Abstract

Adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) catalyzes the first step in the hydrolysis of triacylglycerol (TG) generating diacylglycerol and free fatty acids. The enzyme requires the activator protein CGI-58 (or ABHD5) for full enzymatic activity. Defective ATGL function causes a recessively inherited disorder named neutral lipid storage disease that is characterized by systemic TG accumulation and myopathy. In this study, we investigated the functional defects associated with mutations in the ATGL gene that cause neutral lipid storage disease. We show that these mutations lead to the expression of either inactive enzymes localizing to lipid droplets (LDs) or enzymatically active lipases with defective LD binding. Additionally, our studies assign important regulatory functions to the C-terminal part of ATGL. Truncated mutant ATGL variants lacking approximately 220 amino acids of the C-terminal protein region do not localize to LDs. Interestingly, however, these mutants exhibit substantially increased TG hydrolase activity in vitro (up to 20-fold) compared with the wild-type enzyme, indicating that the C-terminal region suppresses enzyme activity. Protein-protein interaction studies revealed an increased binding of truncated ATGL to CGI-58, suggesting that the C-terminal part interferes with CGI-58 interaction and enzyme activation. Compared with the human enzyme, the C-terminal region of mouse ATGL is much less effective in suppressing enzyme activity, implicating species-dependent differences in enzyme regulation. Together, our results demonstrate that the C-terminal region of ATGL is essential for proper localization of the enzyme and suppresses enzyme activity.

Highlights

  • Defective Adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) function is characterized by systemic TG accumulation in humans [9, 10] and rodents [2]

  • Because naturally occurring mutations in human genes offer a unique opportunity to study the structure-function relationship of enzymes, we investigated the functional defects of mutations in the ATGL gene causing neutral lipid storage disease (NLSD)

  • Our results identify the biochemical basis of the known genetic defects and assign an important function to the previously uncharacterized C-terminal region of the protein, which affects enzyme activity and mediates lipid droplets (LDs) binding of the enzyme

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Summary

Introduction

Defective ATGL function is characterized by systemic TG accumulation in humans [9, 10] and rodents [2]. TG Hydrolase Activity of ATGL and ATGL Mutants—To investigate functional defects caused by different mutations, Cos-7 cells were transfected with expression vectors encoding His-tagged wild-type ATGL or the four mutant versions of the enzyme described above. Compared with wild-type human ATGL (hATGL), the allele with a single missense mutation in amino acid position 195 (P195L) exhibited reduced TG hydrolase activity in the absence (Ϫ45%, p ϭ 0.06) and in the presence (Ϫ87%) of human CGI-58 (hCGI-58).

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