Saccharomyces cerevisiae lysophospholipid acyltransferase, Lpt1, requires Asp146 and Glu297 for catalysis.

The esterification of lysophospholipids contributes to phospholipid synthesis, remodeling, and scavenging. Acyl-CoA-dependent lysophospholipid acyltransferase activity with broad substrate use is mediated by Saccharomyces cerevisiae Lpt1p. We sought to identify Lpt1p active site amino acids besides the histidine conserved among homologs and repeatedly found to be required for catalysis. In vitro Lpt1p assays with amino acid modifying agents implicated aspartate, glutamate, and lysine as active site residues. Threonine and tyrosine were not ruled out. Aligning the primary structures of functionally characterized LPT1 homologs from fungi, plants, and animals identified 11 conserved aspartate, glutamate, lysine, threonine, and tyrosine residues. Site-directed mutagenesis of the respective codons showed that changing D146 and E297 abolished activity without abolishing protein expression. The mechanism of Lpt1p was further analyzed using monounsaturated acyl-CoA species with different double bond positions. Delta 6 species showed the highest catalytic efficiency. We propose that D146 and E297 act in conjunction with H382 as nucleophiles that attack the hydroxyl group in lysophospholipids in a general acid/base mechanism. This sequential mechanism provides a precedent for other members of the membrane bound O-acyltransferase family. Also, Lpt1p optimally orients acyl-CoA substrates with 7.5 Å between a double bond and the thioester bond.

lipids such as lysophospholipids and diacylglycerol to proteins such as grehlin and Wnt. In the mouse genome, there are three distinct phylogenetic clusters of acyltransferase genes, including 32 genes in all ( 1 ). Whether this array evolved primarily to address the many possible combinations of substrates remains to be determined. Whether a common reaction mechanism is shared among the phylogenetic clusters is also not known because, to date, no acyl-CoA dependent acyltransferase has had its reaction mechanism unequivocally determined. We postulate that within each cluster, the acyltransferase reaction mechanism was established in the common ancestor. In that case, establishing the mechanism of one member of a cluster will likely predict the mechanism for all members of that cluster.
Acyl-CoA dependent acyltransferases mediate the formation of ester bonds between acyl chains and the hydroxyl groups of acyl acceptors. Acyl-CoA species range in length and degree of saturation, and acyl acceptors range from (lysoPC) were obtained from Avanti Polar Lipids. [ 14 C]oleoyl-CoA and [ 14 C]lysoPC were from PerkinElmer.

Insertion of Flag tag epitope and site-directed mutations into pRS423GP/LPT1
Addition of the eight amino acid Flag-tag (DYKDDDDK) ( 20 ) onto the C terminus of the LPT1 open reading frame in pRS423GP/ LPT1 ( 12 ) was achieved by PCR using oligos 423-1 and LPT1-3tag, digestion with Spe I and Sac I, and ligation into pRS423GP, which contains the Gal1,10 promoter. This pRS423GP/ LPT1 -fl ag construct was the template for PCR-based generation of site-directed mutants by overlap extension ( 21 ) using the primers in Table 1 .

