Journal of Integrative Agriculture 2014, 13(12): 2616-2624
December 2014
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Effect of Nitric Oxide on the Interaction Between Mitochondrial Malate Dehydrogenase and Citrate Synthase LIU Yu-chen1, WANG Juan2, SU Pei-ying3, MA Chun-mei1 and ZHU Shu-hua1 1
College of Chemistry and Material Science, Shandong Agricultural University, Tai’an 271018, P.R.China Department of Horticultural and Forest Engineer, Heze University, Heze 274015, P.R.China 3 Tai’an Tumor Prevention and Treatment Hospital, Tai’an 271000, P.R.China 2
Abstract Mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH) and citrate synthase (CS) are sequential enzymes in Krebs cycle. mMDH, CS and the complex between mMDH and CS (mMDH+CS) were treated with nitric oxide solution. The roles of notric oxide (NO) on the secondary structures and the interactions between mMDH and CS were studied using circular diehroism (CD) and Fourier transform surface plasmon resonance (FT-SPR), respectivley. The effects of NO on the activities of mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS were also studied. And the regulations by NO on mMDH and CS were simulated by PyMOL software. The results of SPR confirmed that strong interaction between mMDH and CS existed and NO could significantly regulate the interaction between the two enzymes. NO reduced the mass percents of α-helix and increased that of random in mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS. NO increased the activities of CS and mMDH+CS, and inhibited the activity of mMDH. Graphic simulation indicated that covalent bond was formed between NO and Asn242 in active site of CS. However, there was no direct bond between NO and mMDH. The increase in activity of mMDH+CS complex depended mostly on the interaction between NO and CS. All the results suggested that the regulations by NO on the activity and interaction between mMDH and CS were accord with the changes in mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS caused by NO. Key words: Krebs cycle, nitric oxide, surface plasmon resonance, protein-protein interaction, citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase
INTRODUCTION The tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, also known as the Krebs cycle or the citric acid cycle, is at the center of cellular metabolism, playing a starring role in both the process of energy production and biosynthesis. At present, the TCA cycle is considered as not only a circle but also flux modes playing important roles in physiological processes in animals, plants and bacteria (Sweetlove et al. 2010; Meeks 2011; Zhang and Bryant 2011; McCarthy 2013; Nunes-Nesi et al. 2013). The intermediates
of the TCA cycle also involve in regulating physiological and biochemical processes, and supplement of the TCA cycle intermediates protects against cell death induced by high glucose/palmitate (Choi et al. 2011; Peti-Peterdi 2013). Those results suggest that the protection depends on the flux of the intermediates of the TCA cycle. Activities of the enzymes in the TCA cycle contribute to the flux of the intermediates. Malate dehydrogenase (MDH) and citrate synthase (CS) are two sequential enzymes in the TCA cycle. MDH catalyzes malic acid to oxaloacetic acid which is converted to citric acid by CS. In most ripe fruits, malic and citric acids are the
Received 4 November, 2013 Accepted 20 February, 2014 LIU Yu-chen, E-mail:
[email protected]; Correspondence ZHU Shu-hua, Tel: +86-538-8247790, E-mail:
[email protected] © 2014, CAAS. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd. doi: 10.1016/S2095-3119(13)60736-4
Effect of Nitric Oxide on the Interaction Between Mitochondrial Malate Dehydrogenase and Citrate Synthase
main organic acids contributed to fleshy fruit acidity which is an important component of fruit organoleptic quality, and affects postharvest softening (Centeno et al. 2011; Etienne et al. 2013). In recent years, mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH) and CS are increasingly valued for their important roles in the plant TCA cycle (Sweetlove et al. 2010; Nunes-Nesi et al. 2013). Recently, complexes between several TCA cycle enzymes were identified in vivo interaction analyses in Bacillus subtilis (Meyer et al. 2011). New evidences confirm that mMDH lowers leaf respiration and alters photorespiration in Arabidopsis (Tomaz et al. 2010). The overexpression of mMDH gene can improve phosphorus acquisition by tobacco (Lü et al. 2012). Antisense inhibition of mMDH can not only enhance photosynthetic activity and the rate of carbon dioxide assimilation (Nunes-Nesi et al. 2005), but also alter root growth and architecture in tomato plant (van der Merwe et al. 2009). The enhanced photosynthetic performance and growth in transgenic tomato plants are also considered to be a consequence of decreasing mMDH activity (Nunes-Nesi et al. 2005). Overexpression of CS can improve plant growth under nutritional stress, such as aluminum and phosphorus tolerance (Koyama et al. 1999, 2000; Deng et al. 2009), and antisense repression of CS can inhibit the flower formation in transgenic potato plants (Landschutze et al. 1995). Structure and expression of CS from higher plants have been studied widely (La Cognata et al. 1996). Recently, the