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Protein Sci. 2001 Dec;10(12):2587-99.[DOI Link]Structure and stability effects of mutations designed to increase the primary sequence symmetry within the core region of a beta-trefoil.Brych SR, Blaber SI, Logan TM, Blaber M.Institute of Molecular Biophysics and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Florida State University, Tallahassee Florida 32306-4380, USA. Human acidic fibroblast growth factor (FGF-1) is a member of the beta-trefoil
hyperfamily and exhibits a characteristic threefold symmetry of the tertiary
structure. However, evidence of this symmetry is not readily apparent at the
level of the primary sequence. This suggests that while selective pressures may
exist to retain (or converge upon) a symmetric tertiary structure, other
selective pressures have resulted in divergence of the primary sequence during
evolution. Using intra-chain and homologue sequence comparisons for 19 members
of this family of proteins, we have designed mutants of FGF-1 that constrain a
subset of core-packing residues to threefold symmetry at the level of the
primary sequence. The consequences of these mutations regarding structure and
stability were evaluated using a combination of X-ray crystallography and
differential scanning calorimetry. The mutational effects on structure and
stability can be rationalized through the characterization of "microcavities"
within the core detected using a 1.0A probe radius. The results show that the
symmetric constraint within the primary sequence is compatible with a
well-packed core and near wild-type stability. However, despite the general
maintenance of overall thermal stability, a noticeable increase in non-two-state
denaturation follows the increase in primary sequence symmetry. Therefore,
properties of folding, rather than stability, may contribute to the selective
pressure for asymmetric primary core sequences within symmetric protein
architectures.
PMID: 11714927 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] This publication is one of the several that describes a structure solved either at the Kasha Laboratory, Institute of Molecular Biophysics or in collaboration with the Institute Faculty. The data used for this structure determination came in full or part from the Macromolecular X-Ray Crystallography Facility. |
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www.sb.fsu.edu/~xray/Pubs/01brych.html
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