Rodrigo
Aguayo-Ortiz
a,
Cecilia
Chávez-García
a,
John E.
Straub
b and
Laura
Dominguez
*a
aDepartamento de Fisicoquímica, Facultad de Química, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, 04510, Mexico. E-mail: lauradd@unam.mx
bDepartment of Chemistry, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA
First published on 5th June 2017
γ-Secretase is an intramembrane-cleaving aspartyl protease that plays an essential role in the processing of a variety of integral membrane proteins. Its role in the ultimate cleavage step in the processing of amyloid precursor protein to form amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide makes it an important therapeutic target in Alzheimer's disease research. Significant recent advances have been made in structural studies of this critical membrane protein complex. However, details of the mechanism of activation of the enzyme complex remain unclear. Using a multiscale computational modeling approach, combining multiple coarse-grained microsecond dynamic trajectories with all-atom models, the structure and two conformational states of the γ-secretase complex were evaluated. The transition between enzymatic state 1 and state 2 is shown to critically depend on the protonation states of the key catalytic residues Asp257 and Asp385 in the active site domain. The active site formation, related to our γ-secretase state 2, is observed to involve a concerted movement of four transmembrane helices from the catalytic subunit, resulting in the required localization of the catalytic residues. Global analysis of the structural ensemble of the enzyme complex was used to identify collective fluctuations important to the mechanism of substrate recognition and demonstrate that the corresponding fluctuations observed were uncorrelated with structural changes associated with enzyme activation. Overall, this computational study provides essential insight into the role of structure and dynamics in the activation and function of γ-secretase.
The mature γ-secretase consists of four components (Fig. 1A): presenilin 1 (PS1), presenilin enhancer 2 (PEN-2), anterior pharynx-defective 1A (APH-1A) and nicastrin (NCT).4–6PS1 is the catalytic component of γ-secretase. It contains nine transmembrane helices (TMs) organized into a horseshoe-shaped structure with two catalytic Asp residues located at TM6 (Asp257) and TM7 (Asp385) within the convex side of the protein surface.7–10 Autoproteolysis of the intracellular loop connecting TM6 and TM7 leads to the formation of the PS1 N-terminal (NTF, TMs 1–6) and C-terminal fragments (CTF, TMs 7–9) that interact with PEN-2 and APH-1A, respectively.9PEN-2 consists of three TMs, of which TM1 and TM2 form a re-entrant loop extending halfway through the membrane from the intracellular side.7,11 The association of PEN-2 with PS1 has been related to the autocatalytic maturation of PS1 and γ-secretase activity. APH-1A consists of seven TMs helices and a C-terminal juxtamembrane region.12,13 Several experimental studies suggest that this component is required for proper γ-secretase assembly.14,15NCT is a transmembrane glycoprotein with a large N-terminal extracellular domain (ECD) and a single TM helix located in its C-terminal region.16,17 The globular ECD is comprised of a large and a small lobe composed of α-helices and β-strands.12,18,19 It has been proposed that Glu333 and Tyr337, located at NCT's large lobe, interact with the substrate's extracellular domain and play a critical role in substrate recognition.17,20 These residues are buried in a hydrophilic pocket covered by a lid formed by the small lobe.12 It is thought that a rotation of NCT's large lobe around a central pivot may cause lid opening, exposing the substrate-binding site.17 However, mutagenesis studies involving Glu333 contradict this theory, suggesting that Glu333 is involved in the maturation assembly of the complex rather than in substrate recognition.21,22
Fig. 1 (A) Depiction of the all atom model of γ-secretase, derived from the 5FN2 PDB structure, colored by its subunits: PS1, NCT, PEN-2, and APH-1A in green, blue, yellow, and orange, respectively. (B) Fluctuation analysis of 5FN2-derived atomistic model of γ-secretase in POPC bilayer (gray) color-coded by the normalized per-residue root mean square fluctuation (RMSF) from more flexible (red) to less flexible (blue). The analysis was performed during the last 500 ns of the simulation. |
Novel high-resolution cryo-EM structures of human γ-secretase have been resolved.7,12,19 In the first proposed structure, Shi and coworkers7 reported the overall architecture of the complex at 4.5 Å resolution (PDB ID: 4UIS). Nevertheless, due to the limited resolution, partial assignment of the TMs side chains was only possible through sequence homology modeling of PS1 using a presenilin homologue (PSH) (PDB ID: 4HYG).8 Subsequently, Bai, et al.12 obtained an atomic-level γ-secretase structure with 3.4 Å resolution employing cryo-EM single particle analysis (PDB ID: 5A63). In this structure, the main-chain connectivity and side-chains were mostly displayed, facilitating identification of new interactions between the TMs, the presence of the juxtamembrane region of APH-1A, and a complete structure of the NCT ECD.
