A question of inhibition

The three-dimensional structure of the PLC-γ1 enzyme reveals how it suppresses its own activity.

The three-dimensional structure of the enzyme PLC-γ1. Image credit: Hajicek et al. (CC BY 4.0)

Many enzymes are poised to receive signals from the surrounding environment and translate them into responses inside the cell. One such enzyme is phospholipase C-γ1 (PLC-γ1), which controls how cells grow, divide and migrate.

When activating signals are absent, PLC-γ1 usually inhibits its own activity, a mechanism called autoinhibition. This prevents the enzyme from binding to its targets, which are fat molecules known as lipids. When activating signals are present, a phosphate group serves as a ‘chemical tag’ and is added onto PLC-γ1, allowing the enzyme to bind to lipids.

Failure in the regulation of PLC-γ1 or other closely related enzymes may lead to conditions such as cancer, arthritis and Alzheimer’s disease. However, it remains unclear how autoinhibition suppresses the activity of the enzyme, and how it is stopped by the addition of the phosphate group.

Here, Hajicek et al. determine in great detail the three-dimensional structure of the autoinhibited form of the enzyme using a method known as X-ray crystallography. This reveals that PLC-γ1 has two major lobes: one contains the active site that modifies lipids, and the other sits on top of the active site to prevent lipids from reaching it. The findings suggest that when the phosphate group attaches to PLC-γ1, it triggers a large shape change that shifts the second lobe away from the active site to allow lipids to bind.

The three-dimensional structure also helps to understand how mutations identified in certain cancers may activate PLC-γ1. In particular, these mutations disrupt the interactions between elements that usually hold the two lobes together, causing the enzyme to activate more easily.

The work by Hajicek et al. provides a framework to understand how cells control PLC-γ1. It is a first step toward designing new drugs that alter the activity of this enzyme, which may ultimately be useful to treat cancer and other diseases.