Abstract
MICALs (Molecule Interacting with CasL) are conserved multidomain enzymes essential for cytoskeletal reorganization in nerve development, endocytosis, and apoptosis. In these enzymes, a type-2 calponin homology (CH) domain always follows an N-terminal monooxygenase (MO) domain. Although the CH domain is required for MICAL-1 cellular localization and actin-associated function, its contribution to the modulation of MICAL activity towards actin remains unclear. Here, we present the structure of a fragment of MICAL-1 containing the MO and the CH domains—determined by X-ray crystallography and small angle scattering—as well as kinetics experiments designed to probe the contribution of the CH domain to the actin-modification activity. Our results suggest that the CH domain, which is loosely connected to the MO domain by a flexible linker and is far away from the catalytic site, couples F-actin to the enhancement of redox activity of MICALMO-CH by a cooperative mechanism involving a trans interaction between adjacently bound molecules. Binding cooperativity is also observed in other proteins regulating actin assembly/disassembly dynamics, such as ADF/Cofilins.
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Introduction
Growing axons are guided to their appropriate targets by extracellular attractive or repulsive cues that are essential for proper neuronal growth and development, rewiring, fasciculation/defasciculation, and nerve regeneration after injury1,2. Semaphorins, the most well characterized class of external repulsive guidance molecules, interact with Plexin and neuropilin receptors on axonal growth cones3. Upon Plexin interaction with extracellular semaphorins, its cytosolic domain recruits and activates MICAL (Molecule Interacting with CasL); this activation promotes reorganization of the cytoskeleton and subsequent growth cone collapse4,5. Since its initial identification in T-cells6, MICAL has also been found in a variety of neuronal and non-neuronal cell types in which it controls cytoskeletal dynamics7,8.
Three MICAL isoforms (MICAL-1, -2, and -3) have been identified in vertebrates4,5. They have high overall sequence identity (1–2: 56%, 1–3: 56%, and the highest for 2–3: 65% in mouse MICALs). MICALs are large cytosolic proteins with an N-terminal flavoprotein monooxygenase (MO) domain containing an FAD cofactor followed by a variable number of protein-interaction domains3. MICAL-1 combines the catalytic MO domain (residues 1–484) with three other domains thought to be important for modulating MICAL’s activity and/or interaction with substrates: 1) a CH domain (residues 511–615), 2) a Lin-11 Isl-1 Mec-3 (LIM) domain (residues 666–761)9, and 3) a C-terminal region containing a coiled-coil Ezrin Radixin Moesin (ERM) domain10,11. In addition, MICAL-1 contains a poly-proline PPKPP sequence (residues 830–834) that binds the SH3 domain of CasL6.
In mouse MICAL-1 (mMICAL-1, MW: 117 kDa, 1048 amino acids), the MO domain (MICALMO) has been shown to reduce molecular oxygen to H2O2, with a ~70-fold preference for NADPH over NADH as the source of reducing equivalents12. The structure of mMICAL-1 MO domain, determined by x-ray diffraction12,13, contains many of the features common to FAD-containing monooxygenases such as ρ-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (pHBH) with one major difference: the cavity that connects to the active site is larger in MICALMO than in pHBH and could potentially accommodate a protein substrate; in contrast, pHBH substrates are small molecules that can be easily accommodated in a small cavity. In the structure determined in the presence of NADPH, the isoalloxazine ring of the reduced FAD adopts an “in” conformation, in which it is less accessible to water and to O213. The CH and other domains of MICAL could play a role in keeping the active site less accessible to solvent, resembling pHBH and monoamine oxidases14.
CH domains have a highly conserved architecture comprised mainly of α-helices15. They carry out diverse functions in cytoskeleton binding and signalling16. The α-actinin and spectrin protein families, both of which are known to cross-link actin filaments, interact with actin filaments via two tandem CH domains (classified as type-1 and -2). Some proteins, such as calponin and IQGAP, contain single CH domains classified as type-3. Smoothelins and RP/EBs5 as well as MICALs contain a single type-2 CH domain. However, MICALs are unique in the sense that their CH domain is adjacent to a domain containing catalytic activity.
Hung et al. reported that expression of Drosophila MICAL constructs containing either the MO alone or MO plus the CH domain result in proteins with a redox activity that alters actin polymerization dynamics; specifically, they oxidize Met 44 of F-actin, leading to destabilization and disruption of actin filaments17,18. However, although the MICALMO alone is sufficient to bind and oxidize F-actin in vitro, in vivo full-length Drosophila MICAL (dMICAL) with only the CH domain deleted (MICAL∆CH) shows defects in actin processing and motor axon guidance17,18. For example, in Drosophila bristles (an in vivo single cell model of MICAL-mediated F-actin depolymerization), dMICAL co-localizes with F-actin, and the CH domain participates in this localization, as suggested by the observation that MICAL∆CH and MICALΔPIR —lacking the Plexin interacting region—are unable to co-localize with F-actin17. Drosophila MICAL∆CH mutants also show dominant defects in axon defasciculation and guidance18,19. Furthermore, the CH domain is required for MICAL-mediated cytoskeleton organization in vivo20,21. Interestingly, the CH domain of MICAL (MICALCH) participates in these actin–associated functions even though the isolated domain does not bind F-actin in vitro20,21. Although it is clear that the MICALCH is functionally important, its relation to the MO domain and how it modifies the MICALMO activity toward F-actin remain obscure.
The structures of the isolated MICALMO12,13 and MICALCH20,21 have been determined, but they do not provide information about how the CH domain may contribute to connect MICAL activity to interactions with the cytoskeleton. Understanding the modulation of the MICALMO catalytic activities by the CH domain requires the determination of the structure of a MICAL fragment containing the entire MO and CH domains. Here, we report the structure of a protein containing the MO and CH domains of mMICAL-1 (MICALMO-CH; residues 2 to 615) determined using x-ray diffraction and small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS). The structure provides the basis for a model for the oxidation of Met 44 of actin by MICAL. In addition, using steady-state kinetics, we demonstrate that the CH domain of mMICAL-1 enhances both recognition of F-actin and NADPH as well as the NADPH oxidase of MO activity in the presence of F-actin. The high level of conservation of the MICAL MO and CH domains in species ranging from Drosophila to Homo sapiens suggest that structural and functional inferences made here are likely to be applicable to other MICALs, including MICAL-2 and -3.
Results
Structure Determination
The structures of two crystal forms, native 1 and 2 (Table 1), show electron density for residues 8–486 of the MO domain and residues 506–554 and 562–614 of the CH domain (Fig. 1). Although no electron density was observed for the 19-residue linker connecting these domains, SDS-PAGE analysis of re-dissolved crystals shows that no cleavage had occurred during purification or crystallization that could explain the missing linker (Fig. 2a inset). Although the native 1 crystal was made in the presence of a large amount (19 mM) of a synthetic actin “D-loop” peptide (residues 39 to 52 of actin), it did not show additional electron density for this ligand (hence was named “crystal 1”). The native 1 structure was refined to an Rwork and Rfree of 0.25 and 0.30 using data to 2.31 Å resolution (Fig. 1). For the native 2 crystal, obtained without the addition of actin derived peptide, the Rwork and Rfree were 0.23 and 0.28 for data to a resolution of 2.9 Å (Table 1). Size exclusion chromatography showed that, under the conditions used for crystallization MICALMO-CH is a monomer in solution (Fig. 2). In agreement, both crystal forms analysed contain one single chain monomer per asymmetric unit.
Structure of the MO domain
MICALMO contains a Rossman β-α-β fold with a GXGXXG motif, a sequence common in NADPH-dependent FAD-containing oxidoreductase enzymes. In both crystal forms the FAD cofactor is oxidized and accessible through two openings connected to the active site, one large and one small (Fig. 1a). Alignment of the MO domain of the MICALMO crystal structure (PDB 2BRA12) to the same domain of the MICALMO-CH structure shows a 0.5 Å RMSD for 422 Cα atoms. Only small localized differences are observed (Supplementary Fig. S1).
Structure of the CH domain
The structure of the CH domain of MICALMO-CH is highly similar to that of the isolated CH domain of human MICAL-1 (PDB 1WYL and 2DK9) determined by NMR methods20 (RMSD of 0.8 Å for 82 Cα atoms; Fig. 3a). As in other CH domains of the same type found in actin-binding proteins (Fig. 3a–d), the CH domain of MICALMO-CH consists of three α-helices packed as a parallel bundle, with a fourth α-helix that is perpendicular to the other three (Fig. 4). As expected from its sequence, the structure of MICALCH aligns better to the type-2 CH domain of actinin (PDB 2EYI) than to the type-1 (Fig. 3). Key hydrophobic residues important for helix packing and for binding to F-actin are conserved (Figs 3d and 4b)15,20,21.
The CH domain of MICALMO-CH also shows the other conserved features found in type-2 CH domains of actin-binding proteins: a conserved actin-binding segment (ABS; Fig. 4) found in the helix perpendicular to the other three, and a conserved PIP2 binding site (PBS; Fig. 4)15. In the MICALMO-CH structure, these segments are exposed to solvent and are free to interact with other proteins or the membrane (Fig. 1c).
Connectivity between MO and CH domains
There is no observable electron density in either of the two crystal forms for the 19-residue linker that connects the MO and CH domains. The sequence of this linker region (residues 488–506) is not well conserved in the different MICAL-1s (Fig. 5a), in stark contrast to the MO (residues 7–487) and the CH domain (residues 507–611) of MICAL-1, which show highly conserved sequences from Drosophila to Homo sapiens (mouse sequences are 91% identical and 93% similar to the MICALMO-CH region of human MICAL-1; Supplementary Fig. S2). Based on sequence, the linker region is predicted to be unstructured.
Lack of density for the peptide connecting between the two domains introduces an uncertainty as to which of the CH domains among symmetry mates belongs in the same molecule as a given MO. Examination of the asymmetric unit reveals that, given the length of the linker (19-residues), the MO could be connected to any one of four possible CH domains (options 1 to 4, shown in Figs 1c and 6). Equivalent options are present in both crystal forms.
