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1.
Biochemistry ; 45(44): 13239-48, 2006 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17073445

ABSTRACT

The vitamin K-dependent (VKD) carboxylase converts Glu's to carboxylated Glu's in VKD proteins to render them functional in a broad range of physiologies. The carboxylase uses vitamin K hydroquinone (KH(2)) epoxidation to drive Glu carboxylation, and one of its critical roles is to provide a catalytic base that deprotonates KH(2) to allow epoxidation. A long-standing model invoked Cys as the catalytic base but was ruled out by activity retention in a mutant where every Cys is substituted by Ala. Inhibitor analysis of the cysteine-less mutant suggested that the base is an activated amine [Rishavy et al. (2004) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101, 13732-13737], and in the present study, we used an evolutionary approach to identify candidate amines, which revealed His160, His287, His381, and Lys218. When mutational analysis was performed using an expression system lacking endogenous carboxylase, the His to Ala mutants all showed full epoxidase activity but K218A activity was not detectable. The addition of exogenous amines restored K218A activity while having little effect on wild type carboxylase, and pH studies indicated that rescue was dependent upon the basic form of the amine. Importantly, Brønsted analysis that measured the effect of amines with different pK(a) values showed that K218A activity rescue depended upon the basicity of the amine. The combined results provide strong evidence that Lys218 is the essential base that deprotonates KH(2) to initiate the reaction. The identification of this base is an important advance in defining the carboxylase active site and has implications regarding carboxylase membrane topology and the feedback mechanism by which the Glu substrate regulates KH(2) oxygenation.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Carbon Ligases/metabolism , Carboxylic Acids/metabolism , Lysine/metabolism , Vitamin K 2/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Binding Sites , Carbon-Carbon Ligases/chemistry , Carbon-Carbon Ligases/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
2.
Biochemistry ; 45(17): 5587-98, 2006 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16634640

ABSTRACT

Carboxylation of vitamin K-dependent (VKD) proteins is required for their activity and depends on reduced vitamin K generated by vitamin K oxidoreductase (VKOR) and a redox protein that regenerates VKOR activity. VKD protein carboxylation is inefficient in mammalian cells, and to understand why carboxylation becomes saturated, we developed an approach that directly measures the extent of intracellular VKD protein carboxylation. Analysis of factor IX (fIX)-expressing BHK cells indicated that slow egress of fIX from the endoplasmic reticulum and preferential secretion of the carboxylated form contribute to secreted fIX being more fully carboxylated. The analysis also revealed the first reported in vivo VKD protein turnover, which was 14-fold faster than that which occurs in vitro, suggesting facilitation of this process in vivo. r-VKORC1 expression increased the rate of fIX carboxylation and the extent of secreted carboxylated fIX approximately 2-fold, which shows that carboxylation is the rate-limiting step in fIX turnover and which was surprising because turnover in vitro is limited by release of carboxylated fIX. Interestingly, the increases were significantly smaller than the amount of VKOR overexpression (15-fold). However, when cell extracts were tested in single-turnover experiments in vitro, where redox protein is functionally substituted with dithiothreitol, VKOR overexpression increased the fIX carboxylation rate 14-fold, showing r-VKORC1 is functional for supporting fIX carboxylation. These data indicate that the effect of VKOR overexpression is limited in vivo, possibly because a carboxylation component like the redox protein becomes saturated or because another step is now rate-limiting. The studies illustrate the complexity of carboxylation and potential importance of component stoichiometry to overall efficiency.


Subject(s)
Factor IX/metabolism , Mixed Function Oxygenases/biosynthesis , Animals , Carbon-Carbon Ligases/metabolism , Cell Line , Cricetinae , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Humans , Recombinant Proteins/biosynthesis , Vitamin K Epoxide Reductases
3.
J Biol Chem ; 280(41): 34870-7, 2005 Oct 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16061481

