21 research outputs found

    Structural and functional characterization of the bone-modulator protein sclerostin

    No full text
    Die Knochenhomöostase erfolgt durch das Zusammenspiel mehrerer Zelltypen. Während die Osteoblasten für den Knochenaufbau verantwortlich sind, resorbieren die Osteoklasten Knochengewebe. Beide Vorgänge werden durch die Osteozyten streng reguliert. Eine Störung im strikt regulierten Gleichgewicht zwischen Knochenabbau und Knochenaufbau kann daher zu Knochenkrankheiten wie Osteoporose führen. Auf molekularer Ebene erfolgt die Kommunikation zwischen den einzelnen Zelltypen über zwei wichtige Signalwege, den der „Bone Morphogenetic Protein“-Superfamilie (BMPs) und den der Wnt-Proteine. Die Signalübertragung wird hierbei durch sekretierte Faktoren induziert, die an Rezeptoren auf der Zelloberfläche binden. Deren Aktivierung führt zu einem intrazellulären Signal, welches letztlich die Expression von Zielgenen reguliert. Beide Signalwege werden auf mehreren Ebenen, extrazellulär, membranständig und intrazellulär reguliert. Das 2003 identifizierte Sclerostin ist ein Vertreter der extrazellulären Regulatorproteine und wurde aufgrund seiner Zugehörigkeit zur DAN-Familie zunächst fälschlicherweise als direkter Inhibitor des BMP-Signalwegs eingestuft. Mittlerweile wird allerdings davon ausgegangen, dass Sclerostin den Wnt-Signalweg negativ reguliert, indem es die Wnt Ko-Rezeptoren LRP5 und LRP6 bindet, die beide zu der Familie der „Low-density lipoprotein receptors“ gehören. Über den molekularen Inhibitionsmechanismus von Sclerostin war jedoch zum Startpunkt dieser Dissertationsarbeit wenig bekannt. Daher wurde Sclerostin im Rahmen dieser Arbeit biophysikalisch und biochemisch charakterisiert. Die Aufklärung mittels NMR-Spektroskopie ergab für Sclerostin eine Struktur, die sich in drei Regionen gliedert: den Cystinknoten, sowie einen „Loop“-Bereich und die Fingerregion. Vom zentralen Cystinknoten gehen drei Peptid-Schleifen in zwei entgegengesetzte Richtungen aus. Schleife eins und drei bilden eine definierte ß-Faltblattstruktur und ähneln zwei Fingern einer Hand. Die zweite Schleife, welche vom Cystinknoten isoliert in die entgegengesetzte Richtung verläuft („Loop“), ist wie die beiden langen N- und C-Termini flexibel und unstrukturiert. Die in Zusammenarbeit mit der Firma AbD-Serotec entstandenen Fab-Fragmente ermöglichten die Bestimmung des Bindeepitops der Sclerostin/LRP5-Interaktion im Bereich der unstrukturierten dritten Schleife von Sclerostin. Die Struktur von Sclerostin und die Identifikation des Bindeepitops auf Sclerostinseite geben nun erste Einblicke in den molekularen Mechanismus der Sclerostin/LRP5-Interaktion. Diese Kenntnis kann für die Entwicklung von Kleinmolekülinhibitoren mittels rationalem Drugdesign genutzt werden, welche, wie auch der in Kooperation entwickelte die Sclerostinaktivität neutralisierende Antikörper AbD09097, hochinteressante Ansätze für neuartige anabole Therapien von Krankheiten mit Knochenschwund darstellen.Different cell types like osteoblasts, osteoclasts and osteocytes maintain bone homeostasis. While osteoblasts build up bone, osteoclasts resorb bone tissue and both actions are tightly regulated by the osteocytes. Imbalance between bone formation and resorption will lead to various bone diseases, e.g. osteoporosis. On a molecular level communication between these cell types occurs through two major signalling pathways, i.e. the bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) and the Wnt-factors. In both pathways signal transduction is induced by secreted factors, which bind to cell surface receptors. This activation leads to an intracellular signal that finally regulates expression of target genes. Both pathways are tightly regulated at various cellular levels, extracellular, at the membrane as well as intracellular. Sclerostin, which was identified in 2003, is a member of the extracellular modulator proteins. Initially it was wrongly classified as a direct inhibitor of the BMP-signalling pathway due to its classification as a member of the DAN-family. Meanwhile it became apparent that sclerostin targets the Wnt-pathway by binding to the Wnt co-receptors LRP5 and LRP6, which belong to the family of low-density lipoprotein receptors. At the beginning of this work very little was known about the molecular mechanism how sclerostin inhibits the Wnt-pathway. The structure analysis of sclerostin employing NMR-spectroscopy revealed in a modular architecture, which can be divided into three regions: the central, characteristic cystine knot, the loop-region and the two fingers. From the cystine knot three loops emanate in two opposite directions. Loop one and loop three form defined ß-sheet structures resembling two fingers of a hand. Loop two, which runs into the opposite direction, is unstructured and highly flexible like the long N- and C-termini. Antibody fab-fragments, which were generated in collaboration with AbD-Serotec, facilitated the mapping of the binding-epitop of sclerostin to LRP5/6, highlighting an extended area of the unstructured loop region of sclerostin as the LRP5/6 binding site. The high-resolution structure of sclerostin and the identification of the LRP5-binding-epitop yield first insights into the molecular mechanism of sclerostin-LRP5 interaction. This knowledge can now be used to develop small-molecule inhibitors by rational drug design, which are, like the sclerostin activity neutralising fab-fragment AbD09097, highly interesting targets for new bone-anabolic therapies of diseases characterised by bone loss

