Abstract
BackgroundNucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 7 (NPP7) is the only member of the mammalian NPP enzyme family that has been confirmed to act as a sphingomyelinase, hydrolyzing sphingomyelin (SM) to form phosphocholine and ceramide. NPP7 additionally hydrolyzes lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), a substrate preference shared with the NPP2/autotaxin(ATX) and NPP6 mammalian family members. This study utilizes a synergistic combination of molecular modeling validated by experimental site-directed mutagenesis to explore the molecular basis for the unique ability of NPP7 to hydrolyze SM.ResultsThe catalytic function of NPP7 against SM, LPC, platelet activating factor (PAF) and para-nitrophenylphosphorylcholine (pNPPC) is impaired in the F275A mutant relative to wild type NPP7, but different impacts are noted for mutations at other sites. These results are consistent with a previously described role of F275 to interact with the choline headgroup, where all substrates share a common functionality. The L107F mutation showed enhanced hydrolysis of LPC, PAF and pNPPC but reduced hydrolysis of SM. Modeling suggests this difference can be explained by the gain of cation-pi interactions with the choline headgroups of all four substrates, opposed by increased steric crowding against the sphingoid tail of SM. Modeling also revealed that the long and flexible hydrophobic tails of substrates exhibit considerable dynamic flexibility in the binding pocket, reducing the entropic penalty that might otherwise be incurred upon substrate binding.ConclusionsSubstrate recognition by NPP7 includes several important contributions, ranging from cation-pi interactions between F275 and the choline headgroup of all substrates, to tail-group binding pockets that accommodate the inherent flexibility of the lipid hydrophobic tails. Two contributions to the unique ability of NPP7 to hydrolyze SM were identified. First, the second hydrophobic tail of SM occupies a second hydrophobic binding pocket. Second, the leucine residue present at position 107 contrasts with a conserved phenylalanine in NPP enzymes that do not utilize SM as a substrate, consistent with the observed reduction in SM hydrolysis by the NPP7-L107F mutant.
Highlights
Nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 7 (NPP7) is the only member of the mammalian nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP) enzyme family that has been confirmed to act as a sphingomyelinase, hydrolyzing sphingomyelin (SM) to form phosphocholine and ceramide
Two prior modeling studies of hNPP7 used a crystallographic structure of the bacterial NPP as the modeling template [15,24], one of the studies was published prior to the availability of the NPP2 crystal structures [15]
The insertion of residues in the NPP7 sequence within the segment interacting with LPA in NPP2 limits the utility of the NPP2 crystal structures as templates even though they share a common substrate with NPP7
Summary
Nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 7 (NPP7) is the only member of the mammalian NPP enzyme family that has been confirmed to act as a sphingomyelinase, hydrolyzing sphingomyelin (SM) to form phosphocholine and ceramide. NPP7 hydrolyzes lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), a substrate preference shared with the NPP2/autotaxin(ATX) and NPP6 mammalian family members. The nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP) enzymes are classified as pyrophosphatases or phosphodiesterases depending on the type of substrates they hydrolyze. D (LPLD) activity, in contrast to NPP6 and NPP7 which exhibit lysophospholipase C (LPLC) activity. Besides these specific activities, NPP family members exhibit distinct substrate preference profiles but no clear structural basis for the preferences has been proposed [1]. Mutagenic deletion of a segment from NPP7 including H353, a residue involved in chelating one of the essential divalent metal cations, has been identified in the rapidly proliferating colon cancer HT29 cell line [13]
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