![]() |
||
| IMB Home > XRF Home | Soma's Home > Solved Structures > Twigg 2001 > | ||
|
«Previous | Next»
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 Sep 25;98(20):11259-64.[DOI Link]Disordered to ordered folding in the regulation of diphtheria toxin repressor activity.Twigg PD, Parthasarathy G, Guerrero L, Logan TM, Caspar DL.Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA. Understanding how metal binding regulates the activity of the diphtheria toxin
repressor protein (DtxR) requires information about the structure in solution.
We have prepared a DtxR mutant construct with three additional N-terminal
residues, Gly-Ser-His-DtxR(Cys-102 --> Asp), that retains metal-binding
capabilities, but remains monomeric in solution and does not bind DNA under
conditions that effect dimerization and DNA binding in the functional
DtxR(Cys-102 --> Asp) construct. Although the interaction properties of this
inactive mutant in solution are very different from that of active repressors,
crystallization imposes the same dimeric structure as observed in all crystal
forms of the active repressor with and without bound metal. Our solution NMR
analyses of active and inactive metal-free diphtheria toxin repressors
demonstrate that whereas the C-terminal one-third of the protein is well
ordered, the N-terminal two-thirds exhibits conformational flexibility and
exists as an ensemble of structural substates with undefined tertiary structure.
Fluorescence binding assays with 1-anilino naphthalene-8-sulfonic acid (ANS)
confirm that the highly alpha-helical N-terminal two-thirds of the apoprotein is
molten globule-like in solution. Binding of divalent metal cations induces a
substantial conformational reorganization to a more ordered state, as evidenced
by changes in the NMR spectra and ANS binding. The evident disorder to order
transition upon binding of metal in solution is in contrast to the minor
conformational changes seen comparing apo- and holo-DtxR crystal structures.
Disordered to ordered folding appears to be a general mechanism for regulating
specific recognition in protein action and this mechanism provides a plausible
explanation for how metal binding controls the DtxR repressor activity.
PMID: 11572979 [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. |
||||||||||
![]() |
|||
|
www.sb.fsu.edu/~xray/Pubs/01twigg.html
|
|||