In vitro microsomal LPCAT assays
S. cerevisiae strain ODY545 ( W303-1a, mat. a, lpt1 ⌬ ::URA3 ) ( 12 ) was transformed with pRS423GP/ Ϫ , pRS423GP/ LPT1 , or pRS423GP/S LPT1 -fl ag variants and cultured into log phase in synthetic complete media minus histidine with 2% (w/v) galactose. Microsomes were isolated as described previously ( 22 ), and protein concentration was measured by Lowry assay ( 23  ]lysoPC addition, reaction mixtures were warmed at 30°C for 2 min. When applicable, amino acid modifying agents were included during this prewarming, and those reactions had 1% (v/v) isopropanol. After substrate addition and 2 min of reaction at 30°C, 2 ml chloroform-methanol (2:1) was added. Lipids were extracted and resolved using a TLC buffer system of 57:33:7:3 chloroformmethanol-acetic acid-water, and phosphatidylcholine was removed and quantifi ed by scintillation counting. Relative specifi c activity in pRS423GP/ Ϫ microsomes (2.2 nmol/min/mg) was subtracted from all other values unless otherwise stated. Statistical analysis was performed in Minitab 16.0. Signifi cant difference from wild-type was detected using a two-sample, two-tailed t -test and from zero using a one-sample t -test. Apparent K m and V max were determined by Eadie-Hofstee transformation ( 24 ).
We chose to use one of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae members of the MBOAT gene family, LPT1 (also named ALE1 , SLC4 , and LCA1 ), as a convenient and interesting representative for identifying additional, catalytically important residues. Lpt1p is an acyl-CoA-dependent lysophospholipid acyltransferase (LPLAT; EC 2.3.1.23) with broad substrate specifi city regarding the lysophospholipid head group ( 6,(11)(12)(13)(14). This provides for a role in de novo phospholipid synthesis, via esterifi cation of lysophosphatidic acid, and in phospholipid remodeling and the scavenging of lysophospholipids. Dual topology reporter analysis supports that Lpt1p has 13 transmembrane domains, with the catalytically important H382 facing the endoplasmic reticulum lumen ( 15 ). Deletion of LPT1 in S. cerevisiae slowed phosphatidylethanolamine remodeling ( 16 ), and deletion of the homologous gene in Candida albicans resulted in slowed remodeling in all phospholipids after cellular phospholipid species were skewed with palmitate feeding ( 17 ). The most similar homolog in higher eukaryotes, LPCAT3, also has a role in maintaining membrane composition. In vitro, siRNA knockdown of LPCAT3 expression in HeLa cells increased the abundance of saturated acyl chains in cellular phospholipids ( 18 ). The unfolded protein response was also enhanced in those cells. In vivo, shRNA-mediated reduction in mouse hepatic LPCAT3 expression increased very LDL secretion ( 19 ).
The studies presented here aimed to further our understanding of the reaction mechanism of S. cerevisiae Lpt1p with a larger goal of establishing a precedent for its homologs.

Materials
Chemicals were mainly obtained from Sigma, Fisher, and Sunrise (yeast media). Acyl-CoA and lysophosphatidylcholine AACCAACC GAGCTC TATCACTTATCGTCATCGTCCTTGTAATCCTCTTC addition of Flag

Identifi cation of catalytically important Lpt1p amino acid residues by chemical modifi cation
We sought to identify Lpt1p active site amino acid residues that may function in conjunction with the conserved histidine (H382) previously shown to be required for catalysis ( 6 ). Accordingly, candidate residues were those with polar or charged R-groups: aspartate, glutamate, lysine, arginine, serine, threonine, tyrosine, and cysteine. Few entries in the MACiE (Mechanism, Annotation and Classifi cation in Enzymes) database directly involve asparagine or glutamine ( 25 ). Amino acid modifying agents specifi c to the respective residues were included in in vitro microsomal lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase (LPCAT) assays. Microsomes were used because there are no precedents for purifying an MBOAT with activity retained. Because microsomes contain an array of acyltransferases, lysoPC was the chosen substrate because Lpt1p is by far the major LPCAT in yeast. Microsomes isolated from lpt1 ⌬ ::URA3 yeast expressing LPT1 from a plasmid displayed about 30 times greater LPCAT activity than background ( lpt1 ⌬ ::URA3 with empty plasmid). The low amount of background activity allows for the activity observed to be attributed solely to Lpt1p. Concentrations of the modifying agents were at or higher than the IC 50 determined for other enzymes ( 26,27 ).
Both 4,4 ′ -diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2 ′ -disulfonic acid (DIDS) and Workman's reagent K inhibited activity by more than 80% ( Fig. 1 ), suggesting that lysine, aspartate, and glutamate residues are in or close to the Lpt1p active site. The moderate (40%) inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide indicates a possible role for cysteine(s). However, no cysteine is conserved among Lpt1p and functionally characterized homologs in fungi, plants, and animals ( Fig. 2 ). The inability of phenylglyoxylate and phenylmethylsulfonylfl uoride to inhibit removed arginine and serine from being candidate catalytic residues. Threonine and tyrosine were not modifi ed and were thus still considered as candidates.