function of a citrate synthase gene (MaGCS), which is constitutively expressed in all organs with high levels in the fruit, during postharvest banana fruit ripening, is reported (Liu et al. 2013). The expression of MaGCS can be induced by ethylene and inhibited by the ethylene receptor inhibitor, improved by oxaloacetic acid and suppressed by citric acid, suggesting that MaGCS is associated with ethylene biosynthesis and plays an important role in postharvest banana fruit ripening (Liu et al. 2013). mMDH and CS of strawberry fruit are purified and the genes are cloned and identified (Iannetta et al. 2004). mMDH cDNA clones are also isolated from grape berries and the expression pattern are analysed throughout berry development (Or et al. 2000). Isolation and functional characterization of genes encoding citrate synthase are also studied in Malus (Han et al. 2012), pear fruit (Lu et al. 2011). As two sequential enzymes in the TCA cycle, the interaction between mMDH and CS
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has aroused the interests of the researchers. The interactions between mMDH and CS have been studied widely in animals, plants and microbes (Tompa et al. 1987; Morgunov and Srere 1998; Pettersson et al. 2000; Iannetta et al. 2004; Chow et al. 2005). Recently, it is found that bioconjugates formed by adding CS to the Au nanoparticles before MDH addition exhibits higher specific activities for both enzymes than those formed by adding the enzymes in the reverse order. These bioconjugates also have 3-fold higher per-particle sequential activity for conversion of malate to citrate (Keighron and Keating 2010). Those results suggest that exogenous treatments can affect the activities and interaction between mMDH and CS. As a small biomolecular, nitric oxide (NO) is considered to be a potent inhibitor of the mitochondrial electron transport chain (Brown and Borutaite 2002; Wang et al. 2010; Sarti et al. 2012), regulates the ripening processes of fruits (Manjunatha et al. 2010; Zhu et al. 2010), and affects fruit quality during storage (Duan et al. 2007; Sun et al. 2011). NO can regulate energy metabolism via the TCA cycle (Dai et al. 2013). Exogenous NO can decrease leaf citrate content and increase root citrate content of citrus, and inhibit CS activity in citrus leaves (Yang et al. 2012). Our previous research also found that NO makes a dramatic promotion of mMDH activity and slight increase in CS activity in peach fruit during storage (Ma et al. 2011). However, little works have been done to study the roles of NO in the interaction between mMDH and CS. In this paper, the effects of NO on the secondary structures and interaction between mMDH and CS were studied to explore the possible mechanism by which NO regulates the activities of mMDH and CS.
RESULTS Effects of NO on interactions between mMDH and CS Fig. 1 depicted the SPR response of the interactions between mMDH and CS in 10% PEG. The SPR wavenumber shift after step V means the change of the film’s thickness, which can reflect the protein-protein interactions. It could be found that there was a shift in the SPR resonance after NO treatment. The shift in © 2014, CAAS. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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the control, suggesting that the inhibitory effect by NO on mMDH activity was slight. In contrast, the activity of CS treated with 80 mmol L-1 NO was 3.4 times higher than that of the control (Fig. 2-B). The activity of mMDH-CS complexes treated with NO was 1.25 times as high as that of the control (Fig. 2-C).
the SPR response upon the addition of the mMDH was attributed to the association of the amino group to the activated carboxylic acid in the gold chip (Fig. 1-A). Fig. 1-B depicted the response corresponding to the reflectance changes of the SPR sensor associated with mMDH upon addition of CS. The wavenumber shift of NO treatment was larger than the control in the step of combination of mMDH and CS (Fig. 1-B). The results demonstrated that the complex of CS and mMDH was obtained by the precipitation in PEG, and NO treatment could increase the interaction between CS and mMDH.
Effects of NO on secondary structures of mMDH and CS NO could significantly reduce the mass percent of α-helix and increase the mass percent of random of mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS (Table 1). However, no significant effects of NO on mass percent of β-sheet were found in mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS. There was no significant difference in β-turn of mMDH treated with/without NO. NO could decrease the mass percent of β-turn of CS and
Activities of mMDH, CS and mMDH-CS complex The result in Fig. 2-A showed that mMDH activity in the treatment with 80 mmol L-1 NO was 93.1% that of
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Fig. 1 Effect of nitric oxide (NO) on the interaction of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH) and citrate synthase (CS). A, the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) response of mMDH combined to the gold chip. B, the SPR response of CS coupled with mMDH. Line 1, the SPR response of the interactions between mMDH and CS; Line 2, the SPR response of the interactions between mMDH and CS treated with NO.
