Hf. Zhang et al., Identification of the individual residues that determine human CD59 species selective activity, J BIOL CHEM, 274(16), 1999, pp. 10969-10974
Formation of the cytolytic membrane attack complex of complement on host ce
lls is inhibited by the membrane-bound glycoprotein, CD59, The inhibitory a
ctivity of CD59 is species restricted, and human CD59 is not effective agai
nst rat complement. Previous functional analysis of chimeric human/rat CD59
proteins indicated that the residues responsible for the species selective
function of human CD59 map to a region contained between positions 40 and
66 in the primary structure. By comparative analysis of rat and human CD59
models and by mutational analysis of candidate residues, we now identify th
e individual residues within the 40-66 region that confer species selective
function on human CD59, All nonconserved residues within the 40-66 sequenc
e were substituted from human to rat residues in a series of chimeric human
/rat CD59 mutant proteins. Functional analysis revealed that the individual
human to rat residue substitutions F47A, T51L, R55E, and R65Q each produce
d a mutant human CD59 protein with enhanced rat complement inhibitory activ
ity with the single F47A substitution having the most significant effect. I
nterestingly, the side chains of the residues at positions 47, 51, and 55 a
re all located on the short single helix (residues 47-55) of CD59 and form
an exposed continuous strip parallel to the helix axis. A single human CD59
mutant protein containing rat residue substitutions at all three helix res
idues produced a protein with species selective activity comparable to that
of rat CD59, We further found that synthetic peptides spanning the human C
D59 helix sequence were able to inhibit the binding of human CD59 to human
C8, but had little effect on the binding of rat CD59 to rat C8.