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Biochemistry ; 63(17): 2183-2195, 2024 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39138154

ABSTRACT

The Enabled/VASP homology 1 (EVH1) domain is a small module that interacts with proline-rich stretches in its ligands and is found in various signaling and scaffolding proteins. Mena, the mammalian homologue of Ena, is involved in diverse actin-associated events, such as membrane dynamics, bacterial motility, and tumor intravasation and extravasation. Two-dimensional (2D) 1H-15N HSQC NMR was used to study Mena EVH1 binding properties, defining the amino acids involved in ligand recognition for the physiological ligands ActA and PCARE, and a synthetic polyproline-inspired small molecule (hereafter inhibitor 6c). Chemical shift perturbations indicated that proline-rich segments bind in the conserved EVH1 hydrophobic cleft. The PCARE-derived peptide elicited more perturbations compared to the ActA-derived peptide, consistent with a previous report of a structural alteration in the solvent-exposed ß7-ß8 loop. Unexpectedly, EVH1 and the proline-rich segment of PTP1B did not exhibit NMR chemical shift perturbations; however, the high-resolution crystal structure implicated the conserved EVH1 hydrophobic cleft in ligand recognition. Intrinsic steady-state fluorescence and fluorescence polarization assays indicate that residues outside the proline-rich segment enhance the ligand affinity for EVH1 (Kd = 3-8 µM). Inhibitor 6c displayed tighter binding (Kd ∼ 0.3 µM) and occupies the same EVH1 cleft as physiological ligands. These studies revealed that the EVH1 domain enhances ligand affinity through recognition of residues flanking the proline-rich segments. Additionally, a synthetic inhibitor binds more tightly to the EVH1 domain than natural ligands, occupying the same hydrophobic cleft.


Subject(s)
Protein Binding , Humans , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Domains , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/metabolism , Proline/metabolism , Proline/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Crystallography, X-Ray , Microfilament Proteins/chemistry , Microfilament Proteins/metabolism
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