Specific amino acids affecting Drosophila melanogaster prophenoloxidase activity in vitro.

Dev Comp Immunol

Key Laboratory of Insect Developmental and Evolutionary Biology, Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.

Published: September 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Insect prophenoloxidase (PPO) is crucial for combating pathogens by inducing melanization, with Drosophila melanogaster possessing three distinct PPO genes that display varying properties when over-expressed.
  • The study demonstrates that recombinant PPO3 (rPPO3) activation is influenced by Cu(2+) but not by ethanol or substrate, and this auto-activation mechanism is tied to specific amino acids and structural changes in protein synthesis.
  • Mutations and deletions in amino acid sequences within the active site and C-terminus affect Cu(2+)-aided auto-activation and staining activity, indicating the importance of these regions for PPO's functionality.

Article Abstract

Insect prophenoloxidase (PPO) is a key enzyme that induces melanization around invading pathogens and at wounds to prevent further infection. Drosophila melanogaster has three PPO genes which have different biochemical properties following over-expression in S2 cells. As shown by automatic melanization of S2 cells, recombinant PPO3 (rPPO3) became activated upon Cu(2+) addition (Cu(2+)-aided cells melanization without ethanol activation and substrate addition: +Cu(2+); -DOPA, -Ethanol). The exact reasons for this phenomenon are still unknown. In this study, using site-directed mutagenesis and over-expression methods, we found that the place holder, two independent amino acids (equal to Manduca sexta amino acid residues: F218 and S393 in MsPPO1, F224 and E395 in MsPPO2) in the active site pocket and a missing fragment (similar to (565)RPGDPGT(571) in MsPPO1 and (571)QGSDPRR(577) in MsPPO2) at the C-terminus of PPO3, affect rPPO3-S2 cells Cu(2+)-aided auto-melanization. Some mutations nearly rescued rPPO3 Cu(2+)-aided auto-activation, which suggests that the auto-activation of wild type rPPO3 was not due to cleavage by serine proteases. We also found that the corresponding amino acids in the active site pocket have similar effect on PPO1 as on PPO3. PPO1 staining activity (Cu(2+) added or not during PPO transfection; cells melanized after ethanol activation and substrate addition: ±Cu(2+); +DOPA, +Ethanol) has a positive relationship with the active site pocket size as does rPPO3. The fragment of rPPO1 corresponding to the one missing from the C-terminus of PPO3 has no influence on rPPO1 staining activity after it is deleted. However, the staining activities of rPPO2 mutants decreased after deletion of those corresponding amino acid sequences. When the corresponding fragments from PPO1 or PPO2 were inserted into PPO3, the mutant rPPO3 had no influence on staining activity, but had a significantly lowered Cu(2+)-aided auto-activation. Thus, we found that some amino acids are important for rPPO3 Cu(2+)-aided auto-activation as well as PPO staining activity in vitro.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dci.2012.04.007DOI Listing

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