From the Departments of Pathology and Comparative
Medicine and § Biochemistry, Wake Forest University
School of Medicine, Winston-Salen, North Carolina 27157 and the
Departments of Immunology and Vascular Biology, The Scripps
Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037
![]() |
ABSTRACT |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) activates
the plasma enzyme lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT),
catalyzing the rapid conversion of lipoprotein cholesterol to
cholesterol ester. Structural mutants of apoA-I have been used to study
the details of apoA-I-LCAT-catalyzed cholesterol ester formation.
Several studies have shown that the -helical segments corresponding
to amino acids 143-164 and 165-186 (repeats 6 and 7) are essential
for LCAT activation. In the present studies, we examined how the
orientation of the hydrophobic face, independent of an increase in
overall hydrophobicity, affects LCAT activation. We designed,
expressed, and characterized a mutant, reverse of 6 apoA-I (RO6
apoA-I), in which the primary amino acid sequence of repeat 6 (amino
acids 143-164) was reversed from its normal orientation. This mutation
rotates the hydrophobic face of repeat 6 approximately 80°.
Lipid-free RO6 apoA-I showed a marked stabilization when denatured by
guanidine hydrochloride, but showed significant destabilization to
guanidine hydrochloride denaturation in the lipid-bound state compared
with wild-type apoA-I. Recombinant high density lipoprotein discs
(rHDL) formed from RO6 apoA-I,
sn-1-palmitoyl-sn-2-oleoyl
phosphati-dylcholine, and cholesterol were
approximately 12 Å smaller than wild-type apoA-I rHDL. The reduced
size suggests that one of the repeats did not effectively participate
in phospholipid binding and organization. The
sn-1-palmitoyl-sn-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine
RO6 rHDL were a less effective substrate for LCAT. Mapping the entire
lipid-free and lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I with a series of monoclonal
antibodies revealed that both the lipid-free and lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I
displayed altered or absent epitopes in domains within and
adjacent to repeat 6. Together, these results suggest that the proper
alignment and orientation of the hydrophobic face of repeat 6 is an
important determinant for maintaining and stabilizing helix-bilayer and helix-helix interactions.
![]() |
INTRODUCTION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Apolipoprotein A-I
(apoA-I)1 organizes
phospholipid and cholesterol for use in the conversion of cholesterol
to cholesterol ester by the plasma enzyme, lecithin:cholesterol
acyltransferase (LCAT) (1-4). A number of investigations have focused
on identifying the precise molecular mechanism by which apolipoprotein
A-I activates LCAT. Studies of apoA-I deletion mutants have shown that
the -helical amino acid domains, 143-164 and 165-186 (repeats 6 and 7), were essential for LCAT activation and when removed from the
primary sequence, severely disable (>95%) the ability of the protein
to activate LCAT (5-8). Other investigations using monoclonal
antibodies to inhibit cholesterol esterification (9-12) or mimetic
peptides to delineate key structural domains have suggested that other apoA-I regions, e.g. amino acids 99-120, may participate in
the co-activation process (13). It still, however, remains unclear which domain(s) are most important in LCAT activation and the mechanism(s) by which they activate the enzyme.
Arranging all 10 apoA-I 11- or 22-mer repeats on Edmunson helical wheel
diagrams clearly demonstrates the partitioning of the hydrophilic and
hydrophobic amino acids onto opposite faces of the helical wheel, thus
illustrating their amphipathic character (14-16). Based on this
property, it has been suggested that each apoA-I repeat cooperatively
participates in organizing phospholipid into a discoidal complex (rHDL)
through the alignment of their hydrophobic faces parallel to the
phospholipid acyl chains. It has been proposed that the penetration
depth of each 22-mer amphipathic domain correlates to its total
hydrophobicity, i.e. to its overall hydrophobic amino acid
composition (16). However, only recently has it become apparent that a
interrelationship exists between the hydrophobic amino acid
distribution and the ability of an amphipathic -helix repeat to
activate LCAT (17).
