• Title of article

    Antifreeze Protein from Freeze-Tolerant Grass Has a Beta-Roll Fold with an Irregularly Structured Ice-Binding Site

  • Author/Authors

    Adam J. Middleton، نويسنده , , Christopher B. Marshall، نويسنده , , Frédérick Faucher، نويسنده , , Maya Bar-Dolev، نويسنده , , Ido Braslavsky، نويسنده , , Robert L. Campbell، نويسنده , , Virginia K. Walker، نويسنده , , Peter L. Davies and Zongchao Jia، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    713
  • To page
    724
  • Abstract
    The grass Lolium perenne produces an ice-binding protein (LpIBP) that helps this perennial tolerate freezing by inhibiting the recrystallization of ice. Ice-binding proteins (IBPs) are also produced by freeze-avoiding organisms to halt the growth of ice and are better known as antifreeze proteins (AFPs). To examine the structural basis for the different roles of these two IBP types, we have solved the first crystal structure of a plant IBP. The 118-residue LpIBP folds as a novel left-handed beta-roll with eight 14- or 15-residue coils and is stabilized by a small hydrophobic core and two internal Asn ladders. The ice-binding site (IBS) is formed by a flat beta-sheet on one surface of the beta-roll. We show that LpIBP binds to both the basal and primary-prism planes of ice, which is the hallmark of hyperactive AFPs. However, the antifreeze activity of LpIBP is less than 10% of that measured for those hyperactive AFPs with convergently evolved beta-solenoid structures. Whereas these hyperactive AFPs have two rows of aligned Thr residues on their IBS, the equivalent arrays in LpIBP are populated by a mixture of Thr, Ser and Val with several side-chain conformations. Substitution of Ser or Val for Thr on the IBS of a hyperactive AFP reduced its antifreeze activity. LpIBP may have evolved an IBS that has low antifreeze activity to avoid damage from rapid ice growth that occurs when temperatures exceed the capacity of AFPs to block ice growth while retaining the ability to inhibit ice recrystallization.
  • Keywords
    ice recrystallization inhibition , X-ray crystallography , beta-helix , water , thermolabile
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1254387