AI Article Synopsis

  • Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) is an enzyme that breaks down fats (cholesteryl esters and triglycerides) in the body, and when deficient, it can cause serious conditions like Wolman's disease and CE storage disease (CESD).
  • Researchers have successfully presented the first crystal structure of human LAL, revealing its structural similarities to human gastric lipase and highlighting important features like a catalytic triad and a regulatory "cap" domain.
  • The study also noted structural differences in the lid region of LAL, which may affect its ability to interact with fat substrates, and included insights from simulations that could link a specific human mutation, H274Y, to CESD.

Article Abstract

Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) is a serine hydrolase that hydrolyzes cholesteryl ester (CE) and TGs delivered to the lysosomes into free cholesterol and fatty acids. LAL deficiency due to mutations in the LAL gene () results in accumulation of TGs and cholesterol esters in various tissues of the body leading to pathological conditions such as Wolman's disease and CE storage disease (CESD). Here, we present the first crystal structure of recombinant human LAL (HLAL) to 2.6 Å resolution in its closed form. The crystal structure was enabled by mutating three of the six potential glycosylation sites. The overall structure of HLAL closely resembles that of the evolutionarily related human gastric lipase (HGL). It consists of a core domain belonging to the classical α/β hydrolase-fold family with a classical catalytic triad (Ser-153, His-353, Asp-324), an oxyanion hole, and a "cap" domain, which regulates substrate entry to the catalytic site. Most significant structural differences between HLAL and HGL exist at the lid region. Deletion of the short helix, NLCFLLC, at the lid region implied a possible role in regulating the highly hydrophobic substrate binding site from self-oligomerization during interfacial activation. We also performed molecular dynamic simulations of dog gastric lipase (lid-open form) and HLAL to gain insights and speculated a possible role of the human mutant, H274Y, leading to CESD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7397744PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1194/jlr.RA120000748DOI Listing

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