Alignment of the structures of the MO domains of native 1 and native 2 shows that in the two crystal forms the positions of the four CH domains from alternative asymmetric units are shifted relative to the MO domain. Aligning the MO domains of the different options, the root mean square distance between the 103 Cα atoms of the four CH domain options are the largest for option 1 and 4 (8.63 and 8.0 Å, respectively), while those for options 2 and 3 are significantly lower (4.5 Å and 4.6 Å, respectively). In both crystal forms, options 1, 2, and 4 place the CH domain far away from the catalytic site (Fig. 6a,b,d), making minimal contact with the MO domain as indicated by the small buried surface area (Table 2). The CH domain of option 3 in both forms buries by far the largest surface area of all four options (1015 Å2 and 901 Å2; for native 1 and 2 respectively, Table 2). In this option, the CH docks on the side of the small entrance to the catalytic site without obstructing it, but it contacts the catalytic site loop Lc (Fig. 1a). Lc residues, in particular Trp 405, form the cavity that the isoallozaxine rings of the (hydroxy)peroxi-C4a-FAD occupies when it swings-in (Figs 1a and 5b)12,13. This entrance may channel the substrate to the C4a-(hydro)peroxy- intermediate site when the FAD is reduced (Fig. 1a,b). In option 3, the interface on the CH domain interacting with the MO domain is formed by CH domain helix α3 and the loop connecting this helix with α4 (Fig. 4). This interface involves Leu 553, Leu 565, Thr 569, Arg 573, Val 574, Glu 576, His 577, Glu 578 of α3, and Gly 580, Thr 582, Pro 583, Val 584, Ser 586, and Gln 588 of the loop (Fig. 4c). The MO side of the interface involves Lys 235, Arg 371, Phe 399, Leu 402, Arg 408, Gln 441, Leu 442, Ser 444, Gln 445, Ser 447, and Asn 450 (Fig. 5b). Residues on the MO domain participating in the MO-CH interface are well conserved in vertebrates —to a lesser degree in Drosophila— (Fig. 5a) as well as among mouse MICAL isoforms (1–2: 67%,1–3: 62.5%, and notably 2–3: 96% of sequence identity). Residues of the CH domain that participate in the interface show lower sequence identities between MICAL-2 or -3 and MICAL-1 (Fig. 5c; 1, 2 and 1, 2, 3: 28.6%), but are highly homologous to each other (Fig. 5c; 2, 3: 77%). The CH domain residues that participate in this interface, although they have lower sequence identity with each other than their counterparts in the MO domain, they do conserve hydropathy and size characteristics across species and isoforms (Fig. 5a,c).This interaction is mostly polar in nature, and shows significant charge complementarity. Residues Arg 408 and Glu 576, which form a salt bridge, are conserved from Drosophila to humans (Fig. 5a) and among isoforms (Fig. 5c). Also, the NH and the amine nitrogen of Lys 235 form a hydrogen-bonding network with the main chain carbonyl and the side chain of Glu 578. Another hydrogen bond is observed between the side chain of Ser 447 and the carbonyl oxygen of Pro 583.
To examine whether it was possible to connect the MO and CH domains of MICALMO-CH in all four options of native 1, five independent models of the 19-amino acids linker were generated for each option using the program MODELLER22. The models show that it is possible to connect the two domains with a 19-amino-acids linker only for options 1, 2 and 4 (Fig. 6). Linkers for option 3 in mouse MICALMO-CH were predicted to be in highly strained implausible conformations (Fig. 6c). However, the linkers of Drosophila MICAL, and mouse MICAL-2 and -3 are longer than that of MICAL-1 (11, 4 and 6 residues, respectively; Fig. 5c), which could allow these enzymes to reach an intermolecular association equivalent to option-3.
Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) of MICALMO-CH
SAXS data were obtained to provide independent information about the domain arrangement and to help resolve the uncertainty in the connectivity. The radius of gyration (Rg) of MICALMO-CH estimated from the SAXS data, is 31 Å and the Dmax is 122 Å (Fig. 7 and Supplementary Fig. S3). The SAXS estimated particle mass, 70.1 kDa, corresponds to the mass predicted from the sequence of the MICALMO-CH monomer (68.5 kDa,) within 4.4% of error (Table 3). The experimental Rg is significantly larger than that estimated for option 3 (Rg = 24.5 Å; Table 3). The other three options predict an Rg significantly larger than that of option 3, but, still shorter than the experimental value (Table 3). Option 1 has the smallest discrepancy between predicted and experimental scattering data (χ2 = 1.5; Rg = 28.5 Å) and a close fit to the low-resolution ab-initio SAXS model (Table 3, Fig. 7a). The low-resolution ab initio model (envelope) and rigid body refinement of option 1 using SAXS data indicate a slightly greater separation between domains in solution than in the crystal (Fig. 7c,d).
