4.6 Article

Structural basis for prolidase deficiency disease mechanisms

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 285, Issue 18, Pages 3422-3441

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.14620

Keywords

disease mechanism; human prolidase; metalloprotease; prolidase deficiency; protein crystallography

Funding

  1. Joint Berlin MX-Laboratory

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Prolidase is a metallopeptidase that cleaves iminodipeptides containing a proline (Pro) or hydroxyproline (Hyp) residue at their C-terminal end. The disease prolidase deficiency (PD) is a rare recessive human disorder characterized by reduced prolidase activity. PD manifests itself by a wide range of severe clinical symptoms, most commonly as skin ulceration, recurrent infections of the respiratory tract, and mental retardation. Several mutations in the PEPD gene have been identified that are responsible for the loss or the reduction of prolidase activity. In contrast, the structural basis of enzyme inactivation has so far remained elusive. In this study, we present high resolution crystal structures of a number of human prolidase (HsProl) variants, in which single amino acids are either substituted by others or deleted. The observed implications of the mutations on the three-dimensional structure of HsProl are reported and discussed and related to their enzymatic activity. The resulting structures may be divided into four groups depending on the presumed effect of the corresponding mutations on the reaction mechanism. The four possible inactivation mechanisms, which could be elucidated, are disruption of the catalytic Mn-2(OH-)-center, introduction of chain disorder along with the displacement of important active site residues, rigidification of the active site, and flexibilization of the active site. DatabaseAll refined structure coordinates as well as the corresponding structure factor amplitudes have been deposited in the PDB under the accession numbers , , , , , , , , , .

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