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Binding Differences of the Peptide-Substrate–Binding Domain of Collagen Prolyl 4-Hydroxylases I and II for Proline- and Hydroxyproline-Rich Peptides

  • M. Mubinur Rahman
  • , Ramita Sulu
  • , Bukunmi Adediran
  • , Hongmin Tu
  • , Antti M. Salo
  • , Sudarshan Murthy
  • , Johanna Myllyharju
  • , Rik K. Wierenga*
  • , M. Kristian Koski*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University of Oulu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Collagen prolyl 4-hydroxylase (C-P4H) catalyzes the 4-hydroxylation of Y-prolines of the XYG-repeat of procollagen. C-P4Hs are tetrameric α2β2 enzymes. The α-subunit provides the N-terminal dimerization domain, the middle peptide-substrate–binding (PSB) domain, and the C-terminal catalytic (CAT) domain. There are three isoforms of the α-subunit, complexed with a β-subunit that is protein disulfide isomerase, forming C-P4H I-III. The PSB domain of the α-subunit binds proline-rich peptides, but its function with respect to the prolyl hydroxylation mechanism is unknown. An extended mode of binding of proline-rich peptides (PPII, polyproline type-II, conformation) to the PSB-I domain has previously been reported for the PPG-PPG-PPG and P9 peptides. Crystal structures now show that peptides with the motif PxGP (PPG-PRG-PPG, PPG-PAG-PPG) (where x, at Y-position 5, is not a proline) bind to the PSB-I domain differently, more deeply, in the peptide-binding groove. The latter mode of binding has previously been reported for structures of the PSB-II domain complexed with these PxGP-peptides. In addition, it is shown here by crystallographic binding studies that the POG-PAG-POG peptide (with 4-hydroxyprolines at Y-positions 2 and 8) also adopts the PxGP mode of binding to PSB-I as well as to PSB-II. Calorimetric binding studies show that the affinities of these peptides are lower for PSB-I than for PSB-II, with, respectively, KD values of about 70 μM for PSB-I and 20 μM for PSB-II. The importance of these results for understanding the reaction mechanism of C-P4H, in particular concerning the function of the PSB domain, is discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1732-1746
Number of pages15
JournalProteins: Structure, Function and Bioinformatics
Volume93
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2025
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Keywords

  • collagen
  • hydroxyproline
  • PPII
  • proline
  • prolyl 4-hydroxylase
  • PSB domain

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