Positive charge at position 549 is essential for phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate-hydrolyzing but not phosphatidylinositol-hydrolyzing activities of human phospholipase C delta1.
Point mutagenesis, phosphatidylinositol (PI), and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) hydrolysis assays and equilibrium centrifugation PIP2 assays were used to study the functional roles of four highly conserved arginine residues in the Y region of human phospholipase C delta1 (PLCdelta1) (Arg-527, -549, -556, -701). Most of the mutant enzymes were either partially defective or fully active in their abilities to catalyze the hydrolysis of PI or PIP2. However, upon substitution of Arg-549 by glycine or histidine, the mutant enzyme was defective in its ability to catalyze the hydrolysis of PIP2, but it is still able to hydrolyze PI. Replacing Arg-549 with lysine had little effect on the level of PI and PIP2 hydrolytic activities of the mutant enzyme. The residual PIP2 hydrolyzing activity of R549H is highly dependent on pH. R549H showed 5-10% of the PIP2-hydrolyzing activity of the native enzyme between pH 5 and 7 and nondetectable PIP2-hydrolyzing activity at pH 8. The PIP2-hydrolyzing activity of R549G was not detectable at all pH values. Kinetic analysis of PLCdelta1-catalyzed PIP2 hydrolysis revealed that the micellar dissociation constant Ks and interfacial Michaelis constant Km were similar in the native, R549K, and R549H enzymes; but the specific activity at the saturated substrate mole fraction and infinite level of substrate (Vmax) of the R549H mutant were reduced by a factor of 15. PIP2 competitively inhibits the native enzyme to hydrolyze PI at both pH 7 and 8. However, PIP2 inhibits R549H only at pH 7.0 and does not inhibit R549G at either pH. Taken together, these results suggest that positive charge at position 549 of PLCdelta1 protein is essential for the enzyme to recognize and catalyze the hydrolysis of PIP2 but not PI.[1]References
- Positive charge at position 549 is essential for phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate-hydrolyzing but not phosphatidylinositol-hydrolyzing activities of human phospholipase C delta1. Wang, L.P., Lim, C., Kuan, Y., Chen, C.L., Chen, H.F., King, K. J. Biol. Chem. (1996) [Pubmed]
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