Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité de
Recherche Mixte 8544, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris,
France (N.M, S.B., J.M., I.S.); Departments of Structural Biology
(H.M.G., J.L.S.) and Neurobiology (I.S.), Weizmann Institute of
Science, Rehovoth, Israel; and Unité de Conformation de
Macromolécules Biologiques, Université Libre de Bruxelles,
Bruxelles, Belgium (D.V.B., S.J.W.)
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Introduction |
Torpedo
acetylcholinesterase (AChE) contains a nonconserved cysteine residue,
Cys231, buried within the protein, ca. 8 Å from the active-site
serine, Ser200 (Sussman et al., 1991
). Chemical modification of the
free thiol group of this amino acid residue by a repertoire of
sulfhydryl reagents causes irreversible inactivation of the enzyme,
even when modification is reversible (Kreimer et al., 1994
).
Inactivation is due to an irreversible conformational transition of the
native enzyme to a molten globule (MG) species (Kreimer et al., 1994
).
Modification, as well as concomitant inactivation, obeys pseudofirst
order kinetics (Steinberg et al., 1990
; Kreimer et al., 1994
). The rate
of modification by a given thiol reagent is much slower than for a
reaction with a low-molecular-weight thiol, as reflected by the high
activation energy of the reaction (Kreimer et al., 1994
).
The Ellman reaction for assay of AChE (Ellman et al., 1961
) involves
the use of a thiol reagent, namely 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)
(DTNB), also known as Ellman's reagent, which is reduced by the
thiocholine generated by enzymic hydrolysis of acetylthiocholine (ATCh)
to yield the chromophore 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid. Nevertheless, Torpedo AChE can routinely be assayed by the Ellman method
because the
T1/2 for its
inactivation by DTNB at neutral pH and room temperature is
approximately 9 h (Steinberg et al., 1990
). Therefore, it was not
anticipated that a mutant Torpedo AChE, L282S, generated by mutating Leu282, a leucine residue located close to the surface of the
enzyme and near the mouth of the active-site gorge (Fig. 1; Sussman et al., 1991
; Harel et al.,
1995
), to either serine or alanine, would be unstable under the
conditions of the Ellman assay. This mutant had been generated to
promote glycosylation of the adjacent residue, Asn280, by creating the
glycosylation signal AsnXSer. However, instability was not due to
glycosylation because the analogous mutant, L282A, displayed similar
instability. With the following results, we demonstrate that
such mutants, generated by replacement of Leu282 with a smaller
residue, are, indeed, destabilized, and we present evidence that the
instability observed under assay conditions derives from enhanced
reactivity of Cys231 relative to its reactivity in the wild-type (WT)
enzyme. This, in turn, is related to a decrease in the overall thermal stability of the mutant enzyme. Both the enhanced susceptibility to
chemical modification and the decreased thermal stability can be
modulated by reversible inhibitors specific for either the active site
or the "peripheral" anionic site. Leu282 is within a loop
stretching from Trp279 to Ser291. This loop is an important constituent
of the peripheral anionic site (Harel et al., 1993
, 1995
; Bourne et
al., 1995
). It also contributes the principal hydrophobic stretch to a
5-kDa polypeptide, Gly268-Lys315, which serves to anchor a MG species
of Torpedo californica AChE (TcAChE) to
liposomes (Shin et al., 1996
). The peripheral anionic site of AChE has
been shown to enhance the rate of amyloid fibril assembly from A
peptide (Inestrosa et al., 1996
), and, more recently, the isolated
polypeptide sequence has been shown to be endowed with this capacity
(De Ferrari and Inestrosa, 1998
). Thus, elucidation of the
physicochemical forces governing the stability of the Trp279-Ser291 loop warrants further investigation.

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Fig. 1.
Ribbon diagram of TcAChE. Residues 4 to 305 are colored green, and residues 306 to 535 are colored cyan,
highlighting the division of the molecule into two putative domains.
The loop containing Leu282, viz. Trp279-Ser291, is colored yellow, with
the side chains of Trp279 and Leu282 represented in stick form. The
three regions of the second domain of the molecule that interact with
this loop are colored purple, and two side chains, Phe 331 and Asn399,
are shown in stick form. The active-site residues, Trp84 and Ser200, at
the bottom of the active-site gorge, are also shown in stick form to
provide orientation (picture was made in Insight II).
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Experimental Procedures |
Materials.