The structure of TM2 and the N-terminal region of TM6 in PS1 are typically not resolved due to the high flexibility of these domains. Importantly, four new γ-secretase structures exhibiting varying conformational states in this critical region have been resolved (PDB IDs: 5FN2, 5FN3, 5FN4 and 5FN5).19 The first was obtained in complex with the dipeptidic inhibitor N-[N-(3,5-difluorophenacetyl)-L-alanyl]-S-phenylglycine t-butyl ester (DAPT); however, the structure of the inhibitor was not assigned. The second and third γ-secretase structures were solved in complex with peptide fragments. Interestingly, the authors suggest that the peptide fragment found in 5FN3, located between PS1 TM2, TM3 and TM4, belongs to the N-terminal region of APP. Finally, the last structure did not appear to be complexed with any external agent, and as in the case of PDB ID: 5A63, it was not possible to resolve TM2.
A previous molecular dynamics (MD) study examined the dynamic properties and activation of a single human PS1 subunit embedded in a variety of membrane lipid compositions, with an initial PS1 conformation derived from homology modeling.23 However, in the absence of the PEN-2, APH-1A, and NCT subunits, the simulations exhibited large instabilities and flexibility in the TMs. More recently, Han and coworkers24 explored the initial substrate binding site of the transmembrane region of γ-secretase using a multiscale MD approach. In that work, the authors demonstrated the importance of using atomistic and coarse grained models to assess the behaviour of the TMs of forming the complex. Moreover, their results suggest that TM2/6/9 (including the PAL motif) constitute the initial APP-C99 binding site.
Despite these recent advances, many essential aspects of the structure and dynamics of the multicomponent γ-secretase complex remain undescribed. In this study, we employed a multiscale simulation approach that combines atomistic and coarse-grained models starting from a variety of cryo-EM structures to explore the dynamic structural ensemble of γ-secretase embedded in a POPC lipid bilayer. Conformational changes are analyzed using order parameters that characterize the essential dynamics of the enzyme complex, including the transition between active and inactive functional states. Our study provides critical insight into (1) the nature of large-scale conformational transitions in the γ-secretase complex, (2) the identification of two conformational states of PS1, constituting a mechanism for its activation, and (3) the characterization of NCT ECD mobility and its relationship to the observed PS1 states.
Additionally, in order to evaluate the stability of our simulations and validate our methodology and results, two longer simulations of 5 μs were performed for the unprotonated γ-secretase complex using our CG Martini model and a CG Martini with an Elastic Network in Dynamics (CG-ElNeDyn).40 The systems were prepared following the same methodology described above and results are presented in the ESI.†
The most representative structures of the state 1 and state 2 PS1 conformers from the 5FN2 derived CG simulations were selected using the GROMACS cluster tool with a root mean square deviation (RMSD) threshold of 2.0 Å. These structures were back-mapped from coarse-grained (MARTINI force field) models to all-atom (CHARMM36 force field) models using the script backward.py.41 The final systems were simulated for 100 ns of MD following the previously described all-atom simulation protocols.
Finally, three structures were selected from the 5FN2 derived CG simulations with protonated Asp385 to represent the compact, intermediate, and extended conformations of the γ-secretase state models. The density maps of the structures were generated with the molmap command of UCSF Chimera v1.11 (ref. 42) with a resolution of 8.0 Å.
In the following sections, we provide a detailed picture of (1) the relative roles of the enzyme subunits in stabilizing the structure of the PS1 catalytic subunit, (2) the activation mechanism of the enzyme resulting from protonation of the catalytic aspartic acid residues, and (3) the characterization of the principal motions of NCT ECD related to transitions between two conformational states of the enzyme complex. Overall, this study provides the first complete picture of the γ-secretase complex and the relative role of the enzyme subunits in the activation mechanism.
