Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.

X-linked juvenile retinoschisis (XLRS) is a hereditary retinal dystrophy, caused by mutations in the RS1 gene which encodes the secreted protein retinoschisin. In recent years, several molecules have been proposed to interact with retinoschisin, including the retinal Na/K-ATPase, L-voltage gated Ca2...

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Main Authors: Karolina Plössl, Kristina Straub, Verena Schmid, Franziska Strunz, Jens Wild, Rainer Merkl, Bernhard H F Weber, Ulrike Friedrich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216320
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spelling doaj-665b9225cca24c098d9a9b4856de65842021-03-03T20:42:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01145e021632010.1371/journal.pone.0216320Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.Karolina PlösslKristina StraubVerena SchmidFranziska StrunzJens WildRainer MerklBernhard H F WeberUlrike FriedrichX-linked juvenile retinoschisis (XLRS) is a hereditary retinal dystrophy, caused by mutations in the RS1 gene which encodes the secreted protein retinoschisin. In recent years, several molecules have been proposed to interact with retinoschisin, including the retinal Na/K-ATPase, L-voltage gated Ca2+ channels, and specific sugars. We recently showed that the retinal Na/K-ATPase consisting of subunits ATP1A3 and ATP1B2 is essential for anchoring retinoschisin to plasma membranes and identified the glycosylated ATP1B2 subunit as the direct interaction partner for retinoschisin. We now aimed to precisely map the retinoschisin binding domain(s) in ATP1B2. In general, retinoschisin binding was not affected after selective elimination of individual glycosylation sites via site-directed mutagenesis as well as after full enzymatic deglycosylation of ATP1B2. Applying the interface prediction tool PresCont, two putative protein-protein interaction patches ("patch I" and "patch II") consisting each of four hydrophobic amino acid stretches on the ATP1B2 surface were identified. These were consecutively altered by site-directed mutagenesis. Functional assays with the ATP1B2 patch mutants identified patch II and, specifically, the associated amino acid at position 240 (harboring a threonine in ATP1B2) as crucial for retinoschisin binding to ATP1B2. These and previous results led us to suggest an induced-fit binding mechanism for the interaction between retinoschisin and the Na/K-ATPase, which is dependent on threonine 240 in ATP1B2 allowing the accommodation of hyperflexible retinoschisin spikes by the associated protein-protein interaction patch on ATP1B2.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216320
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karolina Plössl
Kristina Straub
Verena Schmid
Franziska Strunz
Jens Wild
Rainer Merkl
Bernhard H F Weber
Ulrike Friedrich
spellingShingle Karolina Plössl
Kristina Straub
Verena Schmid
Franziska Strunz
Jens Wild
Rainer Merkl
Bernhard H F Weber
Ulrike Friedrich
Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Karolina Plössl
Kristina Straub
Verena Schmid
Franziska Strunz
Jens Wild
Rainer Merkl
Bernhard H F Weber
Ulrike Friedrich
author_sort Karolina Plössl
title Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.
title_short Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.
title_full Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.
title_fullStr Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.
title_full_unstemmed Identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal Na/K-ATPase.
title_sort identification of the retinoschisin-binding site on the retinal na/k-atpase.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description X-linked juvenile retinoschisis (XLRS) is a hereditary retinal dystrophy, caused by mutations in the RS1 gene which encodes the secreted protein retinoschisin. In recent years, several molecules have been proposed to interact with retinoschisin, including the retinal Na/K-ATPase, L-voltage gated Ca2+ channels, and specific sugars. We recently showed that the retinal Na/K-ATPase consisting of subunits ATP1A3 and ATP1B2 is essential for anchoring retinoschisin to plasma membranes and identified the glycosylated ATP1B2 subunit as the direct interaction partner for retinoschisin. We now aimed to precisely map the retinoschisin binding domain(s) in ATP1B2. In general, retinoschisin binding was not affected after selective elimination of individual glycosylation sites via site-directed mutagenesis as well as after full enzymatic deglycosylation of ATP1B2. Applying the interface prediction tool PresCont, two putative protein-protein interaction patches ("patch I" and "patch II") consisting each of four hydrophobic amino acid stretches on the ATP1B2 surface were identified. These were consecutively altered by site-directed mutagenesis. Functional assays with the ATP1B2 patch mutants identified patch II and, specifically, the associated amino acid at position 240 (harboring a threonine in ATP1B2) as crucial for retinoschisin binding to ATP1B2. These and previous results led us to suggest an induced-fit binding mechanism for the interaction between retinoschisin and the Na/K-ATPase, which is dependent on threonine 240 in ATP1B2 allowing the accommodation of hyperflexible retinoschisin spikes by the associated protein-protein interaction patch on ATP1B2.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216320
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