ATCh, DTNB, propidium iodide, gallamine
triethiodide, d-tubocurarine, decamethonium bromide,
4,4'-dithiodipyridine (DTP), and BSA were all purchased from Sigma
Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Edrophonium chloride was obtained from
Hoffman-La Roche (Basel, Switzerland). All salts and buffers were of
analytical grade.
Site-Directed Mutagenesis and Transfection.
The coding
sequences of the H catalytic subunits of Torpedo marmorata
AChE (TmAChE; Duval et al., 1992
) and of rat AChE
(Legay et al., 1993
) were inserted into the pEF-BOS vector and
were mutagenized with oligonucleotide primers, as described previously
(Duval et al., 1992
). COS-7 cells were transfected as described
previously (Duval et al., 1992
). After transfection, the COS cells were
incubated for 2 days at 37°C and then for 4 days at 27°C in the
case of the Torpedo enzyme, and incubated for 4 days at
37°C in the case of rat AChE.
AChE Activity Assays.
AChE activity was determined by the
colorimetric method of Ellman et al. (1961)
at room temperature, with
0.75 mM ATCh as the substrate, in 50 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.4)
containing 0.5 mM DTNB and 0.1 mg/ml BSA. Assays were performed
in microplates with a Labsystems (Helsinki, Finland) Multiskan
RC automatic plate reader and recording at 414 nm every 20 s.
Km values were determined under the same
experimental conditions in a concentration range of 0.02 to 10 mM ATCh,
and IC50 values were determined with 0.5 mM ATCh.
AChE samples were preincubated with the inhibitors in the reaction
mixture for 20 min before the initiation of the enzymic reaction by
addition of the substrate.
Inactivation by DTP.
Chemical inactivation was performed in
buffer 1 (0.01% BSA/40 mM NaCl/10 mM Tris hydrochloride; pH 7.4)
containing 1 mM DTP in the case of TmAChE and 0.05 mM DTP
for the rat enzyme. Ten-microliter aliquots of the appropriate AChE
sample were added to 100 µl of the DTP-containing buffer, which was
then incubated at 26.5°C. At appropriate time intervals,
10-µl aliquots were withdrawn and stored on ice for up to 1 h
before assay of residual activity.
Thermal Inactivation.
Thermal inactivation experiments were
performed by the addition of 10-µl aliquots of the appropriate AChE
sample to 100 µl of buffer 1, which was then brought to the
appropriate temperature. Arrhenius plots were determined from
the initial rates of loss of enzymic activity at four appropriate
temperatures for each AChE sample, assuming that thermal denaturation
obeys first order kinetics, yielding values of
H
.
Software.
Domain limits were computed from the atomic
coordinates of the free TcAChE molecule (Protein Data Bank
entry 2ace) by a recently developed procedure (Wernisch et al.,
1999
) that uses a graph heuristic to partition the protein into sets of
residues that display minimum interactions between them. The
interactions are evaluated from the contact areas between atoms, which
are computed from the weighted Voronoi diagram (Richards, 1974
). The accessible surface areas of residues in the protein and the area buried
in the interface between the two domains were evaluated with the
program SurVol (Alard, 1992
). All of the procedures use a probe size of
1.4 Å for the water molecule and the set of radii implemented in the
BRUGEL package (Delhaise et al., 1984
).
The programs Insight II (MSI Corp. San Diego, CA) and XtalView
(McRee, 1992
) were used for display and analysis, and Raster3D (Merritt
and Bacon, 1997
) was used to render some of the images used in this
study. The Collaborative Computational Project, Number 4 program
(1994
), CONTACT, was used to assess interdomain contacts.
 |
Results |
Figure 2 displays the enzymic
activity of aliquots of WT TmAChE and of the corresponding
L282S mutant as a function of time, at 30°C, under standard Ellman
assay conditions (see Experimental Procedures). Whereas the
activity of the WT enzyme, as expected, decreases only slightly over 15 min, that of the L282S mutant decays significantly. In addition, the
effects of the two peripheral site ligands, d-tubocurarine
and gallamine (Changeux, 1966
), should be noted. Whereas the addition
of 0.4 mM gallamine stabilizes L282S over the period monitored,
d-tubocurarine (50 µM) substantially enhances the rate at
which its enzymic activity decays. Propidium, like gallamine,
stabilizes the L282S mutant (not shown). Neither d-tubocurarine nor gallamine had a significant effect on the
slow loss of activity of WT TmAChE.

