniquely, scattering from DDM and buffers were matched by the use of both tail-deuterated DDM and DO. The radius of gyration calculated for IAP and the corresponding ab initio consensus model are consistent with a monomer. The model is slightly smaller than the crystallographic IAP monomer, suggesting a more compact protein in solution compared with the crystal lattice. Our study provides direct insight into the oligomeric state of purified IAP in surfactant solution, and demonstrates the utility of fully contrast-matching the detergent in SANS to characterize other intramembrane proteases and their membrane-bound substrates.
Several approaches have produced an effective vaccine against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). However, the influence of immunity against other vaccinations on the durability and efficacy of the immune response against SARS-CoV-2 is still unknown in settings where vaccines against other viruses need to be administered simultaneously. This will be an important factor in developing multivalent vaccines against seasonal viruses. We have developed a hybrid vaccine for SARS-CoV-2 and influenza viruses using influenza virus-like particles (VLP) incorporated with glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored Spike RBD of SARS-CoV-2 fused to GM-CSF as an adjuvant. GPI-anchored fusion protein of GM-CSF and the SARS-CoV-2 S1 RBD was expressed in CHO-S cells, purified by immunoaffinity chromatography and incorporated onto influenza VLPs by protein transfer to make a hybrid VLP vaccine. The efficacy of the hybrid VLP vaccine was tested against both SARS-CoV-2 and influenza A/PR8 viruses in a mouse model. Our results show that the hybrid vaccine induced a strong antibody response and protected the mice from both influenza virus and mouse-adapted SARS-CoV-2 challenges, with vaccinated mice having less body weight loss and significantly lower lung viral titers compared to control mice. These results suggest that the hybrid vaccine is a promising candidate for preventing influenza A and SARS-CoV-2 infections. This work was supported by NIH/NIAID (SBIR Contract# 75N93019C00017 Amendment to Pack/Ramachandiran), and Intel Corporation for the Intel COVID-19 Global Technology Response Initiative grant.
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