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Dive into the research topics where Maija Risteli is active.

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Featured researches published by Maija Risteli.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Lysyl Hydroxylase 3 Is a Multifunctional Protein Possessing Collagen Glucosyltransferase Activity

Jari Heikkinen; Maija Risteli; Chunguang Wang; Jaana Latvala; Maarit Rossi; Minna Valtavaara; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase (EC 1.14.11.4) and glucosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.66) are enzymes involved in post-translational modifications during collagen biosynthesis. We reveal in this paper that the protein produced by the cDNA for human lysyl hydroxylase isoform 3 (LH3) has both lysyl hydroxylase and glucosyltransferase (GGT) activities. The other known lysyl hydroxylase isoforms, LH1, LH2a, and LH2b, have no GGT activity. Furthermore, antibodies recognizing the amino acid sequence of human LH3 and those against a highly purified chicken GGT partially inhibited the GGT activity. Similarly, a partial inhibition was observed when these antibodies were tested against GGT extracted from human skin fibroblasts. In vitro mutagenesis experiments demonstrate that the amino acids involved in the GGT active site differ from those required for LH3 activity.


Matrix Biology | 2002

The third activity for lysyl hydroxylase 3: galactosylation of hydroxylysyl residues in collagens in vitro.

Chunguang Wang; Hanne Luosujärvi; Jari Heikkinen; Maija Risteli; Lahja Uitto; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase (LH, EC 1.14.11.4), galactosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.50) and glucosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.66) are enzymes involved in posttranslational modifications of collagens. They sequentially modify lysyl residues in specific positions to hydroxylysyl, galactosylhydroxylysyl and glucosylgalactosyl hydroxylysyl residues. These structures are unique to collagens and essential for their functional activity. Lysines and hydroxylysines form collagen cross-links. Hydroxylysine derived cross-links, usually as glycosylated forms, occur especially in weight-bearing and mineralized tissues. The detailed functions of the hydroxylysyl and hydroxylysyl linked carbohydrate structures are not known, however. Hydroxylysine linked carbohydrates are found mainly in collagens, but recent reports indicate that these structures are also present and probably have an important function in other proteins. Earlier we have shown that human LH3, but not isoforms LH1, LH2a and LH2b, possesses both LH and glucosyltransferase activity (J. Biol. Chem. 275 (2000) 36158). In this paper we demonstrate that galactosyltransferase activity is also associated with the same gene product, thus indicating that one gene product can catalyze all three consecutive steps in hydroxylysine linked carbohydrate formation. In vitro mutagenesis experiments indicate that Cys(144) and aspartates in positions 187-191 of LH3 are important for the galactosyltransferase activity. Our results suggest that manipulation of the gene for LH3 can be used to selectively alter the glycosylation and hydroxylation reactions, and provides a new tool to clarify the functions of the unique hydroxylysine linked carbohydrates in collagens and other proteins.


Journal of Cell Science | 2006

Glycosylation catalyzed by lysyl hydroxylase 3 is essential for basement membranes

Heli Ruotsalainen; Laura Sipilä; Miia Vapola; Raija Sormunen; Antti M. Salo; Lahja Uitto; Derry K. Mercer; Simon P. Robins; Maija Risteli; Attila Aszodi; Reinhard Fässler; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3) is a multifunctional enzyme possessing lysyl hydroxylase (LH), hydroxylysyl galactosyltransferase (GT) and galactosylhydroxylysyl glucosyltransferase (GGT) activities in vitro. To investigate the in vivo importance of LH3-catalyzed lysine hydroxylation and hydroxylysine-linked glycosylations, three different LH3-manipulated mouse lines were generated. Mice with a mutation that blocked only the LH activity of LH3 developed normally, but showed defects in the structure of the basement membrane and in collagen fibril organization in newborn skin and lung. Analysis of a hypomorphic LH3 mouse line with the same mutation, however, demonstrated that the reduction of the GGT activity of LH3 disrupts the localization of type IV collagen, and thus the formation of basement membranes during mouse embryogenesis leading to lethality at embryonic day (E) 9.5-14.5. Strikingly, survival of hypomorphic embryos and the formation of the basement membrane were directly correlated with the level of GGT activity. In addition, an LH3-knockout mouse lacked GGT activity leading to lethality at E9.5. The results confirm that LH3 has LH and GGT activities in vivo, LH3 is the main molecule responsible for GGT activity and that the GGT activity, not the LH activity of LH3, is essential for the formation of the basement membrane. Together our results demonstrate for the first time the importance of hydroxylysine-linked glycosylation for collagens.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2007

Expanding the lysyl hydroxylase toolbox: new insights into the localization and activities of lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3).

