info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Uncoupling the Folding and Binding of an Intrinsically Disordered Protein
Fecha
2018-08Registro en:
Poosapati, Anusha; Gregory, Emily; Borcherds, Wade M.; Chemes, Lucia Beatriz; Daughdrill, Gary W.; Uncoupling the Folding and Binding of an Intrinsically Disordered Protein; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Journal Of Molecular Biology; 430; 16; 8-2018; 2389-2402
0022-2836
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Poosapati, Anusha
Gregory, Emily
Borcherds, Wade M.
Chemes, Lucia Beatriz
Daughdrill, Gary W.
Resumen
The relationship between helical stability and binding affinity was examined for the intrinsically disordered transactivation domain of the myeloblastosis oncoprotein, c-Myb, and its ordered binding partner, KIX. A series of c-Myb mutants was designed to either increase or decrease helical stability without changing the binding interface with KIX. This included a complimentary series of A, G, P, and V mutants at three non-interacting sites. We were able to use the glycine mutants as a reference state and show a strong correlation between binding affinity and helical stability. The intrinsic helicity of c-Myb is 21%, and helicity values of the mutants ranged from 8% to 28%. The c-Myb helix is divided into two conformationally distinct segments. The N-terminal segment, from K291–L301, has an average helicity greater than 60% and the C-terminal segment, from S304–L315, has an average helicity less than 10%. We observed different effects on binding when these two segments were mutated. Mutants in the N-terminal segment that increased helicity had no effect on the binding affinity to KIX, while helix destabilizing glycine and proline mutants reduced binding affinity by more than 1 kcal/mol. Mutants that either increased or decreased helical stability in the C-terminal segment had almost no effect on binding. However, several of the mutants reveal the presence of multiple conformations accessible in the bound state based on changes in enthalpy and linkage analysis of binding free energies. These results may explain the high level of sequence identity (> 90%), even at non-interacting sites, for c-Myb homologues.