A recent study1 used solution-state NMR spectroscopy to examine the interactions and dynamics of the yeast mitochondrial inner-membrane ADP/ATP carrier, yAAC3. Crystal structures of different AACs, including yAAC3, in a conformation locked with a strong inhibitor (CATR) had been determined before. This putative “c-state”2,3 is believed to represent one extreme conformation of an alternating access mechanism, which involves a further and yet elusive second state termed “m-state”. Characterizing the dynamics between these states is of paramount importance to understand the transport mechanism. The authors refolded yAAC3 from inclusion bodies in the detergent dodecylphosphocholine (DPC), and observed micro-to-millisecond (μs-ms) motion in part of yAAC3 using CPMG NMR experiments. The authors propose that this asymmetrically distributed dynamics, involving residues located in three out of six helices (α1, α2 and α6), corresponds to excursions from the c-state, which they believe is the predominant state in their sample, to an alternative state populated to 2%. They further propose that this transiently populated state might correspond to, or at least be similar to, the long-sought m-state. Support for the importance of the sparsely populated state for functional turnover comes from their finding that the dynamics is quantitatively different when the substrate (ADP) or the inhibitor (CATR) is present. As discussed below, we disagree with their interpretations. Specifically, we believe that (i) the sample was not in a functionally relevant folded state, (ii) the dynamics fits were not correctly performed and the dynamic parameters are quantitatively incorrect, and (iii) the substrate or the inhibitor have negligible effects on the dynamics in their sample, thus challenging their main conclusions.
A number of studies have demonstrated the denaturing effects of DPC on AAC and related mitochondrial carriers.4–7 The authors chose to study binding of CATR and ADP as criteria to assess whether their yAAC3/DPC sample was functional. They report a dissociation constant (Kd) for CATR-binding of about 150 μM. The apparent agreement with one particular literature value8 would suggest that yAAC3 is functional in DPC. However, this literature value was a typographical error and has been corrected to 192 nM (instead of 192 μM)9, in agreement with many previously reported low-nM Kd values in membranes and detergents10–13. The CATR affinity in DPC is, therefore, ca. three orders of magnitude lower than the one for a functional protein. This finding by itself strongly suggests that the sample is in a non-native state.
Furthermore, based on NMR spectra of yAAC3 in DPC with CATR and ADP, the authors proposed that the interactions with CATR and ADP are specific. They support this claim through chemical-shift perturbation (CSP) data observed upon CATR titration for residues S31, K27, I84, R85 and T86 (reported in a very small excerpt of the NMR spectra in Figures 1e and S1 of ref. 1), and CSPs upon addition of ADP (Figure 3c of ref. 1). We have reanalyzed the titration data, using the spectra provided by the authors, and find that CSPs upon addition of CATR or ADP are spread throughout the molecule (Figure 1A). Residues with the largest ADP-induced CSPs do not point towards the central cavity, where ADP binds,14–17 but are on the mitochondrial-matrix side, over 20 Å away from the presumed binding site. Likewise, numerous residues experiencing CSPs with CATR lie more than 20 Å away from the CATR binding site known from crystal structures2, and are particularly located in the N-terminal loop and the matrix helices, least expected to be involved in CATR binding (Figure 1B). Possibly, unspecific electrostatic interactions in these sample conditions of low ionic strength might be an explanation for the observed effects.
We also challenge the technical correctness and interpretation of the dynamics analyses, which form core result of the publication. We used the exchange-rate constants (kex), population of “excited” state (pe), as well as chemical-shift differences (Δν) reported in ref. 1, to generate theoretical CPMG dispersion curves, and superimposed them onto the original CPMG data (Figure 1C, grey/black). The strong disagreement with the experimental data shows that the fit parameters by Brüschweiler et al. do not describe their experimental data, thus questioning an interpretation that the authors put forward: they used the large values of Δν, particularly in the proline kink regions, as an argument to propose that the excited state may resemble the m-state. Given that the actual chemical-shift changes are likely much smaller than the reported ones, this interpretation is erroneous.
We then focus on the central claim of the publication, namely that the presence of ADP or CATR significantly alters the rate at which yAAC3 exchanges with its alternate state, which goes from kex= 870 ± 200 s-1 without substrate/inhibitor, to 1800 ± 350 s-1 in the presence of ADP, and 150 ± 110 s-1 in the presence of CATR, whereby the excited-state population (2%) remains constant. Although these absolute values are in all likelihood quantitatively wrong (see above), we investigated whether the reported CPMG data (Q41 and I84) indeed support significant differences in the dynamics upon addition of ADP or CATR. Figure 1C shows that a single set of exchange parameters (kex, pe) for all three samples states (apo, CATR- and ADP-loaded) can describe the experimental data points similarly well as the original fit data. This analysis, although performed only with the limited data available in ref. 1, and without the 800 MHz data, which have not been made available to us, suggests that the exchange dynamics in the three different samples is likely not statistically altered by the substrate and the inhibitor. Interestingly enough, a very recent study with a non-functional mutant of yAAC3 in DPC finds essentially the same dynamics than that of WT yAAC3,7further supporting our view that the observed motions are not related to function.
It is unlikely that in functional AAC, CATR has only the very modest (if not negligible) effect on the dynamics, and that it leads to the modest spectral changes reported in ref. 1 (cf. Figure S3). CATR is a very strong inhibitor that locks native AAC into a single conformation. It remains bound to native yAAC3 extracted from membranes even during days of purification steps without externally added CATR.2 The thermal stability of AACs in mild detergent increases by more than 30°C upon binding of CATR,5,6 revealing a considerable change in the properties induced by inhibitor-binding, at variance with the very modest CATR-induced effects reported in ref. 1. The lack of binding specificity, low affinity and hardly detectable effects on dynamics all point to a non-functional state of yAAC3 in DPC, in line with other reports on mitochondrial carriers.4–7
This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC-StG-311318).