Pressure tolerance of deep-sea enzymes can be evolved through increasing volume changes in protein transitions: a study with lactate dehydrogenases from abyssal and hadal fishes

FEBS J. 2020 Dec;287(24):5394-5410. doi: 10.1111/febs.15317. Epub 2020 Apr 21.

Abstract

We explore the principles of pressure tolerance in enzymes of deep-sea fishes using lactate dehydrogenases (LDH) as a case study. We compared the effects of pressure on the activities of LDH from hadal snailfishes Notoliparis kermadecensis and Pseudoliparis swirei with those from a shallow-adapted Liparis florae and an abyssal grenadier Coryphaenoides armatus. We then quantified the LDH content in muscle homogenates using mass-spectrometric determination of the LDH-specific conserved peptide LNLVQR. Existing theory suggests that adaptation to high pressure requires a decrease in volume changes in enzymatic catalysis. Accordingly, evolved pressure tolerance must be accompanied with an important reduction in the volume change associated with pressure-promoted alteration of enzymatic activity ( ΔVPP ). Our results suggest an important revision to this paradigm. Here, we describe an opposite effect of pressure adaptation-a substantial increase in the absolute value of ΔVPP in deep-living species compared to shallow-water counterparts. With this change, the enzyme activities in abyssal and hadal species do not substantially decrease their activity with pressure increasing up to 1-2 kbar, well beyond full-ocean depth pressures. In contrast, the activity of the enzyme from the tidepool snailfish, L. florae, decreases nearly linearly from 1 to 2500 bar. The increased tolerance of LDH activity to pressure comes at the expense of decreased catalytic efficiency, which is compensated with increased enzyme contents in high-pressure-adapted species. The newly discovered strategy is presumably used when the enzyme mechanism involves the formation of potentially unstable excited transient states associated with substantial changes in enzyme-solvent interactions.

Keywords: Liparidae; Macrouridae; high-pressure adaptation; hydrostatic pressure; lactate dehydrogenase; pressure-tolerant enzymes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological*
  • Amino Acid Sequence
  • Animals
  • Fish Proteins / metabolism*
  • Fishes / classification
  • Fishes / physiology*
  • Lactate Dehydrogenases / metabolism*
  • Muscle Proteins / metabolism*
  • Muscles / enzymology*
  • Pressure*
  • Sequence Homology

Substances

  • Fish Proteins
  • Muscle Proteins
  • Lactate Dehydrogenases

Associated data

  • GENBANK/CAE75858.1
  • RefSeq/CAE75858.1
  • RefSeq/TNN45331.1
  • RefSeq/TNN87907.1
  • RefSeq/XP_030209139.1
  • RefSeq/XP_030222546.1
  • RefSeq/XP_010787599.1
  • RefSeq/NP_001290221.1
  • RefSeq/XP_028440246.1
  • RefSeq/Q9PW58.3
  • RefSeq/O93542.3