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Investigating the Roles of a Putative Transmembrane Domain of Mammalian Diacylglycerol Kinase Epsilon

<p> An area of current research interest involves the diacylglycerol kinase (DGK) family. Diacylglycerol kinases (DGKs) are a group of enzymes that phosphorylate diacylglycerol (DAG), a second messenger involved in cell signaling. The product of this reaction, phosphatidic acid (PA), also has signaling roles. An interesting isoform is DGKε, that although it has no identifiable regulatory domains other than the C1 domains. In addition, the catalytic domain is homologous to that of other DGK isoforms; however, DGKε exhibits an unusual specificity toward acyl chains of DAG, selectively phosphorylating an arachidonoyl-DAG substituted at the sn-2 position. Recently, researchers have identified an N-terminal hydrophobic domain of about 19 amino-acids in human DGKε. The present study attempted to identify the function of the N-terminal putative transmembrane domain of human DGKε and its relationship to the activity and substrate specificity of this enzyme by designing a truncated form of DGKε lacking the putative transmembrane domain.</p> <p> We have shown that the putative transmembrane domain of DGKε is not required for enzyme activity or for substrate specificity. In a mixed micellar assay the enzyme-catalyzed reaction followed surface dilution kinetics with respect to diacylglycerol and followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to ATP. The results show that the truncated form of the enzyme maintains substrate specificity for lipids with an arachidonoyl moiety present at the sn-2 position. The truncation increased the catalytic rate constant for all three substrates used in this study.
It appears unlikely that the putative transmembrane domain, a segment unique to DGKε, has no functional role. It is possible that the hydrophobic segment may have a role in enzyme regulation by associating the enzyme in oligomers that are inactive in quiescent cells and get activated upon dissociation into monomers by increased levels of DAG in the membrane. We have shown that the presence of higher molecular species in the gel is not dependent on the presence or absence of the putative transmembrane domain. The only difference between the full-length and truncated enzyme is the monomer to dimer ratio. It appears likely that another segment of DGKε besides the putative transmembrane domain may be involved in oligomerization and that oligomerization is either transient or very weak. The absence of the hydrophobic domain of DGKε seems to cause no drastic changes either in the activity, the substrate specificity, or the state of oligomerization of the enzyme.</p> <p> Therefore, the next question is whether the hydrophobic domain of DGKε inserts itself in the membrane as a transmembrane helix or it only helps associate the enzyme to the surface of the membrane. We studied the topology of theN-terminal domain of DGKε in intact and permeabilized cells by indirect immunofluorescent microscopy. The results show that the N-terminal domain of the protein is present in the cytosol. The data supports a model in which the hydrophobic domain of DGKε forms a hydrophobic loop that attaches to the inner layer of the plasma membrane or that the hydrophobic domain attaches to the inner leaflet through its nonpolar surface of a horizontal helix. The first hypothesis is supported by the presence of a Pro residue in the middle of the hydrophobic domain. This Pro would introduce a kink in the helix creating a loop, but the absence of one or more glycine residues proximal to proline may hinder the formation of the loop. The second hypothesis is sustained by the presence of a polar surface
on one side of the helical wheel. This orientation indicates the presence of a slightly horizontal
helix attached to the surface of the inner layer of the plasma membrane.</p> <p> Regardless of the orientation of the helix, the weak association of the enzyme with the membrane is supported by previous data on the ease of extractability of the enzyme with high salts and on the Triton X-114 phase partitioning.</p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/21546
Date06 1900
CreatorsDicu, Armela Ovidia
ContributorsEpand, Richard M., Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences
Source SetsMcMaster University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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