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Fig. 2.
Catalytic activity of WT and of L282S
TmAChE as a function of time under standard assay
conditions. Catalytic activity was measured under standard assay
conditions (see Experimental Procedures). The activity
at a given time was calculated from the change in optical density of
the reaction mixture over a time interval of 20 s. The change with
time in the catalytic activity of the L282 mutant was also monitored in
the presence of d-tubocurarine (50 µM) and of
gallamine (0.4 mM).
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Our earlier studies of chemical modification and concomitant
deactivation of TcAChE by thiol reagents (Steinberg et al.,
1990
; Kreimer et al., 1994
) suggested that the instability of L282S under the conditions of the Ellman assay might have its origin in the
enhanced reactivity of Cys231 in the mutant enzyme relative to the WT
enzyme. Therefore, this possibility was examined directly. Figure
3 shows the results of experiments in
which samples of WT TmAChE and of various mutant enzymes
were preincubated in the presence of the disulfide DTP (Kreimer et al.,
1994
) before assay by the Ellman procedure. Both L282S (not shown) and
the analogous mutant, L282A, are stable in the absence of DTP at
26.3°C, but unstable in its presence, with
T1/2 values of ca. 7 min under the
experimental conditions used. WT TmAChE is stable under the same conditions, as is the double-mutant C231S/L282A, which lacks the
free thiol of Cys231 (not shown). The fact that the L282A mutant is
destabilized to a similar extent as the L282S mutant shows that
destabilization is not due to glycosylation. This was confirmed by the
fact that the N280Q/L282S double mutant was also unstable in the
presence of DTP (not shown).

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Fig. 3.
Kinetics of inactivation of WT and of mutant
TmAChE by DTP. Inactivation was performed at 26.5°C.
Ten-microliter aliquots of the TmAChE sample were added
to 100 µl of 1 mM DTP in buffer 1. At appropriate time intervals,
10-µl aliquots were withdrawn and stored on ice for up to 1 h
before assay of residual enzymic activity.
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Inspection of the three-dimensional structure of Torpedo
AChE (see Discussion) revealed that the side chain of Leu282
makes contact principally with the side chains of two other residues, the indole ring of Trp279 and the hydroxyl group of Ser291 (Fig. 4). Thus, it was of interest to see
whether substitution of either of these two residues by amino acids
with smaller side chains would reduce the stability of
TmAChE in a similar manner. Accordingly, two appropriate
mutants, W279A and S291G, were generated, and Fig. 3 shows that these
mutations also increase susceptibility to DTP. The degree of
susceptibility produced by the S291G mutation is similar to or greater
than that produced by the L282S/A mutation, whereas that produced by
the W279A mutation is much smaller.

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Fig. 4.
Stereo view of the Trp279-Ser291 loop. Contacts made
by the side chain atoms of Leu282 are shown by dashed lines: mauve for
C , green for C 1, and purple for
C 2. Red dashed lines represent possible hydrogen bonds
between the two water molecules shown (red spheres) and protein atoms.
Wat580 is the uppermost of the two and Wat584 is below. The orientation
in this figure is similar to that in Fig. 1 (picture was made in
XtalView/Raster3D).
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The instability of all three mutants relative to WT
TmAChE, as monitored by susceptibility to chemical
modification, was paralleled by reduced thermal stability. Thus, WT
TmAChE was fairly stable at 38°C and pH 7.75, losing ca.
10% of its activity in 3 h. Under the same conditions, the L282A,
S291G, and W279A mutants displayed T1/2
values of ca. 25 min, 6 min, and 256 min, respectively. Arrhenius plots
showed that the decreased thermal stability was due to large decreases
in the activation energy, from 170 kcal/mol for WT enzyme to 100 kcal/mol and 90 kcal/mol, respectively, for the L282A and S291G mutants
(Fig. 5). A smaller decrease, to 135 kcal/mol, was observed for the W279A mutant, paralleling its more
limited sensitivity to DTP. Figure 5 also shows that the C231S mutant
is slightly less stable than the WT and that the C231S/L282S double
mutant is slightly less stable than L282S, which is in agreement with the observations of Wilson et al. (1996)
.

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Fig. 5.
Activation energies for thermal denaturation of WT
and mutant TmAChEs. Arrhenius plots were derived from
the experimental data for the kinetics of thermal inactivation at four
temperatures for each AChE sample. A 10-µl aliquot of the
TmAChE sample was added to 100 µl of buffer 1 before
incubation at the desired temperature. At suitable time intervals,
10-µl aliquots were withdrawn and stored on ice for up to 1 h
before assay of residual enzymic activity.
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Vertebrate AChE displays a high degree of conservation, with
Torpedo AChE possessing ca. 50% sequence identity and ca.
70% sequence similarity to various mammalian AChEs (Cousin et al., 1998
). Crystallographic studies on complexes of mouse
recombinant, human recombinant, and Torpedo AChE with the
mamba venom polypeptide neurotoxin fasciculin show that these three
enzymes also possess very similar three-dimensional structures (Bourne
et al., 1995
; Harel et al., 1995
; Kryger et al., 1998
). Therefore, we
investigated the effect of mutation to a smaller residue of the
leucine residue in rat AChE equivalent to Leu282 in Torpedo
AChE, which is either conserved or replaced by valine or methionine, in
all of the vertebrate cholinesterases cloned and/or sequenced to date
(Table 1; Cousin et al., 1998
). We also
investigated whether the inherent capacity of Torpedo AChE
to be deactivated by chemical modification of Cys231 could be conferred
on rat AChE by introducing a cysteine moiety in place of the homologous
residue, Gly234.
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TABLE 1
Conservation of residues in the Trp279-Ser291 loop and of residues in
domain 2 that interact with this loop
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Mutation to alanine of the leucine residue in rat AChE equivalent to
Leu282 in TmAChE, viz. Leu289, produced a mutant enzyme, L289(282)A1, that was much more
susceptible to thermal denaturation than was the WT enzyme. Arrhenius
plots (not shown) revealed that this is associated with a reduction in
the energy of activation, from 125 kcal/mol to 90 kcal/mol, a reduction
much smaller than that produced by the homologous mutation in
TmAChE.
WT rat AChE, as might be expected, is not susceptible to DTP at
26.3°C. However, the G234(231)C mutant, in which a
cysteine residue has been inserted at a position homologous to that of Cys231 in WT TmAChE, was deactivated, with a
T1/2 of 30 min, in the presence of 1 mM DTP
(data not shown). As might be predicted from the thermal denaturation
data for the L289A mutant, the double mutant
G234(231)C/L289(282)A is much more susceptible to
DTP under the same experimental conditions and loses activity with a
T1/2 of ca. 20 min, even in the presence of
0.05 mM DTP (data not shown).
Our initial observation (see above) was a modulation of the stability
of the L282S mutant under conditions of the Ellman assay by the
prototypic peripheral site ligand d-tubocurarine. Therefore, it seemed desirable to conduct a systematic survey of the effects of
AChE-specific ligands on the stability of the various mutants discussed
above, relative to WT TmAChE. In addition to
d-tubocurarine and gallamine, which are specific for the
peripheral site, edrophonium and tacrine, ligands specific for the
"anionic" subsite of the active site (Harel et al., 1993
), and
decamethonium, a bisquaternary ligand that spans the two sites (Harel
et al. 1993
), were included for purposes of comparison.
IC50 values for inhibition of the various
TcAChE and rat AChE mutants by these ligands are summarized in Table 2. Not surprisingly,
Km was not greatly influenced by the
mutations made in residues near the entrance of the gorge, nor did the
C231S mutation influence this parameter. Similarly, only small effects
were observed on the IC50 values for tacrine and
edrophonium, which bind to the anionic subsite of the active site at
the bottom of the aromatic gorge. However, the L282S/A and S291G
mutations appeared to increase the affinity of
d-tubocurarine for TmAChE by 2- to 3-fold,
whereas they decreased the affinity of gallamine by 4- to 10-fold and
of decamethonium by 2- to 3-fold. Whereas the W279A mutation had little
effect on the affinity of d-tubocurarine and gallamine for
TmAChE, it decreased the affinity of decamethonium by about
7-fold. The fact that mutations in the peripheral site region may
increase affinity for some peripheral site ligands and decrease that
for others is not unusual and may be due to interaction of different
peripheral site ligands with diverse sets of amino acid residues
(Cousin et al., 1996
).
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TABLE 2
IC50 values for inhibition of wild-type and mutant T. marmorata and rat AChEs by active and peripheral site ligands
Assay conditions were as described in Experimental
Procedures.
