2 research outputs found
Probing the Residual Structure of the Low Populated Denatured State of ADA2h under Folding Conditions by Relaxation Dispersion Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
The structural characterization of
low populated states of proteins
with accuracy comparable to that achievable for native states is important
for understanding the mechanisms of protein folding and function,
as well as misfolding and aggregation. Because of the transient nature
of these low populated states, they are seldom detected directly under
conditions that favor folding. The activation domain of human procarboxypeptidase
A2 (ADA2h) is an α/β-protein that forms amyloid fibrils
at low pH, presumably initiated from a denatured state with a considerable
amount of residual structure. Here we used Carr–Parcell–Meiboom–Gill
relaxation dispersion (CPMG RD) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
to characterize the structure of the denatured state of the ADA2h
I71V mutant under conditions that favor folding. Under these conditions,
the lifetime of the denatured state of I71V ADA2h is on the order
of milliseconds and its population is approximately several percent,
which makes this mutant amenable to studies by CPMG RD methods. The
nearly complete set of CPMG RD-derived backbone <sup>15</sup>N, <sup>13</sup>C, and <sup>1</sup>H NMR chemical shifts in the I71V ADA2h
denatured state reveals that it retains a significant fraction (up
to 50–60%) of nativelike α-helical structure, while the
regions encompassing native β-strands are structured to a much
lesser extent. The nativelike α-helical structure of the denatured
state can bring together hydrophobic residues on the same sides of
α-helices, making them available for intra- or intermolecular
interactions. CPMG RD data analysis thus allowed a detailed structural
characterization of the ADA2h denatured state under folding conditions
not previously achieved for this protein
NMR Structure and Dynamics of the C-Terminal Domain from Human Rev1 and Its Complex with Rev1 Interacting Region of DNA Polymerase η
Rev1 is a translesion synthesis (TLS) DNA polymerase
essential
for DNA damage tolerance in eukaryotes. In the process of TLS stalled
high-fidelity replicative DNA polymerases are temporarily replaced
by specialized TLS enzymes that can bypass sites of DNA damage (lesions),
thus allowing replication to continue or postreplicational gaps to
be filled. Despite its limited catalytic activity, human Rev1 plays
a key role in TLS by serving as a scaffold that provides an access
of Y-family TLS polymerases polη, ι, and κ to their
cognate DNA lesions and facilitates their subsequent exchange to polζ
that extends the distorted DNA primer–template. Rev1 interaction
with the other major human TLS polymerases, polη, ι, κ,
and the regulatory subunit Rev7 of polζ, is mediated by Rev1
C-terminal domain (Rev1-CT). We used NMR spectroscopy to determine
the spatial structure of the Rev1-CT domain (residues 1157–1251)
and its complex with Rev1 interacting region (RIR) from polη
(residues 524–539). The domain forms a four-helix bundle with
a well-structured N-terminal β-hairpin docking against helices
1 and 2, creating a binding pocket for the two conserved Phe residues
of the RIR motif that upon binding folds into an α-helix. NMR
spin-relaxation and NMR relaxation dispersion measurements suggest
that free Rev1-CT and Rev1-CT/polη-RIR complex exhibit μs-ms
conformational dynamics encompassing the RIR binding site, which might
facilitate selection of the molecular configuration optimal for binding.
These results offer new insights into the control of TLS in human
cells by providing a structural basis for understanding the recognition
of the Rev1-CT by Y-family DNA polymerases