10 research outputs found
Uncovering the Relationship between Sulphation Patterns and Conformation of Iduronic Acid in Heparan Sulphate
The L-iduronic acid (IdoA) residue is a critically important structural component in heparan sulphate polysaccharide for the biological functions. The pyranose ring of IdoA is present in 1C4-chair, 2SO-skew boat, and less frequently, in 4C1-chair conformations. Here, we analyzed the conformation of IdoA residue in eight hexasaccharides by NMR. The data demonstrate a correlation between the conformation of IdoA and sulphations in the surrounding saccharide residues. For the 2-O-sulpho IdoA residue, a high degree of sulphation on neighboring residues drives ring dynamics towards the 2SO-skew boat conformer. In contrast, the nonsulphated IdoA residue is pushed towards the 1C4-chair conformer when the neighboring residues are highly sulphated. Our data suggest that the conformation of IdoA is regulated by the sulphation pattern of nearby saccharides that is genetically controlled by the heparan sulphate biosynthetic pathway
Biophysical and Structural Characterization of Novel RAS-Binding Domains (RBDs) of PI3Kα and PI3Kγ
Phosphatidylinositol-3-kinases (PI3Ks) are lipid kinases that phosphorylate phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate to generate a key lipid second messenger, phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-bisphosphate. PI3Kα and PI3Kγ require activation by RAS proteins to stimulate signaling pathways that control cellular growth, differentiation, motility and survival. Intriguingly, RAS binding to PI3K isoforms likely differ, as RAS mutations have been identified that discriminate between PI3Kα and PI3Kγ, consistent with low sequence homology (23%) between their RAS binding domains (RBDs). As disruption of the RAS/PI3Kα interaction reduces tumor growth in mice with RAS- and epidermal growth factor receptor driven skin and lung cancers, compounds that interfere with this key interaction may prove useful as anti-cancer agents. However, a structure of PI3Kα bound to RAS is lacking, limiting drug discovery efforts. Expression of full-length PI3K isoforms in insect cells has resulted in low yield and variable activity, limiting biophysical and structural studies of RAS/PI3K interactions. This led us to generate the first RBDs from PI3Kα and PI3Kγ that can be expressed at high yield in bacteria and bind to RAS with similar affinity to full-length PI3K. We also solved a 2.31 Å X-ray crystal structure of the PI3Kα-RBD, which aligns well to full-length PI3Kα. Structural differences between the PI3Kα and PI3Kγ RBDs are consistent with differences in thermal stability and may underly differential RAS recognition and RAS-mediated PI3K activation. These high expression, functional PI3K RBDs will aid in interrogating RAS interactions and could aid in identifying inhibitors of this key interaction
Vina-Carb: Improving Glycosidic Angles during Carbohydrate Docking
Molecular
docking programs are primarily designed to align rigid,
drug-like fragments into the binding sites of macromolecules and frequently
display poor performance when applied to flexible carbohydrate molecules.
