Abstract

The Star (steroidogenic acute regulatory protein)-related transfer (START) domain superfamily is characterized by a distinctive lipid-binding motif. START domains typically reside in multidomain proteins, suggesting their function as lipid sensors that trigger biological activities. Phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (PC-TP, also known as StarD2) is an example of a START domain minimal protein that consists only of the lipid-binding motif. PC-TP, which binds phosphatidylcholine exclusively, is expressed during embryonic development and in several tissues of the adult mouse, including liver. Although it catalyzes the intermembrane exchange of phosphatidylcholines in vitro, this activity does not appear to explain the various metabolic alterations observed in mice lacking PC-TP. Here we demonstrate that PC-TP function may be mediated via interacting proteins. Yeast two-hybrid screening using libraries prepared from mouse liver and embryo identified Them2 (thioesterase superfamily member 2) and the homeodomain transcription factor Pax3 (paired box gene 3), respectively, as PC-TP-interacting proteins. These were notable because the START domain superfamily contains multidomain proteins in which the START domain coexists with thioesterase domains in mammals and with homeodomain transcription factors in plants. Interactions were verified in pulldown assays, and colocalization with PC-TP was confirmed within tissues and intracellularly. The acyl-CoA thioesterase activity of purified recombinant Them2 was markedly enhanced by recombinant PC-TP. In tissue culture, PC-TP coactivated the transcriptional activity of Pax3. These findings suggest that PC-TP functions as a phosphatidylcholine-sensing molecule that engages in diverse regulatory activities that depend upon the cellular expression of distinct interacting proteins.

Highlights

  • Phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (PC-TP) is a member of a steroidogenic acute regulatory protein-related transfer (START) domain protein superfamily [4]

  • PC-TP-interacting proteins included Them2 from liver and the homeodomain transcription factor, Pax3 from the embryo. These were noteworthy because the START superfamily contains multidomain proteins that consist of START plus thioesterase domains in mammals, as

  • These two proteins comprise domains similar to those observed in multidomain START proteins

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Summary

Introduction

PC-TP ( known as StarD2) is a member of a steroidogenic acute regulatory protein-related transfer (START) domain protein superfamily [4]. PC-TP-interacting proteins included Them2 (thioesterase superfamily member 2) from liver and the homeodomain transcription factor, Pax3 (paired box gene 3) from the embryo.

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