The Mechanism of Selective Recognition of Lipid Substrate by hDHHC20 Enzyme

Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Nov 26;23(23):14791. doi: 10.3390/ijms232314791.

Abstract

S-acylation is a post-translational linkage of long chain fatty acids to cysteines, playing a key role in normal physiology and disease. In human cells, the reaction is catalyzed by a family of 23 membrane DHHC-acyltransferases (carrying an Asp-His-His-Cys catalytic motif) in two stages: (1) acyl-CoA-mediated autoacylation of the enzyme; and (2) further transfer of the acyl chain to a protein substrate. Despite the availability of a 3D-structure of human acyltransferase (hDHHC20), the molecular aspects of lipid selectivity of DHHC-acyltransferases remain unclear. In this paper, using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we studied membrane-bound hDHHC20 right before the acylation by C12-, C14-, C16-, C18-, and C20-CoA substrates. We found that: (1) regardless of the chain length, its terminal methyl group always reaches the "ceiling" of the enzyme's cavity; (2) only for C16, an optimal "reactivity" (assessed by a simple geometric criterion) permits the autoacylation; (3) in MD, some key interactions between an acyl-CoA and a protein differ from those in the reference crystal structure of the C16-CoA-hDHHS20 mutant complex (probably, because this structure corresponds to a non-native dimer). These features of specific recognition of full-size acyl-CoA substrates support our previous hypothesis of "geometric and physicochemical selectivity" derived for simplified acyl-CoA analogues.

Keywords: DHHC-acyltransferase; S-acylation; S-palmitoylation; computer modeling; hDHHC20; intermolecular interactions; lipid selectivity; molecular dynamics.

MeSH terms

  • Acyl Coenzyme A* / metabolism
  • Acylation
  • Acyltransferases* / metabolism
  • Fatty Acids / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Substrate Specificity

Substances

  • Acyl Coenzyme A
  • Acyltransferases
  • Fatty Acids
  • ZDHHC20 protein, human