Abstract
Increased light scattering in the eye lens due to aggregation of the long-lived lens proteins, crystallins, is the cause of cataract disease. Several mutations in the gene encoding human γD-crystallin (HγD) cause misfolding and aggregation. Cataract-associated substitutions at Trp42 cause the protein to aggregate in vitro from a partially unfolded intermediate locked by an internal disulfide bridge, and proteomic evidence suggests a similar aggregation precursor is involved in age-onset cataract. Surprisingly, WT HγD can promote aggregation of the W42Q variant while itself remaining soluble. Here, a search for a biochemical mechanism for this interaction has revealed a previously unknown oxidoreductase activity in HγD. Using in vitro oxidation, mutational analysis, cysteine labeling, and MS, we have assigned this activity to a redox-active internal disulfide bond that is dynamically exchanged among HγD molecules. The W42Q variant acts as a disulfide sink, reducing oxidized WT and forming a distinct internal disulfide that kinetically traps the aggregation-prone intermediate. Our findings suggest a redox "hot potato" competition among WT and mutant or modified polypeptides wherein variants with the lowest kinetic stability are trapped in aggregation-prone intermediate states upon accepting disulfides from more stable variants. Such reactions may occur in other long-lived proteins that function in oxidizing environments. In these cases, aggregation may be forestalled by inhibiting disulfide flow toward mutant or damaged polypeptides.
Highlights
Increased light scattering in the eye lens due to aggregation of the long-lived lens proteins, crystallins, is the cause of cataract disease
We found that fully reduced purified WT protein had no activity with respect to W42Q aggregation
We have described an unexpected synergy between these two modes of oxidative damage that results in rapid lightscattering aggregation due to the existence of a previously unrecognized oxidoreductase activity in human ␥D-crystallin
Summary
We have reported previously [71] the surprising interaction between WT H␥D crystallin and its cataract-associated W42Q mutant whereby the WT protein promoted the mutant’s aggregation in a temperature- and concentration-dependent manner without aggregating itself. Formation of an internal disulfide bond was crucial for the mutant protein’s ability to aggregate [32]. We explored the possibility that redox chemistry is involved in this aggregation-promoting mechanism. We found that fully reduced purified WT protein had no activity with respect to W42Q aggregation
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