4.6 Article

Structural basis for the specificity of renin-mediated angiotensinogen cleavage

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 294, Issue 7, Pages 2353-2364

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.006608

Keywords

renin angiotensin system; serpin; crystal structure; conformational change; site-directed mutagenesis; kinetics; proteolysis; aspartic protease; hypertension; angiotensinogen

Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation [PG/12/41/29679]
  2. Wellcome Trust [082961/Z/07/Z, 100140]
  3. Program for Professor of Special Appointment (Eastern Scholar) at Shanghai Institutions of Higher Learning
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31370727, 81870309]

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The renin-angiotensin cascade is a hormone system that regulates blood pressure and fluid balance. Renin-mediated cleavage of the angiotensin I peptide from the N terminus of angiotensinogen (AGT) is the rate-limiting step of this cascade; however, the detailed molecular mechanism underlying this step is unclear. Here, we solved the crystal structures of glycosylated human AGT (2.30 A resolution), its encounter complex with renin (2.55 A), AGT cleaved in its reactive center loop (RCL; 2.97 A), and spent AGT from which the N-terminal angiotensin peptide was removed (2.63 A). These structures revealed that AGT undergoes profound conformational changes and binds renin through a tail-into-mouth allosteric mechanism that inserts the N terminus into a pocket equivalent to a hormone-binding site on other serpins. These changes fully extended the N-terminal tail, with the scissile bond for angiotensin release docked in renin's active site. Insertion of the N terminus into this pocket accompanied a complete unwinding of helix H of AGT, which, in turn, formed key interactions with renin in the complementary binding interface. Mutagenesis and kinetic analyses confirmed that renin-mediated production of angiotensin I is controlled by interactions of amino acid residues and glycan components outside renin's active-site cleft. Our findings indicate that AGT adapts unique serpin features for hormone delivery and binds renin through concerted movements in the N-terminal tail and in its main body to modulate angiotensin release. These insights provide a structural basis for the development of agents that attenuate angiotensin release by targeting AGT's hormone binding pocket.

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