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We investigated the effects of the ligands on both thermal denaturation
and deactivation produced by chemical modification with DTP for both WT
and peripheral site mutants of TmAChE and rat AChE.
For the L282A mutant, the thermal denaturation studies presented a
fairly straightforward picture. Edrophonium, tacrine, decamethonium, and gallamine all provided substantial protection against thermal denaturation, whereas d-tubocurarine slightly destabilized
the enzyme (Fig. 6). The observed
protection was reflected in the activation energies calculated from
Arrhenius plots obtained in the presence of the various ligands. For
the first four ligands, these were substantially higher than the value
obtained for L282A in the absence of any ligand. For tacrine (155 kcal/mol), the activation energy approached the value obtained for WT
enzyme (170 kcal/mol), and for d-tubocurarine, the
activation energy was slightly decreased. d-Tubocurarine had
a similar effect on the W279A mutant (not shown).

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Fig. 6.
Activation energies for thermal denaturation of the
L282A mutant of TmAChE in the presence and absence of
active-site and peripheral-site ligands. Assays were performed and
Arrhenius plots were derived as described in the legend to Fig. 5.
Ligand concentrations used were: d-tubocurarine, 0.5 mM;
decamethonium, 20 µM; edrophonium, 10 µM; gallamine, 0.6 mM;
tacrine, 100 nM.
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Inactivation by DTP presented a more complex picture. At the
temperature used, 26.3°C, the WT enzyme was fairly stable, but a
slightly increased rate of inactivation was observed in the presence of
either d-tubocurarine or tacrine (Fig.
7A). For the L282A mutant, gallamine and
decamethonium exerted strong protection and edrophonium provided slight
protection, whereas d-tubocurarine slightly increased the
rate of inactivation, and tacrine substantially accelerated
inactivation, producing 50% inhibition of enzymic activity within 2 min, as compared with ca. 6 min in its absence (Fig. 7B). Similar
results were obtained for S291G, although edrophonium provided greater
protection (Fig. 7C). However, for this latter mutant,
d-tubocurarine enhanced the rate of inactivation (5-fold) much more than did tacrine (2-fold). In the case of W279A, the trend
was similar, but the effects were less striking (Fig. 7D). Both
gallamine and edrophonium afforded protection, whereas both d-tubocurarine and tacrine accelerated deactivation. Similar
experiments performed on the rat AChE double-mutant
G234(231)C/L289(282)A yielded a rather different
pattern of efficacy of ligands. Overall, the effects observed were not
striking, but gallamine had a protective effect, decamethonium,
d-tubocurarine, and edrophonium had little or no effect, and
only tacrine enhanced the rate of inactivation substantially, although
not as markedly as for the peripheral site mutants of TmAChE
(data not shown).

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Fig. 7.
Effects of active-site and peripheral-site ligands on
the kinetics of inactivation of WT TmAChE and the L282A,
S291G, and W279A mutants by DTP. The experimental procedure was as
described in the legend to Fig. 3. Ligand concentrations used were as
described in the legend to Fig. 6. A, WT; B, L282A; C, S291G; and D,
W279A.
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Discussion |
Our data are in line with earlier experiments performed on
TcAChE, which showed that chemical modification of the
nonconserved Cys231 caused a loss of enzymic activity (Steinberg et
al., 1990
), with concomitant transformation to a partially unfolded
state displaying the physicochemical features of a MG state (Kreimer et
al., 1994
). However, the data concerning mutation of Leu282 add another
dimension. Although hydrophobic, this residue is located near the
surface of the protein, close to the mouth of the active-site gorge
(Fig. 1; Harel et al., 1995
). We did not expect that mutation of
Leu282, located at the periphery of the protein, would affect so
drastically the stability of the entire catalytic subunit containing 537 amino acid residues. There is substantial documentation of studies
in which large hydrophobic side chains have been mutated to smaller
ones (see, e.g., Yutani et al., 1987
; Matsumara et al., 1988
; Eriksson
et al., 1992b
). In general, such mutations destabilize the protein
under consideration. In cases where these mutations create empty
cavities, the magnitude of the destabilization is greater than in those
where the three-dimensional structure adjusts to fill the void created
by reducing the size of the side chain (Eriksson et al., 1992b
). The
proteins so studied have been much smaller than the catalytic subunit
of TcAChE, containing up to 268 amino acid residues in the
case of the
subunit of tryptophan synthase (Yutani et al., 1987
).
