4.4 Article

Deamidation in human lens βB2-crystallin destabilizes the dimer

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 45, Issue 10, Pages 3146-3153

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi052051k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NEI NIH HHS [R01 EY012239, EY 10572, P30 EY010572, R01-EY012239, P30 EY010572-129004, R01 EY012239-07, R01 EY012239-08] Funding Source: Medline

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Two major determinants of the transparency of the lens are protein-protein interactions and stability of the crystallins, the structural proteins in the lens. beta B2 is the most abundant beta-crystallin in the human lens and is important in formation of the complex interactions of lens crystallins. beta B2 readily forms a homodimer in vitro, with interacting residues across the monomer-monomer interface conserved among beta-crystallins. Due to their long life spans, crystallins undergo an unusually large number of modifications, with deamidation being a major factor. In this study the effects of two potential deamidation sites at the monomer-monomer interface on dimer formation and stability were determined. Glutamic acid substitutions were constructed to mimic the effects of previously reported deamidations at Q162 in the C-terminal domain and at Q70, its N-terminal homologue. The mutants had a nativelike secondary structure similar to that of wild type beta B2 with differences in tertiary structure for the double mutant, Q70E/Q162E. Multiangle light scattering and quasi-elastic light scattering experiments showed that dimer formation was not interrupted. In contrast, equilibrium unfolding and refolding in urea showed destabilization of the mutants, with an inflection in the transition of unfolding for the double mutant suggesting a distinct intermediate. These results suggest that deamidation at critical sites destabilizes beta B2 and may disrupt the function of beta B2 in the lens.

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