    The Clip-Segment of the von Willebrand Domain 1 of the BMP Modulator Protein Crossveinless 2 Is Preformed

    Get PDF
    Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) are secreted protein hormones that act as morphogens and exert essential roles during embryonic development of tissues and organs. Signaling by BMPs occurs via hetero-oligomerization of two types of serine/threonine kinase transmembrane receptors. Due to the small number of available receptors for a large number of BMP ligands ligand-receptor promiscuity presents an evident problem requiring additional regulatory mechanisms for ligand-specific signaling. Such additional regulation is achieved through a plethora of extracellular antagonists, among them members of the Chordin superfamily, that modulate BMP signaling activity by binding. The key-element in Chordin-related antagonists for interacting with BMPs is the von Willebrand type C (VWC) module, which is a small domain of about 50 to 60 residues occurring in many different proteins. Although a structure of the VWC domain of the Chordin-member Crossveinless 2 (CV2) bound to BMP-2 has been determined by X-ray crystallography, the molecular mechanism by which the VWC domain binds BMPs has remained unclear. Here we present the NMR structure of the Danio rerio CV2 VWC1 domain in its unbound state showing that the key features for high affinity binding to BMP-2 is a pre-oriented peptide loop

    Anti-Sclerostin Antibody Inhibits Internalization of Sclerostin and Sclerostin-Mediated Antagonism of Wnt/LRP6 Signaling

    Get PDF
    Sclerosteosis is a rare high bone mass disease that is caused by inactivating mutations in the SOST gene. Its gene product, Sclerostin, is a key negative regulator of bone formation and might therefore serve as a target for the anabolic treatment of osteoporosis. The exact molecular mechanism by which Sclerostin exerts its antagonistic effects on Wnt signaling in bone forming osteoblasts remains unclear. Here we show that Wnt3a-induced transcriptional responses and induction of alkaline phosphatase activity, an early marker of osteoblast differentiation, require the Wnt co-receptors LRP5 and LRP6. Unlike Dickkopf1 (DKK1), Sclerostin does not inhibit Wnt-3a-induced phosphorylation of LRP5 at serine 1503 or LRP6 at serine 1490. Affinity labeling of cell surface proteins with [125I][^{125} I] Sclerostin identified LRP6 as the main specific Sclerostin receptor in multiple mesenchymal cell lines. When cells were challenged with Sclerostin fused to recombinant green fluorescent protein (GFP) this was internalized, likely via a Clathrin-dependent process, and subsequently degraded in a temperature and proteasome-dependent manner. Ectopic expression of LRP6 greatly enhanced binding and cellular uptake of Sclerostin-GFP, which was reduced by the addition of an excess of non-GFP-fused Sclerostin. Finally, an anti-Sclerostin antibody inhibited the internalization of Sclerostin-GFP and binding of Sclerostin to LRP6. Moreover, this antibody attenuated the antagonistic activity of Sclerostin on canonical Wnt-induced responses

    Mutational analysis of sclerostin shows importance of the flexible loop and the cystine-knot for Wnt-signaling inhibition.

    Get PDF
    The cystine-knot containing protein Sclerostin is an important negative regulator of bone growth and therefore represents a promising therapeutic target. It exerts its biological task by inhibiting the Wnt (wingless and int1) signaling pathway, which participates in bone formation by promoting the differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells to osteoblasts. The core structure of Sclerostin consists of three loops with the first and third loop (Finger 1 and Finger 2) forming a structured β-sheet and the second loop being unstructured and highly flexible. Biochemical data showed that the flexible loop is important for binding of Sclerostin to Wnt co-receptors of the low-density lipoprotein related-protein family (LRP), by interacting with the Wnt co-receptors LRP5 or -6 it inhibits Wnt signaling. To further examine the structural requirements for Wnt inhibition, we performed an extensive mutational study within all three loops of the Sclerostin core domain involving single and multiple mutations as well as truncation of important regions. By this approach we could confirm the importance of the second loop and especially of amino acids Asn92 and Ile94 for binding to LRP6. Based on a Sclerostin variant found in a Turkish family suffering from Sclerosteosis we generated a Sclerostin mutant with cysteines 84 and 142 exchanged thereby removing the third disulfide bond of the cystine-knot. This mutant binds to LRP6 with reduced binding affinity and also exhibits a strongly reduced inhibitory activity against Wnt1 thereby showing that also elements outside the flexible loop are important for inhibition of Wnt by Sclerostin. Additionally, we examined the effect of the mutations on the inhibition of two different Wnt proteins, Wnt3a and Wnt1. We could detect clear differences in the inhibition of these proteins, suggesting that the mechanism by which Sclerostin antagonizes Wnt1 and Wnt3a is fundamentally different