It was reported that cavity-containing mutants of T4 lysozyme could be
stabilized by the uptake of benzene or indole into the cavity (Eriksson
et al., 1992a
). We were not able to obtain similar stabilization of the L282A mutant by benzene (N. Morel, unpublished observations), probably
because in this mutant, the conformation of the loop, and possibly
elsewhere, was altered so that no cavity was left after the mutation.
The experimental data presented, whether monitoring loss of enzymic
activity due to chemical modification or measuring rates of thermal
inactivation and generating Arrhenius plots, are all kinetic.
Therefore, at this stage, we cannot differentiate between thermodynamic
and kinetic destabilization. Thus, an increase in the rate of thermal
inactivation might result from a lowering of the free energy of the
intermediate activation state rather than from destabilization of the
native state. In any event, the Arrhenius plots reveal that mutations
that accelerate the rate of thermal inactivation lower the transition
enthalpy (Fig. 5). The effect of ligands on the inactivation of the
L282A mutant was not directly correlated with the values of the
transition enthalpies observed in their presence (Fig.
8). This suggests that for certain
ligands, viz. gallamine, decamethonium, and edrophonium, entropic
effects may play a role in stabilization.

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Fig. 8.
Stereo figure showing possible hydrogen bonds (dashed
lines) between atoms in the Trp279-Ser291 loop (carbon atoms are
colored yellow) and domain 2 (carbon atoms are colored purple). Wat555
is the red sphere. Orientation is similar to that shown in Fig. 4
(picture was made in XtalView/Raster3D).
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To provide a structural basis for the observed destabilization by
mutation of Leu282, we have examined the area surrounding the side
chain of this residue. Figure 1 shows an overall ribbon view of the
enzyme, with the loop containing Leu282 shown in yellow. This figure
also shows that the TcAChE can be divided approximately into
two halves. By using an older automatic procedure for identifying structural domains in proteins (Wodak and Janin, 1981
) and a more recent algorithm (Wernisch et al., 1999
), TcAChE is
found to consist of two "structural domains," each comprising one
contiguous segment of the polypeptide: domain 1 (residues 4-315) and
domain 2 (residues 316-357). These domains have been defined so as to
maximize the interactions between residues within each domain while
minimizing the interactions between domains. This definition has been
used in many algorithms, with the aim of identifying structural units most likely to fold independently and to be stable on their own (Wetlaufer, 1973
). However, this is unlikely to be applicable to the
two domains identified in TcAChE, given that they interact strongly with each other and possess a buried surface area of 5070 Å2, a value nearly three times larger than that
in the average protein-protein complex (Janin and Chothia,
1990
). Furthermore, the domains represent portions of the
/
hydrolase architecture of AChE that do not seem to represent
independent folding motifs found elsewhere. Interestingly, however, our
programs detect surprisingly similar domain partitions in other
proteins of the
/
hydrolase fold family (Ollis et al., 1992
),
such as the fungal and pancreatic lipases, that display weak sequence
homology with AChE. It is also noteworthy that the members of the
catalytic triad of TcAChE, viz. Ser200, Glu327, and His440,
come from both domains, and, thus, span the interdomain interface. This
is quite common in multidomain enzymes where domain movement plays a
role in catalysis (Gerstein et al., 1994
). This suggests that the AChE
domains, or, more particularly, their interface, and their counterparts in other
/
hydrolases, might also play a role in enzyme function.
In TcAChE, the interdomain surface involves 548 atoms from a
total of 78 residues in domain 1 and 74 residues in domain 2. The
interface atoms are defined as those for which the accessible surface
area (Lee and Richards, 1971
) computed in the entire protein is
different from that computed when the domains are considered independently. A sizable portion of the interface residues belongs to
loops (52%), with the remainder belonging to helices and strands. It
should also be mentioned that 73% of the buried interface area is
provided by nonpolar atoms, whereas only 5.5% is contributed by
charged atoms. Hence, the interdomain and, thus, also the intergorge interactions are primarily hydrophobic in nature.
Given the above analysis, visual inspection of Fig. 1 suggests that the
loop comprising residues 279 to 291 plays several roles: 1) it makes an
important contribution to the peripheral site at the top of the gorge;
2) it participates, via the side chains of residues Phe288 and Phe290,
in the acyl binding pocket of the active-site (Harel et al., 1992
); and
3) it makes significant cross-gorge interactions with residues in the
second domain. To quantify this latter role of the loop, Table
3 lists all of the interactions between
residues in the loop and residues in the second domain within a cutoff
of 4.1Å. The possible hydrogen bonds formed are displayed in Fig. 8
and listed in Table 4. Table 1 shows that
the side chains of the residues involved in these polar cross-domain
interactions are well conserved in vertebrate AChE sequences.
