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PDBsum entry 2fh2
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Contractile protein
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PDB id
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2fh2
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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PDB id:
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Contractile protein
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Title:
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C-terminal half of gelsolin soaked in egta at ph 4.5
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Structure:
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Gelsolin. Chain: a, b, c. Fragment: c-terminal half domain. Synonym: actin-depolymerizing factor, adf, brevin, agel. Engineered: yes
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Source:
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Homo sapiens. Human. Organism_taxid: 9606. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 562.
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Resolution:
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2.50Å
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R-factor:
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0.206
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R-free:
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0.255
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Authors:
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S.Chumnarnsilpa,A.Loonchanta,B.Xue,H.Choe,D.Urosev,H.Wang, L.D.Burtnick,R.C.Robinson
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Key ref:
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S.Chumnarnsilpa
et al.
(2006).
Calcium ion exchange in crystalline gelsolin.
J Mol Biol,
357,
773-782.
PubMed id:
DOI:
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Date:
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23-Dec-05
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Release date:
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13-Jun-06
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PROCHECK
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Headers
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References
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P06396
(GELS_HUMAN) -
Gelsolin from Homo sapiens
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Seq: Struc:
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782 a.a.
321 a.a.
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Key: |
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PfamA domain |
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Secondary structure |
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CATH domain |
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DOI no:
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J Mol Biol
357:773-782
(2006)
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PubMed id:
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Calcium ion exchange in crystalline gelsolin.
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S.Chumnarnsilpa,
A.Loonchanta,
B.Xue,
H.Choe,
D.Urosev,
H.Wang,
U.Lindberg,
L.D.Burtnick,
R.C.Robinson.
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ABSTRACT
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Gelsolin is a calcium and pH-sensitive modulator of actin filament length. Here,
we use X-ray crystallography to examine the extraction and exchange of calcium
ions from their binding sites in different crystalline forms of the activated N
and C-terminal halves of gelsolin, G1-G3 and G4-G6, respectively. We demonstrate
that the combination of calcium and low pH activating conditions do not induce
conformational changes in G4-G6 beyond those elicited by calcium alone. EGTA is
able to remove calcium ions bound to the type I and type II metal ion-binding
sites in G4-G6. Constrained by crystal contacts and stabilized by interdomain
interaction surfaces, the gross structure of calcium-depleted G4-G6 remains that
of the activated form. However, high-resolution details of changes in the
ion-binding sites may represent the initial steps toward restoration of the
arrangement of domains found in the calcium-free inactive form of gelsolin in
solution. Furthermore, bathing crystals with the trivalent calcium ion mimic,
Tb(3+), results in anomalous scattering data that permit unequivocal
localization of terbium ions in each of the proposed type I and type II
ion-binding sites of both halves of gelsolin. In contrast to predictions based
on solution studies, we find that no calcium ion is immune to exchange.
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Selected figure(s)
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Figure 6.
Figure 6. The structure of G4-G6 at pH 4.5. (a) A stereo
cartoon representation of the high-resolution structure of G4-G6
subjected to the initial wash conditions at pH 4.5. The domains
are coloured: G4, pink; G5, green; and G6, orange. The terbium
anomalous electron density map, contoured at 5 s (cyan), is
superimposed onto the structure. Three terbium ion positions,
characterized by the positive density in this map, are identical
with the positions of type II calcium ions in this
high-resolution structure and are labeled G4:II, G5:II and
G6:II. The fourth terbium ion (G4:I) is in a position where
calcium is not found in the high-resolution structure, but is
found in the G4-G6:actin structure.15 (b) A cartoon
representation of G4-G6 taken from the calcium-free form of
gelsolin (PDB i.d. 1D0N),6 for purposes of comparison. In this
state, the core b-sheet of G4 (pink) abuts that of G6 (orange),
constituting the G4-G6 latch.15
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Figure 7.
Figure 7. Terbium ion substitution in G1-G3. (a) A cartoon
representation of the structure of G1-G3/actin (PDB i.d. 1RGI).
Actin is coloured blue and the domains of gelsolin are coloured:
G1, red; G2, light green; and G3, yellow. The P3[1]21 terbium
anomalous difference electron density map, contoured at 5 s
(black) and derived from terbium-soaked crystals of G1-G3/actin,
is superimposed onto the structure. Three terbium ion positions,
characterized by the positive density in this map, are identical
with the positions of type II metal ion-binding sites in the
G1-G3/actin structure and are labeled G1:II, G2:II and G3:II. A
fourth terbium ion (G1:I) is in a position where a type I
calcium ion is found in the structure.5 An actin-ATP-associated
Tb^3+ (labelled A) also is indicated. (b) A cartoon
representation of the structure of G1-G3/actin, with a P6[5]22
Tb^3+ anomalous electron density map superimposed, as in (a). In
this case, the terbium ion-soaked crystals were backwashed with
mother liquor containing 10 mM CaCl[2] and 0.2 mM Tb(NO[3])[3].
Tb^3+ was replaced only at the type II sites in G1 and G3. The
type II site in G2, which was unoccupied in the structure of
G1-G3/actin, and the type I site sandwiched between actin and G1
remained occupied by terbium ions.
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The above figures are
reprinted
by permission from Elsevier:
J Mol Biol
(2006,
357,
773-782)
copyright 2006.
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Figures were
selected
by the author.
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Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference
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PubMed id
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Reference
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S.Nag,
Q.Ma,
H.Wang,
S.Chumnarnsilpa,
W.L.Lee,
M.Larsson,
B.Kannan,
M.Hernandez-Valladares,
L.D.Burtnick,
and
R.C.Robinson
(2009).
Ca2+ binding by domain 2 plays a critical role in the activation and stabilization of gelsolin.
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
106,
13713-13718.
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PDB codes:
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Ashish,
M.S.Paine,
P.B.Perryman,
L.Yang,
H.L.Yin,
and
J.K.Krueger
(2007).
Global structure changes associated with Ca2+ activation of full-length human plasma gelsolin.
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J Biol Chem,
282,
25884-25892.
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The most recent references are shown first.
Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly
from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be
only a partial list as not all journals are covered by
either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data
so more and more references will be included with time.
Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB
codes are
shown on the right.
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}
}
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