The Longer Isoform and Cys-1 Disulfide Bridge of Rat Surfactant Protein A Are Not Essential for Phospholipid and Type II Cell Interactions
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 37 (47) , 16481-16488
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi9817966
Abstract
Rat SP-A is a heterooligomer of two closely related isoforms, that requires interchain disulfide linkage for several functions including SP-A-mediated phospholipid vesicle aggregation and modulation of surfactant secretion and uptake by isolated alveolar type II cells. While the Cys6 disulfide bond of rat SP-A is known to be critical for function, the importance of the second interchain disulfide linkage within the N-terminal Isoleucine-3-Lysine-Cysteine-1 (IKC) sequence of the alternatively processed isoform is not clear. To examine the role of the Cys-1-dependent multimerization in SP-A function, we disrupted the Cys-1 disulfide bond by deletion of the IKC sequence (SP-Ahyp, DeltaIKC) or the substitution Cys-1 to Ser (SP-Ahyp,C-1S) in mutant recombinant proteins produced in insect cells. N-terminal sequence analyses revealed that the mutations influenced signal peptidase cleavage specificity, resulting in an increase in the abundance of the longer isoform of SP-Ahyp,C-1S and in N-terminal truncation of a fraction of the SP-Ahyp,DeltaIKC polypeptides at Gly8. On nonreducing SDS-PAGE analysis, both mutant proteins migrated as monomers and dimers but not the higher multimers that are characteristic of the wild-type recombinant protein (SP-Ahyp). Cross-linking analyses demonstrated that the association between trimeric SP-A subunits remained intact despite disruption of the Cys-1 bond. The SP-Ahyp,C-1S eluted in the same volume as SP-Ahyp from the gel sizing column with an apparent mass of 440 kDa, indicative of association of at least 9-10 monomers. The phospholipid binding and aggregation activities of the SP-Ahyp,C-1S were approximately 75% and 55% of the SP-Ahyp, respectively, but the SP-Ahyp,DeltaIKC was functionally comparable to SP-Ahyp. Similarly, both mutant proteins regulated the secretion and uptake of surfactant from isolated type II cells, but the SP-Ahyp,DeltaIKC was somewhat more potent than the SP-Ahyp,C-1S. Competitive binding to the SP-A receptor on type II cells was reduced by both Cys-1 mutations. We conclude that neither Cys-1-dependent multimerization nor the longer SP-A isoform is absolutely required for oligomeric association of trimeric SP-A subunits, SP-A/phospholipid interactions, or the regulation of surfactant secretion or uptake from type II cells by rat SP-A.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Engineering hybrid genes without the use of restriction enzymes: gene splicing by overlap extensionPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The Cys6 Intermolecular Disulfide Bond and the Collagen-like Region of Rat SP-A Play Critical Roles in Interactions with Alveolar Type II Cells and Surfactant LipidsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
- Surfactant-associated protein A is important for maintaining surfactant large-aggregate forms during surface-area cyclingBiochemical Journal, 1996
- Surface-area cycling of different surfactant preparations: SP-A and SP-B are essential for large-aggregate integrityBiochemical Journal, 1994
- A parallel three stranded α‐helical bundle at the nucleation site of collagen triple‐helix formationFEBS Letters, 1994
- Immunocytochemical localization of lysozyme and surfactant protein A in rat type II cells and extracellular surfactant forms.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1992
- Reconstitution of Tubular Myelin from Synthetic Lipids and Proteins Associated with Pig Pulmonary SurfactantAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1989
- Macromolecular organization of natural and recombinant lung surfactant protein SP 28–36Journal of Molecular Biology, 1988
- Nucleotide and amino acid sequences of pulmonary surfactant protein SP 18 and evidence for cooperation between SP 18 and SP 28-36 in surfactant lipid adsorption.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1987
- DNA sequencing with chain-terminating inhibitorsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1977