4.6 Article

Common allotypes of ER aminopeptidase 1 have substrate-dependent and highly variable enzymatic properties

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100443

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Funding

  1. VENI award from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [016.186.006]

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The study revealed that ERAP1 allotypes exhibit a wide range of enzymatic activities, with one allotype, associated with Behcet's disease, consistently showing low activity outlier. Through in vitro analysis, it was found that ERAP1 allotypes can differ in both catalytic efficiency and substrate affinity, leading to changes in intermediate accumulation in multistep trimming reactions.
Polymorphic variation of immune system proteins can drive variability of individual immune responses. Endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1) generates antigenic peptides for presentation by major histocompatibility complex class I molecules. Coding SNPs in ERAP1 have been associated with predisposition to inflammatory rheumatic disease and shown to affect functional properties of the enzyme, but the interplay between combinations of these SNPs as they exist in allotypes has not been thoroughly explored. We used phased genotype data to estimate ERAP1 allotype frequency in 2504 individuals across five major human populations, generated highly pure recombinant enzymes corresponding to the ten most common ERAP1 allotypes, and systematically characterized their in vitro enzymatic properties. We find that ERAP1 allotypes possess a wide range of enzymatic activities, up to 60-fold, whose ranking is substrate dependent. Strikingly, allotype 10, previously associated with Behcet's disease, is consistently a low-activity outlier, suggesting that a significant percentage of individuals carry a subactive ERAP1 gene. Enzymatic analysis revealed that ERAP1 allotypes can differ in both catalytic efficiency and substrate affinity, differences that can change intermediate accumulation in multistep trimming reactions. Alterations in efficacy of an allosteric inhibitor that targets the regulatory site suggest that allotypic variation influences the communication between the regulatory and the active site. Our work defines the wide landscape of ERAP1 activity in human populations and demonstrates how common allotypes can induce substrate-dependent variability in antigen processing, thus contributing, in synergy with major histocompatibility complex haplotypes, to immune response variability and predisposition to chronic inflammatory conditions.

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