Identifi cation of catalytically important residues in Lpt1p by conservation
To identify amino acids important in catalysis, alignment of biochemically characterized homologous LPLATs from three kingdoms was performed (Fig. 2). The choice of homologs provided for a great deal of evolutionary distance and thus provided the opportunity for sequence variation within the structural constraints of using similar lysophospholipid substrates. Other MBOATs, such as ACAT1 and acyl-CoA diacylglycerol acyltransferase, were excluded because such inclusions distinctly reduced the number of conserved residues. Perhaps the dimensions needed to accommodate the differently shaped acyl acceptors requires customized active site architecture, requiring different spacing among the active site residues and therefore preventing detection by alignment. Accordingly, Lpt1p was aligned with functional homologs from one fungus [ Candida albicans ( 14 )]; two plants [ Arabidopsis thaliana ( 28 ) and Brassica rapa ( 29 )], two paralogs each; and two animals [ Homo sapiens (30)(31)(32) and Mus musculus ( 1 )], three paralogs each. Aspartate/glutamate, serine/threonine, and lysine/arginine substitutions were considered to be equivalent.

Site-directed mutagenesis of 11 conserved codons in LPT1 -fl ag: protein production
To determine if the conserved residues were critical for catalysis, site-directed mutants were generated in pRS423GP/ LPT1-fl ag . Substitute codons were chosen to remove the R group's electrophilic or nucleophilic character while maintaining the approximate size. Galactose-induced expression of the wild-type and mutant LPT1-fl ag in lpt1 ⌬ :: URA3 , microsome isolation, and immunoblotting of microsomes identifi ed a single band of the expected size (73 kDa) ( Fig. 3 ). Although varying levels of band intensity were observed, all constructs conferred qualitatively similar expression.

Site-directed mutagenesis of 11 conserved codons in LPT1 -fl ag: LPCAT activity
The effect of the site-directed mutations on LPCAT activity was determine by in vitro microsomal assays. Oleoyl-CoA, shown previously to be an optimal substrate ( 12 ), and lysoPC were provided at near saturating concentrations (50 M each). For two mutants, D146L and E297L, the measured activity was not signifi cantly different than zero ( Fig. 4 ). This absence of activity supports that D146 and E297 are directly involved in catalysis.
The fi nding of two critical amino acids having carboxylate R-groups suggested a role for these in binding a divalent cation. Depletion of zinc has been shown to inhibit Lpt1 activity by 80% ( 33 ), and 25 M of zinc increased Lpt1p activity by 50% ( 11 ). To address the possibility that D146L and E297L cause loss of activity due to weakened zinc binding, the ability of 25 M and 50 M zinc to restore activity was tested. No stimulation was observed in either mutant (data not shown). Higher concentrations of zinc were not assayed because zinc inhibits Lpt1p at 100 M and above ( 11 ).
E331L and Y388F also had profound effects on activity, reducing it by 75% and 66%, respectively ( Fig. 4 ). Because the remaining activity was signifi cantly above zero, barring a neighboring glutamate or tyrosine being used as a secondary active site, a direct role for E331 and Y388 in catalysis is not supported. Active site residue redundancy was also a possibility regarding lysines because mutating the four conserved lysines independently showed no signifi cant reduction in activity. To address this, a construct harboring mutations of all four conserved lysines was generated. This 4K to 4Q mutant also showed no signifi cant reduction in Fig. 3. Effect of site-directed mutagenesis on Lpt1p expression. Site-directed mutagenesis generated the 12 indicated mutants in pRS423GP/ LPT1-Flag . These constructs, wild-type LPT1-Flag , and empty vector were transformed into lpt1 ⌬ ::URA3 S. cerevisiae . Expression was induced by galactose, and microsomes were isolated. Microsomal protein (12 g) was resolved by SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose, and probed with the M2 anti-Flag antibody (1:1,000). Incubation with a HRP-conjugated, anti-rabbit secondary antibody (1:1,000) was followed by enhanced chemiluminescence. Detection was performed using the C-DIGIT Western Blot scanner (LI-COR). Bar to the left indicates migration of the 67 kDa marker protein (BSA). activity ( Fig. 4 ) and was still inhibited by over 90% by DIDS. Therefore, the target of DIDS inhibition was not detected by the sequence alignment. Lpt1p contains 54 lysines, making the systematic mutation of lysines unfeasible. Interestingly, the K403Q mutant mediated triple the normal Lpt1p activity. This may be useful in future biotechnology applications involving LPT1 overexpression.

