Structure of lipoprotein lipase in complex with GPIHBP1

Author:

Arora Rishi,Nimonkar Amitabh V.,Baird Daniel,Wang Chunhua,Chiu Chun-Hao,Horton Patricia A.,Hanrahan Susan,Cubbon Rose,Weldon Stephen,Tschantz William R.,Mueller Sascha,Brunner Reto,Lehr Philipp,Meier Peter,Ottl Johannes,Voznesensky Andrei,Pandey Pramod,Smith Thomas M.,Stojanovic Aleksandar,Flyer Alec,Benson Timothy E.,Romanowski Michael J.,Trauger John W.

Abstract

Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) plays a central role in triglyceride (TG) metabolism. By catalyzing the hydrolysis of TGs present in TG-rich lipoproteins (TRLs), LPL facilitates TG utilization and regulates circulating TG and TRL concentrations. Until very recently, structural information for LPL was limited to homology models, presumably due to the propensity of LPL to unfold and aggregate. By coexpressing LPL with a soluble variant of its accessory protein glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored high-density lipoprotein binding protein 1 (GPIHBP1) and with its chaperone protein lipase maturation factor 1 (LMF1), we obtained a stable and homogenous LPL/GPIHBP1 complex that was suitable for structure determination. We report here X-ray crystal structures of human LPL in complex with human GPIHBP1 at 2.5–3.0 Å resolution, including a structure with a novel inhibitor bound to LPL. Binding of the inhibitor resulted in ordering of the LPL lid and lipid-binding regions and thus enabled determination of the first crystal structure of LPL that includes these important regions of the protein. It was assumed for many years that LPL was only active as a homodimer. The structures and additional biochemical data reported here are consistent with a new report that LPL, in complex with GPIHBP1, can be active as a monomeric 1:1 complex. The crystal structures illuminate the structural basis for LPL-mediated TRL lipolysis as well as LPL stabilization and transport by GPIHBP1.

Funder

Novartis

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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