Abstract

Lysyl hydroxylase (LH) catalyzes the formation of hydroxylysine in collagens; three human isoenzymes have been cloned so far. We report here on the purification of all three recombinant isoenzymes to homogeneity from the medium of cultured insect cells, and we demonstrate that they are all homodimers. Limited proteolysis experiments identified two main protease-sensitive regions in the monomers of about 80-85 kDa, corresponding to three fragments A-C (from the N to C terminus), with molecular masses of about 30, 37, and 16 kDa, respectively. Fragment A was found to play no role in LH activity as a recombinant B-C polypeptide constituted a fully active hydroxylase with K(m) values for cosubstrates and the peptide substrate that were identical to those of the full-length enzyme. LH3, but not LH1 and LH2, has also been reported recently (Heikkinen, J., Risteli, M., Wang, C., Latvala, J., Rossi, M., Valtavaara, M., and Myllylä, R. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 36158-36163) to possess collagen glucosyltransferase activity. We confirm this highly surprising finding here and extend it by demonstrating that LH3 may also possess trace amounts of collagen galactosyltransferase activity. All the glucosyltransferase and galactosyltransferase activity of LH3 was found to reside in fragment A, which played no role in the hydroxylase activity of the polypeptide. This fragment is about 55% identical and 80% similar to the corresponding fragments of LH1 and LH2. However, the levels of the glycosyltransferase activities are so low that they may be of little biological significance. It is thus evident that human tissues must have additional glycosyltransferases that are responsible for most of the collagen glycosylation in vivo.

Highlights

  • Ascorbate [1, 2]

  • In order to develop a simple method for purifying Lysyl hydroxylase (LH) polypeptides, cDNAs coding for the processed LH1, LH2, and LH3 polypeptides were cloned into a pAcGP67A expression vector, and a histidine tag was inserted between the GP67 signal sequence and the LH cDNA in each case

  • High Five insect cells cultured in suspension were infected with baculoviruses coding for the histidine-tagged LH1, LH2, or LH3 polypeptides

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Summary

Introduction

The resulting hydroxylysine residues have two important functions They are essential for the stability of the intermolecular collagen cross-links, and their hydroxy groups serve as attachment sites for carbohydrate units, either the monosaccharide galactose or the disaccharide glucosylgalactose [1]. No data are available on the level of this activity in the LH3 polypeptide nor on the possible biological significance of the finding [17]. It is unknown whether this isoenzyme possesses collagen galactosyltransferase activity, as the glucose residue is only transferred to a galactosylhydroxylysine residue [1]. Lysyl Hydroxylase Fragments to the domain structure of the enzyme, and whether the enzyme has collagen galactosyltransferase activity

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