The crystal structure, mutagenesis, and activity studies reveal that patatin is a lipid acyl hydrolase with a Ser-Asp catalytic dyad

TJ Rydel, JM Williams, E Krieger, F Moshiri… - Biochemistry, 2003 - ACS Publications
TJ Rydel, JM Williams, E Krieger, F Moshiri, WC Stallings, SM Brown, JC Pershing…
Biochemistry, 2003ACS Publications
Patatin is a nonspecific lipid acyl hydrolase that accounts for approximately 40% of the total
soluble protein in mature potato tubers, and it has potent insecticidal activity against the corn
rootworm. We determined the X-ray crystal structure of a His-tagged variant of an isozyme of
patatin, Pat17, to 2.2 Å resolution, employing SeMet multiwavelength anomalous dispersion
(MAD) phasing methods. The patatin crystal structure has three molecules in the asymmetric
unit, an R-factor of 22.0%, and an R free of 27.2%(for 10% of the data not included in the …
Patatin is a nonspecific lipid acyl hydrolase that accounts for approximately 40% of the total soluble protein in mature potato tubers, and it has potent insecticidal activity against the corn rootworm. We determined the X-ray crystal structure of a His-tagged variant of an isozyme of patatin, Pat17, to 2.2 Å resolution, employing SeMet multiwavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) phasing methods. The patatin crystal structure has three molecules in the asymmetric unit, an R-factor of 22.0%, and an Rfree of 27.2% (for 10% of the data not included in the refinement) and includes 498 water molecules. The structure notably revealed that patatin has a Ser-Asp catalytic dyad and an active site like that of human cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) [Dessen, A., et al. (1999) Cell 97, 349−360]. In addition, patatin has a folding topology related to that of the catalytic domain of cPLA2 and unlike the canonical α/β-hydrolase fold. The structure confirms our site-directed mutagenesis and bioactivity data that initially suggested patatin possessed a Ser-Asp catalytic dyad. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis revealed that Ser77 and Asp215 were critical for both esterase and bioactivity, consistent with prior work implicating a Ser residue [Strickland, J. H., et al. (1995) Plant Physiol. 109, 667−674] and a Ser-Asp dyad [Hirschberg, H. J. H. B., et al. (2001) Eur. J. Biochem. 268, 5037−5044] in patatin's catalytic activity. The crystal structure aids the understanding of other structure−function relationships in patatin. Patatin does not display interfacial activation, a hallmark feature of lipases, and this is likely due to the fact that it lacks a flexible lid that can shield the active site.
ACS Publications