The molecular basis for the pH-dependent calcium affinity of the pattern recognition receptor langerin
Author(s) -
Jan-Oliver Kapp-Joswig,
Jennifer Anders,
Hengxi Zhang,
Christoph Rademacher,
Bettina G. Keller
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of biological chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.361
H-Index - 513
eISSN - 1067-8816
pISSN - 0021-9258
DOI - 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100718
Subject(s) - protonation , chemistry , allosteric regulation , aspartic acid , biophysics , histidine , binding site , stereochemistry , hydrogen bond , biochemistry , receptor , molecule , amino acid , biology , organic chemistry , ion
The C-type lectin receptor langerin plays a vital role in the mammalian defense against invading pathogens. Langerin requires a Ca 2+ cofactor, the binding affinity of which is regulated by pH. Thus, Ca 2+ is bound when langerin is on the membrane but released when langerin and its pathogen substrate traffic to the acidic endosome, allowing the substrate to be degraded. The change in pH is sensed by protonation of the allosteric pH sensor histidine H294. However, the mechanism by which Ca 2+ is released from the buried binding site is not clear. We studied the structural consequences of protonating H294 by molecular dynamics simulations (total simulation time: about 120 μs) and Markov models. We discovered a relay mechanism in which a proton is moved into the vicinity of the Ca 2+ -binding site without transferring the initial proton from H294. Protonation of H294 unlocks a conformation in which a protonated lysine side chain forms a hydrogen bond with a Ca 2+ -coordinating aspartic acid. This destabilizes Ca 2+ in the binding pocket, which we probed by steered molecular dynamics. After Ca 2+ release, the proton is likely transferred to the aspartic acid and stabilized by a dyad with a nearby glutamic acid, triggering a conformational transition and thus preventing Ca 2+ rebinding. These results show how pH regulation of a buried orthosteric binding site from a solvent-exposed allosteric pH sensor can be realized by information transfer through a specific chain of conformational arrangements.
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