© 2014, CAAS. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Effect of Nitric Oxide on the Interaction Between Mitochondrial Malate Dehydrogenase and Citrate Synthase
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Fig. 2 Effects of NO on activities of mMDH, CS and mMDH-CS complex. Values (means±SD, number of replications=3) with different letters are significantly different at 0.05% (LSD).
Table 1 Effect of nitric oxide (NO) on the second structure of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH), citrate synthase (CS) and mMDH+CS Mass percent (%) α-Helix β-Sheet β-Turn Random
mMDH without NO 25.6±1.5 a 20.5±1.1 a 15.5±1.3 a 38.4±1.3 a
CS NO 21.0±1.1 b 19.9±0.8 a 15.3±1.6 a 43.8±0.6 b
without NO 25.7±0.9 a 22.3±1.3 a 25.8±0.8 a 26.2±1.2 a
NO 20.7±2.1 b 22.2±1.2 a 23.6±0.6 b 33.5±1.1 b
mMDH+CS without NO 23.6±1.2 a 13.5±0.9 a 25.7±1.0 a 37.2±1.5 a
NO 19.9±0.7 b 12.4±1.0 a 22.0±1.2 b 45.7±1.0 b
Values (means±SD, number of replications=3) with different letters are significantly different at 0.05% (LSD) for the same emzyme with different treatments in the same line.
mMDH+CS. After NO treatment, the negative-peak amplitudes of mMDH at 208 and 222 nm were decreased significantly, and the peak of mMDH became small and shifted to lower wave numbers (Fig. 3-A). The negative peak at 222 nm in circular diehroism (CD) spectra of CS was big and shifted to lower wave numbers with amplitude decreased (Fig. 3-B). The negative peak at 208 nm in CD spectra of mMDH+CS treated wtih NO shifted slightly to higher wave numbers and the amplitude increased (Fig. 3-C). On the contrary, the negative peak at 222 nm in CD spectra of mMDH+CS treated wtih NO shifted slightly to lower wave numbers and the amplitude decreased. No significant effect of NO on mMDH activity was found, while NO significantly changed the activities of CS and mMDH+CS (Fig. 3). The difference would lie in the different mass percents of β-turn in mMDH and CS (Table 1).
Graphic simulation NO was found to bind to Asn242 by covalent bond in
the active site of CS (Fig. 4-A), suggesting there was strong interaction force between NO and CS. However, the molecular modeling result showed that no strong and direct interaction force existed between NO and active site of mMDH.
DISCUSSION It has been demonstrated that the complexes of CS and mMDH obtained by the precipitation in PEG could remain a solid state for at least 2 min (Morgunov and Srere 1998). This allowed a study of the kinetics of these complexes. SPR results confirmed that the interaction between mMDH and CS was particularly strong, and NO also strongly affected the interaction between mMDH and CS. NO significantly changed the mass percents of the secondary structures of CS and mMDH+CS, but slightly changed that of mMDH, which coincided with the changes in the activities of mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS. The results of molecular modeling also confirmed that NO could affect CS more significantly than mMDH. © 2014, CAAS. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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Fig. 3 Circular dichroism (CD) spectra of mMDH, CS, mMDH+CS before and after NO treatment. A, circular dichroism spectra of mMDH. B, circular dichroism spectra of CS. C, circular dichroism spectra of mMDH+CS.
