1. Academic Validation
  2. Coactosin-like protein functions as a stabilizing chaperone for 5-lipoxygenase: role of tryptophan 102

Coactosin-like protein functions as a stabilizing chaperone for 5-lipoxygenase: role of tryptophan 102

  • Biochem J. 2009 Dec 14;425(1):265-74. doi: 10.1042/BJ20090856.
Julia Esser 1 Marija Rakonjac Bettina Hofmann Lutz Fischer Patrick Provost Gisbert Schneider Dieter Steinhilber Bengt Samuelsson Olof Rådmark
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Division of Physiological Chemistry II, Karolinska Institutet, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
Abstract

The activity of 5-LO (5-lipoxygenase), which catalyses two initial steps in the biosynthesis of pro-inflammatory LTs (leukotrienes), is strictly regulated. One recently discovered factor, CLP (coactosin-like protein), binds 5-LO and promotes LT formation. In the present paper we report that CLP also stabilizes 5-LO and prevents non-turnover inactivation of the Enzyme in vitro. Mutagenesis of tryptophan residues in the 5-LO beta-sandwich showed that 5-LO-Trp102 is essential for binding to CLP, and for CLP to support 5-LO activity. In addition, the stabilizing effect also depended on binding between CLP and 5-LO. After mutations which prevent interaction (5-LO-W102A or CLP-K131A), the protective effect of CLP was absent. A calculated 5-LO-CLP docking model indicates that CLP may bind to additional residues in both domains of 5-LO, thus possibly stabilizing the 5-LO structure. To obtain further support for binding between CLP and 5-LO in a living cell, subcellular localization of CLP and 5-LO in the monocytic cell line Mono Mac 6 was determined. In these cells, 5-LO associates with a nuclear fraction only when differentiated cells are primed with phorbol ester and stimulated with ionophore. The same pattern of redistribution was found for CLP, indicating that the two proteins associate with the nucleus in a co-ordinated fashion. The results of the present study support a role for CLP as a chaperoning scaffold factor, influencing both the stability and the activity of 5-LO.

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