By examining the role of the hydrophobic residues within repeat 6 we have been able to refine our understanding of how apoA-I activates LCAT. Previous studies showed that substitution of apoA-I's repeat 10 for repeat 6 (10F6 apoA-I), significantly increased apoA-I rHDL's helix-bilayer stability to denaturation without altering global secondary conformation (17). The increase in apoprotein-phospholipid bilayer stability was accompanied by a substantial reduction in the ability of 10F6 apoA-I rHDL to activate LCAT. We proposed that the increase in helix-bilayer and helix-helix interactions that result from the repeat 10 for 6 substitution cause the 121-165 domain (repeats 5 and 6) to penetrate more deeply into the rHDL phospholipid bilayer, thereby restricting LCAT's access to the boundary phospholipid acyl chains and reducing the overall catalytic efficiency (17).
In the present study we constructed a mutant apoA-I (RO6 apoA-I) having the hydrophobic face of repeat 6 rotated 80° with respect to wild-type apoA-I, and then characterized the ability of this mutant to bind lipid and activate LCAT. Discoidal rHDL containing RO6 apoA-I were significantly smaller in diameter, and exhibited a 5-fold lower ability to activate LCAT than wild-type apoA-I rHDL. Monoclonal antibody epitope mapping was used to analyze conformational changes. This technique demonstrated altered or absent epitopes spanning the domains adjacent to repeat 6 in both the lipid-free and lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I. These studies confirm the idea that the optimal alignment and orientation of repeat 6's hydrophobic face are important determinants in maintaining and stabilizing apoA-I helix-phospholipid bilayer interactions and that these interactions are key structural features regulating LCAT activation.
![]() |
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
High performance liquid chromatography-grade organic solvents were from Fisher Scientific. All other chemical reagents were purchased from Sigma unless otherwise noted. [3H]Cholesterol was from NEN Life Science Products Inc. Tissue culture reagents, restriction endonucleases, and other DNA modifying enzymes were from Life Technologies, Inc.
Design and Expression of Wild-type and Mutant pBlueBac III:ApoA-I
Constructs--
Wild-type, 6 apoA-I (lacking residues 143-164),
5/6 apoA-I (lacking residues 121-164), and 10F6 apoA-I (replacement
of repeat 6 for repeat 10) cDNA:pBlueBac III constructs were used
in conjunction with the Autographa californica nuclear
polyhedrosis virus linear viral DNA for co-transfection into Sf9
cells, as described previously (17, 18). The apoA-I mutant, called RO6
apoA-I, contains the reverse or inverted primary sequence of repeat 6 at residues 143-164 and was cloned into the Life Technologies, Inc.
pFastBac1 expression vector. The RO6 apoA-I bacmid vector was prepared
using the wild-type apoA-I pBlue BacIII construct as template, our
standard 5' most apoA-I cDNA primer (17, 18) and the RO6 mutagenic
primer which reverses the orientation of residues 143-164 or repeat 6. The RO6 mutagenic primer sequence:
5'-CTCGTCGTCGCTGTAGGGCAGGCCCTCCTCCATGCGGTCGCGCGCGCGGGCATGCACGTCCGCCAGGCGCGTATGCAGGGCTGGGCTCAGCTTCTC-3'.
Preparation, Purification, and Characterization of Recombinant Wild-type and Mutant Forms of ApoA-I from Baculovirus-infected Sf9 Cells-- Preparation and purification of recombinant wild-type and 10F6 apoA-I protein were carried out as previously reported (17, 18). The final purified protein was dissolved in 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate, pH 7.4, and its concentration determined by the method of Lowry (20). The molecular weights of the proteins were confirmed by electrospray mass spectrometry on a Quattro II mass spectrometer.
Preparation of rHDL Containing Wild-type and Mutant Forms of
ApoA-I--
A molar ratio of 80:4:1, POPC:cholesterol:apoA-I was used
for making rHDL essentially as described for the preparation of L--dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) wild-type and
10F6 apoA-I rHDL at a starting molar ratio of 100:5:1 (17, 18).
