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1From the National Eye Institute, the 3National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and the 4National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; the 2Institute of Applied Physics, Nizhnii Novgorod, Russia; and the 5Institute of Biochemical Physics, Moscow, Russia.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Proteins were expressed in baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells and purified by chromatography. Purified protein solutions (pH 7.4) were reduced by using Tris (2-carboxyethyl) phosphine HCl and irradiated with a 308-nm excimer laser at physiologically relevant UV doses and wavelengths (308 nm), and light-scattering (633 nm) was measured. Irradiated crystallins were analyzed by matrix-assisted desorption ionization (MALDI) and tandem liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS).
RESULTS. UV-irradiation of both rßA3 and rßA3tr resulted in major loss of soluble protein, as shown by absorption at 280 nm, size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and SDS-PAGE, with concomitant formation of insoluble aggregates producing light-scattering. Compared with wild-type rßA3, rßA3tr showed a significant tendency to begin scattering light at lower UV dose and had a higher aggregation rate with increasing UV exposure. Changes in irradiated crystallins include aggregation and cross-linking, photolysis, and oxidation of methionine and tryptophan residues.
CONCLUSIONS. Loss of ß-crystallin terminal arms appears to increase their tendency to aggregate in response to UV irradiation, suggesting that this loss in the maturing lens may increase susceptibility to age-related cataract.
-crystallins, which are molecular chaperones related to the small heat shock proteins,1 and the ß
-crystallins, which are related to bacterial wall and spore-coat proteins.2 3 4 The ß
-crystallins share a common two-domain structure.5 6 7 Each domain comprises two Greek-key motifs formed by two twisted ß-pleated sheets. The ß-crystallins also have N- and C-terminal extensions or "arms."8 As they are studied in solution, ß-crystallins associate into higher-order complexes that can undergo rapid subunit exchange, whereas the
-crystallins exist as stable monomers.9 10 11 12 13
Cataracts, a major cause of blindness worldwide, are the clinical result of light-scattering by the lens. This light-scattering can result from loss of cellular order in the lens as a result of disrupted lens development or uncontrolled cell division, or loss of transparency within individual lens cells. The latter can result from aberrations of or damage to the lens crystallins or the intracellular environment, disrupting the ability of the crystallins to interact in a close and orderly fashion and causing them to aggregate or to precipitate. Mutant crystallins can cause hereditary cataracts due to altered stability, association, or solubility. It has been shown recently that splice and deletion mutations of rßA3-crystallin are associated with the formation of autosomal dominant zonular cataract.14 15 16 17 Changes in
A- and
B-,18 19 20 21 22 ßB1-,23 ßB2-,24 25
C-, and
D-crystallins15 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 are also associated with congenital cataracts. Thus, it seems possible that structural modifications of lens crystallins may make them more susceptible to further damage by UV-light, resulting in increasing susceptibility to age-related cataract.
As shown by x-ray diffraction analysis, ß- and
-crystallins lose their native structural organization in senile nuclear cataract, and similar changes are observed on UV irradiation of bovine crystallins solutions.33 Although little is known about the effects of UV exposure on individual ß
-crystallins, the susceptibilities of mixed lens ß
-crystallins to UV radiation have been well characterized,34 35 36 37 supporting earlier results that ß-crystallins are more resistant to UV-induced photoaggregation than are
-crystallins.34 38 The structures of the ß- and
-crystallin central domains are very similar. However ß-crystallins have N- or both N- and C-terminal arms, whereas
-crystallins have only rudimentary extensions,39 raising the possibility that differences in ß- and
-crystallin photobehavior may be explained by the presence of terminal arms on ß-crystallins.