Raili Myllylä; Chunguang Wang; Jari Heikkinen; André H. Juffer; Outi Lampela; Maija Risteli; Heli Ruotsalainen; Antti M. Salo; Laura Sipilä

Hydroxylysine and its glycosylated forms, galactosylhydroxylysine and glucosylgalactosylhydroxylysine, are post‐translational modifications unique to collagenous sequences. They are found in collagens and in many proteins having a collagenous domain in their structure. Since the last published reviews, significant new data have accumulated regarding these modifications. One of the lysyl hydroxylase isoforms, lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3), has been shown to possess three catalytic activities required sequentially to produce hydroxylysine and its glycosylated forms, that is, the lysyl hydroxylase (LH), galactosyltransferase (GT), and glucosyltransferase (GGT) activities. Studies on mouse models have revealed the importance of these different activities of LH3 in vivo. LH3 is the main molecule responsible for GGT activity in mouse embryos. A lack of this activity causes intracellular accumulation of type IV collagen, which disrupts the formation of basement membranes (BMs) during mouse embryogenesis and leads to embryonic lethality. The specific inactivation of the LH activity of LH3 causes minor alterations in the structure of the BM and collagen fibril organization, but does not affect the lifespan of mutated mice. Recent data from zebrafish demonstrate that growth cone migration depends critically on the LH3 glycosyltransferase domain. LH3 is located in the ER loosely associated with the membranes, but, unlike the other isoforms, LH3 is also found in the extracellular space in some tissues. LH3 is able to adjust the amount of hydroxylysine and hydroxylysine‐linked carbohydrates of extracellular proteins in their native conformation, suggesting that it may have a role in matrix remodeling. J. Cell. Physiol. 212: 323–329, 2007.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

A Connective Tissue Disorder Caused by Mutations of the Lysyl Hydroxylase 3 Gene

Antti M. Salo; Helen Cox; Peter Farndon; Celia Moss; Helen Grindulis; Maija Risteli; Simon P. Robins; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3, encoded by PLOD3) is a multifunctional enzyme capable of catalyzing hydroxylation of lysyl residues and O-glycosylation of hydroxylysyl residues producing either monosaccharide (Gal) or disaccharide (Glc-Gal) derivatives, reactions that form part of the many posttranslational modifications required during collagen biosynthesis. Animal studies have confirmed the importance of LH3, particularly in biosynthesis of the highly glycosylated type IV and VI collagens, but to date, the functional significance in vivo of this enzyme in man is predominantly unknown. We report here a human disorder of LH3 presenting as a compound heterozygote with recessive inheritance. One mutation dramatically reduced the sugar-transfer activity of LH3, whereas another abrogated lysyl hydroxylase activity; these changes were accompanied by reduced LH3 protein levels in cells. The disorder has a unique phenotype causing severe morbidity as a result of features that overlap with a number of known collagen disorders.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Characterization of Collagenous Peptides Bound to Lysyl Hydroxylase Isoforms

Maija Risteli; Olli Niemitalo; Hilkka Lankinen; André H. Juffer; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase (LH, EC 1.14.11.4) is the enzyme catalyzing the formation of hydroxylysyl residues in collagens and other proteins with collagenous domains. Although lower species, such as Caenorhabditis elegans, have only one LH orthologue, LH activity in higher species, such as human, rat, and mouse, is present in three molecules, LH1, LH2, and LH3, encoded by three different genes. In addition, LH2 is present in two alternatively spliced forms (LH2a, LH2b). To understand the functions of the four molecular forms of LH in vertebrates, we analyzed differences in the binding and hydroxylation of various collagenous peptides by the LH isoforms. Nine-amino acid-long synthetic peptides on Pepspot were used for the binding analysis and an activity assay to measure hydroxylation. Our data with 727 collagenous peptides indicated that a positive charge on the peptide and specific amino acid residues in close proximity to the lysyl residues in the collagenous sequences are the key factors promoting peptide binding to the LH isoforms. The data suggest that the LH binding site is not a deep hydrophobic pocket but is open and hydrophilic where acidic amino acids play an important role in the binding. The data do not indicate strict sequence specificity for the LH isoforms, but the data indicated that there was a clear preference for some sequences to be bound and hydroxylated by a certain isoform.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Reduction of Lysyl Hydroxylase 3 Causes Deleterious Changes in the Deposition and Organization of Extracellular Matrix

Maija Risteli; Heli Ruotsalainen; Antti M. Salo; Raija Sormunen; Laura Sipilä; Naomi L. Baker; Shireen R. Lamandé; Leena Vimpari-Kauppinen; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3) is a multifunctional enzyme possessing lysyl hydroxylase, collagen galactosyltransferase, and glucosyltransferase (GGT) activities. We report here an important role for LH3 in the organization of the extracellular matrix (ECM) and cytoskeleton. Deposition of ECM was affected in heterozygous LH3 knock-out mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF+/−) and in skin fibroblasts collected from a member of a Finnish epidermolysis bullosa simplex (EBS) family known to be deficient in GGT activity. We show the GGT deficiency to be due to a transcriptional defect in one LH3 allele. The ECM abnormalities also lead to defects in the arrangement of the cytoskeleton in both cell lines. Ultrastructural abnormalities were observed in the skin of heterozygous LH3 knock-out mice indicating that even a moderate decrease in LH3 has deleterious consequences in vivo. The LH3 null allele in the EBS family member and the resulting abnormalities in the organization of the extracellular matrix, similar to those found in MEF+/−, may explain the correlation between the severity of the phenotype and the decrease in GGT activity reported in this family.