Briefly, 1.9 mg of POPC in chloroform (30 mg/ml) was added to 48 µg
of cholesterol dissolved in ethanol (10 mg/ml) and 10 µl (10 µCi) of radiolabeled [1,2-3H]cholesterol (50 Ci/mmol) in
ethanol. Organic solvents were removed under a stream of argon and the
tubes were placed under vacuum for 30 min. Sodium cholate, 2.1 mg, was
added, the solution vortexed and then incubated for 30 min at 27 °C.
The mixture was briefly vortexed 3 times during the 10-min incubation.
To this mixture, 0.9 mg of wild-type or mutant apoA-I was added and the
incubation continued for an additional 20 min at 4 °C. Sodium
cholate was removed by dialysis against 10 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 140 mM NaCl, 0.25 mM EDTA, and 0.15 mM sodium azide at 27 °C. The rHDL were then purified by
passage through a Superose 12 (Pharmacia) column (55 × 1.8 cm) at
a flow rate of 1 ml/min. Phospholipid, cholesterol, and protein assays
were performed to determine the final molar composition of the rHDL
(17, 18). A final concentration of 1% SDS was used in the Lowry method
for protein determination of rHDL complexes to prevent solution
turbidity. The number of molecules of mutant apoA-I per substrate
particle was determined by apoprotein cross-linking with dimethyl
suberimidate as described by Swaney (21) followed by SDS 4-30%
polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis.
Nondenaturating Gradient Gel Electrophoresis-- DMPC and POPC rHDL sizes were determined using 4-30% nondenaturating gradient gel electrophoresis (22), as described previously (17, 18). rHDL particle size was determined by comparison to protein standards of known Stokes' diameter (23).
Circular Dichroism Spectroscopy and Guanidine Hydrochloride
Denaturation Studies--
Circular dichroism spectra were recorded
with a Jasco J720 spectropolarimeter at 25 °C using a 0.1-cm path
length cell. Ellipticity was measured at 222 nm. Five scans were
recorded, averaged, and the background subtracted. Mean molar residue
ellipticity (q) is reported as degrees
cm2·dmol1, and calculated from the
equation, [q] = qobs·115/10 · l · c, where qobs is the
observed ellipticity at 222 nm in degrees, 115 is the mean residue
molecular weight of the protein, l is the optical path
length in centimeters, and c the protein concentration in
g/ml. The percent
-helix content was calculated from the formula of
Chen et al. (24) [q]222 = (
30,300·fh)
2,340. Stabilities of lipid-free
and lipid-bound POPC rHDL were determined by plotting the mean residue
ellipticity versus guanidine hydrochloride concentration and
expressed as the concentration of GdnHCl that reduced the ellipticity
by 50% (D1/2).
Epitope Mapping of Lipid-free and Lipid-bound RO6
ApoA-I--
Competitive solid-phase immunoassays were used to assess
the binding of monoclonal antibodies to lipid-free apoA-I and POPC rHDL
containing apoA-I. With two exceptions (antibodies AI-17 and AI-141.7)
each antibody used in this study has been described and their epitopes
on wild-type apoA-I documented (25). The epitopes of antibodies AI-17
and AI-147.7 were localized to residues 143-165 and 220-242,
respectively, on the basis of their binding to apoA-I mutant
proteins.2 The immunoassays
were performed as described (17). Briefly, isolated human plasma apoA-I
or plasma HDL (0.05 ml of 5 µg/ml) were immobilized onto 96-well
Falcon 3911 Microtest III flexible assay plates. After postcoating the
plates, increasing amounts of a purified apoA-I or recombinant A-I
discs (0.025 ml) diluted in phosphate-buffered saline containing 3%
normal goat serum were added to wells in the presence of 0.025 ml of
ascites fluid containing a limiting amount of monoclonal antibody
(typically dilutions of 1 × 104 to 1 × 10
6). Competitor concentrations listed in the figures
represent the final concentrations (µg/ml) in the 0.05-ml reaction
mixture. The plates were incubated overnight at 4 °C. After washing
the wells, mouse antibody binding to the immobilized antigen was
detected by a second 1-h incubation at 37 °C with
125I-labeled goat anti-mouse IgG. All data were expressed
as B/Bo where B is the
counts/min bound in the presence of competitor, and
Bo is the counts/min bound in the absence of
competitor. To compare the affinity of the antibodies for POPC rHDL
containing wild-type or mutant apoA-I as competitor, the slopes of
logit-transformed B/Bo ratios were
determined by linear regression and subjected to tests of equality.