Effect of monounsaturated acyl-CoA double-bond position on Lpt1p reaction kinetics
Several kinetic studies of Lpt1p have shown a preference for unsaturated acyl-CoA species compared with saturated acyl-CoA species ( 6,12,14 ). This suggests a need for a kink or contortion in the acyl-CoA's hydrocarbon chain to optimally fi t into the catalytic site. We used 18-carbon, monounsaturated acyl-CoA species with double bonds at delta 6, 9, and 11 to probe the catalytic site. In vitro microsomal LPCAT assays with substrate concentration series for each acyl-CoA species found that 18:1 ⌬ 6 and 18:1 ⌬ 11 had lower apparent K m values than the common, monounsaturated 18-carbon (oleoyl) species (18:1 ⌬ 9 ) ( Fig. 5 ). Because substrate preference is best expressed as catalytic effi ciency ( k cat / K m ) and because all of the reactions had the same, although undetermined, enzyme concentration, apparent V max / K m should be proportional to the catalytic effi ciency. The catalytic effi ciency was highest for 18:1 ⌬ 6 even though 18:1 ⌬ 9 had the highest apparent V max . Given that every two carbons in acyl chains are about 2.5 Å apart, these data suggest that the contortion conferred by a cis double bond about 7.5 Å from the thioester allows for binding with positioning of the thioester into the active site. Binding and positioning were less optimal when that distance increased by only 3.8 Å.

Characterization of the type of BiBi mechanism
Because Lpt1p mediates a reaction with two substrates and two products (i.e., BiBi), we next sought to determine if the mechanism was sequential or ping pong. Accordingly, a series of in vitro LPCAT assays with all combinations of fi ve subsaturating oleoyl-CoA and fi ve lysoPC concentrations was performed. Double reciprocal plots of lysoPC concentration versus reaction velocity generated a family of lines that have unique slopes and intersect (with the exception of 20 M oleoyl-CoA) to the left of the y axis ( Fig. 6 ). This is consistent with Lpt1p sequentially binding acyl-CoA and lysoPL substrates to form a ternary complex ( 34 ).

DISCUSSION
The acyl-CoA dependent lysophospholipid acyltransferase reaction mediated by Lpt1p is at its basis a transferase reaction. Transferase reactions often involve acid/base chemistry and, specifi cally, nucleophilic substitution ( 25 ). For Lpt1p, a possible substitution mechanism involves a catalytic residue donating an electron (i.e., acting as a nucleophile or Lewis base) to the lysoPL's hydroxyl group, making it a better nucleophile to attack the carbonyl carbon of the thioester bond in acyl-CoA. We sought to determine How D146 and/or E297 function in conjunction with H382 remains to be determined. Topology analysis of S. cerevisiae Lpt1p using SUC2 (invertase)-HIS4C chimeras identifi ed H382 to be on a short loop that faces the endoplasmic reticulum lumen ( 15 ). However, that study focused on the C-terminal third of Lpt1p. No data directly ascertained the location of D146 and E297. Hydrophobicity plots predicted that D146 faces the cytosol while the location of E297 varied among the fi ve topology prediction algorithms ( 15 ).
One precedent for combined catalytic contributions by histidine and aspartate is Haemophilus infl uenzae serine acetyl transferase. Crystal structure determination with substrate bound identifi ed two histidines and one aspartate in proximity to the substrate. Site-directed mutagenesis of each dramatically decreased activity. The proposed mechanism has H154 acting as a general base to promote the deprotonation of the substrate serine's hydroxyl group, which subsequently attacks the carbonyl of the acetyl-CoA thioester. D139 is proposed to form a dyad linkage with H154 and to increase the basicity of H154. H189 is proposed to aid in substrate orientation ( 35 ).
what, if any, residues in addition to H382 are critical for catalysis by Lpt1p and if a nucleophilic attack mechanism was consistent with the contribution of those residues.
Inhibition by Workman's Reagent K, multiple-sequence alignment, and site-directed mutagenesis identifi ed D146 and E297 as critical for catalysis. The corresponding residues were not chosen for analysis in two previous studies that sought to identify critical residues in MBOATs ( 5,10 ). Both studies performed site-directed mutagenesis of codons in regions of clustered sequence conservation. Analysis of African green monkey ACAT1 found that mutation of D400, which aligns with S. cerevisiae Lpt1p D320, abolished activity ( 5 ). However, mutation of D400 also dramatically reduced expression, and mutating the conserved aspartate, D378, in African green monkey ACAT2 had no effect on activity. These data leave the catalytic role of D400 in question. Within the clusters of amino acid conservation in human LPCAT3, E186 and D314 were identifi ed and mutated, but full or 20% activity remained, respectively ( 10 ). Therefore, the present study is the fi rst to identify carboyxlate-containing residues as essential for catalysis by an MBOAT.   4. Effect of site-directed mutagenesis on Lpt1p activity. In vitro LPCAT activity was measured by incubating 1 g of microsomes (isolated as in Fig. 3 ), 50 M [ 14 C]lysoPC, and 50 M oleoyl-CoA in 175 mM Tris (pH 7.4) for 2 min. Relative specifi c activity is reported. Error bars indicate standard deviation (n = 3-6). *Signifi cantly less than wild-type ( P < 0.05); # signifi cantly more than wild-type ( P < 0.05).
Another precedent is Salvia splendens malonyl-CoA: anthocyanin 5-O-glucoside-6 ′ "-O-malonyltransferase. Alignment of this enzyme with homologs and site-directed mutagenesis found it to require H167 and D390. Further experiments supported that enzyme-promoted deprotonation of the carbohydrate substrate's hydroxyl group created a nucleophile that attacked the malonly-CoA thioester bond ( 36 ). Whether histidine or aspartate functioned as the primary nucleophile was not determined. Glutamate has also been shown to act as a base in the S. cerevisiae GCN5, an acetyl-CoA-dependent histone acetyl transferase. In that enzyme, E174 deprotonates a lysine in the histone substrate, activating that lysine for nucleophilic attack of the thioester carbonyl in acetyl-CoA ( 37 ). All of these mechanisms lack a modifi ed enzyme intermediate and therefore require formation of a ternary complex. Formation of such a complex is supported by the two-substrate concentration-series kinetic analysis reported here.
Aspartate, glutamate, and histidine may also function in S. cerevisiae Lpt1p to bind zinc. These are three of the four residues that are most commonly used to coordinate a catalytic zinc atom ( 38 ). In S. cerevisiae extracts, LPCAT activity was inhibited by over 80% in the presence of 2 o-phenanthroline, a zinc chelator ( 30 ). Provision of 25 M zinc to microsomes from LPT1 overexpressing yeast increased in vitro LPLAT activity by 50% ( 11 ). Partial (40%) inhibition of Lpt1p by N-ethylmaleimide, a cysteine-modifying agent, also lends support to the involvement of zinc binding because cysteine is the fourth amino acid commonly used to coordinate zinc ( 35 ). However, because zinc commonly functions as an electrophile, its involvement in an acyltransferase mechanism is not easily hypothesized. Electrostatically interacting with phosphates in CoA to orient the substrate is one possible role for zinc.
Acyl-CoA binding and orientation by Lpt1p are clearly infl uenced by the shape of the hydrocarbon moiety. Among 18-carbon monounsaturated acyl-CoA species, the closer the double bond was to the thioester, the higher the catalytic effi ciency ( V max / K m ). This agrees with previous work that showed Lpt1p uses arachidonyl-CoA, 20:4 ⌬ 5,8,11,14 with a catalytic effi ciency double that of oleoyl-CoA (52 vs. 25/min/mg) ( 12 ). Having an angular binding pocket complementary to acyl-CoAs with a bend about 7.5 nm from the active site may explain how LPCATs can preferentially use substrates with a double bond at position ⌬ 5 or ⌬ 6 . For S. cerevisiae , such substrates would derive from exogenous fatty acids because only ⌬ 9 species are synthesized. Considering the ternary complex formed during the reaction, acyl-CoA orientation may be important to provide space for lysoPL.
Our main conclusions are that two carboxylate R groups, D146 and E297, are critical to acyl-CoA lysophospholipid acyltransferase activity mediated by S. cerevisiae Lpt1p. Also important in Lpt1p-mediated catalysis is the positioning of the acyl-CoA. Substrate binding and turnover were greatly affected by moving the cis double bond in monounsaturated acyl-CoA species by only a few carbons.