1. Academic Validation
  2. The proposed channel-enzyme transient receptor potential melastatin 2 does not possess ADP ribose hydrolase activity

The proposed channel-enzyme transient receptor potential melastatin 2 does not possess ADP ribose hydrolase activity

  • Elife. 2016 Jul 6;5:e17600. doi: 10.7554/eLife.17600.
Iordan Iordanov 1 2 Csaba Mihályi 1 2 Balázs Tóth 1 2 László Csanády 1 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Medical Biochemistry, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.
  • 2 MTA-SE Ion Channel Research Group, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.
Abstract

Transient Receptor Potential Melastatin 2 (TRPM2) is a CA(2+)-permeable cation channel essential for immunocyte activation, Insulin secretion, and postischemic cell death. TRPM2 is activated by ADP ribose (ADPR) binding to its C-terminal cytosolic NUDT9-homology (NUDT9H) domain, homologous to the soluble mitochondrial ADPR pyrophosphatase (ADPRase) NUDT9. Reported ADPR hydrolysis classified TRPM2 as a channel-enzyme, but insolubility of isolated NUDT9H hampered further investigations. Here we developed a soluble NUDT9H model using chimeric proteins built from complementary polypeptide fragments of NUDT9H and NUDT9. When expressed in E.coli, chimeras containing up to ~90% NUDT9H sequence remained soluble and were affinity-purified. In ADPRase assays the conserved Nudix-box sequence of NUDT9 proved essential for activity (kcat~4-9s(-1)), that of NUDT9H did not support catalysis. Replacing NUDT9H in full-length TRPM2 with soluble chimeras retained ADPR-dependent channel gating (K1/2~1-5 μM), confirming functionality of chimeric domains. Thus, TRPM2 is not a 'chanzyme'. Chimeras provide convenient soluble NUDT9H models for structural/biochemical studies.

Keywords

ADPR; E. coli; NUDT9H domain; TRPM2; biochemistry; biophysics; chanzyme; chimera; structural biology; xenopus.

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