LCAT Reaction Kinetics of POPC rHDL Containing Wild-type and
Mutant ApoA-I--
The LCAT reaction was monitored by following the
cholesterol to cholesterol ester conversion using POPC rHDL containing
either wild-type or mutant apoA-I. The complexes were assayed in
duplicate using 0-1.0 µg of substrate cholesterol in a final
concentration of 10 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 140 mM
NaCl, 0.25 mM EDTA, and 0.15 mM sodium azide,
0.6% fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin, 2 mM -mercaptoethanol, and 25 ng of purified human plasma LCAT (26). The
reactions were carried out for 15-60 min at 37 °C, and the conversion of [3H]cholesterol to
[3H]cholesterol ester was determined by lipid extraction
of the incubation mixture followed by thin layer chromatography. The extent of cholesterol esterification was kept below 15% to maintain first-order kinetics. The fractional cholesterol esterification rate
was expressed as nanomoles of cholesterol ester formed per hour per ml
of LCAT, as described previously (17, 18). Apparent Vmax and Km values were
determined from Hanes-Woolf plots (17) of rHDL cholesterol substrate
concentration (µM) divided by the cholesterol ester
formation rate (nmol/h/ml LCAT) versus rHDL cholesterol
concentration (µM).
Data Analysis-- Values are given as the mean ± S.D. Statistical comparisons were made using the Student's t test.
![]() |
RESULTS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Edmunson helical wheel diagrams of repeat 6, shown in Fig. 1, for wild-type and RO6 apoA-I show that the hydrophobic and hydrophilic face orientations differ by approximately 80°. We hypothesized that the rotation of the hydrophobic face relative to the adjacent helical domains would disrupt the protein-lipid stabilization normally present in wild-type apoA-I. Potential stabilizing apoprotein helix-phospholipid bilayer interactions affected by the rotation include hydrophobic interactions between the hydrophobic face of repeat 6 residues and the phospholipid bilayer as well as hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions between repeat 6 and adjacent repeats 5 and 7.
|
To characterize the properties of RO6 apoA-I we prepared rHDL
containing either DMPC or POPC at a 100:5:1 or 80:4:1,
phospholipid:cholesterol:apoprotein molar ratio, respectively. As shown
in Fig. 2, nondenaturating gradient gel
electrophoresis showed that the column purified DMPC or POPC RO6 apoA-I
rHDL were approximately 8-11 Å smaller in diameter than DMPC or POPC
wild-type apoA-I rHDL. The final molar compositions of both DMPC and
POPC RO6 apoA-I rHDL are listed along with their approximate particle
diameters in Table I. Recombinant HDL
composed of 6 apoA-I, a mutant apoA-I having the complete deletion
of repeat 6 (amino acids 143-164), formed complexes of the same size as the RO6 apoA-I, Table I. The DMPC or POPC rHDL made with
5/6 (complete deletion of repeats 5 and 6, amino acids 121-164) were approximately 14-20 Å smaller than those made with wild-type
apoA-I.
|
|
The denaturation of lipid-free and lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I by GdnHCl
showed that lipid-free RO6 apoA-I had a significantly higher
D1/2 = 1.39 ± 0.05 M, than
lipid-free wild-type apoA-I, D1/2 = 1.02 ± 0.05 M (n = 3, p < 0.05),
suggesting that repeat 6 of RO6 apoA-I is more stabilized by
inter-helical interactions than lipid-free wild-type apoA-I. Mutant
lipid-free 6 and 10F6 apoA-I had D1/2 values of
1.30 ± 0.10 and 1.46 ± 0.09 M, respectively, similar to RO6 apoA-I, whereas, lipid-free
5/6 apoA-I had a
D1/2 = 1.00 ± 0.06 M, that was
similar to wild-type apoA-I (Table II). These results suggest that the greater degree of apoprotein
inter-helical association in 10F6, RO6, and
6 apoA-I results from a
conformation adopted to minimize hydrophobic residue exposure to the
polar aqueous environment. In agreement with other reports (27, 28), no
significant difference in
-helix content was seen among the various
lipid-free mutant apoproteins compared with wild-type apoA-I, since
most of the
-helical structure has been shown to reside in the
N-terminal half of the molecule.