Activity of MICALMO and MICALMO-CH in the presence of F-actin
F-actin behaves as a non-essential activator of NADPH-oxidation by MICALMO and MICALMO-CH: the addition of F-actin increases the rate of reaction but catalysis still takes place in its absence, albeit at reduced rate (Fig. 8). Consequently, the initial velocities of the NADPH-oxidation ( v ) follow the typical non-essential activator steady-state kinetics scheme shown in Fig. 8a. These velocities are well represented by Equation (1), a hyperbolic function of the substrate concentration and activator ([NADPH] and [F-actin], respectively) at given concentrations of enzyme ([Enzyme]). In Equation (1), the coupling parameter α measures the synergy between substrate affinity and binding of the activator or vice versa (α = 1 no coupling, α < 1 positive coupling, etc.), and β measures the acceleration factor of the turnover-number when the ternary complex (enzyme-substrate-activator) is formed. The apparent Michaelis-Menten constant () of the substrate electron donor and apparent turnover-number of NADPH oxidation () were also obtained by fitting these velocities at a given [F-actin] with the simple Michaelis-Menten enzyme/substrate steady-state kinetic equation (2) (Fig. 8b, Table 4). For MICALMO the values vary only slightly and not regularly, indicating that actin does not affect the NADPH binding to the isolated MO domain (Table 4). Therefore, the observed kinetics for MICALMO can be fit with a constant (28.8 ± 2.4 μM) across the range of [F-actin] analysed (Fig. 8c, Table 4). The observed independence of the binding constants (Ks) with the concentration of the other substrate is modeled with a value of α equal to 1 in Equation (1). In contrast, for MICALMO-CH the values decreases when [F-actin] increases (Fig. 8c and Table 4), suggesting a value of α different from 1 in Equation (1). Data were fitted to Eq. (1) restraining α to 1 in the case of MICALMO and allowing α to vary in the case of MICALMO-CH. Both sets show good fit to the experimental values (Fig. 8b). The K constants fitted for MICALMO and MICALMO-CH are not significantly different (Fig. 8d; KM of 9.3 ± 1.9 μM vs 10.5 ± 3.4 and KA of 28.8 ± 2.4 μM vs. 37.7 ± 8.4, respectively). In contrast, for MICALMO-CH the data are fitted with a value α of 0.16 ± 0.04, indicating strong cooperativity between binding NADPH and actin.
In both cases, increases with the F-actin (activator) concentration, although the magnitude of the change is significantly greater for MICALMO-CH than that for the isolated MO domain (Fig. 8c,d). The rate of NADPH oxidation by either protein increases in the presence of actin, but the increase is smaller for MICALMO (β = 4.7 ± 0.5 for MICALMO; β = 7.43 ± 0.31 for MICALMO-CH; Fig. 8d). The dependence of the Ks for NADPH and actin on each other’s concentration in MICALMO-CH is the major difference between the two proteins (α = 0.16 for MICALMO-CH vs. 1.0 for MICALMO).
Model of MICALMO-CH/F-actin interaction
As the D-loop of actin is part of a large oligomeric filament (F-actin) it raises the question of whether it is accessible to the active site of MICAL. For a direct oxidation to be possible, the sulfur atom of Met 44 (well below the surface in F-actin) should be positioned within ~3 Å of the C4a (hydroxyl)peroxy-FAD- intermediate so that oxidation can occur. Thus, a conformation should be found in which the actin D-loop of a filament comes close to the C4a of the FAD cofactor in a way that allows the oxidation to take place. This conformation should be accessible from observed structures without breaking any covalent bonds or affecting the structural integrity of either actin or MICAL.
As no crystal structure of MICAL in complex with F-actin is available, we built a possible model of the complex (Fig. 9a,b), using the MICALMO-CH crystal structure and a dimer of actin from the most recently reported F-actin model (PDB 2ZWH23). The CH domain of MICAL was essential in choosing the initial position and the orientation of MICALMO-CH on the F-actin; we hypothesize that the CH domain is necessary for optimizing the binding of the MO to oxidize Met 44. The initial position was chosen based on aligning the CH domain of MICALMO-CH and the CH of actinin bound to actin (PDB 3LUE24), followed by manual adjustment to bring both the MO and CH domains in close proximity to the actin dimer (Fig. 9a,b). Although Met 44 is far from the surface, the wide opening of the MICAL’s active site can be oriented towards the D-loop. This model served as a starting point for a series of molecular dynamics simulations in which, in each successive run, actin’s Met 44 was harmonically constrained with a soft force constant (0.5 kcal mol−1 Å−2) to be closer to FAD-C4a, until its sulphur atom was within ~3 Å of the FAD-C4a.
The simulations reveal that it is possible to attain a D-loop conformation in which Met 44 is in proximity to FAD-C4a (hereafter referred to as “D-loop out” conformation); shown in Fig. 9c,d. A conformation with Met 44 close to the FAD-C4a is possible regardless of whether the FAD of the MO domain is in the oxidized “out” or the reduced “in” conformation. The potential energy, averaged over the production phase of the simulation, of the “D-loop out” conformation is within 3% of that of the original conformation23 (Table 5). The major structural change in the actin monomer is in the D-loop itself and the few residues surrounding it; the rest of the actin monomer remains close to the original structure (Fig. 9c,d). The fact that this “D-loop out” conformation can be reached in a molecular dynamics simulation, using gentle steering and without the need to break bonds or significantly alter the integrity of either structure, indicates that this conformation can be populated with a high enough frequency to be kinetically competent.
