Abstract

The human transporter ATP7B delivers copper to the biosynthetic pathways and maintains copper homeostasis in the liver. Mutations in ATP7B cause the potentially fatal hepatoneurological disorder Wilson disease. The activity and intracellular localization of ATP7B are regulated by copper, but the molecular mechanism of this regulation is largely unknown. We show that the copper chaperone Atox1, which delivers copper to ATP7B, and the group of the first three metal-binding domains (MBD1-3) are central to the activity regulation of ATP7B. Atox1-Cu binding to ATP7B changes domain dynamics and interactions within the MBD1-3 group and activates ATP hydrolysis. To understand the mechanism linking Atox1-MBD interactions and enzyme activity, we have determined the MBD1-3 conformational space using small angle X-ray scattering and identified changes in MBD dynamics caused by apo-Atox1 and Atox1-Cu by solution NMR. The results show that copper transfer from Atox1 decreases domain interactions within the MBD1-3 group and increases the mobility of the individual domains. The N-terminal segment of MBD1-3 was found to interact with the nucleotide-binding domain of ATP7B, thus physically coupling the domains involved in copper binding and those involved in ATP hydrolysis. Taken together, the data suggest a regulatory mechanism in which Atox1-mediated copper transfer activates ATP7B by releasing inhibitory constraints through increased freedom of MBD1-3 motions.

Highlights

  • The human transporter ATP7B delivers copper to the biosynthetic pathways and maintains copper homeostasis in the liver

  • We show that the copper chaperone Atox1, which delivers copper to ATP7B, and the group of the first three metal-binding domains (MBD1–3) are central to the activity regulation of ATP7B

  • The N-terminal segment of MBD1–3 was found to interact with the nucleotide-binding domain of ATP7B, physically coupling the domains involved in copper binding and those involved in ATP hydrolysis

Read more

Summary

ARTICLE cro

Yu‡1, Nan Yang§1, Jameson Bothe¶, Marco Tonelli¶, Sergiy Nokhrin‡, Natalia V. Dolgova‡, Lelita Braiterman§, Svetlana Lutsenko§, and Oleg Y. Dmitriev‡2 From the ‡Department of Biochemistry, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5E5, Canada, the §Department of Physiology, Johns Hopkins Medical University, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, and the ¶National Magnetic Resonance Facility at Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706

Edited by Wolfgang Peti
Results
Discussion
Protein expression and purification
NMR experiments
SAXS data collection and processing
ATPase activity assay
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call