Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 61
Filter
1.
Nature ; 600(7887): 153-157, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34819673

ABSTRACT

Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) is a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) that regulates important functions in the central nervous system1,2. The ALK gene is a hotspot for chromosomal translocation events that result in several fusion proteins that cause a variety of human malignancies3. Somatic and germline gain-of-function mutations in ALK were identified in paediatric neuroblastoma4-7. ALK is composed of an extracellular region (ECR), a single transmembrane helix and an intracellular tyrosine kinase domain8,9. ALK is activated by the binding of ALKAL1 and ALKAL2 ligands10-14 to its ECR, but the lack of structural information for the ALK-ECR or for ALKAL ligands has limited our understanding of ALK activation. Here we used cryo-electron microscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance and X-ray crystallography to determine the atomic details of human ALK dimerization and activation by ALKAL1 and ALKAL2. Our data reveal a mechanism of RTK activation that allows dimerization by either dimeric (ALKAL2) or monomeric (ALKAL1) ligands. This mechanism is underpinned by an unusual architecture of the receptor-ligand complex. The ALK-ECR undergoes a pronounced ligand-induced rearrangement and adopts an orientation parallel to the membrane surface. This orientation is further stabilized by an interaction between the ligand and the membrane. Our findings highlight the diversity in RTK oligomerization and activation mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase/chemistry , Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase/metabolism , Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase/ultrastructure , Binding Sites , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Crystallography, X-Ray , Cytokines/chemistry , Cytokines/metabolism , Cytokines/ultrastructure , Enzyme Activation , Humans , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Multiprotein Complexes/chemistry , Multiprotein Complexes/metabolism , Multiprotein Complexes/ultrastructure , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Binding , Protein Domains , Protein Multimerization
2.
Nature ; 537(7619): 202-206, 2016 09 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27501151

ABSTRACT

Molecular chaperones act on non-native proteins in the cell to prevent their aggregation, premature folding or misfolding. Different chaperones often exert distinct effects, such as acceleration or delay of folding, on client proteins via mechanisms that are poorly understood. Here we report the solution structure of SecB, a chaperone that exhibits strong antifolding activity, in complex with alkaline phosphatase and maltose-binding protein captured in their unfolded states. SecB uses long hydrophobic grooves that run around its disk-like shape to recognize and bind to multiple hydrophobic segments across the length of non-native proteins. The multivalent binding mode results in proteins wrapping around SecB. This unique complex architecture alters the kinetics of protein binding to SecB and confers strong antifolding activity on the chaperone. The data show how the different architectures of chaperones result in distinct binding modes with non-native proteins that ultimately define the activity of the chaperone.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Protein Aggregates , Protein Folding , Alkaline Phosphatase/chemistry , Alkaline Phosphatase/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Kinetics , Maltose-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Maltose-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Protein Binding , Protein Unfolding , Substrate Specificity
3.
EMBO J ; 36(23): 3517-3531, 2017 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29109154

ABSTRACT

Type III secretion (T3S), a protein export pathway common to Gram-negative pathogens, comprises a trans-envelope syringe, the injectisome, with a cytoplasm-facing translocase channel. Exported substrates are chaperone-delivered to the translocase, EscV in enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, and cross it in strict hierarchical manner, for example, first "translocators", then "effectors". We dissected T3S substrate targeting and hierarchical switching by reconstituting them in vitro using inverted inner membrane vesicles. EscV recruits and conformationally activates the tightly membrane-associated pseudo-effector SepL and its chaperone SepD. This renders SepL a high-affinity receptor for translocator/chaperone pairs, recognizing specific chaperone signals. In a second, SepD-coupled step, translocators docked on SepL become secreted. During translocator secretion, SepL/SepD suppress effector/chaperone binding to EscV and prevent premature effector secretion. Disengagement of the SepL/SepD switch directs EscV to dedicated effector export. These findings advance molecular understanding of T3S and reveal a novel mechanism for hierarchical trafficking regulation in protein secretion channels.


