45 research outputs found
RegTransBase—a database of regulatory sequences and interactions in a wide range of prokaryotic genomes
RegTransBase is a manually curated database of regulatory interactions in prokaryotes that captures the knowledge in public scientific literature using a controlled vocabulary. Although several databases describing interactions between regulatory proteins and their binding sites are already being maintained, they either focus mostly on the model organisms Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis or are entirely computationally derived. RegTransBase describes a large number of regulatory interactions reported in many organisms and contains the following types of experimental data: the activation or repression of transcription by an identified direct regulator, determining the transcriptional regulatory function of a protein (or RNA) directly binding to DNA (RNA), mapping or prediction of a binding site for a regulatory protein and characterization of regulatory mutations. Currently, RegTransBase content is derived from about 3000 relevant articles describing over 7000 experiments in relation to 128 microbes. It contains data on the regulation of about 7500 genes and evidence for 6500 interactions with 650 regulators. RegTransBase also contains manually created position weight matrices (PWM) that can be used to identify candidate regulatory sites in over 60 species. RegTransBase is available at
Mouse S100G Protein Exhibits Properties Characteristic of a Calcium Sensor
Bovine S100 G (calbindin D9k, small Ca2+-binding protein of the EF-hand superfamily) is considered as a calcium buffer protein; i.e., the binding of Ca2+ practically does not change its general conformation. A set of experimental approaches has been used to study structural properties of apo- and Ca2+-loaded forms of mouse S100 G (81.4% identity in amino acid sequence with bovine S100 G). This analysis revealed that, in contrast to bovine S100 G, the removal of calcium ions increases α-helices content of mouse S100 G protein and enhances its accessibility to digestion by α-chymotrypsin. Furthermore, mouse apo-S100 G is characterized by a decreased surface hydrophobicity and reduced tendency for oligomerization. Such behavior is typical of calcium sensor proteins. Apo-state of mouse S100 G still has rather compact structure, which can be cooperatively unfolded by temperature and GdnHCl. Computational analysis of amino acid sequences of S100 G proteins shows that these proteins could be in a disordered state upon a removal of the bound calcium ions. The experimental data show that, although mouse apo-S100 G is flexible compared to the Ca2+-loaded state, the apo-form is not completely disordered and preserves some cooperatively meting structure. The origin of the unexpectedly high stability of mouse S100 G can be rationalized by an exceptionally strong association of its N- and C-terminal parts containing the EF-hands I and II, respectively
Analyzing the Structural and Functional Roles of Residues from the ‘black’ and ‘gray’ Clusters of Human S100P Protein
Two highly conserved structural motifs observed in members of the EF-hand family of calcium binding proteins. The motifs provide a supporting scaffold for the Ca2+ binding loops and contribute to the hydrophobic core of the EF-hand domain. Each structural motif represents a cluster of three amino acids called cluster I (‘black’ cluster) and cluster II (‘grey’ cluster). Cluster I is more conserved and mostly incorporates aromatic amino acids. In contrast, cluster II is noticeably less conserved and includes a mix of aromatic, hydrophobic, and polar amino acids of different sizes. In the human calcium binding S100 P protein, these ‘black’ and ‘gray’ clusters include residues F15, F71, and F74 and L33, L58, and K30, respectively. To evaluate the effects of these clusters on structure and functionality of human S100 P, we have performed Ala scanning. The resulting mutants were studied by a multiparametric approach that included circular dichroism, scanning calorimetry, dynamic light scattering, chemical crosslinking, and fluorescent probes. Spectrofluorimetric Ca2+-titration of wild type S100 P showed that S100 P dimer has 1–2 strong calcium binding sites (K1 = 4 × 106 M−1) and two cooperative low affinity (K2 = 4 × 104 M−1) binding sites. Similarly, the S100 P mutants possess two types of calcium binding sites. This analysis revealed that the alanine substitutions in the clusters I and II caused comparable changes in the S100 P functional properties. However, analysis of heat- or GuHCl-induced unfolding of these proteins showed that the alanine substitutions in the cluster I caused notably more pronounced decrease in the protein stability compared to the changes caused by alanine substitutions in the cluster II. Opposite to literature data, the F15 A substitution did not cause the S100 P dimer dissociation, indicating that F15 is not crucial for dimer stability. Overall, similar to parvalbumins, the S100 P cluster I is more important for protein conformational stability than the cluster II
Effects of His-tags on Physical Properties of Parvalbumins
A comparative study of His-tagged and non-tagged rat β-parvalbumin (rWT β-PA), calcium binding protein with the EF-hand calcium binding domains, has been carried out. The attachment of His-tag increases α-helical content and decreases β-sheets and β-turns content of the metal free form (apo-state) of β-PA. In contrast to this, the attachment of His-tag decreases α-helical content by more than 10% and increases contents of β-sheets and β-turns of the Ca2+-loaded state. According to the dynamic light scattering analysis, apo-state of His-tagged rat β-PA seems to be less compact compared with the apo-state of non-tagged rat β-PA. Surprisingly, the attachment of His-tag practically does not change mean hydrodynamic radius of Ca2+-loaded rat β-PA. The attachment of His-tag shifts thermal denaturation peaks of both apo- and Ca2+-loaded states of rat β-PA towards higher temperatures by 3–4 °C and slightly decreases its Ca2+ affinity. These results should be taken into consideration in the use of His-tagged parvalbumins