Consequently, it may be postulated that these residues play a key role
in preserving the active conformation of the enzyme and/or in its
folding to the native conformation. This prediction could be examined
by site-directed mutagenesis studies. Indeed, in preliminary
experiments, mutation of Arg289 to glutamate produced an active enzyme
that was, however, substantially less stable than WT TmAChE
(N. Morel, unpublished observations).
To examine the nonpolar interactions listed in Table 3, Fig.
9 shows the complementarity between the
solvent-accessible surfaces of the loop and neighboring atoms in the
second domain. Of particular interest is the sandwiching of the loop
residue Phe288 between the side chains of Phe331 and Asn399, both of
domain 2. Also noteworthy is the fact that Ile287 buries 140 Å2 in the interface, the second largest value
after Phe448 (not interacting with the loop), which buries 164 Å2. In all, the loop buries approximately 446 Å2 of surface area in the interaction between
the two domains.

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Fig. 9.
Interaction of surfaces between the Trp279-Ser291
loop and domain 2. The loop is depicted as an orange ribbon, and only
those side chain and main chain atoms that interact with atoms of the
second domain (within 4.1Å) are shown. The atoms of those interacting
residues that actually make contact are shown as red balls, and the
side chain atoms of the same residues that do not make contact are
shown in orange stick representations (to provide context and
connectivity). The solvent-accessible surface of only the contacting
atoms is shown in dark red mesh. The surface is calculated in
the context of the entire loop. Relevant residues from domain 2 are
shown as three segments of ribbon. Each segment is labeled at its
COOH-terminus. Medium blue indicates residues that have no contact with
the 279-291 loop. Purple residues have some atoms that contact the loop
atoms. Those main chains and side chains of domain 2 that actually
contact the loop are colored cyan, and the solvent-accessible surface
of these atoms (in the context of the whole second pseudodomain) is
shown in light cyan, made transparent to show the atoms of which it is
composed. The one cyan sphere is the water molecule, arbitrarily
assigned to be part of domain 2 (picture was made in Insight II).
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The participation of residues in the Trp279-Ser291 loop in cross-gorge
interactions implies that destabilization of the loop itself would
perturb important interdomain interactions, thereby impairing the
activity and, possibly, also the stability of the entire subunit. The
side chain of Leu282 is almost completely buried, with only 10 Å2 of surface area exposed to solvent. Figure 4
shows that it fills the central cavity of this loop, making van der
Waals interactions with other atoms in the vicinity (Table
5 and Fig.
10). Furthermore, we see that Phe288
adopts a left-handed helical backbone conformation, usually associated
with glycine and asparagine residues. Thus, decreasing the size of the
side chain of Leu282, as in the L282A mutant, would most probably
change the conformation of the loop or increase its conformational
flexibility. Consequently, this would compromise the cross-gorge
interactions shown in Figs. 8 and 9, resulting in the observed loss of
activity and the surmised loss of stability. Similar considerations
would apply to the destabilization achieved by analogous substitution
of Trp279 and Ser291 by amino acids with smaller side chains. However,
although the destabilization produced by the S291G mutation is rather
similar to that produced by the L282S or L282A mutation, that produced
by the W279A mutation is much smaller. This difference may tentatively
be ascribed to the fact that the principal interaction of Leu282 is
with Ser291, and vice versa, both side chains being almost completely
buried. As can be seen from Table 5, Ser291O
makes van der Waals contacts with both Leu282C
and L282C
2. In the case of Trp279, the indole
ring, although hydrophobic, is largely oriented outwards, toward the
active-site gorge, where it is available for interaction with
peripheral site ligands (Harel et al., 1992
, 1993
, 1995
; Bourne et al.,
1995
) and it makes a single, weaker interaction via its
C
3 atom with
Leu282C
1. It is of interest that within the
loop, two buried waters, Wat580 and Wat584, appear to contribute to
stabilization via van der Waals interactions and hydrogen bonds.

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Fig. 10.
