Difference in an intermolecular disulfide-bond between two highly homologous serum proteins Leg1a and Leg1b implicates their functional differentiation

BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS(2021)

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Abstract
Zebrafish Liver-enriched gene 1a (Leg1a) and Leg1b are liver-produced serum proteins encoded by two adjacently linked homologous genes leg1a and leg1b, respectively. We previously showed that maternal-zygotic (MZ) leg1a null mutant developed a small liver at 3.5 days post-fertilization (dpf) during winter-time or under UV-treatment and displayed an abnormal stature at its adulthood. It is puzzling why Leg1b, which shares 89.3% identity with Leg1a and co-expressed with Leg1a, cannot fully compensate for the loss-of-function of Leg1a in the leg1a(zju1) MZ mutant. Here we report that Leg1a and Leg1b share eight cysteine residues but differ in amino acid residue 358, which is a serine in Leg1a but cysteine (C-358) in Leg1b. We find that Leg1b forms an intermolecular disulfide bond through C-358. Mutating C-358 to Methionine (M-358) does not affect Leg1b secretion whereas mutating other conserved cysteine residues do. We propose that the intermolecular disulfide bond in Leg1b might establish a rigid structure that makes it functionally different from Leg1a under certain oxidative conditions. (c) 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc.
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Key words
Disulfide bond, Liver development, Liver-enriched gene 1 (Leg1), Site-directed mutagenesis, Zebrafish
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