Discussion
Our studies provide novel insights into the role of the MICALCH domain in modulating the catalytic activity of MICAL towards F-actin. This work also reports the first example to date of a CH domain modulating the activity of an adjacent catalytic domain.
In the two crystal structures of the MICALMO-CH presented here, the structures of the MO domain and the CH domain are similar to those of the isolated domains. As no electron density is found for the linker connecting the two domains, which of the CH domains in the asymmetric unit is connected to the MO domain cannot be decided from the structure.
To resolve the ambiguity, SAXS data of MICALMO-CH in solution were collected. The ab-initio low-resolution envelopes and rigid-body refinement using the SAXS scattering data (Fig. 7) indicate that in solution MICALMO-CH is an elongated molecule that resembles crystallographic option 1 (Fig. 6a) but with a slightly larger separation between domains (Fig. 7d). This larger separation is compatible with a flexible linker between the two domains. The fact that none of the possible MO-CH arrangements are identical between the two crystal forms also supports the argument that there is conformational flexibility between the two domains.
What is immediately evident upon inspection of the structures is that the CH domain does not significantly alter the conformation of the MO domain nor does it obstruct the active site, regardless of the choice of asymmetric unit (Fig. 1c).
A characteristic feature of this monooxygenase family is that binding of the oxygen-acceptor substrates (i.e. F-actin) accelerates NADPH oxidation. In these enzymes the loss of reducing equivalents by production of peroxide is actively suppressed; however, leakage velocities between 1 and 2 s−1 are frequently observed. Both MO and MO-CH show low turnover rates (0.7 and 1.7 s−1, respectively) in the absence of F-actin. The suppression is relieved by the oxygen acceptor substrate and accelerations between 102–105 fold have been observed in aromatic monooxygenases25.
Acceleration of NADPH oxidase activity in the presence of similar amounts of F-actin for different MICAL domain combinations and species have been reported: acceleration of 5-fold for human MICALMO in presence of 2.4 μM of F-actin26, 35-fold i in Drosophila MICALMO-CH in presence of 2.3 μM Drosophila F-actin17, and recently a 10-fold across all human MICALMO-CH types (MICAL-1, 2, and 3) in presence of 2.8 μM F-actin27. In contrast, we observed moderate 1.7-fold increase for our mouse MICALMO and 4.7-fold for the MICALMO-CH construct in the presence of 2 μM of F-actin (Table 4). Different degrees of inhibition by the buffer used in the experiments —we choose to maximize F-actin polymeric state— or differences between species may be the cause of the discrepancies observed. There is agreement nevertheless, between our data, the human data, and the Drosophila MICALMO-CH in that all three show acceleration in the rate of NADPH oxidation in the presence of F-actin.
Interestingly, the reducing equivalents consumed in the time interval used for velocity determination (5–10 s) exceed the amount of activator present in some conditions (for example for 0.4 μM of F-actin; Table 4). The NADPH oxidation profiles (Supplementary Fig. S4) show an early deviation (curvature) from the initial slope that may be associated with a second phase with depleted activator. The NADPH oxidation rate by Drosophila MICAL is 0.8 μM of NADPH per second (estimated from Fig. 1F of ref. 17 using the described sampling of 10 s). There dMICAL would have processed sufficient reducing equivalents at the first data point to oxygenate all the F-actin (2 μM) present in the reaction several times, suggesting that either (a) not all the NADPH consumed is used to modify the bound F-actin, (b) there is more than a single site of modification per F-actin molecule, or (c) the modified F-actin continues to activate the redox reaction independent of or in addition to being a substrate.
Overall, MICALMO and MICALMO-CH catalyse the oxidation of NADPH faster (β > 0) in presence of F-actin but with different kinetic characteristics (Fig. 8). There are significant differences between catalytic activities (kcatMO < kcatMO-CH) and acceleration factors (βMO < βMO-CH), consistent with further enhancement of the redox activity with F-actin when the CH domain is present. In the range of F-actin concentrations tested, the apparent redox catalytic power increases more than 20-fold in the case of MICALMO-CH; in contrast to the modest 3-fold increase observed in the case of MICALMO (Table 4). F-actin accelerates NADPH oxidation more for MICALMO-CH than for MICALMO (β = 7.4 ± 1.3 vs. 4.9 ± 0.4; Fig. 8c). The CH domain does not change the affinity for each substrate alone —KMMO is not significantly different from KMMO-CH and KAMO ≈ KAMO-CH; Fig. 8d. The difference between the two proteins, MICALMO and MICALMO-CH, is found in the kinetics of oxidation of actin. In the case of the single MO domain, F-actin functions as a simple non-essential activator that provides an alternative path for the oxygenation reaction to occur, resulting in an increase of the NADPH oxidation rate without changes in NADPH affinity (α = 1). In contrast, in MICALMO-CH, in addition to this effect, F-actin modifies the MO active-site in a way that increases the affinity for NADPH (α = 0.16) and its oxidation rate. These observations suggest that the CH domain functions by coupling second substrate-binding to enzymatic rate enhancement.
