The Parkinson Disease-linked LRRK2 Protein Mutation I2020T Stabilizes an Active State Conformation Leading to Increased Kinase Activity
The effect of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) mutation I2020T on its kinase activity has been controversial, with both increased and decreased effects being reported. We conducted steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic studies on LRRKtide and its analog LRRKtideS. Their phosphorylation diffe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2014-05, Vol.289 (19), p.13042-13053 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The effect of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) mutation I2020T on its kinase activity has been controversial, with both increased and decreased effects being reported. We conducted steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic studies on LRRKtide and its analog LRRKtideS. Their phosphorylation differs by the rate-limiting steps: product release is rate-limiting for LRRKtide and phosphoryl transfer is rate-limiting for LRRKtideS. As a result, we observed that the I2020T mutant is more active than wild type (WT) LRRK2 for LRRKtideS phosphorylation, whereas it is less active than WT for LRRKtide phosphorylation. Our pre-steady-state kinetic data suggest that (i) the I2020T mutant accelerates the rates of phosphoryl transfer of both reactions by 3–7-fold; (ii) this increase is masked by a rate-limiting product release step for LRRKtide phosphorylation; and (iii) the observed lower activity of the mutant for LRRKtide phosphorylation is a consequence of its instability: the concentration of the active form of the mutant is 3-fold lower than WT. The I2020T mutant has a dramatically low KATP and therefore leads to resistance to ATP competitive inhibitors. Two well known DFG-out or type II inhibitors are also weaker toward the mutant because they inhibit the mutant in an unexpected ATP competitive mechanism. The I2020 residue lies next to the DYG motif of the activation loop of the LRRK2 kinase domain. Our modeling and metadynamic simulations suggest that the I2020T mutant stabilizes the DYG-in active conformation and creates an unusual allosteric pocket that can bind type II inhibitors but in an ATP competitive fashion.
LRRK2 has emerged as one of the most relevant players in Parkinson disease pathogenesis.
Enzyme kinetic and modeling studies elucidate the effect of the LRRK2 I2020T mutant on kinase activity.
The I2020T mutant stabilizes the active conformation and leads to increased kinase activity. As a result, it binds to type II inhibitors competitively.
This study may contribute to the development of new classes of inhibitors of LRRK2. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M113.537811 |