posted on 2012-08-15, 00:00authored bySergei M. Danilov, Kerry Gordon, Andrew B. Nesterovitch, Heinrich Lu¨ nsdorf, Zhenlong Chen, Maricela Castellon, Isolda A. Popova, Sergey Kalinin, Emma Mendonca, Pavel A. Petukhov, David E. Schwartz, Richard D. Minshall, Edward D. Sturrock
Background: Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) metabolizes a range of peptidic substrates and plays a key role in blood pressure regulation and vascular remodeling. Thus, elevated ACE levels may be associated with an increased risk for different cardiovascular or respiratory diseases. Previously, a striking familial elevation in blood ACE was explained by mutations in the ACE juxtamembrane region that enhanced the cleavage-secretion process. Recently, we found a family whose affected members had a 6-fold increase in blood ACE and a Tyr465Asp (Y465D) substitution, distal to the stalk region, in the N domain of ACE.
Methodology/Principal Findings: HEK and CHO cells expressing mutant (Tyr465Asp) ACE demonstrate a 3- and 8-fold increase, respectively, in the rate of ACE shedding compared to wild-type ACE. Conformational fingerprinting of mutant ACE demonstrated dramatic changes in ACE conformation in several different epitopes of ACE. Cell ELISA carried out on CHOACE cells also demonstrated significant changes in local ACE conformation, particularly proximal to the stalk region. However, the cleavage site of the mutant ACE - between Arg1203 and Ser1204 - was the same as that of WT ACE. The Y465D
substitution is localized in the interface of the N-domain dimer (from the crystal structure) and abolishes a hydrogen bond
between Tyr465 in one monomer and Asp462 in another. Conclusions/Significance: The Y465D substitution results in dramatic increase in the rate of ACE shedding and is associated
with significant local conformational changes in ACE. These changes could result in increased ACE dimerization and accessibility of the stalk region or the entire sACE, thus increasing the rate of cleavage by the putative ACE secretase (sheddase).
Funding
Partial funding was provided by South African National Research Foundation, the German Academic Exchange. Molecular graphics images were produced using the University of California San Francisco Chimera package from the Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics at the University of
California, San Francisco (supported by National Institutes of Health P41 RR001081). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.