Of the possible MO-CH arrangements in the crystal asymmetric unit, option 3 shows the most compact structure with the closest and the tightest interactions between the MO and CH domains (Fig. 6c). The characteristics of this interaction—buried area (≈1000 Å2), charge complementarity, and the degree of conservation of the interface residues among species and isoforms—suggest that this contact may have a physiological role as an intermolecular interaction between the MO and the CH domains. MICAL-2 and MICAL-3 have longer linkers and high residue conservation in the putative MO-CH interface (Fig. 5c), providing additional indirect evidence that these interfaces may be a hot spot for a protein-protein association with biological relevance in these isoforms.
The failure of option 3 to explain the SAXS results (Table 3, Fig. 7) argues against this being the actual arrangement between the two domains in solution. However, the CH domain placement far away from the active site in all the other options makes it physically improbable that the covalently connected CH domain may have a direct effect on the MO activity.
This apparent contradiction may be explained by a trans cooperative mechanism in which the CH domain from one MICALMO-CH molecule interacts with the MO domain of another MICAL via the option 3 interaction. This interaction is particularly suited for trans binding because the cis interaction is unfavorable given the length of the linker peptide (see above). Actin depolymerization factors ADF/Cofilins are a well-characterized family of filament-severing proteins that also show a common cooperative mechanism of action28.
In summary, the structures in crystal and solution of MICALMO-CH presented in this study provide structural insight into the function of MICAL’s CH domain. The CH domain couples binding of F-actin to catalytic site modification enhancing the monooxygenase activity. In this CH-mediated mechanism, cooperative binding of MICAL molecules, perhaps using the contact observed in option 3, appears to be involved. This cooperative binding further stabilizes the formation of the MICAL/F-actin complex, while at the same time allowing the non-covalent concatenation of MICAL molecules on the surface of the filaments that will significantly increase the efficiency of actin modification by MICAL. The contact between the CH domain and the catalytic site loop Lc (Fig. 5b) provides a mechanism for modulating both substrate affinity and catalytic activity.
Our F-actin/MICALMO-CH model suggests that direct oxidation of actin Met 44 by MICAL is possible; however, it does not rule out that oxidation of Met 44 occurs by a high local H2O2 concentration in the cavity formed upon binding MICALMO-CH to actin. Restricted access of the H2O2 to the sulfur atom of Met 44 may result in an apparent stereospecificity29,30. The model for oxidation of F-actin by MICAL presented here involving a large change in the conformation of the D-loop of actin will be important for guiding future experiments aimed at elucidating mechanistic details of the redox reaction catalyzed by MICAL.
Methods
Cloning
A plasmid containing DNA coding for residues 2–615 of MICAL-1 from Mus musculus, codon-optimized for expression in Escherichia coli was obtained from Genescript Inc. In addition of a Gly from the expression vector digestion site, the Q78K substitution was introduced to remove an endogenous protease site. This construct, cloned onto a pET28a expression vector containing an N-terminal His-tag with an engineered N-terminal Tobacco Etch virus (TEV) protease site, was used to transform Escherichia coli BL21.
Protein expression and purification
After induction of the transformed E. coli cells by addition of 0.2 mM isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG), cells were grown for 15 hours at 17 °C in LB media before harvesting by centrifugation. Cells were resuspended in lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7, 140 mM NaCl, 10 mM imidazole, 0.1% Tween-20, 5 mM MgCl2, 2 mM β-mercaptoethanol, 5 mM benzamidine, and 10% v/v glycerol) and broken with a microfluidizer. After centrifugation and filtering, the protein was purified by Ni-Sepharose affinity chromatography with a gradient of 10–500 mM imidazole in 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.3, 140 mM NaCl. The eluted protein was dialyzed against 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.0, and 200 mM Glycine, and digested overnight with TEV protease to remove the His-tag. The cleaved product was purified using a Source 15S cation exchange column (GE Healthcare), eluting with 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.0, and a 0–1 M NaCl gradient. The final yield was ~3 mg per liter of culture. MICALMO-CH was concentrated to ~25 mg/ml using a 3 kDa MWCO ultrafiltration device (GE Healthcare), before storage at −80 °C.
The mouse MICALMO (1–484) used in the enzyme kinetic experiments described below was prepared as previously described12.
Crystallization (Native 1)
1 μl of MICALMO-CH protein solution (25 mg/ml in 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.0, 200 mM NaCl, 2 mM DTT, 2% v/v glycerol) was mixed with 1 μl of a 19.0 mM peptide solution of actin’s D-loop (39-RHQGVMVGMGQKDS-52) and incubated at room temperature for 30 min. Two μl of this solution, combined with 1 μL of reservoir solution (100 mM HEPES pH 7.0, 20% PEG 2000 MME) and equilibrated against 500 μl of reservoir solution, produces small crystals of poor diffracting quality. Single crystals suitable for data collection were obtained by a two additional steps: 1) drops were micro-seeded by hair-streaking of the crystallization drops after a day of equilibration after touching the previous crystals with the hair; and 2) a new crystallization round mixing protein aliquots with a seed dilution generated by smashing a few of the previously obtained crystals in reservoir solution. After this final step, suitable single crystals grew in 24 h at 20 °C.
Crystallization (Native 2)
For crystallization, the protein solution (25 mg/ml) was prepared in a buffer containing 100 mM sodium citrate pH 5.0, 200 mM NaCl. Differential scanning fluorimetry showed high stability of the protein in this buffer condition (data not shown). 1 μl of this protein solution was combined with 1 μl of microseeds diluted in reservoir solution [100 mM HEPES pH 7.0, 20% PEG 2000 MME] and equilibrated against 500 μl of reservoir solution. Crystals grew in 24 hours at 20 °C.
Crystal Data Collection, Structure Determination, and Refinement
Cell parameter variations among crystals obtained in the same conditions during the search for diffraction quality crystals were frequently observed (data not shown). Two crystal forms showing differences in the c cell-dimension and β angle were selected for analysis. Diffraction data from both crystal forms (native 1 and native 2) frozen in the their mother liquors, with 20% v/v glycerol added as cryoprotectant, were collected using a Saturn 944 + CCD as a detector. The source was an FR-E + Super-BrightTM copper rotating anode x-ray generator equipped with VariMAX™ mirrors for monocromatization and collimation (Rigaku Americas Corporation, The Woodlands, TX). Data were processed with HKL2000 (HKL Research Inc.). The structure of native 1 was determined by molecular replacement with the program MOLREP as implemented in the CCP4 Suite31, using the previously determined structure of MICALMO (residues 1–484) as a search model (PDB 2BRA12). The model of the CH domain was built manually with the program COOT32 on the unassigned electron density of a sigmaA-weighted difference Fourier map (mFO-DFC) calculated with phases from the MO domain alone. The final structure was refined using the program REFMAC in CCP4 Suite). The structure of the second crystal was determined by molecular replacement using the two domains of the first crystal as separate search models. The models were refined by rigid body refinement, followed by restrained refinement and TLS/Restrained refinement (Fig. 1). All data collection and refinement statistics are presented in Table 1.
Size exclusion chromatography
The oligomeric size of MICALMO-CH in solution was determined using size exclusion chromatography (SEC) with a Superose™ 12 10/300 GL column (GE LifeSciences) in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.0 and 500 mM NaCl. Five molecular standards of known size (Thyroglobulin, Globulin, ovalbumin, myoglobin, and vitamin B12) were used for calibration in an independent run. The elution position of the MICALMO-CH peak compared to those of the five standards (Fig. 2a) was used to estimate the molecular weight (Mw) using the relation between the log(Mw) and the ratio between the sample elution volume (Ve) and the column void volume (Vo) (Fig. 2B).
Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) of MICALMO-CH
SAXS data were collected at the SIBYLS beam line (B12.3.1) of the ALS for q values in the range 0.0128–0.3253 Å−1 using three protein concentrations (2, 4 and 7 mg/ml) in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris HCl pH 7.0, 200 mM NaCl, 2 mM DTT, and 2% v/v glycerol (Table 3). The particle molecular mass was estimated by three independent methods (Table 3 and Suppl. Fig. S4): a) using the relation between the intensities of the scattering at zero angle [I(0)] of the MICALMO-CH sample and that of a standard -dimeric bovine serum albumin (BSA; Mw: 132 kDa, SIGMA Inc.)- at the same three concentrations used for the protein sample; b) using the saxsmow web server estimator (http://www.ifsc.usp.br/~saxs/saxsmow.html)33; and c) using the relation between the molecular weight and the ratio of the square of the correlation volume (Vc) to Rg as implemented in Scatter 2.034. An ab-initio low-resolution model of MICALMO-CH was obtained by a two-step procedure. In the first step, twenty envelopes were generated by DAMMIN (ATSAS) and averaged with DAMAVER (ATSAS) to provide a low-resolution dummy atom model (DAM) with an overall normalized spatial discrepancy (NSD) of 0.735. In a second step, the averaged DAM generated by DAMAVER was used as a starting model for a final run of DAMMIN. The final low-resolution model (Fig. 7) has an averaged NSD of 0.47 with a standard deviation of 0.08. In addition, an all atom-model, obtained by rigid-body refinement of the two separated MICALMO-CH domains against the experimental scattering using the program SASREF36, reached a χ2 of ≈0.69 (Fig. 7).
Rate of NADPH oxidation as a function of F-actin concentration
MICAL’s constructs redox activity in presence of F-actin was measured as NADPH oxidation monitoring the decrease in absorbance at 340 nm over time (Fig. 8, Supplementary Fig. S5). The reaction was initiated with the addition of the enzyme to a 100 μL quartz-cuvette and mixing for 5 sec by slowly pipetting to avoid bubbles. To maintain steady-state conditions in NADPH and F-actin, the rate of reaction was measured as close as possible to the beginning of the reaction, commonly after 5 sec and before 10 sec. The initial slope of the curve was taken as the initial reaction-rate of NADPH oxidation ( v ) (See Supplementary Fig. S5 for a example of the observed curves). Kinetic data for MICALMO and MICALMO-CH were obtained at different NADPH concentrations (six data points ranging from 3 to 100 μM for the MO and five data points from 10 to 150 μM for the MO-CH) for each F-actin concentration used (five conditions 0.0, 0.4, 0.9, 2.2, and 7.5 μM for the MO and four conditions 0.0, 2.0, 4.0, and 8.0 μM for the MO-CH). Each data point was repeated three to four times and the mean v and its standard deviation recorded. Data from each construct were fitted using the general steady-state kinetic relation in the presence of a non-essential activator known as a Henri-Michaelis-Menten relation given by the equation (1).
in which KM and KA are the equilibrium constants in the quasi-equilibrium conditions depicted in Fig. 8a for NADPH (substrate) and F-actin (activator), assuming non-limiting amounts of these, α is the ratio between substrate affinities of the free enzyme and activator-bound enzyme, β is the acceleration factor produced by the activator (F-Actin), and the turnover number, where is the initial reaction rate at infinite concentration of substrate. Bracketed variables are the concentration of the reaction components. Evaluating equation (1) at a given concentration of F-actin simplifies to the relation for a simple enzyme-substrate reaction
In which the apparent NADPH dissociation constant () and catalytic rate ()—now functions of the activator concentration—are related to the absolute constant parameters in equation (1) by:
The turnover numbers (kcat) of MICALMO and MICALMO-CH at different concentrations of F-actin are shown in Fig. 8. Kinetic parameters were determined by non-linear least-squares fit of , to the equation (1) using the program Prism6 (GraphPad Inc.), which was also used for the statistical analysis. Human non-muscle G-actin (from human platelets; #APHL99, Cytoskeleton Inc.) was polymerized following manufacturer protocols. The polymerization buffer: 5 mM TrisHCl pH 8.0, 50 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM CaCl2, 0.5 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP was used in the steady-state kinetic experiments.
The concentration of the MICAL constructs used (600 nM) was determined by absorbance at 280 nm of a sample denatured in 6 M GdnHCl using the Gill and von Hippel method37.
The statistical analysis were performed using an F-square sum F-test for each dataset fit with Equation (2) as is implemented in the program Prizm® v 6.0.
Modelling of the MICALMO-CH complex with actin
A model of the complex of MICALMO-CH and F-actin was made using the crystal structure of MICALMO-CH reported in this study and a dimer of actin from the most recent F-actin model (PDB 2ZWH38). In the case of the reduced enzyme, the MO in the MICALMO-CH structure was replaced by the one in the crystal structure of the MO with the reduced FAD (PDB 2C4C13). To obtain a starting model, the CH domain of MICALMO-CH was aligned to the CH domain of an electron microscopy model of actinin bound to F-actin (PDB 3LUE24), followed by manual adjustment of MICALMO-CH to orient the large opening of the active site in the MO towards the D-loop (DnaseI-binding loop) of actin which contains Met 44, while maintaining the contact between the CH domain and actin. In these conditions, the closest distance between Met 44 and the C4a of the FAD is ~32 Å. For direct oxidation to be possible, the D-loop must adopt a conformation in which the sulfur atom of Met 44 is within ~3 Å of the distal oxygen of the C4a-hydroperoxyflavin FAD intermediate (FAD-C4a-O-OH) of MICAL’s active site. To assess whether such a conformation is possible, we used a series of steered molecular dynamics (MD) calculations. CHARMM version 28b2 with the CHARMM 28b2 force field was used in the computations with implicit solvent and a distance dependent dielectric constant. The models were optimized by minimizing the energy for 1000 cycles of steepest descent, followed by 1000 cycles of conjugate gradient, and finally 1000 cycles of adopted-basis Newton-Raphson minimization. For all MD calculations, the FAD cofactor was harmonically constrained to either the oxidized “out” conformation or the reduced “in” conformation with a soft force constant (1 kcal mol−1 Å−2). Leapfrog Verlet molecular dynamics simulations were performed at a constant temperature of 300 K and ran for 30,000 fs, harmonically constraining Met 44 to a chosen position with a force constant of 0.5 kcal mol−1 Å−2). In each successive simulation, Met 44 was constrained to a position closer to the FAD-C4a atom, until the D-loop achieved a conformation where Met 44 was within the 3 Å range required for oxidation to be possible. The average value of the energy and its fluctuations during the last 10,000 fs were calculated with an in-house written program.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Alqassim, S. S. et al. Modulation of MICAL Monooxygenase Activity by its Calponin Homology Domain: Structural and Mechanistic Insights. Sci. Rep. 6, 22176; doi: 10.1038/srep22176 (2016).
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Acknowledgements
This work was fully supported by the Scholarship Coordination Office, Office of the President of the United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
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L.M.A. and M.A.B. conceived the study. S.S.A. expressed, purified, and crystallized MICALMOCH, collected the diffraction data and determined the structures. M.A.B. collected SAXS data and performed analysis. M.U. expressed and purified MICALMO for kinetics experiments. S.S.A., M.U., E.B., M.N. and M.A.B. performed kinetics experiments. S.S.A. and L.M.A. performed molecular dynamics simulations and together with M.A.B. built the MICALMO-CH/F-actin model. S.S.A., L.M.A. and M.A.B. designed the research and wrote the manuscript. L.M.A. and M.A.B. directed and supervised all of the research.
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Alqassim, S., Urquiza, M., Borgnia, E. et al. Modulation of MICAL Monooxygenase Activity by its Calponin Homology Domain: Structural and Mechanistic Insights. Sci Rep 6, 22176 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep22176
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep22176
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