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1.
Biophys J ; 118(8): 1861-1875, 2020 04 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32246901

ABSTRACT

Many membrane proteins are thought to function as dimers or higher oligomers, but measuring membrane protein oligomerization in lipid membranes is particularly challenging. Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy are noninvasive, optical methods of choice that have been applied to the analysis of dimerization of single-spanning membrane proteins. However, the effects inherent to such two-dimensional systems, such as the excluded volume of polytopic transmembrane proteins, proximity FRET, and rotational diffusion of fluorophore dipoles, complicate interpretation of FRET data and have not been typically accounted for. Here, using FRET and fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy, we introduce a method to measure surface protein density and to estimate the apparent Förster radius, and we use Monte Carlo simulations of the FRET data to account for the proximity FRET effect occurring in confined two-dimensional environments. We then use FRET to analyze the dimerization of human rhomboid protease RHBDL2 in giant plasma membrane vesicles. We find no evidence for stable oligomers of RHBDL2 in giant plasma membrane vesicles of human cells even at concentrations that highly exceed endogenous expression levels. This indicates that the rhomboid transmembrane core is intrinsically monomeric. Our findings will find use in the application of FRET and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy for the analysis of oligomerization of transmembrane proteins in cell-derived lipid membranes.


Subject(s)
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Membrane Proteins , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Dimerization , Humans , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Protein Multimerization
2.
Cell Chem Biol ; 24(12): 1523-1536.e4, 2017 12 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29107700

ABSTRACT

Rhomboid-family intramembrane proteases regulate important biological processes and have been associated with malaria, cancer, and Parkinson's disease. However, due to the lack of potent, selective, and pharmacologically compliant inhibitors, the wide therapeutic potential of rhomboids is currently untapped. Here, we bridge this gap by discovering that peptidyl α-ketoamides substituted at the ketoamide nitrogen by hydrophobic groups are potent rhomboid inhibitors active in the nanomolar range, surpassing the currently used rhomboid inhibitors by up to three orders of magnitude. Such peptidyl ketoamides show selectivity for rhomboids, leaving most human serine hydrolases unaffected. Crystal structures show that these compounds bind the active site of rhomboid covalently and in a substrate-like manner, and kinetic analysis reveals their reversible, slow-binding, non-competitive mechanism. Since ketoamides are clinically used pharmacophores, our findings uncover a straightforward modular way for the design of specific inhibitors of rhomboid proteases, which can be widely applicable in cell biology and drug discovery.


Subject(s)
Drug Design , Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism , Serine Proteinase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Gram-Negative Bacteria/enzymology , Gram-Positive Bacteria/enzymology , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , Serine Proteinase Inhibitors/chemical synthesis , Serine Proteinase Inhibitors/chemistry
3.
J Biol Chem ; 292(7): 2703-2713, 2017 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28069810

ABSTRACT

Rhomboid proteases are increasingly being explored as potential drug targets, but their potent and specific inhibitors are not available, and strategies for inhibitor development are hampered by the lack of widely usable and easily modifiable in vitro activity assays. Here we address this bottleneck and report on the development of new fluorogenic transmembrane peptide substrates, which are cleaved by several unrelated rhomboid proteases, can be used both in detergent micelles and in liposomes, and contain red-shifted fluorophores that are suitable for high-throughput screening of compound libraries. We show that nearly the entire transmembrane domain of the substrate is important for efficient cleavage, implying that it extensively interacts with the enzyme. Importantly, we demonstrate that in the detergent micelle system, commonly used for the enzymatic analyses of intramembrane proteolysis, the cleavage rate strongly depends on detergent concentration, because the reaction proceeds only in the micelles. Furthermore, we show that the catalytic efficiency and selectivity toward a rhomboid substrate can be dramatically improved by targeted modification of the sequence of its P5 to P1 region. The fluorogenic substrates that we describe and their sequence variants should find wide use in the detection of activity and development of inhibitors of rhomboid proteases.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism , Peptides/metabolism , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Kinetics , Liposomes , Substrate Specificity
4.
EMBO J ; 33(20): 2408-21, 2014 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25216680

ABSTRACT

The mechanisms of intramembrane proteases are incompletely understood due to the lack of structural data on substrate complexes. To gain insight into substrate binding by rhomboid proteases, we have synthesised a series of novel peptidyl-chloromethylketone (CMK) inhibitors and analysed their interactions with Escherichia coli rhomboid GlpG enzymologically and structurally. We show that peptidyl-CMKs derived from the natural rhomboid substrate TatA from bacterium Providencia stuartii bind GlpG in a substrate-like manner, and their co-crystal structures with GlpG reveal the S1 to S4 subsites of the protease. The S1 subsite is prominent and merges into the 'water retention site', suggesting intimate interplay between substrate binding, specificity and catalysis. Unexpectedly, the S4 subsite is plastically formed by residues of the L1 loop, an important but hitherto enigmatic feature of the rhomboid fold. We propose that the homologous region of members of the wider rhomboid-like protein superfamily may have similar substrate or client-protein binding function. Finally, using molecular dynamics, we generate a model of the Michaelis complex of the substrate bound in the active site of GlpG.


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Chloromethyl Ketones/pharmacology , DNA-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Endopeptidases/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Providencia/chemistry , Amino Acid Chloromethyl Ketones/chemical synthesis , Binding Sites , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA-Binding Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Endopeptidases/genetics , Endopeptidases/metabolism , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Mutation , Protein Binding , Recombinant Proteins , Substrate Specificity
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