Analysis of the apolar contributions to the inter-subunit binding free energies of the four γ-secretase components suggests that PS1-TM1, PS1-TM8 and PS1-TM9 are involved in critical interactions with APH-1A, contributing to the low observed energy values (Fig. S3A†). Similarly, we observed favorable interaction between PS1-TM4 and the first and third TMs of PEN-2. It is worth noting that we found significant interactions between the PS1 TM3–TM4 loop and the N-terminal fragment of PEN-2, which was involved in significant contacts with a major lobe helix of NCT. This network of interactions may play an essential role in the communication pathway between these subunits and the PS1 catalytic site. Fluctuation analysis reveals that the γ-secretase complex, including the catalytic subunit, remains structurally stable throughout the 1 μs all-atom simulations, consistent with previous experimental studies.7,12 An equivalent analysis of our 5FN3 model is shown in the ESI (Fig S1–S3†).
The TM6 cytosolic fragment also showed high flexibility during the MD simulations. It has been proposed that alterations in the distance between cytosolic sides of TM6 and TM7 correlate with Aβ42 production, suggesting that the TM6 conformation is a critical regulator of PS1 catalytic activity.46 The large RMSF values and highly conserved helicity observed in TM2 and TM6 suggest the presence of collective motion modulating the relative orientation of these helices. The mobility of TM2 and TM6 has also been associated with the significant plasticity of the active site suggested by cryo-EM structural analysis.12 In Fig. 2 we present the computed tilt angle distribution of TMs, which agrees well with distributions derived from available γ-secretase structures. In particular, the wide tilt angle distribution of TM2 confirms the high mobility of this helix associated with the PS1 subunit plasticity.
Fig. 2 (A) Distribution of tilt angles of the PS1 TMs calculated for simulations of 5FN2 (color coded by TM helix number) and 5FN3 (in gray shade) and compared with TMs tilt angle ranges obtained from available experimental structures of γ-secretase (PDB IDs: 5A63, 4UIS, 5FN2, 5FN3, 5FN4 and 5FN5) (black bars). (B) Depiction of the 3D structure of γ-secretase (color coding PS1 TMs as (A)). |
Order parameters used to characterize the PS1 ensemble include the TM tilt angles relative to the membrane normal (TTM) and the distance between the catalytic Asp (ddAsp). These order parameters are highly effective in differentiating the conformational state 1 (inactive state, long ddAsp and proper TTM angles) and state 2 (active state, short ddAsp and proper TTM angles) of γ-secretase. Short ddAsp conformations involve Asp conformations suitable to form the crucial hydrogen bond required for the catalytic reaction.
In order to explore the correlation between the TMs orientation and proximity of the catalytic residues, the set of 50 1 μs trajectories for the 5FN2 and 5FN3 derived CG models, varying Asp257 and Asp385 protonation states, were analyzed by projecting the simulated structural ensemble onto the ddAsp distance and TTM angles for TM2, TM6, TM7 and TM9. Fig. 3 displays the probability distributions for the ddAsp distance and the TTM angles for 5FN2 model of γ-secretase with unprotonated Asp and protonated Asp385 (similar results for 5FN3 and the two systems with the protonated Asp257 are available in Fig. S11†). There are notable changes in the relative probabilities of the conformational states of γ-secretase characterizing the structural ensemble of PS1: (1) the state 1, predominant in the unprotonated 5FN2 and 5FN3 derived CG models, is characterized by an inactive PS1 catalytic conformation with a ddAsp distance larger than 0.5 nm; (2) the state 2 observed in the protonated 5FN2 and 5FN3 derived CG models is characterized by a short ddAsp distance consistent with active site formation. The TTM angle distributions for the identified states indicate that TM6 and TM7 undergo an important TTM angle modification that is strongly correlated with modulation of the ddAsp distance. Moreover, the principal component analysis (PCA) of the PS1 catalytic subunit suggests that a concerted motion of all TMs is required for the state 1 to state 2 transition (Fig. S12†).