To investigate this possibility, we applied physiologically relevant doses of UV irradiation to samples of wild-type and N-armtruncated ßA3-crystallins. Structural modifications in ßA3tr induced by UV treatment were characterized by MS. Insoluble protein aggregates formed earlier and at a higher rate with the truncated rßA3tr compared to the wild-type protein. The increase in sensitivity of rßA3tr to UV light suggests that the loss of the N-terminal arm from lens ß-crystallins may increase their tendency to aggregate under UV-irradiationinduced photo-oxidation, increasing susceptibility to age-related cataract.
| Methods |
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B-crystallin. Briefly, Sf9 cells were infected with recombinant AcMNPV virus containing rßA3 or rßA3tr coding sequences. Sf9 cells were harvested in 72 hours, washed with PBS, and stored as a pellet at 70°C. The frozen infected insect cells were lysed by freeze thawing in 1 mL of buffer A: 50 mM Tris HCl (pH 7.5), 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 150 mM NaCl, 50 µM Tris(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine (TCEP; Pierce, Rockford, IL), and 2.8 mM thiol protease inhibitor E-64 (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN). The lysates were centrifuged at 10,600g for 30 minutes at 4°C and were dialyzed against 1 L of buffer A for 24 to 48 hours. Proteins were purified using a fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) workstation (Biological Duo-Flow; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) at room temperature (20°C). Protein purification was performed as follows. Soluble extracts were loaded onto a 124-mL 16/60 size-exclusion column (Sephacryl S-200 HR; GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ) equilibrated with buffer A and eluted at flow rate of 0.5 mL/min. The purity of rßA3 was satisfactory after SEC, and the protein was subjected to UV irradiation after exchanging buffer to fresh buffer A using a Superdex 75 10/30 HR chromatography column (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ). A concentrated sample of rßA3tr was loaded on a 5-mL ion-exchange column (HiTrap DEAE-10; GE Healthcare) and equilibrated with buffer B (50 mM Tris HCl [pH 8.5], 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 50 µM TCEP), and 2.5-mL fractions were eluted at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min and a 500 mL 0 to 1 M NaCl salt gradient was applied. The location of recombinant proteins among column fractions was determined by monitoring the column eluate at absorbance (A)280 nm and by electrophoresis of aliquots on 12% SDS-PAGE.42 The identities of rßA3 and rßA3tr were verified by SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis. The protein concentration of untreated samples was measured by absorption spectroscopy at 280 nm using a spectrophotometer (DU-650 UV; Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, CA).
UV Irradiation of Recombinant ß-Crystallins
Before UV-irradiation, protein samples were exchanged by dialysis into buffer C: 1x PBS (pH 7.2), 1 mM DTT, and 50 µM TCEP. UV irradiation of rßA3 and rßA3tr was performed at the Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences to which samples were shipped on dry ice (70°C). Experimental measurements were performed as described earlier.38 Briefly, 350-µL protein samples (70°C) were brought quickly to room temperature (20°C) 1 hour before UV-treatment, centrifuged at 5000g for 15 minutes at 20°C, and irradiated with an excimer laser LPX-200 (Lambda Physik, Acton, MA) at
= 308 nm (XeCl). Temperature variation of protein samples under UV irradiation did not exceed 1°C to 2°C. During sample irradiation, the excimer laser pulse power density was 75 mJ/cm2 with a pulse repetition rate of 2 pulses/sec. The energy of the excimer laser pulses and protein absorption at 308 nm were measured (ED-200 joulemeter; Gentec, Inc., Quebec City, Quebec, Canada). An HeNe laser (10 mW,
= 633 nm) with a beam divergence of 1.1 x 103 rads was used as a test beam, to measure light-scattering in a direction perpendicular to the excimer laser beam. The scattered radiation power of a test beam was obtained by the dark-field method with a 633 nm photodiode. Thus, changes in protein absorption at 308 nm and light-scattering at 633 nm were measured in a cuvette simultaneously during the experiment. The energy of UV irradiation (UV dose) was estimated by using the expression W = 0.15 x t J/cm2, where t is in seconds. After irradiation, samples were frozen and shipped on dry ice (70°C) by courier to the National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, MD) for further analysis. The significance of changes in the absorption curves of test samples was estimated by using a fit comparison tool (implemented in Origin 7; OriginLab Corp., Northampton, MA).
All UV-treated protein samples were subjected to centrifugation at 20,800g for 30 minutes at 4°C. The pellet of insoluble protein from each sample was resuspended in 4% SDS and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Supernatant fractions were used for fluorometric analysis, absorption spectra, size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and SDS-PAGE, and Western blot, as described in the following.