Subject(s)
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Type III Secretion Systems/metabolism , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli/genetics , Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli/pathogenicity , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Models, Biological , Models, Molecular , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/genetics , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Protein Transport , Type III Secretion Systems/chemistry , Type III Secretion Systems/genetics
4.
J Biomol NMR ; 75(2-3): 133-142, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33745068

ABSTRACT

A unique aspect of NMR is its capacity to provide integrated insight into both the structure and intrinsic dynamics of biomolecules. Chemical exchange phenomena that often serve as probes of dynamic processes in biological macromolecules can be quantitatively investigated with chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) experiments. 2H-decoupling sidebands, however, always occur in the profiles of 13CHD2 13C-CEST experiments when using the simple CW (continuous wave) method, which may obscure the detection of minor dips of excited states. Traditionally, these sidebands are manually eliminated from the profiles before data analysis by removing experimental points in the range of 2H-decoupling field strength ±50 Hz away from the major dips of the ground state on either side of the dips. Unfortunately, this may also eliminate potential minor dips if they overlap with the decoupling sidebands. Here, we developed methods that use pseudo-continuous waves with variable RF amplitudes distributed onto ramps for 2H decoupling. The new methods were thoroughly validated on Bruker spectrometers at a range of fields (1H frequencies of 600, 700, and 850 MHz, and 1.1 GHz). By using these methods, we successfully removed the sidebands from the NMR profiles of 13CHD2 13C-CEST experiments.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Computer Simulation , Radio Waves
5.
Nature ; 501(7466): 212-216, 2013 Sep 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24005320

ABSTRACT

The ability to design proteins with high affinity and selectivity for any given small molecule is a rigorous test of our understanding of the physiochemical principles that govern molecular recognition. Attempts to rationally design ligand-binding proteins have met with little success, however, and the computational design of protein-small-molecule interfaces remains an unsolved problem. Current approaches for designing ligand-binding proteins for medical and biotechnological uses rely on raising antibodies against a target antigen in immunized animals and/or performing laboratory-directed evolution of proteins with an existing low affinity for the desired ligand, neither of which allows complete control over the interactions involved in binding. Here we describe a general computational method for designing pre-organized and shape complementary small-molecule-binding sites, and use it to generate protein binders to the steroid digoxigenin (DIG). Of seventeen experimentally characterized designs, two bind DIG; the model of the higher affinity binder has the most energetically favourable and pre-organized interface in the design set. A comprehensive binding-fitness landscape of this design, generated by library selections and deep sequencing, was used to optimize its binding affinity to a picomolar level, and X-ray co-crystal structures of two variants show atomic-level agreement with the corresponding computational models. The optimized binder is selective for DIG over the related steroids digitoxigenin, progesterone and ß-oestradiol, and this steroid binding preference can be reprogrammed by manipulation of explicitly designed hydrogen-bonding interactions. The computational design method presented here should enable the development of a new generation of biosensors, therapeutics and diagnostics.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Digoxigenin/metabolism , Drug Design , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/metabolism , Binding Sites , Biotechnology , Crystallography, X-Ray , Digoxigenin/chemistry , Estradiol/chemistry , Estradiol/metabolism , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Progesterone/chemistry , Progesterone/metabolism , Protein Binding , Reproducibility of Results , Substrate Specificity
6.
Mol Cell ; 44(5): 734-44, 2011 Dec 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22152477

ABSTRACT

Protein-protein interactions mediate a vast number of cellular processes. Here, we present a regulatory mechanism in protein-protein interactions mediated by finely tuned structural instability and coupled with molecular mimicry. We show that a set of type III secretion (TTS) autoinhibited homodimeric chaperones adopt a molten globule-like state that transiently exposes the substrate binding site as a means to become rapidly poised for binding to their cognate protein substrates. Packing defects at the homodimeric interface stimulate binding, whereas correction of these defects results in less labile chaperones that give rise to nonfunctional biological systems. The protein substrates use structural mimicry to offset the weak spots in the chaperones and to counteract their autoinhibitory conformation. This regulatory mechanism of protein activity is evolutionarily conserved among several TSS systems and presents a lucid example of functional advantage conferred upon a biological system by finely tuned structural instability.