Fig. 3 Simulated distributions of 5FN2 derived CG model in POPC bilayer projected onto (1) the distance between the catalytic residues (Asp257 and Asp385) and (2) the calculated TM2, TM6, TM7 and TM9 tilt angles in the (A) unprotonated and (B) Asp385 protonated states. The black triangles depict the values of ddAsp and TTM angles obtained from the experimental structures of γ-secretase (PDB IDs: 5A63, 4UIS, 5FN2, 5FN3, 5FN4 and 5FN5). |
Similarly, a slight change in the TTM angles of TM2 and TM9 is observed to be correlated with a conformational change in TTM angles of TM6 and TM7. Importantly, previous experimental studies have provided evidence that TM2 and TM9 constitute the initial substrate binding site in PS1, suggesting two different mechanisms of substrate entry into the active site: between TM6 and TM9 or between TM2 and TM6.43,45 Given the high flexibility and broad tilt angle distribution observed in our study, which is consistent with the conformational ensemble derived from cryo-EM studies, we specifically conjecture that TM2 acts as a gateway for substrate entry through TM2 and TM6.55
In order to obtain a detailed atomistic description of the identified conformational states of PS1 structures, we performed 100 ns all-atom MD simulations (Fig. 4) of the γ-secretase complex employing the CHARMM force field in a POPC lipid bilayer. The most probable state 1 and state 2 γ-secretase conformations were selected using the GROMACS cluster tool with a RMSD threshold of 2.0 Å from the CG structural ensemble. As observed in the CG studies, the state 2 conformation is showed to fluctuate between more and less active conformations (ddAsp distance does not exceed 0.75 nm). This state 2 (active/less-active) equilibrium is associated with Asp dihedral angle fluctuation with unaltered inclination of the key TMs. Equivalent fluctuations between state 1/state 2 (inactive/active) states were observed in the CG model simulations, indicating that the state 2 (active) conformation may require the substrate to be bound to the catalytic site in order to stabilize the active conformation. On the other hand, data derived from atomistic MD simulation of the PS1 state 1 (inactive) conformations display substantial structural fluctuations with a 1.0 nm ddAsp distance. This observation is consistent with the previously characterized inactive CG simulations. Furthermore, the analysis of water molecules at the active site showed the presence of intramolecular hydrogen-bonds between both catalytic aspartic residues and a coordinated water molecule within 3.0 Å distance and 150-degree angle (Fig. 4C). This hydrogen bond network was present 43.92% of the time of the last 50 ns of the state 2 all-atom simulation. Interestingly, this water coordination is a crucial step for PS1 activation and proteolytic processing of γ-secretase substrates.
Fig. 4 (A) Most representative structures of the state 1 (inactive) and state-2 (active) conformations of the PS1 subunit of γ-secretase obtained from all-atom MD simulations. The dotted red line represents the distance between the gamma carbons of Asp257 and Asp385. (B) Simulated distribution of both conformational state models projected onto the distance between the catalytic aspartic acid residues and the PS1 tilt angles of TM6 and TM7. The black triangles depict ddAsp distances and TTM angles obtained from the experimental structures of γ-secretase (PDB IDs: 5A63, 4UIS, 5FN2, 5FN3, 5FN4 and 5FN5). (C) Time evolution of hydrogen bonds between a coordinated water molecule and both catalytic aspartic residues through the last 50 ns of the state 1 and state 2 simulations. |
The first two eigenvectors, involving the NCT ECD and accounting for the majority (23%) of overall γ-secretase motion, were selected to analyze the NCT movement. Analysis of conformations projected onto the first two PC eigenvectors revealed that the first eigenvector is related to NCT “up/down” movement while the second eigenvector corresponds to NCT-ECD “left/right” rotation. Fig. 5 depicts motion along the first and second principal components (PCs) using a porcupine representation. Interestingly, we found the same two principal component motions during the 5 μs simulation of our CG-ElNeDyn model with a slower dynamics and a smaller set of collective vectors (Fig. S6†).
Fig. 5 Porcupine representation of the (A) “up/down” movement and (B) “left/right” rotation of the NCT ECD obtained from PCA. |
In order to further analyze structural fluctuations of NCT, we constructed two order parameters based on the first and second PCs obtained from the CG structural ensemble (capturing up/down and left/right rotational motion of NCT, Fig. S13†). The first order parameter describes the distance between the center of geometry of PS1 and the center of geometry of the large lobe of NCT (ddPS-NCT). Significant variation in the distribution of the ddPS-NCT distances indicates that a percentage of the γ-secretase structures simulated using the CG model exhibit an “up” conformation (with ddPS-NCT distances larger to 5.0 nm) while a fraction of the NCT domain adopts a “down” conformation (with a ddPS-NCT distance shorter than 4.5 nm). The second order parameter characterizes the rotational motion of NCT (dihNCT) and involves a dihedral angle formed by four points of the NCT structure: (1) the intracellular and (2) extracellular amino acids of the single TM helix of NCT, (3) the center of mass of the large lobe of NCT, and (4) the residues Arg583–Asp588 (located at the distal end of the NCT large lobe). Previous experimental structural studies of γ-secretase have proposed a possible interaction of the substrate N-terminal region with exposed Glu333 located at a lid opening.17 Taken together, those observations and our simulation analysis support the conjecture that NCT rotation (dihNCT) is essential to the γ-secretase substrate binding mechanism. The simulated dihNCT distribution indicates that the NCT large lobe rotates in the left/right directions, with preference for leftward rotation (dihNCT values of −50 deg). However, further analysis demonstrates that the identified NCT motion, described by the ddPS-NCT distance and the dihNCT rotation, does not modify the position of the NCT-lid (Fig. S14 and S15†). This suggests that Glu333 might not be involved in the substrate recognition mechanism. Furthermore, Wolfe and coworkers57 proposed that the NCT-ECD acts as a steric gatekeeper for substrate entry into the PS1 active site, instead of having a specific interaction with the substrate. This steric block mechanism could be associated with ECD up-down movement, left-right rotation, and interaction with the transmembrane subunits, as shown in the following section.