|
In contrast to the D1/2 observed for lipid-free
apoA-I, POPC RO6 apoA-I rHDL had a significantly lower
D1/2 (2.30 ± 0.08 M,
p < 0.05), compared with POPC wild-type apoA-I rHDL,
D1/2 = 2.65 ± 0.13 M GdnHCl. POPC
6 apoA-I rHDL was also found to be significantly different from POPC
wild-type apoA-I rHDL with D1/2 = 2.35 ± 0.07. In contrast, 10F6 apoA-I rHDL had a significantly higher
D1/2 (3.05 ± 0.14 M,
p < 0.05), compared with wild-type apoA-I rHDL,
indicating a more stable association between apoprotein and the lipid
bilayer. The 10F6 apoA-I substitution mutation was also shown to have a significantly higher D1/2 when compared with
wild-type apoA-I complexed to DMPC (17). As noted for the lipid-free
apoprotein state, there were no significant differences in the
-helix content of POPC mutant apoA-I containing rHDL and POPC
wild-type apoA-I rHDL.
The ability of the POPC RO6 apoA-I rHDL to activate LCAT was compared
with POPC wild-type apoA-I rHDL. As shown in Fig.
3 and Table
III, POPC RO6 apoA-I rHDL and POPC 5/6
apoA-I rHDL had similar rates of cholesterol esterification and showed
a 4-5-fold lower rate (nmol/h ml of LCAT) than POPC wild-type apoA-I
rHDL. In contrast, POPC
6 apoA-I rHDL and POPC 10F6 apoA-I had even lower rates of cholesterol esterification compared with wild-type (approximately 7-fold reduction). Table III shows the apparent kinetic
constants of the LCAT reaction for all of the POPC mutant apoA-I
containing rHDL complexes. Interestingly, no differences were seen
between the apparent Km determined for POPC wild-type, RO6, or
5/6 apoA-I rHDL. However, POPC 10F6 and
6 apoA-I had a 2-3-fold greater apparent Km than
wild-type apoA-I rHDL (Table III).
|
|
To probe the conformational changes induced by the RO6 apoA-I mutation we carried out epitope mapping studies of lipid-free and lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I. First, the binding capacities of each antibody for lipid-free and lipid-bound RO6 and wild-type apoA-I were compared using competitive immunoassays (17, 25). Of the 13 antibodies tested, eight N-terminal epitopes between residues 1 and 137, one within the 143 to 165 residue region, and two antibodies that identify C-terminal epitopes between residues 187 and 243 were found to bind well to both apoproteins (data not shown). These antibodies had binding ratios that indicate that these epitopes were expressed in both apoproteins in a similar manner and suggest that there were only minimal differences in the extent of epitope expression between the two apoproteins. In contrast, two antibodies that identify epitopes between residues 137 to 147 and 178 to 200 on wild-type apoA-I either did not bind to RO6 apoA-I or bound very poorly, as shown in Fig. 4, panels A and C, respectively.
|
The conformational changes caused by the association of RO6 apoA-I with lipid were also studied using the same 13 antibodies. The binding among the eight N-terminal antibodies was similar to that observed with lipid-free RO6 apoA-I (data not shown). Both lipid-free RO6 apoA-I (Fig. 4, panel A, left) and lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I (Fig. 4, panel A, right), showed a complete absence of the epitope corresponding to residues 137 to 147 (junction of repeats 5 and 6). Lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I showed a reduced binding capacity to the epitope corresponding to residues 178 to 200 (repeats 7 and 8) compared with wild-type apoA-I. However, antibody A1-17 corresponding to residues 143-165 (repeat 6) bound equally well to lipid-bound RO6 and wild-type apoA-I, suggesting that although the repeat 6 sequence of RO6 apoA-I had been inverted, its wild-type epitope conformation had been maintained.
