Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.533, No.4, 913-918, 2020
ATP differentially antagonizes the crowding-induced destabilization of human gamma S-crystallin and its four cataract-causing mutants
alpha beta gamma-crystallins account for similar to 90% of ocular proteins in lens with concentrations >= 400 mg/ml, which has to be soluble for the whole life-span and their aggregation results in cataract. So far, four cataract-causing mutants G18V, D26G, S39C and V42 M have been identified for human gamma S-crystallin. Mysteriously, lens maintains ATP concentrations of 3-7 mM despite being a metabolically-quiescent organ. Here by DSF and NMR, we characterized the binding of ATP to three cataract-causing mutants of human gamma S-crystallin as well as its effect on the solution conformations and thermal stability. The results together decode several novel findings: 1) ATP shows no detectable binding to WT and mutants, as well as no significant alternation of their conformations even at molar ratio of 1:200.2) Cataract-causing mutants show distinctive patterns of the crowding-induced destabilization. 3) ATP differentially antagonizes their crowding-induced destabilization. Our studies suggest that the crowding-induced destabilization of human gamma S-crystallin is also critically dependent of the hydration shell which could be differentially altered by four mutations. Most unexpectedly, ATP acts as an effective mediator for the protein hydration shell to antagonize the crowding-induced destabilization. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Adenosine triphosphate (ATP);Human eye lens;gamma S-crystallin;Cataract-causing mutants;Molecular crowding;NMR spectroscopy