Fluorescence was measured with a spectrofluorometer (Cary Eclipse; Varian Pty. Ltd., Clayton, Victoria, Australia) equipped with 96-well reader. Corresponding to each UV dose, 125-µL rßA3tr samples were diluted in buffer C to a final volume of 250 µL. Tryptophan and N-formylkynurenine fluorescent spectra were obtained with 295- and 330-nm excitation wavelengths, respectively. Trp and N-formylkynurenine emit fluorescent light at wavelengths of 300 nm and 440 nm, respectively.
Absorption spectra were measured with a spectrophotometer (DU-650 UV; Beckman). Absorption of 10- µL soluble protein samples was scanned from 240 to 320 nm. All UV-irradiated sample absorption values were normalized to those of untreated sample spectra at wavelength of 250 nm. Difference spectra were obtained by measuring absorption of a UV-irradiated sample minus that of an untreated control sample.
Untreated and UV-irradiated soluble fractions of protein samples were analyzed by SEC in buffer C (UV-irradiation of recombinant ß-crystallins). Samples (0.1 mL) were loaded on a 10/30 column (Superdex 75 HR; GE Healthcare) and chromatographed at 0.5 mL/min. Void and column volumes were 8.3 and 18.6 mL, respectively. Sample concentrations were 10 µM for the nonirradiated samples. Protein standards used in SEC were bovine serum albumin, ovalbumin, carbonic anhydrase, chymotrypsinogen A, and cytochrome c. Chromatographic peaks were integrated by standard methods after baseline subtraction (Origin 7.0; OriginLab, Corp.).
SDS-PAGE, Western blot analysis, and image analysis were performed with 14-µL aliquots (4%) of the supernatant samples. Western blot analysis of antisera raised in rabbits against a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 36-68 of murine ßA3-crystallin was performed separately for supernatant and pellet fractions of rßA3 and rßA3tr. No significant alterations in absorption spectra or SEC and only minimal alterations on Western blot analysis of insoluble proteins were noted in untreated control samples shipped with the test samples. SDS-PAGE gels and Western blot nitrocellulose membranes were digitized and processed with image-analysis software (Scion Image, ver. beta 4.0.2; Scion Corp., Frederick, MD). The cross-section of each gel lane was integrated, and an averaged lane profile was obtained along the protein migration line and saved to disk. Gel and Western blot peaks were integrated after baseline subtraction (Origin, ver. 7.0; OriginLab, Corp.).
Mass Spectrometry Analysis
Samples of rßA3tr (control or UV treated; 4 µg in 0.1 M ammonium bicarbonate) were digested with 0.1 µg trypsin overnight at 37°C. The resultant peptides were reduced with 3 mM 2-mercaptoethanol for 30 minutes at 37°C and alkylated with 10 mM iodoacetamide. The peptides were concentrated by vacuum centrifugation and brought up to 10 µL with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). Contaminating salts and particulates were removed by binding the peptides to a C18-column (ZipTip; Millipore, Bedford, MA), washing with 0.1% TFA, and eluting into 10 µL of an equal volume ratio of 0.1% TFA in water and acetonitrile.
Peptides were analyzed by matrix-assisted desorption ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry, using a matrix of
-cyano 4-hydroxy cinnamic acid, and by tandem liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). LC was performed on a commercial system (Magic HPLC; Michrom BioResources, Auburn, CA), with a constant pressure splitter to reduce the flow rate to 400 nL/min. Peptides were separated with a 75-µm inner diameter fused silica capillary column (PicoFrit; New Objective, Woburn, MA), packed with approximately 5 cm of resin (5 µm particle, 300 angstrom pore; C18; Vydac, Hesperia, CA) followed by separation in buffer A (5% acetonitrile in water with 0.5% acetic acid and 0.005% TFA), using a linear gradient from 2% to 85% of buffer B (80% acetonitrile, 10% n-propanol, 10% water), with 0.5% acetic acid and 0.005% TFA. The LC effluent was electrosprayed directly into the sampling orifice of a mass spectrometer (LCQ DECA; Thermo Finnigan, San Jose, CA) using an adaptation of a microscale electrospray interface.43 The spectrometer was operated to collect MS/MS spectra in a data-dependent manner, with up to three of the most intense ions being subjected to isolation and fragmentation. MS/MS data were analyzed and matched to protein sequences in the database using either the SEQUEST44 or MASCOT45 search programs.