Subject(s)
Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Models, Molecular , Molecular Chaperones/antagonists & inhibitors , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Molecular Mimicry , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Protein Multimerization , Protein Stability
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(35): 9798-803, 2016 08 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27528687

ABSTRACT

The flagellum is a complex bacterial nanomachine that requires the proper assembly of several different proteins for its function. Dedicated chaperones are central in preventing aggregation or undesired interactions of flagellar proteins, including their targeting to the export gate. FliT is a key flagellar chaperone that binds to several flagellar proteins in the cytoplasm, including its cognate filament-capping protein FliD. We have determined the solution structure of the FliT chaperone in the free state and in complex with FliD and the flagellar ATPase FliI. FliT adopts a four-helix bundle and uses a hydrophobic surface formed by the first three helices to recognize its substrate proteins. We show that the fourth helix constitutes the binding site for FlhA, a membrane protein at the export gate. In the absence of a substrate protein FliT adopts an autoinhibited structure wherein both the binding sites for substrates and FlhA are occluded. Substrate binding to FliT activates the complex for FlhA binding and thus targeting of the chaperone-substrate complex to the export gate. The activation and targeting mechanisms reported for FliT appear to be shared among the other flagellar chaperones.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Flagella/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Proton-Translocating ATPases/chemistry , Salmonella typhimurium/chemistry , Amino Acid Motifs , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Binding Sites , Cloning, Molecular , Crystallography, X-Ray , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Flagella/metabolism , Flagella/ultrastructure , Gene Expression , Genetic Vectors/chemistry , Genetic Vectors/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Molecular Chaperones/genetics , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation, alpha-Helical , Protein Conformation, beta-Strand , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Proton-Translocating ATPases/genetics , Proton-Translocating ATPases/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Salmonella typhimurium/metabolism , Salmonella typhimurium/ultrastructure , Substrate Specificity
8.
Nat Chem Biol ; 12(2): 117-23, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26656091

ABSTRACT

Cyclophilin A (CypA) is overexpressed in a number of human cancer types, but the mechanisms by which the protein promotes oncogenic properties of cells are not understood. Here we demonstrate that CypA binds the CrkII adaptor protein and prevents it from switching to the inhibited state. CrkII influences cell motility and invasion by mediating signaling through its SH2 and SH3 domains. CrkII Tyr221 phosphorylation by the Abl or EGFR kinases induces an inhibited state of CrkII by means of an intramolecular SH2-pTyr221 interaction, causing signaling interruption. We show that the CrkII phosphorylation site constitutes a binding site for CypA. Recruitment of CypA sterically restricts the accessibility of Tyr221 to kinases, thereby suppressing CrkII phosphorylation and promoting the active state. Structural, biophysical and in vivo data show that CypA augments CrkII-mediated signaling. A strong stimulation of cell migration is observed in cancer cells wherein both CypA and CrkII are greatly upregulated.


Subject(s)
Cyclophilin A/pharmacology , Oncogene Proteins v-abl/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-crk/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Amino Acid Sequence , Blotting, Western , Calorimetry , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Movement/drug effects , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data
9.
Nature ; 488(7410): 236-40, 2012 Aug 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22801505

ABSTRACT

How the interplay between protein structure and internal dynamics regulates protein function is poorly understood. Often, ligand binding, post-translational modifications and mutations modify protein activity in a manner that is not possible to rationalize solely on the basis of structural data. It is likely that changes in the internal motions of proteins have a major role in regulating protein activity, but the nature of their contributions remains elusive, especially in quantitative terms. Here we show that changes in conformational entropy can determine whether protein-ligand interactions will occur, even among protein complexes with identical binding interfaces. We have used NMR spectroscopy to determine the changes in structure and internal dynamics that are elicited by the binding of DNA to several variants of the catabolite activator protein (CAP) that differentially populate the inactive and active DNA-binding domain states. We found that the CAP variants have markedly different affinities for DNA, despite the CAP−DNA-binding interfaces being essentially identical in the various complexes. Combined with thermodynamic data, the results show that conformational entropy changes can inhibit the binding of CAP variants that are structurally poised for optimal DNA binding or can stimulate the binding activity of CAP variants that only transiently populate the DNA-binding-domain active state. Collectively, the data show how changes in fast internal dynamics (conformational entropy) and slow internal dynamics (energetically excited conformational states) can regulate binding activity in a way that cannot be predicted on the basis of the protein's ground-state structure.