    The Clip-Segment of the von Willebrand Domain 1 of the BMP Modulator Protein Crossveinless 2 Is Preformed

    No full text
    Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) are secreted protein hormones that act as morphogens and exert essential roles during embryonic development of tissues and organs. Signaling by BMPs occurs via hetero-oligomerization of two types of serine/threonine kinase transmembrane receptors. Due to the small number of available receptors for a large number of BMP ligands ligand-receptor promiscuity presents an evident problem requiring additional regulatory mechanisms for ligand-specific signaling. Such additional regulation is achieved through a plethora of extracellular antagonists, among them members of the Chordin superfamily, that modulate BMP signaling activity by binding. The key-element in Chordin-related antagonists for interacting with BMPs is the von Willebrand type C (VWC) module, which is a small domain of about 50 to 60 residues occurring in many different proteins. Although a structure of the VWC domain of the Chordin-member Crossveinless 2 (CV2) bound to BMP-2 has been determined by X-ray crystallography, the molecular mechanism by which the VWC domain binds BMPs has remained unclear. Here we present the NMR structure of the Danio rerio CV2 VWC1 domain in its unbound state showing that the key features for high affinity binding to BMP-2 is a pre-oriented peptide loop

    Analysis of binding of wildtype Sclerostin and different variants to hLRP6.

    No full text
    <p>(A) COS-1 cells were either transfected with an expression construct encoding for hLRP6 (COS-1 + hLRP6) or mock-transfected using empty vector (COS1). Cells were then incubated with I<sup>125</sup>-labeled wildtype Sclerostin (I<sup>125</sup>). Protein bound to the cell surface was chemically crosslinked in the presence of 2 µg unlabeled wildtype Sclerostin or the indicated Sclerostin variants for competition, corresponding to a 100-fold excess of unlabeled protein. The radioactivity bound to the cells was subsequently analyzed by autoradiography. Shown bands were all obtained in the same experiment. The black bar indicates that the picture was cut to omit samples that are not relevant for this publication. (B) Quantitative autoradiography analysis of several experiments as shown in (A). All bars were normalized by setting the intensity of the protein band obtained from addition of unlabeled wildtype Sclerostin to partially compete off I<sup>125</sup>-labeled wildtype Sclerostin to 1. Data represent means with standard deviations (SD) of at least three independent experiments. *: P<0.05, **: P<0.01 (student's t-test with data obtained for variant R56A). (C) Western Blot of a pull down experiment with biotinylated Sclerostin mutants C84AC142R, ΔLoop and WT Sclerostin. Sclerostin proteins were incubated with purified human LRP6 protein fragment comprising propeller domains E1 and E2 (LRP6E1E2). For pull down of protein complexes streptavidin-agarose beads were used. Input: Samples before beads were added, beads: Beads after incubation and washing. Proteins were detected using an antibody specific for the His<sub>6</sub>-tag of the proteins. One representative out of four experiments is shown.</p

    Inhibition of Wnt3a signaling by Sclerostin.

    No full text
    <p>(A) HEK293TSA cells stably transfected with the Wnt-responsible luciferase reporter construct SuperTOPFlash were stimulated with 1.5 nM recombinant murine Wnt3a and serial dilutions of murine Sclerostin. Shown is the resulting dose response curve in comparison to the dose response curve of mWnt1-transfected cells as shown in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0081710#pone-0081710-g003" target="_blank">figure 3</a>. (B) mWnt3a-derived luciferase signal obtained in presence of Sclerostin wildtype (WT) and 2 µM Sclerostin specific antibody AbD09097 (AbD) or with WT alone. (C) Reporter gene assay as depicted in (A) and (B) showing the dose-dependency of Sclerostin Alaloop and ΔLoop in comparison to WT Sclerostin. Measurements were done in duplicate. (D) Measurement of the intracellular level of β-Catenin upon mWnt3a and mWnt1 stimulation in presence of Sclerostin or Dkk1 using In-Cell Western. The fluorescence signal determined from the antibody against β-Catenin was normalized for cell number using DNA staining with DRAQ5. Signal of non-transfected/untreated cells was set to 0% and signal of cells treated/transfected with Wnt proteins alone was set to 100%. A typical experiment out of three is shown; datapoints represent means with SD of two independent measurements. (E) Overview of the efficiency of Sclerostin WT and mutant proteins to neutralize Wnt3a driven luciferase expression (IC<sub>50</sub> values represented as bar diagram). Data represent means with standard deviation (SD) of at least two independent experiments. *: P<0.05 **: P<0.01 (student's t-test with data obtained for wildtype Sclerostin). To highlight the location of the mutation in the Sclerostin structure the same color-coding as in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0081710#pone-0081710-g002" target="_blank">figure 2</a> is used.</p
    corecore