![]() |
DISCUSSION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
In this study we describe the biophysical and biochemical properties of a mutant form of apoA-I, RO6, in which the hydrophobic and hydrophilic faces of repeat 6 (amino acids 143-164) have been rotated approximately 80° from their native position in wild-type apoA-I repeat 6. These studies support an earlier hypothesis which suggested the role of apoA-I in LCAT activation was to disrupt the water-bilayer interface and expose the buried substrate for LCAT (29, 30). The present study extends this idea and demonstrates that both the orientation and amino acid composition of the hydrophobic face of repeat 6 and thus, its interaction with the phospholipid bilayer are the major structural features regulating interfacial LCAT activation and catalysis (16, 17).
Previous studies have clearly demonstrated that the region corresponding to residues 121-186 was involved in LCAT activation (5-8, 17, 31). Investigations designed to pinpoint structural features of this region that activate LCAT have demonstrated the importance of the hydrophobic face (17). Those studies strongly suggest that the overall hydrophobicity of the repeat 6 22-mer can modulate LCAT activation without altering the overall substrate size and composition (17). POPC 10F6 apoA-I rHDL showed a 17-fold reduction in catalytic efficiency as compared with POPC wild-type apoA-I rHDL. In either DMPC (17) or POPC rHDL 10F6 apoA-I had a significantly higher D1/2 than the respective wild-type apoA-I rHDL (Table II). Combined, these results strongly suggest that the greater fractional hydrophobic area occupying the helix face coupled with a higher hydrophobicity per residue content for the substituted repeat 6 (repeat 10) resulted in a tighter association between the hydrophobic face and the phospholipid bilayer, thus potentially restricting interaction between LCAT and bilayer acyl chains. Additional support for the apoA-I hydrophobic face-bilayer stabilization comes from NMR studies of a peptide activator of LCAT in which the hydrophobic interactions between nonpolar amino acid side chains and lipid appeared to be the most important factor in stabilizing the apoprotein-lipid complex (32). Furthermore, NMR analysis of a 166-185 residue apoA-I fragment bound to micelles suggested that helix-helix interactions were not common and may not be important stabilization factors. This is consistent with the suggestion that cationic side chains located between the polar and nonpolar faces of adjacent helices would likely cause repulsive interactions if tightly spaced (33).
The RO6 apoA-I studies support the hydrophobic face-LCAT activation
hypothesis since displacement of the hydrophobic and hydrophilic faces
of repeat 6 functionally prevent this domain from independently interacting with the substrate phospholipid bilayer without rotation of
the helix. The diameters and final molar compositions of either DMPC or
POPC RO6 apoA-I rHDL were shown to be similar to the respective 6
apoA-I rHDL, which lacks repeat 6 entirely (Table I), suggesting that
one
-helix per molecule of apoA-I has been removed from the
periphery of the rHDL. In addition, GdnHCl denaturation
D1/2 values were found to be similar for both RO6
and
6 apoA-I in both lipid-free and lipid-bound states (Table II).
Our interpretation of these data are supported by the work of Jonas and
colleagues (34-37) which demonstrated that rHDL containing 2 molecules
of apoA-I per particle may vary in diameter as a function of the number
of
-helical segments per apoA-I molecule in contact with lipid.
Using the area taken up by an
-helix (i.e. approximately 12 Å) rHDL with diameters of 78 Å, 86 Å, or 96 Å would contain a
total of 6, 7, or 8 apoA-I
-helical segments, respectively, of
wild-type apoA-I per particle in contact with lipid. Based on this
hypothesis rHDL containing RO6 or
6 apoA-I with diameters of 86 Å would have one less
-helical segment per molecule in contact with
phospholipid compared with rHDL containing wild-type apoA-I. In the
case of
6 apoA-I this change resulted from the deletion of repeat 6, whereas, for RO6 apoA-I this change resulted from a shift in the
orientation of the hydrophobic and hydrophilic faces within repeat 6. Thus, we interpret these data as indicating that RO6 apoA-I repeat 6 is
functionally absent, i.e. not in direct contact with the
phospholipid bilayer and possibly more tightly associated with adjacent
helical domains.