A critical source of flexibility within an oligosaccharide is the
glycosidic linkages. Recently, Carbohydrate Intrinsic (CHI) energy
functions were reported that attempt to quantify the glycosidic torsion
angle preferences. In the present work, the CHI-energy functions have
been incorporated into the AutoDock Vina (ADV) scoring function, subsequently
termed Vina-Carb (VC). Two user-adjustable parameters have been introduced,
namely, a CHI- energy weight term (<i>chi_coeff</i>) that
affects the magnitude of the CHI-energy penalty and a CHI-cutoff term
(<i>chi_cutoff</i>) that negates CHI-energy penalties below
a specified value. A data set consisting of 101 protein–carbohydrate
complexes and 29 apoprotein structures was used in the development
and testing of VC, including antibodies, lectins, and carbohydrate
binding modules. Accounting for the intramolecular energies of the
glycosidic linkages in the oligosaccharides during docking led VC
to produce acceptable structures within the top five ranked poses
in 74% of the systems tested, compared to a success rate of 55% for
ADV. An enzyme system was employed in order to illustrate the potential
application of VC to proteins that may distort glycosidic linkages
of carbohydrate ligands upon binding. VC represents a significant
step toward accurately predicting the structures of protein–carbohydrate
complexes. Furthermore, the described approach is conceptually applicable
to any class of ligands that populate well-defined conformational
states
A Traveling Wave Ion Mobility Spectrometry (TWIMS) Study of the Robo1-Heparan Sulfate Interaction
Roundabout 1 (Robo1) interacts with its receptor Slit to regulate axon guidance, axon branching, and dendritic development in the nervous system and to regulate morphogenesis and many cell functions in the nonneuronal tissues. This interaction is known to be critically regulated by heparan sulfate (HS). Previous studies suggest that HS is required to promote the binding of Robo1 to Slit to form the minimal signaling complex, but the molecular details and the structural requirements of HS for this interaction are still unclear. Here, we describe the application of traveling wave ion mobility spectrometry (TWIMS) to study the conformational details of the Robo1-HS interaction. The results suggest that Robo1 exists in two conformations that differ by their compactness and capability to interact with HS. The results also suggest that the highly flexible interdomain hinge region connecting the Ig1 and Ig2 domains of Robo1 plays an important functional role in promoting the Robo1-Slit interaction. Moreover, variations in the sulfation pattern and size of HS were found to affect its binding affinity and selectivity to interact with different conformations of Robo1. Both MS measurements and CIU experiments show that the Robo1-HS interaction requires the presence of a specific size and pattern of modification of HS. Furthermore, the effect of N-glycosylation on the conformation of Robo1 and its binding modes with HS is reported. Graphical Abstract á…Ÿ
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Downstream Products are Potent Inhibitors of the Heparan Sulfate 2-O-Sulfotransferase.
Heparan Sulfate (HS) is a cell signaling molecule linked to pathological processes ranging from cancer to viral entry, yet fundamental aspects of its biosynthesis remain incompletely understood. Here, the binding preferences of the uronyl 2-O-sulfotransferase (HS2ST) are examined with variably-sulfated hexasaccharides. Surprisingly, heavily sulfated oligosaccharides formed by later-acting sulfotransferases bind more tightly to HS2ST than those corresponding to its natural substrate or product. Inhibition assays also indicate that the IC50 values correlate simply with degree of oligosaccharide sulfation. Structural analysis predicts a mode of inhibition in which 6-O-sulfate groups located on glucosamine residues present in highly-sulfated oligosaccharides occupy the canonical binding site of the nucleotide cofactor. The unexpected finding that oligosaccharides associated with later stages in HS biosynthesis inhibit HS2ST indicates that the enzyme must be separated temporally and/or spatially from downstream products during biosynthesis in vivo, and highlights a challenge for the enzymatic synthesis of lengthy HS chains in vitro
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Author Correction: Downstream Products are Potent Inhibitors of the Heparan Sulfate 2-O-Sulfotransferase.
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper
A Traveling Wave Ion Mobility Spectrometry (TWIMS) Study of the Robo1-Heparan Sulfate Interaction
Roundabout 1 (Robo1) interacts with its receptor Slit to regulate axon guidance, axon branching, and dendritic development in the nervous system and to regulate morphogenesis and many cell functions in the nonneuronal tissues. This interaction is known to be critically regulated by heparan sulfate (HS). Previous studies suggest that HS is required to promote the binding of Robo1 to Slit to form the minimal signaling complex, but the molecular details and the structural requirements of HS for this interaction are still unclear. Here, we describe the application of traveling wave ion mobility spectrometry (TWIMS) to study the conformational details of the Robo1-HS interaction. The results suggest that Robo1 exists in two conformations that differ by their compactness and capability to interact with HS. The results also suggest that the highly flexible interdomain hinge region connecting the Ig1 and Ig2 domains of Robo1 plays an important functional role in promoting the Robo1-Slit interaction. Moreover, variations in the sulfation pattern and size of HS were found to affect its binding affinity and selectivity to interact with different conformations of Robo1. Both MS measurements and CIU experiments show that the Robo1-HS interaction requires the presence of a specific size and pattern of modification of HS. Furthermore, the effect of N-glycosylation on the conformation of Robo1 and its binding modes with HS is reported. Graphical Abstract á…Ÿ