Light-Scattering Analysis by the Hill Formula
The concentration of soluble protein in irradiated samples decreased proportionally to the UV dose, as shown in detail in the Results. This suggests that the concentration of denatured protein (D) in solution increases in proportion to the UV dose W (i.e., [D]
W). By analogy with the Hill formula, the saturation Y can then be calculated as Y = Vmax (Wka)b/(1 + (Wka)b, where, b is a parameter similar to the Hill coefficient, ka is a value proportional to the microscopic association constant (units: cm2/JM), W is the UV dose, and Vmax = 1 for the normalized scattering curve. Using a nonlinear fitting algorithm (Origin 7.0, OriginLab Corp.), we fit this equation to the normalized photokinetic data shown by rßA3 and rßA3tr. The resultant plot, by analogy to the Hill plot, shows log(Y/1 Y) as a function of log(Wka) with the binding coefficient b, analogous to the Hill coefficient, determined from the expression: log(Y/1 Y) = b log(Wka).
| Results |
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SEC of UV-LightTreated rßA3 and rßA3tr
Samples of rßA3 and rßA3tr irradiated with UV-light doses from 25 to 175 J/cm2 with 25 J/cm2 increments were analyzed by protein absorption spectroscopy, SEC, SDS-PAGE, and Western blot analysis. The SEC and absorption data were obtained for the soluble fraction of rßA3 and rßA3tr after removing insoluble protein by centrifugation. Aliquots of soluble fractions of rßA3 and rßA3tr irradiated with doses from 25 to 100 J/cm2 were chromatographed (Superdex 75 column; GE Healthcare; Fig. 2 ). Nonirradiated rßA3 and rßA3tr samples show single major peaks eluting at 11.1 and 12.9 mL, respectively, corresponding to apparent molecular weights of 29.5 and 23.0 kDa similar to those published earlier.10
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Western Blots of UV-LightTreated rßA3 and rßA3tr
Western blot analysis of the UV-treated rßA3 and rßA3tr samples are shown in Figure 3 . The soluble protein samples showed progressive loss of staining intensity for the major bands at 27 kDa (rßA3) and 23 kDa (rßA3tr) as the UV dose increased from 25 to 200 J/cm2. This loss was greater for rßA3tr than for rßA3 at higher UV doses (Figs. 3A 3C) and was accompanied in the 25-, 50-, and 75-J/cm2 samples by the appearance of additional bands of 23 and 18 kDa (rßA3), and 18 kDa (rßA3tr), along with increased dispersed staining below the major bands for each UV dose. Above the major band, there was an additional band at 52 kDa (rßA3) and 46 kDa (rßA3tr), visible only on the Western blot in the 25- to 125-J/cm2 (rßA3) and in the 25- to 75-J/cm2 (rßA3tr) samples, consistent with the appearance of dimers on SEC (Fig. 2) .
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Characterization of rßA3tr by MS
UV-light-treated rßA3tr samples were digested with trypsin, and the reduced and alkylated peptides were analyzed by MALDI-MS spectrometry to detect the covalent modifications of ß-crystallin resulting from exposure to UV light. Major peaks in the MALDI spectra of control samples correspond to amino acid residues 30-44 (m/z 1796.00), 44-63 (m/z 2231.97), 64-89 (m/z 3001.43), 90-108 (2294.03), 95-121 (3176.00), 109-124 (m/z 1904.60), 125-136 (m/z 1466.79), 137-176 (m/z 4736.05), and 177-210 (m/z 4026.83). Thus, the MALDI spectra contained peaks corresponding to tryptic peptides matching approximately 80% of the predicted amino acid sequence. Covalent modifications to rßA3tr due to UV irradiation were detected in MALDI MS by the appearance of additional peaks or by shifts in the mass of a peak in the spectra.
