Membrane Binding Modulates the Quaternary Structure of CTP:Phosphocholine Cytidylyltransferase
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT), a key enzyme that controls phosphatidylcholine synthesis, is regulated by reversible interactions with membranes containing anionic lipids. Previous work demonstrated that CCT is a homodimer. In this work we show that the structure of the dimer interfac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2004-07, Vol.279 (27), p.28817-28825 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT), a key enzyme that controls phosphatidylcholine synthesis, is regulated by reversible
interactions with membranes containing anionic lipids. Previous work demonstrated that CCT is a homodimer. In this work we
show that the structure of the dimer interface is altered upon encountering membranes that activate CCT. Chemical cross-linking
reactions were established which captured intradimeric interactions but not random CCT dimer collisions. The efficiency of
capturing covalent cross-links with four different reagents was diminished markedly upon presentation of activating anionic
lipid vesicles but not zwitterionic vesicles. Experiments were conducted to show that the anionic vesicles did not interfere
with the chemistry of the cross-linking reactions and did not sequester available cysteine sites on CCT for reaction with
the cysteine-directed cross-linking reagent. Thus, the loss of cross-linking efficiency suggested that contact sites at the
dimer interface had increased distance or reduced flexibility upon binding of CCT to membranes. The regions of the enzyme
involved in dimerization were mapped using three approaches: 1) limited proteolysis followed by cross-linking of fragments,
2) yeast two-hybrid analysis of interactions between select domains, and 3) disulfide bonding potential of CCTs with individual
cysteine to serine substitutions for the seven native cysteines. We found that the N-terminal domain (amino acids 1â72) is
an important participant in forming the dimer interface, in addition to the catalytic domain (amino acids 73â236). We mapped
the intersubunit disulfide bond to the cystine 37 pair in domain N and showed that this disulfide is sensitive to anionic
vesicles, implicating this specific region in the membrane-sensitive dimer interface. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M403311200 |