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PDBsum entry 2kdl
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Human serum albumin binding protein
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PDB id
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2kdl
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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DOI no:
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
106:21149-21154
(2009)
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PubMed id:
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A minimal sequence code for switching protein structure and function.
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P.A.Alexander,
Y.He,
Y.Chen,
J.Orban,
P.N.Bryan.
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ABSTRACT
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We present here a structural and mechanistic description of how a protein
changes its fold and function, mutation by mutation. Our approach was to create
2 proteins that (i) are stably folded into 2 different folds, (ii) have 2
different functions, and (iii) are very similar in sequence. In this simplified
sequence space we explore the mutational path from one fold to another. We show
that an IgG-binding, 4beta+alpha fold can be transformed into an
albumin-binding, 3-alpha fold via a mutational pathway in which neither function
nor native structure is completely lost. The stabilities of all mutants along
the pathway are evaluated, key high-resolution structures are determined by NMR,
and an explanation of the switching mechanism is provided. We show that the
conformational switch from 4beta+alpha to 3-alpha structure can occur via a
single amino acid substitution. On one side of the switch point, the 4beta+alpha
fold is >90% populated (pH 7.2, 20 degrees C). A single mutation switches the
conformation to the 3-alpha fold, which is >90% populated (pH 7.2, 20 degrees
C). We further show that a bifunctional protein exists at the switch point with
affinity for both IgG and albumin.
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Selected figure(s)
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Figure 4.
Cartoon depiction of backbone topology of G[A]95 and G[B]95.
Residues 1–8 are blue, 9–23 are green, 24–37 are red,
38–52 are yellow, and 53–56 are cyan.
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Figure 6.
Switching mechanism. Alternative conformations of the
N-terminal (orange) and C-terminal (blue) amino acids in the
3-α and 4β+α folds. The critical switch amino acid occurs at
position 45 (red). Also depicted are the hydrophobic packing of
the N- and C-terminal amino acids in the core of the 4β+α fold.
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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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M.V.Golynskiy,
M.S.Koay,
J.L.Vinkenborg,
and
M.Merkx
(2011).
Engineering protein switches: sensors, regulators, and spare parts for biology and biotechnology.
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Chembiochem,
12,
353-361.
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Y.Li,
Z.Wen,
J.Xiao,
H.Yin,
L.Yu,
L.Yang,
and
M.Li
(2011).
Predicting disease-associated substitution of a single amino acid by analyzing residue interactions.
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BMC Bioinformatics,
12,
14.
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I.Yadid,
N.Kirshenbaum,
M.Sharon,
O.Dym,
and
D.S.Tawfik
(2010).
Metamorphic proteins mediate evolutionary transitions of structure.
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
107,
7287-7292.
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PDB codes:
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J.O.Wrabl,
and
V.J.Hilser
(2010).
Investigating homology between proteins using energetic profiles.
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PLoS Comput Biol,
6,
e1000722.
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K.M.Saravanan,
H.Balasubramanian,
S.Nallusamy,
and
S.Samuel
(2010).
Sequence and structural analysis of two designed proteins with 88% identity adopting different folds.
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Protein Eng Des Sel,
23,
911-918.
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P.N.Bryan,
and
J.Orban
(2010).
Proteins that switch folds.
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Curr Opin Struct Biol,
20,
482-488.
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Y.Shen,
P.N.Bryan,
Y.He,
J.Orban,
D.Baker,
and
A.Bax
(2010).
De novo structure generation using chemical shifts for proteins with high-sequence identity but different folds.
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Protein Sci,
19,
349-356.
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D.Shortle
(2009).
One sequence plus one mutation equals two folds.
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
106,
21011-21012.
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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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