Journal Issue - Volume 18 Issue 6 (June 2009)
In This Issue
- Published in Wiley Interscience on May 26, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.160 (p NA)
No abstract.
Racemic crystallography - Easy crystals and easy structures: What's not to like?
- Brian W. Matthews
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 07, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.125 (p 1135-1138)
Biophysical studies support a predicted superhelical structure with armadillo repeats for Ric-8
- Maximiliano Figueroa, María Victoria Hinrichs, Marta Bunster, Patricia Babbitt, José Martinez-Oyanedel, Juan Olate
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 07, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.124 (p 1139-1145)
Ric-8 is a highly conserved cytosolic protein (MW 63 KDa) initially identified in C. elegans as an essential factor in neurotransmitter release and asymmetric cell division. Two different isoforms have been described in mammals, Ric-8A and Ric-8B; each possess guanine nucleotide exchange activity (GEF) on heterotrimeric G-proteins, but with different G subunits specificities. To gain insight on the mechanisms involved in Ric-8 cellular functions it is essential to obtain some information about...
Racemic crystallography of synthetic protein enantiomers used to determine the X-ray structure of plectasin by direct methods
- Kalyaneswar Mandal, Brad L. Pentelute, Valentina Tereshko, Vilasak Thammavongsa, Olaf Schneewind, Anthony A. Kossiakoff, Stephen B. H. Kent
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 07, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.127 (p 1146-1154)
We describe the use of racemic crystallography to determine the X-ray structure of the natural product plectasin, a potent antimicrobial protein recently isolated from fungus. The protein enantiomers L-plectasin and D-plectasin were prepared by total chemical synthesis; interestingly, L-plectasin showed the expected antimicrobial activity, while D-plectasin was devoid of such activity. The mirror image proteins were then used for racemic crystallization. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction data were...
Compressing the free energy range of substructure stabilities in iso-1-cytochrome c
- Michael G. Duncan, Michael D. Williams, Bruce E. Bowler
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Mar 25, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.120 (p 1155-1164)
Evolutionary conservation of substructure architecture between yeast iso-1-cytochrome c and the well-characterized horse cytochrome c is studied with limited proteolysis, the alkaline conformational transition and global unfolding with guanidine-HCl. Mass spectral analysis of limited proteolysis cleavage products for iso-1-cytochrome c show that its least stable substructure is the same as horse cytochrome c. The limited proteolysis data yield a free energy of 3.8 ± 0.4 kcal mol-1 to unfold the...
The effect of the cosolvent trifluoroethanol on a tryptophan side chain orientation in the hydrophobic core of troponin C
- Olivier Julien, Pascal Mercier, Melissa L. Crane, Brian D. Sykes
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Mar 25, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.121 (p 1165-1174)
The unique biophysical properties of tryptophan residues have been exploited for decades to monitor protein structure and dynamics using a variety of spectroscopic techniques, such as fluorescence and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). We recently designed a tryptophan mutant in the regulatory N-domain of cardiac troponin C (F77W-cNTnC) to study the domain orientation of troponin C in muscle fibers using solid-state NMR. In our previous study, we determined the NMR structure of calcium-saturated...
The Brichos domain of prosurfactant protein C can hold and fold a transmembrane segment
- Hanna Johansson, Maria Eriksson, Kerstin Nordling, Jenny Presto, Jan Johansson
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Mar 30, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.123 (p 1175-1182)
Prosurfactant protein C (proSP-C) is a 197-residue integral membrane protein, in which the C-terminal domain (CTC, positions 59-197) is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen and contains a Brichos domain (positions 94-197). Mature SP-C corresponds largely to the transmembrane (TM) region of proSP-C. CTC binds to SP-C, provided that it is in nonhelical conformation, and can prevent formation of intracellular amyloid-like inclusions of proSP-C that harbor mutations linked to...
Thermally denatured state determines refolding in lipase: Mutational analysis
- Shoeb Ahmad, Nalam Madhusudhana Rao
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 06, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.126 (p 1183-1196)
Irreversibility of thermally denatured proteins due to aggregation limits thermodynamic characterization of proteins and also confounds the identification of thermostable mutants in protein populations. Identification of mutations that prevent the aggregation of unfolded proteins provides insights into folding pathways. In a lipase from Bacillus subtilis, evolved by directed evolution procedures, the irreversibility due to temperature-mediated aggregation was completely prevented by a single...
