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Unmasking crucial residues in adipose triglyceride lipase for coactivation with comparative gene identification-58

Authors :
Natalia Kulminskaya
Carlos Francisco Rodriguez Gamez
Peter Hofer
Ines Kathrin Cerk
Noopur Dubey
Roland Viertlmayr
Theo Sagmeister
Tea Pavkov-Keller
Rudolf Zechner
Monika Oberer
Source :
Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 65, Iss 1, Pp 100491- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Lipolysis is an essential metabolic process that releases unesterified fatty acids from neutral lipid stores to maintain energy homeostasis in living organisms. Adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) plays a key role in intracellular lipolysis and can be coactivated upon interaction with the protein comparative gene identification-58 (CGI-58). The underlying molecular mechanism of ATGL stimulation by CGI-58 is incompletely understood. Based on analysis of evolutionary conservation, we used site directed mutagenesis to study a C-terminally truncated variant and full-length mouse ATGL providing insights in the protein coactivation on a per-residue level. We identified the region from residues N209-N215 in ATGL as essential for coactivation by CGI-58. ATGL variants with amino acids exchanges in this region were still able to hydrolyze triacylglycerol at the basal level and to interact with CGI-58, yet could not be activated by CGI-58. Our studies also demonstrate that full-length mouse ATGL showed higher tolerance to specific single amino acid exchanges in the N209-N215 region upon CGI-58 coactivation compared to C-terminally truncated ATGL variants. The region is either directly involved in protein-protein interaction or essential for conformational changes required in the coactivation process. Three-dimensional models of the ATGL/CGI-58 complex with the artificial intelligence software AlphaFold demonstrated that a large surface area is involved in the protein-protein interaction. Mapping important amino acids for coactivation of both proteins, ATGL and CGI-58, onto the 3D model of the complex locates these essential amino acids at the predicted ATGL/CGI-58 interface thus strongly corroborating the significance of these residues in CGI-58–mediated coactivation of ATGL.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222275
Volume :
65
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Lipid Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.096cc53e4e4f6a87eb1ee3710210b5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlr.2023.100491