In Search for Globally Disordered Apo-parvalbumins: Case of Parvalbumin Î’-1 from Coho Salmon
Parvalbumin (PA) is a classical EF-hand calcium-binding protein of muscle, neuronal, and other tissues, and a major fish allergen. Although certain apo-PAs lack tertiary structure, functional implications of that feature and its structural prerequisites remain unclear. In a search for unstable PAs, we probed conformational stability of parvalbumin β-1 from coho salmon (csPA), a cold water fish species, using circular dichroism, scanning calorimetry, hydrophobic probe fluorescence, limited proteolysis, chemical crosslinking and dynamic light scattering techniques. Apo-csPA is shown to be mainly monomeric protein with markedly disorganized secondary structure and lack of rigid tertiary structure. Examination of per-residue propensity for intrinsic disorder in the PA groups with either folded or unfolded apo-form using the average PONDR® VSL2P profiles revealed that the N-terminal region that includes α-helix A, AB-loop and N-terminal half of α-helix B is predicted to be less ordered in PAs with disordered apo-state. Application of the structural criteria developed for discrimination of disordered PAs indicate that the latter comprise about 16–19% of all PAs. We show that structural instability of apo-β-PA serves as a hallmark of elevated calcium affinity of the protein. Therefore, the successful predictions of unstable apo-PAs might facilitate search for PAs with maximal calcium affinity and possibly serving as calcium sensors
Derivative of Extremophilic 50S Ribosomal Protein L35Ae as an Alternative Protein Scaffold
<div><p>Small antibody mimetics, or alternative binding proteins (ABPs), extend and complement antibody functionality with numerous applications in research, diagnostics and therapeutics. Given the superiority of ABPs, the last two decades have witnessed development of dozens of alternative protein scaffolds (APSs) for the design of ABPs. Proteins from extremophiles with their high structural stability are especially favorable for APS design. Here, a 10X mutant of the 50S ribosomal protein L35Ae from hyperthermophilic archaea <i>Pyrococcus horikoshii</i> has been probed as an APS. A phage display library of L35Ae 10X was generated by randomization of its three CDR-like loop regions (repertoire size of 2×10<sup>8</sup>). Two L35Ae 10X variants specific to a model target, the hen egg-white lysozyme (HEL), were isolated from the resulting library using phage display. The affinity of these variants (L4 and L7) to HEL ranges from 0.10 μM to 1.6 μM, according to surface plasmon resonance data. While L4 has 1–2 orders of magnitude lower affinity to HEL homologue, bovine α-lactalbumin (BLA), L7 is equally specific to HEL and BLA. The reference L35Ae 10X is non-specific to both HEL and BLA. L4 and L7 are more resistant to denaturation by guanidine hydrochloride compared to the reference L35Ae 10X (mid-transition concentration is higher by 0.1–0.5 M). Chemical crosslinking experiments reveal an increased propensity of L4 and L7 to multimerization. Overall, the CDR-like loop regions of L35Ae 10X represent a proper interface for generation of functional ABPs. Hence, L35Ae is shown to extend the growing family of protein scaffolds dedicated to the design of novel binding proteins.</p></div
Serotonin Promotes Serum Albumin Interaction with the Monomeric Amyloid β Peptide
Prevention of amyloid β peptide (Aβ) deposition via facilitation of Aβ binding to its natural depot, human serum albumin (HSA), is a promising approach to preclude Alzheimer’s disease (AD) onset and progression. Previously, we demonstrated the ability of natural HSA ligands, fatty acids, to improve the affinity of this protein to monomeric Aβ by a factor of 3 (BBRC, 510(2), 248–253). Using plasmon resonance spectroscopy, we show here that another HSA ligand related to AD pathogenesis, serotonin (SRO), increases the affinity of the Aβ monomer to HSA by a factor of 7/17 for Aβ40/Aβ42, respectively. Meanwhile, the structurally homologous SRO precursor, tryptophan (TRP), does not affect HSA’s affinity to monomeric Aβ, despite slowdown of the association and dissociation processes. Crosslinking with glutaraldehyde and dynamic light scattering experiments reveal that, compared with the TRP-induced effects, SRO binding causes more marked changes in the quaternary structure of HSA. Furthermore, molecular docking reveals distinct structural differences between SRO/TRP complexes with HSA. The disintegration of the serotonergic system during AD pathogenesis may contribute to Aβ release from HSA in the central nervous system due to impairment of the SRO-mediated Aβ trapping by HSA
Comparison of protein combinatorial libraries based on proteins originating from extremophiles, including Sac7d, Sso7d and L35Ae 10X.
<p>Comparison of protein combinatorial libraries based on proteins originating from extremophiles, including Sac7d, Sso7d and L35Ae 10X.</p
Amino acid sequences for the recombinant forms of L35Ae from <i>P</i>. <i>horikoshii</i> used in this study.
<p>Secondary structure elements of L35Ae from <i>P</i>. <i>furiosus</i> are indicated (refer to PDB entry 2lp6 [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0170349#pone.0170349.ref034" target="_blank">34</a>]): β-sheets 1–6, CDR-like loops 1–3, α-helix (green). The residues affected by randomization are shown in color. <b>(A)</b> The amino acid sequences of rWT L35Ae and its 10X mutant [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0170349#pone.0170349.ref030" target="_blank">30</a>]. The residues differing between 10X and rWT L35Ae are indicated using bold font. Two 10X variants were used in the phage display library, which contain a loop 2 of original length <b>(a)</b> or elongated by three residues <b>(b</b>). <b>(B)</b> The amino acid sequences of L35Ae 10X with C-terminal GLE sequence replaced by myc tag (‘10X-myc’) and those for HEL-specific binders L4 and L7, isolated from the phage display library of L35Ae 10X. The regions subjected to randomization are indicated in pink.</p