RESUMO
The dystrophin-glycoprotein-complex (DGC), anchored by the transmembrane protein dystroglycan, functions to mechanically link the extracellular matrix and actin cytoskeleton. Breaking this connection is associated with diseases such as muscular dystrophy, yet cleavage of dystroglycan by matrix-metalloproteinases (MMPs) remains an understudied mechanism to disrupt the DGC. We determined the crystal structure of the membrane-adjacent domain (amino acids 491-722) of E. coli expressed human dystroglycan to understand MMP cleavage regulation. The structural model includes tandem immunoglobulin-like (IGL) and sperm/enterokinase/agrin-like (SEAL) domains, which support proteolysis in diverse receptors to facilitate mechanotransduction, membrane protection, and viral entry. The structure reveals a C-terminal extension that buries the MMP site by packing into a hydrophobic pocket, a unique mechanism of MMP cleavage regulation. We further demonstrate structure-guided and disease-associated mutations disrupt proteolytic regulation using a cell-surface proteolysis assay. Thus disrupted proteolysis is a potentially relevant mechanism for "breaking" the DGC link to contribute to disease pathogenesis.
RESUMO
Replication-incompetent single cycle infectious Influenza A Virus (sciIAV) has demonstrated utility as a research and vaccination platform. Protein-based therapeutics are increasingly attractive due to their high selectivity and potent efficacy but still suffer from low bioavailability and high manufacturing cost. Transient RNA-mediated delivery is a safe alternative that allows for expression of protein-based therapeutics within the target cells or tissues but is limited by delivery efficiency. Here, we develop recombinant sciIAV as a platform for transient gene delivery in vivo and in vitro for therapeutic, research, and manufacturing applications (in vivo antimicrobial production, cell culture contamination clearance, and production of antiviral proteins in vitro). While adapting the system to deliver new protein cargo we discovered expression differences presumably resulting from genetic context effects. We applied a high-throughput screen to map these within the 3'-untranslated and coding regions of the hemagglutinin-encoding segment 4. This screen revealed permissible mutations in the 3'-UTR and depletion of RNA level motifs in the N-terminal coding region.
RESUMO
Proteolysis of transmembrane receptors is a critical cellular communication mechanism dysregulated in disease, yet decoding proteolytic regulation mechanisms of hundreds of shed receptors is hindered by difficulties controlling stimuli and unknown fates of cleavage products. Notch proteolytic regulation is a notable exception, where intercellular forces drive exposure of a cryptic protease site within a juxtamembrane proteolytic switch domain to activate transcriptional programs. We created a Synthetic Notch Assay for Proteolytic Switches (SNAPS) that exploits the modularity and unequivocal input/response of Notch proteolysis to screen surface receptors for other putative proteolytic switches. We identify several new proteolytic switches among receptors with structural homology to Notch. We demonstrate SNAPS can detect shedding in chimeras of diverse cell surface receptors, leading to new, testable hypotheses. Finally, we establish the assay can be used to measure modulation of proteolysis by potential therapeutics and offer new mechanistic insights into how DECMA-1 disrupts cell adhesion.
Assuntos
Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Receptores de Superfície Celular/metabolismo , Bioensaio , Caderinas/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular , Distroglicanas/metabolismo , Humanos , Metaloproteinases da Matriz/metabolismo , Domínios Proteicos , Proteólise , Receptores de Superfície Celular/química , Trastuzumab/metabolismoRESUMO
We present a robust strategy to covalently link proteins and DNA using HUH-endonuclease domains as fusion partners (HUH-tags). We show that HUH-tags react robustly with specific sequences of unmodified single-stranded DNA, and we have identified five tags that react orthogonally with distinct DNA sequences. We demonstrate the versatility of HUH-tags as fusion partners in Cas9-mediated gene editing and the construction of doubly DNA-tethered proteins for single-molecule studies. Finally we demonstrate application to cellular imaging in live and fixed cells.