When rßA3tr was exposed to UV irradiation, the peak heights for many of the tryptic peptides were greatly reduced in the MALDI spectra, whereas the peak heights for only a few peptides remained fairly constant, as described in the legend to Figure 4 . In addition, several new peaks appeared in the lower m/z range of the spectra, with increasing levels of UV exposure (Figs. 4A 4B) . The changes in the spectra suggest that certain regions of rßA3tr are particularly sensitive to fragmentation by these levels of UV irradiation. After exposure to higher doses of UV irradiation, the amount of intact protein decreased, as seen by the loss of intensity of several MALDI peaks for tryptic peptides from the protein, consistent with the decrease in protein migrating with the intact band on SDS/PAGE (Figs. 3C 3D) . Some of these peaks were not detectable at higher doses (data not shown).
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The four methionine residues in ßA3-crystallin are located in three tryptic peptides. Tryptic peptides containing M45 and M110 were observed in the MALDI spectra, along with their corresponding oxidized peptides. A third tryptic peptide, residues 137-161, includes W152, M150, and M160. The MALDI spectra of control samples do not contain a peak at the mass corresponding to this peptide, and so changes to this region of the protein resulting from UV exposure could not be determined. Some oxidation was observed in tryptic digests of the control protein for peptides containing M45 and M110, and the amount of oxidation of both increased significantly with UV exposure (Fig. 4C) , more than doubling at doses of 50 J/cm2 and further increasing dramatically at doses above 150 J/cm2. This indicates oxidation of methionine with subsequent formation of methionine sulfoxide on exposure to UV.
The eight tryptophan residues are located in five tryptic peptides within the rßA3tr sequence. In the MALDI spectra, peaks corresponding to four peptides with six of the tryptophan residues are observed. For two peptides (residues 95-109 and 193-210), two tryptophan residues were present in each peptide. Tryptic peptide 193-210 was the C-terminal tryptic peptide that exhibited extensive fragmentation with UV exposure (Fig. 4B , Table 2 ). Two peaks corresponding to oxidation of tryptic peptide 95-109 were observed in the MALDI spectra at m/z 1707.7 and 1723.7, representing the change in mass for the addition of one and two oxygen atoms, respectively (data not shown). Because MS/MS data were not obtained for these oxidized peptides, it is not clear whether the two oxygen atoms were present on a single tryptophan residue, or they were on separate residues. Oxidation of peptide 95-109 with UV exposure was quantitated by the ratio of peak heights for the oxidized and unmodified peptide (Fig. 4D) . As opposed to methionines, at low doses of UV light, little increase in tryptophan oxidation was observed, but at higher doses (>150 J/cm2) tryptophan oxidation increased dramatically.
In addition to the changes found in these specific tryptophan residues by mass spectrometry, total changes in tryptophan content under UV irradiation was quantified using fluorometry and absorption spectrophotometry. Tryptophan residues fluoresced at 330 nm. Under UV-treatment Trp oxidized to N-formylkynurenine, which had a maximum fluorescence at 440 nm. Figure 4E shows the change in relative intensities of tryptophan and N-formylkynurenine fluorescence in rßA3tr-crystallin with increasing doses of UV irradiation. On average, the intensity of tryptophan fluorescence decreased with increasing UV-B exposure, whereas that of N-formylkynurenine increased. These results agree with the absorption data. A significant part of ß-crystallins total absorption at A280 was due to absorption by tryptophan. Figure 4F shows decreasing absorption at 280 nm with increasing UV-B doses, consistent with decreasing tryptophan content due to UV damage.