Alterations in apoA-I secondary structure are not necessarily associated with changes in rHDL size or composition, e.g. 10F6 apoA-I rHDL (17). 10F6 apoA-I rHDL were dramatically deficient (17-fold) in their LCAT catalytic efficiency as compared with wild-type apoA-I rHDL (Table III), but this apparent reduction in LCAT catalytic efficiency did not result from global alterations in rHDL size or composition. In the 10F6 apoA-I mutation the epitope corresponding to residues 143-164 was absent in 10F6 apoA-I, as would be expected (17). While, adjacent domains corresponding to repeats 4 and 5 (monoclonal epitopes mapped to residues 119-144, and 137-147) were altered compared with wild-type apoA-I (17). Overall, these results suggest that the activation of LCAT is sensitive to the secondary structure of apoA-I in the 121-164 residue domain and its activation may depend on the precise alignment and interaction among adjacent helices (6, 17, 38-40). We have proposed that helix-helix interactions may provide optimal molecular spacing for LCAT's active site to access interfacial phospholipids, however, it is also possible that these interactions form a region which acts as a recognition site for direct interaction with LCAT or its active site (3).
Secondary structure mapping of RO6 apoA-I using monoclonal antibodies (Fig. 4B) showed that the epitopes corresponding to amino acids 143-165 in RO6 apoA-I (repeat 6) had a similar binding affinity and binding capacity to repeat 6 of wild-type apoA-I in either the lipid-free or lipid-bound form (Fig. 4). In contrast, the epitope spanning the junction of repeats 5 and 6 (amino acids 137-147) in lipid-free or lipid-bound RO6 apoA-I was completely absent, compared with wild-type apoA-I (Fig. 4A). These results can be explained if the hydrophilic face of RO6 repeat 6 is exposed and conformationally similar to wild-type apoA-I repeat 6, while the hydrophobic face, interacts more tightly with repeat 5. Presumably these interactions between apoA-I and the phospholipid bilayer reduce the size of the RO6 rHDL.
LCAT activation studies by Jonas and colleagues (34-37) have shown
that full-length wild-type apoA-I can form heterogeneous rHDL and that
LCAT activation varied with rHDL size and composition. We have shown
that 6 and RO6 apoA-I form rHDL that were smaller than wild-type
apoA-I (Table I and Fig. 2). Therefore, a direct quantitative
comparison of wild-type apoA-I rHDL LCAT catalytic efficiency with that
of
6 or RO6 apoA-I rHDL is complex. In this study, we have
demonstrated that rotation of apoA-I repeat 6 does not alter the rHDL
size, composition,
-helix content, or D1/2
compared with
6 apoA-I (Tables I and II). Consistent with Jonas and
colleagues (34-37)
6 and RO6 apoA-I rHDL LCAT activation properties
are similar (Table III and Fig. 3). However, the
6 apoA-I rHDL
showed a consistently lower LCAT catalytic efficiency and may result
from an entire 22-mer repeat deletion which could alter the hydrophobic
face orientation of all downstream repeats. Consistent with this idea, results from monoclonal epitope mapping of lipid-free and lipid-bound
6 apoA-I demonstrate alterations in secondary conformation within repeats 6, 7, 8, and 9.3 In
addition, the relative LCAT activation properties of RO6,
6, and
wild-type apoA-I were measured after being incorporated onto small
unilamellar vesicles of uniform size and
composition4 in order to
control for differences in substrate particle size. Unilamellar
vesicles of approximately 100 Å in diameter were used as substrates
for LCAT assays after preincubation with RO6 apoA-I,
6, or wild-type
apoA-I. These studies showed that
6 and RO6 apoA-I had only 5 and
15% of wild-type apoA-I activation, respectively. Thus, the rotation
of the hydrophobic face of a single 22-mer repeat has dramatic
consequences on LCAT activation independent of substrate size.