ABSTRACT

Leptospirosis is an emerging infectious disease whose pathology includes a hemorrhagic response, and sequencing of the Leptospira interrogans genome revealed an ortholog of the vitamin K-dependent (VKD) carboxylase as one of several hemostatic proteins present in the bacterium. Until now, the VKD carboxylase was known to be present only in the animal kingdom (i.e. metazoans that include mammals, fish, snails, and insects), and this restricted distribution and high sequence similarity between metazoan and Leptospira orthologs strongly suggests that Leptospira acquired the VKD carboxylase by horizontal gene transfer. In metazoans, the VKD carboxylase is bifunctional, acting as an epoxidase that oxygenates vitamin K to a strong base and a carboxylase that uses the base to carboxylate Glu residues in VKD proteins, rendering them active in hemostasis and other physiologies. In contrast, the Leptospira ortholog showed epoxidase but not detectable carboxylase activity and divergence in a region of identity in all known metazoan VKD carboxylases that is important to Glu interaction. Furthermore, although the mammalian carboxylase is regulated so that vitamin K epoxidation does not occur unless Glu substrate is present, the Leptospira VKD epoxidase showed unfettered epoxidation in the absence of Glu substrate. Finally, human VKD protein orthologs were not detected in the L. interrogans genome. The combined data, then, suggest that Leptospira exapted the metazoan VKD carboxylase for some use other than VKD protein carboxylation, such as using the strong vitamin K base to drive a new reaction or to promote oxidative damage or depleting vitamin K to indirectly inhibit host VKD protein carboxylation.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Carbon Ligases/chemistry , Leptospira/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Carbon/chemistry , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Epitopes/chemistry , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Genome, Bacterial , Humans , Microsomes/metabolism , Models, Chemical , Molecular Sequence Data , Open Reading Frames , Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Phylogeny , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Substrate Specificity , Vitamin K/chemistry
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 101(38): 13732-7, 2004 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15365175

ABSTRACT

Vitamin K-dependent (VKD) proteins require carboxylation for diverse functions that include hemostasis, apoptosis, and Ca(2+) homeostasis, yet the mechanism of carboxylation is not well understood. Combined biochemical and chemical studies have led to a long-standing model in which a carboxylase Cys catalytic base deprotonates vitamin K hydroquinone (KH(2)), leading to KH(2) oxygenation and Glu carboxylation. We previously identified human carboxylase Cys-99 and Cys-450 as catalytic base candidates: Both were modified by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and Ser-substituted mutants retained partial activity, suggesting that the catalytic base is activated for increased basicity. Mutants with Cys-99 or Cys-450 substituted by Ala, which cannot ionize to function as a catalytic base, were therefore analyzed. Both single and double mutants had activity, indicating that Cys-99 and Cys-450 do not deprotonate KH(2). [(14)C]NEM modification of C99A/C450A revealed one additional reactive group; however, Ser-substituted mutants of each of the eight remaining Cys retained substantial activity. To unequivocally test, then, whether any Cys or Cys combination acts as the catalytic base, a mutant with all 10 Cys substituted by Ala was generated. This mutant showed 7% wild-type activity that depended on factor IX coexpression, indicating a VKD protein effect on carboxylase maturation. NEM and diethyl pyrocarbonate inhibition suggested that the catalytic base is an activated His. These results change the paradigm for VKD protein carboxylation. The identity of the catalytic base is critical to understanding carboxylase mechanism and this work will therefore impact both reinterpretation of previous studies and future ones that define how this important enzyme functions.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Carbon Ligases/metabolism , Hydroquinones/metabolism , Vitamin K/metabolism , Amines , Animals , Baculoviridae , Carbon-Carbon Ligases/genetics , Catalysis , Cell Line , Cysteine , Cystine , Genetic Vectors , Insecta , Microsomes/enzymology , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
5.
Electrophoresis ; 23(7-8): 979-84, 2002 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11981842

ABSTRACT

Chemiluminescent immunodetection of proteins separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is generally performed only after Western blotting. Agarose gels are adequately permeable to allow immunoprobing directly in the gel. Chemiluminescent substrates had not been applied for direct immunoprobing of agarose gels. In a comparison with direct immunostaining of fibrinogen derivatives with horse radish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated primary antibody using 3,3'-diaminobenzidene (DAB) yielding a sensitivity in the low nanogram range, a luminol-based chemiluminescent detection extended sensitivity to the mid-picogram range with seemingly no interference from either regular or glyoxyl agarose gels. The high sensitivity of chemiluminescence extends utility of direct immunoprobing of either agarose or glyoxyl agarose composite gels for detection and measurement of both high and low molecular weight proteins/peptides which are not easily detected/measured by Western blotting. However, due to the thickness of the gels, direct immunoprobing can be quite laborious. To eliminate that drawback, we describe a simplified approach, converting the thick gels to thin ones prior to probing, that makes direct immunoprobing as easy as Western blotting.


Subject(s)
Proteins/chemistry , Sepharose/chemistry , Electrophoresis, Agar Gel , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Horseradish Peroxidase/chemistry , Luminescent Measurements , Sensitivity and Specificity
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