Author:
Wu Chun-Xiang,Liao Jingling,Park Yangshin,Hoang Neo C.,Engel Victoria A.,Wan Li,Oh Misook,Sanishvili Ruslan,Takagi Yuichiro,Johnson Steven M.,Wang Mu,Federici Mark,Nichols R. Jeremy,Beilina Alexandra,Reed Xylena,Cookson Mark R.,Hoang Quyen Q.
Abstract
Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) is a large 286 kDa multi-domain protein whose mutation is a common cause of Parkinson’s disease (PD). One of the common sites of familial PD-associated mutations occurs at residue Arg-1441 in the GTPase domain of LRRK2. Previously, we reported that the PD-associated mutation R1441H impairs the catalytic activity of the GTPase domain thereby traps it in a persistently "on" state. More recently, we reported that the GTPase domain of LRRK2 exists in a dynamic dimer-monomer equilibrium where GTP binding shifts it to the monomeric conformation while GDP binding shifts it back to the dimeric state. We also reported that all of the PD-associated mutations at Arg-1441, including R1441H, R1441C, and R1441G, impair the nucleotide-dependent dimer-monomer conformational dynamics of the GTPase domain. However, the mechanism of this nucleotide-dependent conformational dynamics and how it is impaired by the mutations at residue Arg-1441 remained unclear. Here, we report a 1.6 Å crystal structure of the GTPase domain of LRRK2. Our structure has revealed a dynamic switch region that can be differentially regulated by GTP and GDP binding. This nucleotide-dependent regulation is impaired when residue Arg-1441 is substituted with the PD-associated mutations due to the loss of its exquisite interactions consisting of two hydrogen bonds and a π-stacking interaction at the dimer interface.Significance StatementMutations in LRRK2 are associated with familial Parkinson’s disease, so understanding its mechanism of actions and how they are changed by the disease-associated mutations is important for developing therapeutic strategies. This paper describes an atomic structure of the G-domain of LRRK2 revealing that the conformational dynamics of the switch regions are potentially important for its normal function. It further shows that a disease-associated mutation could lock the G domain in a persistently active-like conformation, thus perturbing its normal function.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
8 articles.
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