| Discussion |
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Analysis of UV-treated ßA3-crystallins is consistent with the occurrence of several simultaneous molecular processes, also observed in earlier studies.5 34 38 49 One of these is photo-oxidation, an oxidative action of free radicals induced in the surrounding solution.50 This often results in protein cross-linking, initially to form dimers and later to form insoluble aggregates stabilized by intermolecular covalent bonds. In addition, oxidation of amino acids can decrease the solubility of crystallins and contribute to irreversible aggregation. The increasing light-scattering at 633 nm of both rßA3 and rßA3tr solutions irradiated with increasing doses of UV-light (Fig. 1A) results from the formation of insoluble aggregates. These insoluble aggregates are easily removed from the protein solution by low-speed centrifugation and are at least partially solubilized by the presence of reducing agents in the gel sample buffer, suggesting that some cross-linking occurs by formation of disulfide bonds, a major mechanism of cross-linking of photo-oxidized crystallins.51 In this light, ßA3-crystallin contains eight cysteine residues, almost half of which appear to be sterically available to form intermolecular disulfide bonds, which also explains differences in cross-linking evident on SEC, which would include disulfide bonds, and PAGE, in which samples were highly reduced. In addition, the cross-linking of rßA3tr detected by SEC may represent higher-order aggregates, since this molecule is retained somewhat on SEC columns.10 Evidence for protein cross-linking was also detected in earlier studies of photo-oxidation of lens derived
-, ß-, and
-crystallins and recombinant ßA3-crystallin.38
In the current study, the formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds due to UV-light treatment was minimized at low levels of UV exposure, because sample transportation and biochemical analysis were performed in buffer containing 1 mM DTT and 50 µM TCEP. In addition, the SDS-PAGE sample buffer had 2-ß-mercaptoethanol reducing disulfide cross-link. The absence of a reducing environment in studies of lens proteins in vitro has been shown to result in differing oxidative changes from the intact lens.52 Reducing agents were included in the reaction buffer to replicate as closely as possible the intracellular environment of the lens, which has strong reducing capabilities.
A second process in UV-treated crystallins is photolysis, breakage of the amino acid backbone by the direct effect of UV light, acting on tryptophan or other residues. Although both processes could be seen in the soluble and insoluble fractions, even at 25 J/cm2, photolysis tended to predominate at higher UV doses (Fig. 3) . Photolysis of sensitive residues in the protein produced the discrete bands representing truncated crystallins and peptides seen on SDS-PAGE at higher UV doses, whereas nonspecific chain scission produced the background smears seen in these lanes.
As summarized in Figure 5 , results of peak area change detected by SEC at 280 nm, SDS-PAGE, and Western blot analysis, as well as protein absorption changes at 280 nm, all demonstrated a decrease in soluble protein with increasing UV dose, also consistent with the MS data. This decrease occurred as result of insoluble aggregate formation, which then caused light-scattering. Decreasing light absorption at 308 nm probably is also contributed to by a second process, photomodification of tryptophan residues absorbing UV light at 280 to 290 nm in the remaining soluble protein, as shown by the MS data. This process would be expected to occur in rßA3 and rßA3tr at a similar rate, providing a partial explanation for the smaller differences in their susceptibility to UV irradiation when assessed by transmission than in light-scattering, which would be totally dependent on aggregation. Modification of tryptophan residues in lens proteins in vivo and in vitro due to UV-light irradiation is a well-studied process.35 53
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From the loss of peak intensity for specific peptides, it appears that specific regions of rßA3tr show increased susceptibility to fragmentation by UV treatment. Although the specific mechanism for peptide fragmentation by UV treatment is not clear from these experiments, regions of the protein containing tryptophan residues appear to be particularly prone to fragmentation by UV treatment. One of these is the C-terminal peptide 199-203 (which has two tryptophan residues nearby: W194 and W197), located in the loop connecting strands ß15 and ß16 in the fourth Greek-key motif of ßA3-crystallin (Fig. 4G) . The observed accessibility to photolysis of residues in positions 200-204 (Table 2) is consistent with the prediction that this loop is exposed at the protein surface, which may make it more susceptible to the UV treatment.10
The oxidation of methionine residues to methionine sulfoxide increases the surface hydrophobicity of protein54 and may decrease its solubility. The MS data showed an increase in methionine oxidation under UV-treatment (Fig. 4C) . This suggests that in certain conditions oxidized methionines may promote the formation of higher-molecular-weight aggregates. Identification of methionine oxidation as a major result of UV irradiation of ß-crystallins is particularly notable, in that reduction of methionine sulfoxide by methionine sulfoxide reductase A has recently been shown to be critical for cultured lens cell survival under both normal culture conditions and oxidative stress.55 Modification of tryptophan residues in lens proteins in vivo and in vitro due to UV irradiation is well described.35 53 In the present study oxidation of two tryptophans in positions 95 and 98 (Fig. 4D) was observed, and the relative oxidation of those tryptophan residues increased with treatment at higher UV doses. In addition, decreases in the total tryptophans content with UV treatment were shown by tryptophan fluorescence and absorption measurements. At present, we are using MS to understand further the role of methionine, tryptophan, and other residues in higher-molecular-weight aggregate formation and to identify specific structural modifications of the protein that are associated with UV-light treatment.