NO could significantly increase the activities of CS and mMDH+CS, but slightly inhibit the activity of mMDH (Fig. 2). mMDH and CS are sequential enzymes in the Krebs cycle. The carboxyl terminal of subunits of CS and the amino terminal of subunits of mMDH could be brought together, which enables CS and mMDH be
docked together with a short linker region (Lindbladh et al. 1994). It has been shown that positive electrostatic potential exists between the active sites of the fusion proteins of mMDH and CS (Lindbladh et al. 1994; Elcock and McCammon 1996). These electrostatic forces could account for the channeling of OAA between the active sites of mMDH and CS. Thus, OAA, the product of mMDH might directly serve as the substrate for CS. The activity of the mMDH+CS complex was increased by NO, suggesting that NO could promote the interaction between mMDH and CS. Native conformation and special functional domain are important for enzyme activity, and realted to the contents of α-helix and random and the ratio of α/β (Karplus and Kuriyan 2005; Buxbaum 2011). The decrease in α-helix indicates the damages in hydrogen bond and other structures of enzyme and suggests that the peptide chains become loose. Random may cover the active site or the combination between binding sites and substrates, affect the binds between enzyme and substrates or inhibitors to change the activity of enzyme (Buxbaum 2011). The results of SPR indicated that NO could significantly affect the mass percents of the secondary structures in mMDH and CS, causing the changes in conformations of mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS, which was in accord with the changes in the activities of mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS. The catalytic site is highly conserved in CS, and contains 3 key residues: Asn242, His320 and Asp237 (Larson et al. 2009; Siriwardena et al. 2013). His238, Arg329 and Arg401 also involved in catalyzing oxaloacetic acid by CS (Daidone et al. 2004). The covalent bond between NO and Asn242 in active site of CS was strong interaction force, suggesting that NO could change significantly the native conformation of CS, which leading to the changes in CS acitivity. Asp and His are key residues in catalytic site of mMDH (Minarik et al. 2002; Wang et al. 2009). There was no significant interaction between NO and mMDH in molecular modeling (Fig. 4). Thus, the increase in mMDH+CS activity treated with NO depended on the regulations by NO on CS activity more than mMDH. However, mMDH activity was still inhibited by NO. Those results suggests there should be other pathways, such as S-nitrosylation (Gould et al. 2013), by which NO played its inhibitory effects on mMDH activity. However, further works should be done
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Effect of Nitric Oxide on the Interaction Between Mitochondrial Malate Dehydrogenase and Citrate Synthase
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Fig. 4 Graphic simulations for the effect of NO on mMDH and CS. Only the active site of each enzyme is shown on this picture. A, the interaction between NO and mMDH. B, the interaction between NO and CS.
to deeply and thoroughly study the roles of NO in the interaction between mMDH and CS and the regulation by NO on Krebs cycle.
CONCLUSION NO could regulate the mass percents of the secondary structures in mMDH, CS and mMDH+CS, and increase the activities of CS and mMDH+CS by covalent bond between NO and Asn242 in active site of CS. The increase in activity of mMDH+CS complex depended mostly on the interaction between NO and CS.
MATERIALS AND METHODS Materials All chemicals were of analysis grade unless stated otherwise. Citrate synthase (CS, EC 2.3.3.1), mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH, EC 1.1.1.37) (product no. M 2634), L-malic acid, oxaloacetic acid (OAA), acetyl coenzyme A trilithium salt, β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydrate (NAD+), β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide reduced disodium salt hydrate (NADH), sodium bicarbonate, and (5,5´-dithiobis(2nitrobenzoic acid)) (DTNB) were purchased from SigmaAldrich Co. Ltd (Shanghai, China). 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid (COOH-thiol, 95%), 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC), N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) and ethanolamine were purchased from Aladdin Reagent Inc. (Shanghai, China). The gold-sputtered slide glass (18 mm×18 mm) used as a sensor chip was purchased from Thermo Electron Corp (USA). All solutions were filtered using Corning cellulose acetate membranes with 0.45 μm pores. Double-distilled water was used in all experiments.
