4.6 Article

Contribution of Residue B5 to the Folding and Function of Insulin and IGF-I CONSTRAINTS AND FINE-TUNING IN THE EVOLUTION OF A PROTEIN FAMILY

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 285, Issue 7, Pages 5040-5055

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M109.062992

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DK48280, R01 DK069764, R01 DK40949]
  2. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-04ER63786]
  3. American Diabetes Association [ADA 1-08-RA-218]

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Proinsulin exhibits a single structure, whereas insulin-like growth factors refold as two disulfide isomers in equilibrium. Native insulin-related growth factor (IGF)-I has canonical cystines (A6-A11, A7-B7, and A20-B19) maintained by IGF-binding proteins; IGF-swap has alternative pairing (A7-A11, A6-B7, and A20-B19) and impaired activity. Studies of mini-domain models suggest that residue B5 (His in insulin and Thr in IGFs) governs the ambiguity or uniqueness of disulfide pairing. Residue B5, a site of mutation in proinsulin causing neonatal diabetes, is thus of broad biophysical interest. Here, we characterize reciprocal B5 substitutions in the two proteins. In insulin, His(B5)-> Thr markedly destabilizes the hormone (Delta Delta G(u) 2.0 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol), impairs chain combination, and blocks cellular secretion of proinsulin. The reciprocal IGF-I substitution Thr(B5)-> His (residue 4) specifies a unique structure with native H-1 NMR signature. Chemical shifts and nuclear Overhauser effects are similar to those of native IGF-I. Whereas wild-type IGF-I undergoes thiol-catalyzed disulfide exchange to yield IGF-swap, His(B5)-IGF-I retains canonical pairing. Chemical denaturation studies indicate that His(B5) does not significantly enhance thermodynamic stability (Delta Delta Gu 0.2 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol), implying that the substitution favors canonical pairing by destabilizing competing folds. Whereas the activity of Thr(B5)-insulin is decreased 5-fold, His(B5)-IGF-I exhibits 2-fold increased affinity for the IGF receptor and augmented post-receptor signaling. We propose that conservation of Thr(B5) in IGF-I, rescued from structural ambiguity by IGF-binding proteins, reflects fine-tuning of signal transduction. In contrast, the conservation of HisB5 in insulin highlights its critical role in insulin biosynthesis.

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