Subject(s)
Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/chemistry , Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/metabolism , Entropy , Binding Sites , Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/genetics , DNA/chemistry , DNA/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Motion , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Time Factors
10.
J Biomol NMR ; 69(1): 45-52, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28887770

ABSTRACT

TROSY-based triple resonance experiments are essential for protein backbone assignment of large biomolecular systems by solution NMR spectroscopy. In a survey of the current Bruker pulse sequence library for TROSY-based experiments we found that several sequences were plagued by artifacts that affect spectral quality and hamper data analysis. Specifically, these experiments produce sidebands in the 13C(t 1) dimension with inverted phase corresponding to 1HN resonance frequencies, with approximately 5% intensity of the parent 13C crosspeaks. These artifacts originate from the modulation of the 1HN frequency onto the resonance frequency of 13Cα and/or 13Cß and are due to 180° pulses imperfections used for 1H decoupling during the 13C(t 1) evolution period. These sidebands can become severe for CAi, CAi-1 and/or CBi, CBi-1 correlation experiments such as TROSY-HNCACB. Here, we implement three alternative decoupling strategies that suppress these artifacts and, depending on the scheme employed, boost the sensitivity up to 14% on Bruker spectrometers. A class of comparable Agilent/Varian pulse sequences that use WALTZ16 1H decoupling can also be improved by this method resulting in up to 60-80% increase in sensitivity.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Artifacts , Proteins/chemistry
11.
J Biomol NMR ; 69(4): 237-243, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29164453

ABSTRACT

In multidimensional solution NMR experiments, π pulses are used extensively for inversion and refocusing operations on 1H, 13C and 15N nuclei. Pulse miscalibration, off-resonance effects, and J-coupling evolution during π pulse execution result in severe signal losses that are exacerbated at high magnetic fields. Here, we report the implementation of a triply-compensated π pulse (G5) optimized for both inversion and refocusing in widely used 2- and 3-dimensional experiments. By replacing most of the hard π pulses, adiabatic or composite pulses on the 1H, 13C and 15N channels with G5 pulses, we obtained signal enhancements ranging from 80 to 240%. We anticipate that triply-compensated pulses will be crucial for improving the performance of multidimensional and multinuclear pulse sequences at ultra-high fields.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods
12.
J Biomol NMR ; 69(4): 215-227, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29098507

ABSTRACT

Selective methyl labeling is an extremely powerful approach to study the structure, dynamics and function of biomolecules by NMR. Despite spectacular progress in the field, such studies remain rather limited in number. One of the main obstacles remains the assignment of the methyl resonances, which is labor intensive and error prone. Typically, NOESY crosspeak patterns are manually correlated to the available crystal structure or an in silico template model of the protein. Here, we propose methyl assignment by graphing inference construct, an exhaustive search algorithm with no peak network definition requirement. In order to overcome the combinatorial problem, the exhaustive search is performed locally, i.e. for a small number of methyls connected through-space according to experimental 3D methyl NOESY data. The local network approach drastically reduces the search space. Only the best local assignments are combined to provide the final output. Assignments that match the data with comparable scores are made available to the user for cross-validation by additional experiments such as methyl-amide NOEs. Several NMR datasets for proteins in the 25-50 kDa range were used during development and for performance evaluation against the manually assigned data. We show that the algorithm is robust, reliable and greatly speeds up the methyl assignment task.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Protein Conformation
13.
J Biomol NMR ; 66(4): 259-271, 2016 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27878649

ABSTRACT

The ongoing NMR method development effort strives for high quality multidimensional data with reduced collection time. Here, we apply 'SOFAST-HMQC' to frequency editing in 3D NOESY experiments and demonstrate the sensitivity benefits using highly deuterated and 15N, methyl labeled samples in H2O. The experiments benefit from a combination of selective T 1 relaxation (or L-optimized effect), from Ernst angle optimization and, in certain types of experiments, from using the mixing time for both NOE buildup and magnetization recovery. This effect enhances sensitivity by up to 2.4× at fast pulsing versus reference HMQC sequences of same overall length and water suppression characteristics. Representative experiments designed to address interesting protein NMR challenges are detailed. Editing capabilities are exploited with heteronuclear 15N,13C-edited, or with diagonal-free 13C aromatic/methyl-resolved 3D-SOFAST-HMQC-NOESY-HMQC. The latter experiment is used here to elucidate the methyl-aromatic NOE network in the hydrophobic core of the 19 kDa FliT-FliJ flagellar protein complex. Incorporation of fast pulsing to reference experiments such as 3D-NOESY-HMQC boosts digital resolution, simplifies the process of NOE assignment and helps to automate protein structure determination.


Subject(s)
Isotope Labeling , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Proteins/chemistry , Algorithms , Deuterium , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Models, Theoretical , Nitrogen Isotopes , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Protons
14.
J Biomol NMR ; 65(2): 99-108, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27255761

ABSTRACT

A simple and cost effective method to independently and stereo-specifically incorporate [(1)H,(13)C]-methyls in Leu and Val in proteins is presented. Recombinant proteins for NMR studies are produced using a tailored set of auxotrophic E. coli strains. NMR active isotopes are routed to either Leu or Val methyl groups from the commercially available and scrambling-free precursors α-ketoisovalerate and acetolactate. The engineered strains produce deuterated proteins with stereospecific [(1)H,(13)C]-methyl labeling separately at Leu or Val amino acids. This is the first method that achieves Leu-specific stereospecific [(1)H,(13)C]-methyl labeling of proteins and scramble-free Val-specific labeling. Use of auxotrophs drastically decreases the amount of labeled precursor required for expression without impacting the yield. The concept is extended to Thr methyl labeling by means of a Thr-specific auxotroph that provides enhanced efficiency for use with the costly L-[4-(13)C,2,3-(2)H2,(15)N]-Thr reagent. The Thr-specific strain allows for the production of Thr-[(13)CH3](γ2) labeled protein with an optimal isotope incorporation using up to 50 % less labeled Thr than the traditional E. coli strain without the need for (2)H-glycine to prevent scrambling.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Leucine/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Threonine/chemistry , Valine/chemistry , Isotope Labeling , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation
16.
Nat Chem Biol ; 9(7): 462-5, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23644478

ABSTRACT

The ability to inhibit binding or enzymatic activity is key to preventing aberrant behaviors of proteins. Allosteric inhibition is desirable as it offers several advantages over competitive inhibition, but the mechanisms of action remain poorly understood in most cases. Here we show that allosteric inhibition can be effected by destabilizing a low-populated conformational state that serves as an on-pathway intermediate for ligand binding, without altering the protein's ground-state structure. As standard structural approaches are typically concerned with changes in the ground-state structure of proteins, the presence of such a mechanism can go easily undetected. Our data strongly argue for the routine use of NMR tools suited to detect and characterize transiently formed conformational states in allosteric systems. Structure information on such important intermediates can ultimately result in more efficient design of allosteric inhibitors.


Subject(s)
Allosteric Site , Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/chemistry , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Calorimetry/methods , Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/metabolism , DNA/chemistry , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Mutation , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation
17.
Nature ; 462(7271): 368-72, 2009 Nov 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19924217

ABSTRACT

Allosteric regulation is used as a very efficient mechanism to control protein activity in most biological processes, including signal transduction, metabolism, catalysis and gene regulation. Allosteric proteins can exist in several conformational states with distinct binding or enzymatic activity. Effectors are considered to function in a purely structural manner by selectively stabilizing a specific conformational state, thereby regulating protein activity. Here we show that allosteric proteins can be regulated predominantly by changes in their structural dynamics. We have used NMR spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry to characterize cyclic AMP (cAMP) binding to the catabolite activator protein (CAP), a transcriptional activator that has been a prototype for understanding effector-mediated allosteric control of protein activity. cAMP switches CAP from the 'off' state (inactive), which binds DNA weakly and non-specifically, to the 'on' state (active), which binds DNA strongly and specifically. In contrast, cAMP binding to a single CAP mutant, CAP-S62F, fails to elicit the active conformation; yet, cAMP binding to CAP-S62F strongly activates the protein for DNA binding. NMR and thermodynamic analyses show that despite the fact that CAP-S62F-cAMP(2) adopts the inactive conformation, its strong binding to DNA is driven by a large conformational entropy originating in enhanced protein motions induced by DNA binding. The results provide strong evidence that changes in protein motions may activate allosteric proteins that are otherwise structurally inactive.