Overlay of five AChE crystal structures in the
region of the Trp279-Ser291loop. The structures used are as follows:
soman-inactivated (Millard et al., 1998 ; green); complex with huperzine
A (Raves et al., 1997 ; PDB entry 1vot; dark blue); complex with
edrophonium (Harel et al., 1993 ; PDB entry 1ack; cyan),
sarin-inactivated (Millard et al., 1998 ; dark pink); and native AChE
(Raves et al., 1997 ; PDB entry 2ace; brown). Overlap of
structures is based on the assumption that all five of the crystals are
isomorphous. The overlay shows that there are no large qualitative
differences in the conformation of the loop, despite the presence or
absence of inhibitors at the bottom of the active-site gorge. The
largest differences are exhibited by the side chains of Ile287 and
Leu358, which appear to adopt a number of different conformations.
Furthermore, 2ace lacks one water molecule, uppermost in the
representation (picture was made in Insight II).
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The effects of the various reversible inhibitors on the stability of
the mutant enzyme(s) are also of interest, although for the peripheral
site ligands, no crystallographic data are available to reveal details
of their interaction with the AChE, and it would be difficult to obtain
meaningful assignments from docking studies. This was evident from
comparison of the X-ray structures of complexes, e.g., of
fasciculin/AChE (Harel et al., 1995
) and of huperzine A/AChE
(Raves et al., 1997
), with the structures predicted by docking. The
data for thermal denaturation of the L282A reveal that all of the
ligands examined, whether peripheral, active-site directed, or spanning
the two sites, stabilize the protein, with the exception of
d-tubocurarine, the destabilizing effect of which was the
starting point for the current study. In general, the binding energy
conferred by a ligand might be expected to stabilize the structure of a
protein unless it binds better to the transition state for unfolding
than to the native ground state. The data obtained on the effect of the
various ligands on chemical deactivation by DTP are rather unexpected.
Again, it was found that edrophonium and gallamine retard deactivation,
in agreement with our earlier observation that edrophonium retarded
inactivation of TcAChE by N-ethylmaleimide and
p-chloromercurisulfonic acid (Steinberg et al., 1990
). Our
finding that both the peripheral site ligand, d-tubocurarine, and the active-site ligand, tacrine, enhance
the rate of inactivation, and that the latter has a strong effect on
the rates of inactivation of L282A, S291G, and W279A, was quite unexpected. We earlier showed that N-methylacridinium, the
structure of which is rather similar to that of tacrine and which,
presumably, interacts with the anionic site at the bottom of the
active-site gorge in a similar way (Harel et al., 1993
), does not
affect chemical modification of TcAChE by
N-ethylmaleimide (Steinberg et al., 1990
). Furthermore,
Abramson et al. (1989)
found no effect of this ligand on the
irreversible modification of TcAChE by the molluscan toxin
onchidal. Indeed, in our present study, we found that tacrine has
little effect on chemical modification of WT TmAChE. Because
tacrine protects L282A against thermal denaturation, it must be
speculated that its binding to the mutant enzyme produces a
conformational change that renders the sulfhydryl group of Cys231 more
accessible to chemical modification.
As presented in Results, comparison of the effect of the
same set of ligands on susceptibility of the rat G234(231)C
and G234(231)C/L289(282)A mutants to chemical
modification revealed broad overall similarity to what was observed
with the corresponding Torpedo mutants. However, it is of
interest that Bungarus fasciatus AChE is much less
susceptible to propidium and gallamine than the Torpedo
enzyme, but slightly more susceptible to d-tubocurarine
(Cousin et al., 1996
), as is also the case for the L282A/S and S291G
TmAChE mutants relative to the WT (see Table 2). In the
absence of crystallographic data, it is premature to attempt to
rationalize these different patterns of susceptibility.
The experimental data presented, taken together with the theoretical
analysis, show how mutation of a single residue at the periphery of a
relatively large native protein structure can affect its overall stability.
This study was supported by Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique; Direction des Systèmes de Force et de la
Prospective; Association Française contre les Myopathies; Fourth
Framework Program in Biotechnology of the European Union; U.S. Army
Research and Materiel Command under Contract 17-97-2-7022; Kimmelman
Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly; and Concerted Research Action Program of the French Community of Belgium (Contract 97/02-211). The expert technical assistance of Anne Le Goff is gratefully acknowledged, as is the participation of Philippe Chanal and Charles J. Waechter in the early stages of the project. I. S. is the
Bernstein-Mason Professor of Neurochemistry.