Lipid-free apoE (fragment 191-299) has been shown by x-ray
crystallography to exist as a four-helix bundle (41). The substitution pattern of hydrophobic and hydrophilic amino acids in these bundled helices was regularly repeated approximately every seven residues following a heptad repeat pattern. Leucine residues were found mostly
at positions 1 and 4, thereby placing them on a common helical face,
given one helical turn corresponds to approximately 3.6 residues.
Recent x-ray crystallography of a lipid-free fragment of apoA-I
(
1-43 amino acids) has suggested a functional role for heptad
repeats within apoA-I helices 2-7 (42). On the basis of sequence
homology, the 11-residue amphipathic
-helical motif of apoA-I can be
segregated into two helix types, A and B (38, 43). While the type B
helix follows the classical 1 and 4 heptad repeat pattern, the type A
helix exhibits a modified heptad repeat in which the hydrophobic
residues are found at positions 1 and 5 (42). These authors conclude
that the modified heptad repeats (type A) serve to rotate the
orientation of the hydrophobic face relative to the unmodified heptad
repeats (type B). This frequent re-orientation of the hydrophobic face
may be necessary to allow the apoprotein to wrap around the surface of
a curved lipid-containing particles while keeping the hydrophobic faces
associated with the edge of the rHDL (42, 44, 45).
In wild-type apoA-I the type A and B repeat pattern between residues 141 and 168 (including repeats 5/6 junction, repeat 6, and repeats 6/7 junction) is B-A-B. For 10F6 apoA-I the pattern is the same (B-A-B). It should be noted that 10F6 apoA-I has additional highly hydrophobic residues (2 leucines and 1 valine) at positions other than 1-4 or 1-5 within the substituted repeat. The greater number and hydrophobicity of residues increases the hydrophobic face hydrophobicity, causing the substituted repeat to penetrate deeper in the phospholipid bilayer and causing a dramatic reduction in LCAT activation. In RO6 apoA-I the type A and B repeat pattern is inverted, and reads A-B-A. The inversion of the repeat 6 hydrophobic face may result in its inability to interact optimally with the phospholipid bilayer, in addition to restricting its hydrophobic face alignment relative to adjacent helices 5 and 7. Given the limited flexibility of the repeat 6 helix around the proline residues at positions 143 and 165 (44, 45), this limited flexibility may cause repeat 6 of RO6 apoA-I to interact more strongly with adjacent helices. In summary, we have demonstrated that the proper alignment and orientation of the hydrophobic face of apoA-I repeat 6 is an important determinant in maintaining and stabilizing helix-bilayer and helix-helix interactions and that these interactions are a key structural feature regulating LCAT activation.
![]() |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
---|
We gratefully acknowledge the technical assistance of Carol Banka, Kathi Richards, Abraham Gebre, and the editorial assistance of Nancy H. Nelson.
![]() |
FOOTNOTES |
---|
* This work was supported in part by United States Public Health Service Grants HL-49373 (to M. S. T. and J. S. P.) and HL-43815 (to L. K. C.) from the National Institutes of Health. The mass spectrometry facility was supported in part by center Grant CA12197 from the National Cancer Institute and purchased in part with funds from National Science Foundation Grant BIR-9414018.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
¶ Established Investigator of the American Heart Association. To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Pathology and Comparative Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd., Winston-Salem, NC 27157. Tel.: 336-716-2147; Fax: 336-716-6279; E-mail: msthomas{at}wfubmc.edu.
1 The abbreviations used are: apoA-I, apoprotein A-I; LCAT, lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase; rHDL, recombinant high density lipoprotein; POPC, sn-1-palmitoyl-sn-2-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine; GdnHCl, guanidine hydrochloride.
2 L. Curtiss and M. G. Sorci-Thomas, unpublished observations.
3 L. Curtiss, M. Sorci-Thomas, unpublished results.
4 M. Sorci-Thomas, M. W. Kearns, and M. Landrum, unpublished observations.
![]() |
REFERENCES |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|