Detection of the interaction between mMDH and CS The interaction between mMDH and CS and the effects of NO on the interaction were detected by Fourier transform surface plasmon resonance (FT-SPR). The FT-SPR measurements were performed with an SPR-100 module from Thermo equipped 107 with a flow sample cell mounted on a goniometer. It was inserted in a Thermo Nexus FT-IR 108 spectrometer using a near-IR tungsten-halogen light source. The incidence angle was adjusted to have minimal reflectivity located at 9 000 cm-1 at the beginning of each experiment so as to be in the best sensitivity region of the Indium Gallium Arsenide (InGaAs) detector. A peristaltic pump was used to pump the analyte or wash solution from a reservoir into the flow cell. PBS buffer solution (100 mmol L-1, pH 8.0) was used as a running buffer, and the flow rate was fixed at 0.8 mL min-1. The stable wavenumber shifts were recorded in real time using the SPR. In all experiments, all solutions were ultrasonicated. Before each binding measurement for the sample solutions, the SPR sensor chips were washed with PBS buffer in turn until a stable base line was obtained. Immobilization of proteins onto gold surface was carried out using a literature protocol (Madeira et al. 2011). The gold-sputtered slide glass, as a sensor chip, was dipped in 10 mL of freshly prepared piranha solution (70% H2SO4, 3% H2O2) for 2 min. After being rinsed with copious distilled water, the gold-sputtered slide glass was placed into 20 mL of 10 mmol L-1 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid in ethanol (Fig. 5 step I), and kept at 4ºC overnight. The carboxyl groups on the SPR sensor were activated by placing the chip into 10 mL PBS buffer containing 100 mmol L-1 EDC and 25 mmol L-1 NHS for 30 min (Fig. 5 step II). The chip was rinsed with ethanol and then double distilled water and finally dried by N2. Before being mounted into the SPR instrument, the chip was washed with PBS (100 mmol L-1, pH 8.0) at a flow rate of 0.8 mL min-1 until a stable base line was obtained. mMDH was diluted in immobilization buffer (100 μg mL-1). The intermediate product of the reaction between the carboxylic acid and the EDC was very labile and could be hydrolyzed
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to oxaloacetate for mMDH in single and multienzyme bioconjugates, 100 mmol L-1 Tris-HCl (pH 8.1), 25 μL of 36 mmol L-1 malate and 25 μL of 60 mmol L-1 NAD+, for a final concentration of 0.3 mmol L-1 malate and 0.1 mmol L-1 NAD+, were mixed in a cuvette and equilibrated to room temperature (25ºC). The absorbance of NADH was monitored at 340 nm for 5 min, in accordance with previous reports (Keighron and Keating 2010). The activity of CS for conversion of oxaloacetate to citrate was assayed in similar fashion to mMDH with the exception that 25 μL of 12 mmol L-1 acetyl-CoA and 25 μL of 60 mmol L-1 OAA were used as substrates with 25 μL of 18 mmol L-1 DTNB, for a final concentration of 0.5 mmol L-1 OAA, 0.1 mmol L-1 acetyl-CoA, and 0.15 mmol L-1 DTNB. DTNB was added to monitor the production of coenzyme A by CS by adsorption at 412 nm. The overall reaction of malate to citrate catalyzed by bioconjugate as a PEG mMDH-CS precipitate, was monitored in 10 mmol L-1 malate, 4 mmol L-1 NAD+, and 0.1 mmol L-1 acetyl-CoA using 0.4 mmol L-1 DTNB at 412 nm in 100 mmol L-1 Tris-HCl (pH 8.1) buffer. Complexes of enzymes (2 g L-1 of solution) were incubated in 30% PEG at room temperature for 2 min in advance. Each assay was repeated at least three times.
O I
...
S
C OH Activation
EDC/NHS O S
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MDH
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H Ethanolamine (X)
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Detection for the secondary structures of mMDH and CS
X MDH
N H
O CS
C OH
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MDH
NH 4 ...... OOC
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H Protein-protin interaction
Fig. 5 The diagram for detection the intreactions between mMDH and CS by SPR.
quickly. The carboxylic acid could react with the ligand to yield a covalent amine bond. Thus, mMDH was immobilized (Fig. 5 step III). The immobilization consists in the formation of an amide bond between a primary amino group of the mMDH and the carboxylic acid groups of CS. And those in the middle indicate the interaction resulting from the fusion between the C-terminal end of CS and the N-terminal end of mMDH (Fig. 5 step V).
Enzyme activity assays To measure the rate of reaction for the conversion of malate
The changes in the secondary structures of mMDH and CS were detected on Jasco 810 circular dichroism (CD) spectropolarimeter (JASCO, Tokyo, Japan). mMDH and CS (0.1 g L-1) were dissolved in 10 mmol L-1 phosphate buffer (pH 8.0), respectively. The spectra were recorded using a 1-mm path length cell under constant nitrogen flush (∼30 L min-1) with a step size of 0.1 nm, bandwidth of 2 nm, and an average time of 3 s. The final spectrum reported was an average of five scans. For the NO denaturation experiments, mMDH and CS were incubated at final concentration of 80 µmol L-1 NO in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 60 min, and the spectra were recorded from 180 to 260 nm at 25°C.
Molecular modeling The regulations by NO on mMDH and CS were modeled by PyMOL Molecular Graphics System (Schrodinger 2010). The structures of mMDH (PDB ID: 5MDH) and CS (PDB ID: 3ENJ) were download from RSCB Protein Data Bank (http://www.rcsb.org).
Statistical analysis The experiments were conducted in a completely randomized design. The data were expressed as means±SE, and processed
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Effect of Nitric Oxide on the Interaction Between Mitochondrial Malate Dehydrogenase and Citrate Synthase
by analysis of variance (ANOVA), comparing treatments at a significance level of 0.05 according to the least significant difference (LSD) test.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31270723, 31370686, 31470686) and the Science and Technology Development Planning of Shandong Province, China (2013CEX20109).
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