In further analysis, we extracted representative structures characterizing the three distinct conformational states in order to generate and analyze three density maps (8.0 Å resolution), employing UCSF Chimera software.42 The structural state transitions are observed to involve three distinctive interactions between the extracellular domain of NCT and key γ-secretase subunits: (1) in the extended state, the small lobe of NCT interacts with the C-terminal region of PEN2, (2) in the intermediate state, the large lobe of NCT interacts with the HL1 (hydrophilic TM1–TM2 loop) of PS1, and (3) in the compact state, the large lobe of NCT interacts with the APH-1A and PS1 extracellular domains. The broad distribution of structures in the intermediate state indicates that the second interaction, between the large lobe of NCT and HL1 of PS1, is essential for NCT ECD stabilization. Moreover, this conformation could be essential for NCT to act as a selective “gatekeeper” during peptide entry into the catalytic site.58 Experimental studies have demonstrated that when substrate or other agents (e.g. inhibitors and modulators) are bound to γ-secretase, the compact conformation of the complex is the most stable and favored state.20,22,56 Importantly, we found that although the NCT ECD interact with the hydrophilic PS1 HL1, APH-1A, and PEN2, no correlated motion was observed between the large NCT ECD and the PS1 TMs helices. These results suggest that the large NCT ECD motion is not critical to the activation or inactivation mechanism of the catalytic PS1 subunit (Fig. S16†).
Overall, the TMs of γ-secretase form a stable structural complex of relatively low mobility. However, we specifically observed that higher flexibility and correlated motion of PS1-TM2 and PS1-TM6 impacts the ddAsp distance essential for protease catalytic activity. Taken together, these findings suggest that correlated motion of key TMs helices, dependent on the ddAsp distance and TM tilt angles, is essential to the transitions between inactive to active states of PS1.
We have further demonstrated that the equilibrium between the state 1 (“inactive”) and state 2 (“active”) PS1 conformers is modulated by the protonation states of the catalytic residues Asp257 and Asp385. State 1 PS1 conformations are predominant in proteins having unprotonated catalytic Asp residues, while state 2 PS1 conformations are sampled when either catalytic Asp residue is protonated.
Analysis of global conformational changes in the γ-secretase complex identified significant mobility in the NCT ECD, characterized as up/down motion and left/right rotation of the large lobe of NCT ECD. Similar movement of the NCT ECD has been previously inferred from electron microscopy images.22 Based on these observations, it has been conjectured that γ-secretase function is controlled through modulation of relative populations of NCT ECD conformational states in the γ-secretase structural ensemble. Importantly, our data suggests that these movements are not correlated with NCT lid motion and the state 1/state 2 equilibrium of PS1, supporting that NCT-ECD only acts as steric gatekeeper for substrate entry into the active site, as proposed first by Wolfe and coworkers.57
This multiscale simulation analysis provides a detailed picture of the global structure and dynamics of the γ-secretase complex. The insight provided into the nature of the active and inactive state conformation, as well as the mechanism of transition between state 1 and state 2 of the PS1 catalytic domain, provides a foundation for future studies of the catalytic mechanism of substrate recognition and cleavage. It is our hope that the results of this study will contribute to a mechanistic understanding of the cleavage of APP-C99 by γ-secretase in the genesis of Aβ, critical to the structure-based design of AD therapeutics.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7sc00980a |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |