Published March 22, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

CMT2N-causing aminoacylation domain mutants enable Nrp1 interaction with AlaRS

Description

Through dominant mutations, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases constitute the largest protein family linked to Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT). An example is CMT subtype 2N (CMT2N), caused by individual mutations spread out in AlaRS, including three in the aminoacylation domain, thereby suggesting a role for a tRNA-charging defect. However, here we found that two are aminoacylation defective but that the most widely distributed R329H is normal as a purified protein in vitro and in unfractionated patient cell samples. Remarkably, in contrast to wild-type (WT) AlaRS, all three mutant proteins gained the ability to interact with neuropilin 1 (Nrp1), the receptor previously linked to CMT pathogenesis in GlyRS. The aberrant AlaRS-Nrp1 interaction is further confirmed in patient samples carrying the R329H mutation. However, CMT2N mutations outside the aminoacylation domain do not induce the Nrp1 interaction. Detailed biochemical and biophysical investigations, including X-ray crystallography, small-angle X-ray scattering, hydrogen-deuterium exchange (HDX), switchSENSE hydrodynamic diameter determinations, and protease digestions reveal a mutation-induced structural loosening of the aminoacylation domain that correlates with the Nrp1 interaction. The b1b2 domains of Nrp1 are responsible for the interaction with R329H AlaRS. The results suggest Nrp1 is more broadly associated with CMT-associated members of the tRNA synthetase family. Moreover, we revealed a distinct structural loosening effect induced by a mutation in the editing domain and a lack of conformational impact with C-Ala domain mutations, indicating mutations in the same protein may cause neuropathy through different mechanisms. Our results show that, as with other CMT-associated tRNA synthetases, aminoacylation per se is not relevant to the pathology.

Data availability

Coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank for human AlaRSN388-WT and AlaRSN388-R329H under accession codes PDB 4XEM and PDB 4XEO, respectively.

Files

sun-et-al-2021-cmt2n-causing-aminoacylation-domain-mutants-enable-nrp1-interaction-with-alars.pdf

Files (2.1 MB)

Name Size Download all
Supporting information
md5:a84758fee1f58c85c7b947c5efc3732c
905.7 kB Preview Download
Article
md5:c80a6b0e7c7b5115ee1858bd46b0ef4e
1.2 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2012898118
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9669

Funding

National Institutes of Health
GM088278
National Institutes of Health
NS113583
National Institutes of Health
GM125908
National Institutes of Health
GM113194
National Foundation for Cancer Research
fellowship
National Natural Science Foundation of China
31971147
Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Commission
JCYJ20190807155011406
European Research Council
309548
Wellcome
Investigator Award
Medical Research Council
MR/N025431/1
Newton Fund
MR/N027302/1

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology