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PDBsum entry 4zcb

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protein Protein-protein interface(s) links
Lipid binding protein PDB id
4zcb

 

 

 

 

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Contents
Protein chains
133 a.a.
Waters ×217
PDB id:
4zcb
Name: Lipid binding protein
Title: Human crbpii mutant - y60w dimer
Structure: Retinol-binding protein 2. Chain: a, b. Fragment: unp residues 2-134. Synonym: cellular retinol-binding protein ii,crbp-ii. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
Source: Homo sapiens. Human. Organism_taxid: 9606. Gene: rbp2, crbp2. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 511693.
Resolution:
1.70Å     R-factor:   0.185     R-free:   0.239
Authors: Z.Nossoni,Z.Assar,W.Wang,J.Geiger,B.Borhan
Key ref: Z.Assar et al. (2016). Domain-Swapped Dimers of Intracellular Lipid-Binding Proteins: Evidence for Ordered Folding Intermediates. Structure, 24, 1590-1598. PubMed id: 27524203
Date:
15-Apr-15     Release date:   20-Apr-16    
PROCHECK
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 Headers
 References

Protein chains
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
P50120  (RET2_HUMAN) -  Retinol-binding protein 2 from Homo sapiens
Seq:
Struc:
134 a.a.
133 a.a.*
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 1 residue position (black cross)

 Enzyme reactions 
   Enzyme class: E.C.?
[IntEnz]   [ExPASy]   [KEGG]   [BRENDA]

 

 
Structure 24:1590-1598 (2016)
PubMed id: 27524203  
 
 
Domain-Swapped Dimers of Intracellular Lipid-Binding Proteins: Evidence for Ordered Folding Intermediates.
Z.Assar, Z.Nossoni, W.Wang, E.M.Santos, K.Kramer, C.McCornack, C.Vasileiou, B.Borhan, J.H.Geiger.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
Human Cellular Retinol Binding Protein II (hCRBPII), a member of the intracellular lipid-binding protein family, is a monomeric protein responsible for the intracellular transport of retinol and retinal. Herein we report that hCRBPII forms an extensive domain-swapped dimer during bacterial expression. The domain-swapped region encompasses almost half of the protein. The dimer represents a novel structural architecture with the mouths of the two binding cavities facing each other, producing a new binding cavity that spans the length of the protein complex. Although wild-type hCRBPII forms the dimer, the propensity for dimerization can be substantially increased via mutation at Tyr60. The monomeric form of the wild-type protein represents the thermodynamically more stable species, making the domain-swapped dimer a kinetically trapped entity. Hypothetically, the wild-type protein has evolved to minimize dimerization of the folding intermediate through a critical hydrogen bond (Tyr60-Glu72) that disfavors the dimeric form.
 

 

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