Subject(s)
Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/metabolism , Energy Metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Cyclic AMP/chemistry , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein/chemistry , DNA/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Tertiary
18.
Nature ; 462(7271): 363-7, 2009 Nov 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19924216

ABSTRACT

Extra-cytoplasmic polypeptides are usually synthesized as 'preproteins' carrying amino-terminal, cleavable signal peptides and secreted across membranes by translocases. The main bacterial translocase comprises the SecYEG protein-conducting channel and the peripheral ATPase motor SecA. Most proteins destined for the periplasm and beyond are exported post-translationally by SecA. Preprotein targeting to SecA is thought to involve signal peptides and chaperones like SecB. Here we show that signal peptides have a new role beyond targeting: they are essential allosteric activators of the translocase. On docking on their binding groove on SecA, signal peptides act in trans to drive three successive states: first, 'triggering' that drives the translocase to a lower activation energy state; second, 'trapping' that engages non-native preprotein mature domains docked with high affinity on the secretion apparatus; and third, 'secretion' during which trapped mature domains undergo several turnovers of translocation in segments. A significant contribution by mature domains renders signal peptides less critical in bacterial secretory protein targeting than currently assumed. Rather, it is their function as allosteric activators of the translocase that renders signal peptides essential for protein secretion. A role for signal peptides and targeting sequences as allosteric activators may be universal in protein translocases.


Subject(s)
Enzyme Activators/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Protein Sorting Signals/physiology , Adenosine Triphosphatases/metabolism , Alkaline Phosphatase/metabolism , Periplasmic Proteins/metabolism , Protein Binding , Protein Transport
19.
Nat Chem Biol ; 8(6): 590-6, 2012 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22581121

ABSTRACT

CrkL is a key signaling protein that mediates the leukemogenic activity of Bcr-Abl. CrkL is thought to adopt a structure that is similar to that of its CrkII homolog. The two proteins share high sequence identity and indistinguishable ligand binding preferences, yet they have distinct physiological roles. Here we show that the structures of CrkL and phosphorylated CrkL are markedly different than the corresponding structures of CrkII. As a result, the binding activities of the Src homology 2 and Src homology 3 domains in the two proteins are regulated in a distinct manner and to a different extent. The different structural architecture of CrkL and CrkII may account for their distinct functional roles. The data show that CrkL forms a constitutive complex with Abl, thus explaining the strong preference of Bcr-Abl for CrkL. The results also highlight how the structural organization of the modular domains in adaptor proteins can control signaling outcome.


Subject(s)
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/chemistry , Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/chemistry , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-crk/chemistry , src Homology Domains , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/genetics , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/metabolism , Binding Sites , Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl/genetics , Humans , Models, Molecular , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-crk/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-crk/metabolism , Signal Transduction
20.
Curr Opin Struct Biol ; 88: 102890, 2024 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39043011

ABSTRACT

Protein kinases are dynamic enzymes that display complex regulatory mechanisms. Although they possess a structurally conserved catalytic domain, significant conformational dynamics are evident both within a single kinase and across different kinases in the kinome. Here, we highlight methods for exploring this conformational space and its dynamics using kinase domains from ABL1 (Abelson kinase), PKA (protein kinase A), AurA (Aurora A), and PYK2 (proline-rich tyrosine kinase 2) as examples. Such experimental approaches combined with AI-driven methods, such as AlphaFold, will yield discoveries about kinase regulation, the catalytic process, substrate specificity, the effect of disease-associated mutations, as well as new opportunities for structure-based drug design.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL