Journal of Lipid Research (Dec 2013)

Structural basis for distinct functions of the naturally occurring Cys mutants of human apolipoprotein A-I[S]

  • Olga Gursky,
  • Martin K. Jones,
  • Xiaohu Mei,
  • Jere P. Segrest,
  • David Atkinson

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 12
pp. 3244 – 3257

Abstract

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HDL removes cell cholesterol and protects against atherosclerosis. ApoA-I provides a flexible structural scaffold and an important functional ligand on the HDL surface. We propose structural models for apoA-IMilano (R173C) and apoA-IParis (R151C) mutants that show high cardioprotection despite low HDL levels. Previous studies established that two apoA-I molecules encircle HDL in an antiparallel, helical double-belt conformation. Recently, we solved the atomic structure of lipid-free Δ(185–243)apoA-I and proposed a conformational ensemble for apoA-IWT on HDL. Here we modify this ensemble to understand how intermolecular disulfides involving C173 or C151 influence protein conformation. The double-belt conformations are modified by belt rotation, main-chain unhinging around Gly, and Pro-induced helical bending, and they are verified by comparison with previous experimental studies and by molecular dynamics simulations of apoA-IMilano homodimer. In our models, the molecular termini repack on various-sized HDL, while packing around helix-5 in apoA-IWT, helix-6 in apoA-IParis, or helix-7 in apoA-IMilano homodimer is largely conserved. We propose how the disulfide-induced constraints alter the protein conformation and facilitate dissociation of the C-terminal segment from HDL to recruit additional lipid. Our models unify previous studies of apoA-IMilano and demonstrate how the mutational effects propagate to the molecular termini, altering their conformations, dynamics, and function.

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