Matrix Biology | 2011

Dimerization of human lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3) is mediated by the amino acids 541-547.

Jari Heikkinen; Maija Risteli; Outi Lampela; Paula Alavesa; Marjo Karppinen; André H. Juffer; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylases (LH), which catalyze the post-translational modifications of lysines in collagen and collagen-like proteins, function as dimers. However, the amino acids responsible for dimerization and the role of dimer formation in the enzymatic activities of LH have not yet been identified. We have localized the region responsible for the dimerization of lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3), a multifunctional enzyme of collagen biosynthesis, to a sequence of amino acids between the glycosyltransferase activity and the lysyl hydroxylase activity domains. This area is covered by amino acids 541-547 in human LH3, but contains no cysteine residues. The region is highly conserved among LH isoforms, and is also involved in the dimerization of LH1 subunits. Dimerization is required for the LH activity of LH3, whereas it is not obligatory for the glycosyltransferase activities. In order to determine whether complex formation can occur between LH molecules originating from different species, and between different LH isoforms, double expressions were generated in a baculovirus system. Heterocomplex formation between mouse and human LH3, between human LH1 and LH3 and between human LH2 and LH3 was detected by western blot analyses. However, due to the low amount of complexes formed, the in vivo function of heterocomplexes remains unclear.


PLOS ONE | 2012

The Activities of Lysyl Hydroxylase 3 (LH3) Regulate the Amount and Oligomerization Status of Adiponectin

Heli Ruotsalainen; Maija Risteli; Chunguang Wang; Yu Wang; Marjo Karppinen; Ulrich Bergmann; Ari-Pekka Kvist; Helmut Pospiech; Karl-Heinz Herzig; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3) has lysyl hydroxylase, galactosyltransferase, and glucosyltransferase activities, which are sequentially required for the formation of glucosylgalactosyl hydroxylysines in collagens. Here we demonstrate for the first time that LH3 also modifies the lysine residues in the collagenous domain of adiponectin, which has important roles in glucose and lipid metabolism and inflammation. Hydroxylation and, especially, glycosylation of the lysine residues of adiponectin have been shown to be essential for the formation of the more active high molecular weight adiponectin oligomers and thus for its function. In cells that totally lack LH3 enzyme, the galactosylhydroxylysine residues of adiponectin were not glucosylated to glucosylgalactosylhydroxylysine residues and the formation of high and middle molecular weight adiponectin oligomers was impaired. Circulating adiponectin levels in mutant mice lacking the lysyl hydroxylase activity of LH3 were significantly reduced, which indicates that LH3 is required for complete modification of lysine residues in adiponectin and the loss of some of the glycosylated hydroxylysine residues severely affects the secretion of adiponectin. LH mutant mice with reduced adiponectin level showed a high fat diet-induced increase in glucose, triglyceride, and LDL-cholesterol levels, hallmarks of the metabolic syndrome in humans. Our results reveal the first indication that LH3 is an important regulator of adiponectin biosynthesis, secretion and activity and thus might be a potential candidate for therapeutic applications in diseases associated with obesity and insulin resistance.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Lysyl Hydroxylase 3 Modifies Lysine Residues to Facilitate Oligomerization of Mannan-Binding Lectin

Maija Risteli; Heli Ruotsalainen; Ulrich Bergmann; Umakhanth Venkatraman Girija; Russell Wallis; Raili Myllylä

Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3) is a multifunctional protein with lysyl hydroxylase, galactosyltransferase and glucosyltransferase activities. The LH3 has been shown to modify the lysine residues both in collagens and also in some collagenous proteins. In this study we show for the first time that LH3 is essential for catalyzing formation of the glucosylgalactosylhydroxylysines of mannan-binding lectin (MBL), the first component of the lectin pathway of complement activation. Furthermore, loss of the terminal glucose units on the derivatized lysine residues in mouse embryonic fibroblasts lacking the LH3 protein leads to defective disulphide bonding and oligomerization of rat MBL-A, with a decrease in the proportion of the larger functional MBL oligomers. The oligomerization could be completely restored with the full length LH3 or the amino-terminal fragment of LH3 that possesses the glycosyltransferase activities. Our results confirm that LH3 is the only enzyme capable of glucosylating the galactosylhydroxylysine residues in proteins with a collagenous domain. In mice lacking the lysyl hydroxylase activity of LH3, but with untouched galactosyltransferase and glucosyltransferase activities, reduced circulating MBL-A levels were observed. Oligomerization was normal, however and residual lysyl hydroxylation was compensated in part by other lysyl hydroxylase isoenzymes. Our data suggest that LH3 is commonly involved in biosynthesis of collagenous proteins and the glucosylation of galactosylhydroxylysines residues by LH3 is crucial for the formation of the functional high-molecular weight MBL oligomers.

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