Comparison of the effect of UV irradiation on rßA3 and rßA3tr provides insight into the effects of the well-documented loss of ß-crystallin terminal extensions in developing and aging lens fibers and in some forms of cataracts56 on the sensitivity of the lens to UV light.57 58 59 Because both proteins share identical amino acid sequences for most of their structure, differing only by absence of the N-terminal 29 amino acid terminal arm in rßA3tr (<15%), similar photokinetics in response to UV light may be expected. The truncated rßA3tr protein is "capped" with a glycine residue similar to that in
B-crystallin, which might be expected to prevent untoward reactions of amino acids inadvertently exposed to solvent.48 However, rßA3tr-crystallin appears to be more susceptible to UV-light treatment than the rßA3-crystallins and possibly even to oxidative damage from routine handling and shipping. This suggests a protective role against UV light and oxidative damage for the ßA3-crystallin N-terminal extension.
Although the analogy is inexact, one way to conceptualize aggregation of ß-crystallins is as a bimolecular association. In a fashion analogous to the Hill plot, the saturation curve Y can be fitted to the data as shown in the inset in Figure 6 . Wo (2227 J/cm2), as estimated from the Hill plot (Fig. 6) , is the UV dose necessary to achieve recognizable aggregation of protein induced by UV light. For W > Wo the binding coefficients b are greater than 1 for both rßA3 and rßA3tr (4.15 ± 0.16 and 3.34 ± 0.11, respectively). By analogy with the Hill coefficient, values of the binding coefficient b greater than 1 suggest that scattering, which results from aggregation of denatured protein with increasing UV dose, is a positively cooperative process for both rßA3 and rßA3tr. This more than linear response of aggregation to UV irradiation indicates that the presence of denatured protein increases the UV susceptibility of crystallins still in solution. At UV doses W < Wo the binding coefficient is <1 (rßA3tr), which may indicate a protective effect of the antioxidants in the buffer at low UV doses, the intrinsic resistance of the protein itself to photo-oxidation or perhaps that UV damage initially is accumulated in soluble protein.
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In summary, physiologically relevant doses of UV irradiation were applied to samples of wild-type and mutant ßA3-crystallins reduced with the disulfide bond breaker TCEP. The shapes of photokinetic curves of rßA3- and rßA3tr-crystallins both show an initial lag followed by increasing aggregation with increasing UV irradiation. However, light-scattering related to formation of insoluble protein aggregates develops earlier for rßA3tr, which also has a higher aggregation rate than that of rßA3. Molecular changes identified in rßA3tr include both photolysis and oxidation of methionine and tryptophan residues. The difference in sensitivity to UV light of normal and truncated recombinant ßA3-crystallins suggests that loss of terminal extension during lens maturation and aging increases the tendency of ß-crystallin to aggregate under UV irradiation, increasing susceptibility to age-related cataract.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Disclosure: Y.V. Sergeev, None; L.V. Soustov, None; E.V. Chelnokov, None; N.M. Bityurin, None; P.S. Backlund, Jr, None; P.T. Wingfield, None; M.A. Ostrovsky, None; J.F. Hejtmancik, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Yuri V. Sergeev, NEI/NIH, 10/10B10, 10 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD, 20892; sergeev{at}helix.nih.gov.
| References |
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B-crystallin chaperone gene causes a desmin-related myopathy. Nat Genet. 1998;20:9295.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]
C-crystallin gene is associated with autosomal dominant variable zonular pulverulent cataract. Hum Genet. 2000;106:531537.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline][Order article via Infotrieve]