Structural and functional characterization of a putative polysaccharide deacetylase of the human parasite Encephalitozoon cuniculi
- Jonathan E. Urch, Ramon Hurtado-Guerrero, Damien Brosson, Zhanliang Liu, Vincent G. H. Eijsink, Catherine Texier, Daan M. F. van Aalten
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 14, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.128 (p 1197-1209)
The microsporidian Encephalitozoon cuniculi is an intracellular eukaryotic parasite considered to be an emerging opportunistic human pathogen. The infectious stage of this parasite is a unicellular spore that is surrounded by a chitin containing endospore layer and an external proteinaceous exospore. A putative chitin deacetylase (ECU11_0510) localizes to the interface between the plasma membrane and the endospore. Chitin deacetylases are family 4 carbohydrate esterases in the CAZY...
Listeriolysin O as cytotoxic component of an immunotoxin
- Sabine Bergelt, Stefan Frost, Hauke Lilie
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 07, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.130 (p 1210-1220)
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been developed over the past years as promising anticancer therapeutics. The conjugation of tumor specific mAbs with cytotoxic molecules has been shown to improve their efficacy dramatically. These bifunctional immunotoxins, consisting of covalently linked antibodies and protein toxins, possess considerable potential in cancer therapy. Many of them are under investigation in clinical trials. As a result of general interest in new toxic components, we describe...
Green fluorescence induced by EF-hand assembly in a split GFP system
- Stina Lindman, Ida Johansson, Eva Thulin, Sara Linse
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 07, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.131 (p 1221-1229)
The affinity between the 1-157 and 158-238 fragments of green fluorescent protein (GFP) is too low for spontaneous in vivo reassembly of the protein upon co-expression of the two fragments. This prevents chromophore maturation and the cells lack GFP fluorescence. We have utilized the very high affinity between the two EF-hands of calbindin D9k to facilitate GFP assembly from its fragments and to introduce a calcium dependent molecular switch. In GFPN-EF1, residues 1-157 of GFP are fused to...
Relating protein conformational changes to packing efficiency and disorder
- Nitin Bhardwaj, Mark Gerstein
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 16, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.132 (p 1230-1240)
Changes in protein conformation play key roles in facilitating various biochemical processes, ranging from signaling and phosphorylation to transport and catalysis. While various factors that drive these motions such as environmental changes and binding of small molecules are well understood, specific causative effects on the structural features of the protein due to these conformational changes have not been studied on a large scale. Here, we study protein conformational changes in relation to...
Self-association of streptococcus pyogenes collagen-like constructs into higher order structures
- Ayumi Yoshizumi, Zhuoxin Yu, Teresita Silva, Geetha Thiagarajan, John A. M. Ramshaw, Masayori Inouye, Barbara Brodsky
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 16, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.134 (p 1241-1251)
A number of bacterial collagen-like proteins with Gly as every third residue and a high Pro content have been observed to form stable triple-helical structures despite the absence of hydroxyproline (Hyp). Here, the high yield cold-shock expression system is used to obtain purified recombinant collagen-like protein (V-CL) from Streptococcus pyogenes containing an N-terminal globular domain V followed by the collagen triple-helix domain CL and the modified construct with two tandem collagen...
Rate and extent of protein localization is controlled by peptide-binding domain association kinetics and morphology
- Evan Mills, Kevin Truong
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 16, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.135 (p 1252-1260)
Protein localization is an important regulatory mechanism in many cell signaling pathways such as cytoskeletal organization and genetic regulation. The specific mechanism of protein localization determines the kinetics and morphological constraints of protein translocation, and thus affects the rate and extent of localization. To investigate the affect of localization kinetics and morphology on protein localization, we designed a protein localization system based on Ca2+-calmodulin and Src...
Design, generation, and testing of mammalian expression modules that tag membrane proteins
- John Pang, Xiaokun Zeng, Rui-ping Xiao, Edward G. Lakatta, Li Lin
- Published in Wiley Interscience on Apr 16, 2009
- DOI: 10.1002/pro.136 (p 1261-1271)
The expression of mammalian membrane proteins in laboratory cell lines allows their biological functions to be characterized and carefully dissected. However, it is often difficult to design and generate effective antibodies for membrane proteins in the desired studies. As a result, expressed membrane proteins cannot be detected or characterized via common biochemical approaches such as western blotting, immunoprecipitation, or immunohistochemical analysis, and their cellular behaviors cannot...



