4 research outputs found

    J Mol Biol.

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    Viral scaffolding proteins direct polymerization of major capsid protein subunits into icosahedral procapsid structures. The scaffolding protein of bacteriophage SPP1 was engineered with a C-terminal hexahistidine tag (gp11-His6) and purified. The protein is an α-helical-rich molecule with a very elongated shape as found for internal scaffolding proteins from other phages. It is a 3.3 S tetramer of 93.6 kDa at micromolar concentrations. Intersubunit cross-linking of these tetramers generated preferentially covalently bound dimers, revealing that gp11-His6 is structurally a dimer of dimers. Incubation at temperatures above 37 °C correlated with a reduction of its α-helical content and a less effective intersubunit cross-linking. Complete loss of secondary structure was observed at temperatures above 60 °C. Refolding of gp11-His6 thermally denatured at 65 °C led to reacquisition of the protein native ellipticity spectrum but the resulting population of molecules was heterogeneous. Its hydrodynamic behavior was compatible with a mix of 3.3 S elongated tetramers (not, vert, similar 90%) and a smaller fraction of 2.4 S dimers (not, vert, similar 10%). This population of gp11-His6 was competent to direct polymerization of the SPP1 major capsid protein gp13 into procapsid-like structures in a newly developed assembly assay in vitro. Although native tetramers were active in assembly, refolded gp11-His6 showed enhanced binding to gp13 revealing a more active species for interaction with the major capsid protein than native gp11-His6

    Structural basis for ARF1-mediated recruitment of ARHGAP21 to Golgi membranes

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    ARHGAP21 is a Rho family GTPase-activating protein (RhoGAP) that controls the Arp2/3 complex and F-actin dynamics at the Golgi complex by regulating the activity of the small GTPase Cdc42. ARHGAP21 is recruited to the Golgi by binding to another small GTPase, ARF1. Here, we present the crystal structure of the activated GTP-bound form of ARF1 in a complex with the Arf-binding domain (ArfBD) of ARHGAP21 at 2.1 Å resolution. We show that ArfBD comprises a PH domain adjoining a C-terminal α helix, and that ARF1 interacts with both of these structural motifs through its switch regions and triggers structural rearrangement of the PH domain. We used site-directed mutagenesis to confirm that both the PH domain and the helical motif are essential for the binding of ArfBD to ARF1 and for its recruitment to the Golgi. Our data demonstrate that two well-known small GTPase-binding motifs, the PH domain and the α helical motif, can combine to create a novel mode of binding to Arfs
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