Title of article
How to Arm a Supervillin: Designing F-Actin Binding Activity into Supervillin Headpiece
Author/Authors
Jeffrey W. Brown، نويسنده , , Didem Vardar-Ulu، نويسنده , , Zhenghui Gordon Jiang and C. James McKnight، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
11
From page
608
To page
618
Abstract
Villin-type headpiece domains are compact motifs that have been used extensively as model systems for protein folding. Although the majority of headpiece domains bind actin, there are some that lack this activity. Here, we present the first NMR solution structure and 15N-relaxation analysis of a villin-type headpiece domain natively devoid of F-actin binding activity, that of supervillin headpiece (SVHP). The structure was found to be similar to that of other headpiece domains that bind F-actin. Our NMR analysis demonstrates that SVHP lacks a conformationally flexible region (V-loop) present in all other villin-type headpiece domains and which is essential to the phosphoryl regulation of dematin headpiece. In comparing the electrostatic surface potential map of SVHP to that of other villin-type headpiece domains with significant affinity for F-actin, we identified a positive surface potential conserved among headpiece domains that bind F-actin but absent from SVHP. A single point mutation (L38K) in SVHP, which creates a similar positive surface potential, endowed SVHP with specific affinity for F-actin that is within an order of magnitude of the tightest binding headpiece domains. We propose that this effect is likely conferred by a specific buried salt bridge between headpiece and actin. As no high-resolution structural information exists for the villin-type headpiece F-actin complex, our results demonstrate that through positive mutagenesis, it is possible to design binding activity into homologous proteins without structural information of the counterpartʹs binding surface.
Keywords
electrostatic surface potential , supervillin , villin-type headpiece domain , protein design , NMR structure and relaxation
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
1250600
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