| Ligand Binding Modulates the Mechanical Stability of Dihydrofolate Reductase Biophysical Journal, Volume 89, Issue 5, 1 November 2005, Pages 3337-3344 Sri Rama Koti Ainavarapu, Lewyn Li, Carmen L. Badilla and Julio M. Fernandez Abstract We use single-molecule force spectroscopy to demonstrate that the mechanical stability of the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is modulated by ligand binding. In the absence of bound ligands, DHFR extends at very low forces, averaging 27 pN, without any characteristic mechanical fingerprint. By contrast, in the presence of micromolar concentrations of the ligands methotrexate, nicotinamide adenine dihydrogen phosphate, or dihydrofolate, much higher forces are required (82±18 pN, 98±15 pN, and 83±16 pN, respectively) and a characteristic fingerprint is observed in the force-extension curves. The increased mechanical stability triggered by these ligands is not additive. Our results explain the large reduction in the degradation rate of DHFR, in the presence of its ligands. Our observations support the view that the rate-limiting step in protein degradation by adenosine triphosphate-dependent proteases is the mechanical unfolding of the target protein. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (200 kb) |
| Fingerprinting DHFR in Single-Molecule AFM Studies Biophysical Journal, Volume 91, Issue 5, 1 September 2006, Pages 2009-2010 Sri Rama Koti Ainavarapu, Lewyn Li and Julio M. Fernandez Full Text | PDF (81 kb) |
| Response to the Comment by Ainavarapu et al. Biophysical Journal, Volume 91, Issue 5, 1 September 2006, Pages 2011-2012 Matthias Rief, Jan Philipp Junker, Michael Schlierf, Kai Hell and Walter Neupert Full Text | PDF (135 kb) |
Copyright © 2005 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 89, Issue 5, L46-L48, 1 November 2005
doi:10.1529/biophysj.105.072066
Biophysical Letters
J.P. Junker*, K. Hell†, M. Schlierf*, W. Neupert† and M. Rief*,
, 
* Physik-Department E22, Technische Universität München, D-85748 Garching, Germany
† Institut für Physiologische Chemie, Universität München, D-81377 Munich, Germany
Address reprint requests and inquiries to M. Rief.In many physiological systems like muscle or the cytoskeleton, mechanical properties and stability of proteins are important for protein function. Single-molecule techniques have made such material properties accessible on the level of individual protein domains 1,2. But even with proteins whose function is not primarily mechanical, single-molecule protein unfolding experiments may yield valuable information about the molecular conformation. In this study we investigate whether ligand binding to the enyzme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) alters the mechanical stability of the enzyme and how single-molecule mechanical experiments can be used to report on the binding status of individual enzymes.
DHFR reduces dihydrofolic acid to tetrahydrofolic acid in the presence of the cofactor NADPH. This enzymatic reaction is an important step in nucleotide synthesis. There are a variety of drugs targeting DHFR that have gained great importance in chemotherapy and in the treatment of autoimmune diseases; among these is methotrexate (MTX), which binds competitively to the folate binding site of DHFR. DHFR is well studied in classical folding experiments 3 and it is known that MTX binding greatly enhances the thermodynamic stability of the enzyme 4. Mechanical stabilization of the enzyme is hence likely although a direct link between unfolding forces and thermodynamic stability cannot be established 5. For our study we chose mouse DHFR because it has been used to study the mitochondrial protein import motor that unfolds proteins before import 6. DHFR without bound substrate is readily imported into mitochondria whereas binding of MTX completely stops the import 7. Mechanical stabilization of the enzyme by substrate binding seems especially interesting in this context.
To investigate the mechanical stability of single mouse DHFR enzyme molecules we inserted DHFR into the rod of the actin cross-linking protein Ddfilamin (see Figure 1A). The Ddfilamin rod consists of five immunoglobulin domains and has been mechanically characterized in a series of previous studies 8. In our experiment the Ddfilamin domains serve as handles to contact DHFR at its termini. A typical force curve is shown in Figure 1C. All features known from Ddfilamin unfolding can be observed in the force curve. The unfolding events marked in blue reflect unfolding of Ig domains in the Ddfilamin rod whereas the red events reflect unfolding of Ig domain 4 that unfolds via a stable intermediate 8. In contrast to the pure Ddfilamin rod we now consistently observe an additional unfolding event (marked in green) where the polypeptide chain lengthens by 66–67nm (see Figure 1D).
This gain in length is exactly the expected value for an unfolding event where the 186 amino acids folded in a DHFR domain go from a folded into a completely stretched conformation. Closer inspection of the DHFR unfolding event shows substructure within the unfolding event (cf. inset in Figure 1C). Before completely relaxing to the unfolded state the cantilever dwells for ∼3ms at an intermediate level. This is indication for a metastable mechanical unfolding intermediate 9. Analysis of the length gain from the folded to the intermediate conformation (Figure 1E) allows us to identify the amino acid residues that form the intermediate structure. The 22±3nm gain corresponds to 55–65 amino acid residues detaching from either the N- or C-terminus. Given the large structural change within the tightly folded core of DHFR induced by detachment of 55–65 residues from the N-terminus, the most likely candidate is detachment of the five C-terminal β-sheets (marked in light green in Figure 1B). The remainder of 121–131 amino acids (marked in dark green) will still be able to form intact binding sites for both substrates.
In a next set of experiments we studied the effect of substrate binding on the stability of DHFR and the mechanical unfolding intermediate. We could not detect any mechanical difference between the substrate free protein and the protein with NADPH bound (see Supplementary Material ). To improve statistics of our measurements we therefore pooled those data together. We analyzed both the forces of the major unfolding peak and the lifetime of the unfolding intermediate in the absence of substrate as well as in the presence of MTX and in the simultaneous presence of the substrates MTX and NADPH (see Figure 2AB). Binding of MTX was independently verified by the characteristic spectroscopic ultraviolet shift. We found the major unfolding peak was unchanged at all conditions with an average of ∼60pN (insets in Figure 2CE). In contrast to the unfolding force we did observe an effect of substrate binding on the stability of the intermediate. The lifetimes under the different substrate conditions are shown in the left panels of Figure 2CE). While MTX alone increases the average lifetime of the intermediate under force by only 25%, in the presence of both MTX and NADPH the lifetimes double. The fits in Figure 2CE, are Monte Carlo simulations with a potential width of 2Å taking into account the distribution of forces acting on the intermediate (for details see Supplementary Material ). The best fit values for the lifetimes under zero load condition are shown in Table 1.
Surprisingly the effects of substrate binding on mechanical stability of the protein are overall moderate. The average force of the major unfolding peak was even unchanged at all conditions. In contrast, equilibrium experiments have shown drastic stabilization of DHFR upon binding of MTX. This seeming discrepancy can be resolved by considering that our mechanical experiments occur in nonequilibrium. Obviously the interactions determining the average unfolding force of 60pN reside in the C-terminal part of the protein that detaches during the transition from folded to the intermediate. This part is distant from all substrate binding sites and hence an influence of substrate binding is not expected. The influence on the stability of the intermediate is stronger but only binding of both substrates leads to a significant effect. This is in accord with studies on the titin domain I27 showing that the interactions determining mechanical protein stability are local 2. In contrast, equilibrium free energy samples over all interactions within the protein structure. The location of force application to the protein is therefore likely of great importance. In the proposed intermediate structure (dark green part in Figure 1B) the N- and C-terminus is not in direct contact with the bound MTX and a weak effect is in perfect agreement. We anticipate that force application close to the substrate binding sites can be used to tune the sensitivity of structural stability on ligand binding.
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