Subunit interface mutants of rabbit muscle aldolase form active dimers

Abstract
We report the construction of subunit interface mutants of rabbit muscle aldolase A with altered quaternary structure. A mutation has been described that causes nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia and produces a thermolabile aldolase (Kishi H et al., 1987, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84:8623–8627). The disease arises from substitution of Gly for Asp‐128, a residue at the subunit interface of human aldolase A. To elucidate the role of this residue in the highly homologous rabbit aldolase A, site‐directed mutagenesis is used to replace Asp‐128 with Gly, Ala, Asn, Gln, or Val. Rabbit aldolase D128G purified from Escherichia coli is found to be similar to human D128G by kinetic analysis, CD, and thermal inactivation assays. All of the mutant rabbit aldolases are similar to the wild‐type rabbit enzyme in secondary structure and kinetic properties. In contrast, whereas the wild‐type enzyme is a tetramer, chemical crosslinking and gel filtration indicate that a new dimeric species exists for the mutants. In sedimentation velocity experiments, the mutant enzymes exist as mixtures of dimer and tetramer at 4 °C. Sedimentation at 20 °C shows that the mutant enzymes are >99.5% dimeric and, in the presence of substrate, that the dimeric species is active. Differential scanning calorimetry demonstrates that Tm values of the mutant enzymes are decreased by 12 °C compared to wild‐type enzyme. The results indicate that Asp‐128 is important for interface stability and suggest that 1 role of the quaternary structure of aldolase is to provide thermostability.