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How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target

Charged residues on the surface of proteins are critical for both protein stability and interactions. However, many proteins contain binding regions with a high net charge that may destabilize the protein but are useful for binding to oppositely charged targets. We hypothesized that these domains wo...

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Autores principales: Jaramillo‐Martinez, Valeria, Dominguez, Matthew J., Bell, Gemma M., Souness, Megan E., Carhart, Anna H., Cuibus, M. Adriana, Masoumzadeh, Elahe, Lantz, Benjamin J., Adkins, Aaron J., Latham, Michael P., Ball, K. Aurelia, Stollar, Elliott J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10108434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36992534
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4635
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author Jaramillo‐Martinez, Valeria
Dominguez, Matthew J.
Bell, Gemma M.
Souness, Megan E.
Carhart, Anna H.
Cuibus, M. Adriana
Masoumzadeh, Elahe
Lantz, Benjamin J.
Adkins, Aaron J.
Latham, Michael P.
Ball, K. Aurelia
Stollar, Elliott J.
author_facet Jaramillo‐Martinez, Valeria
Dominguez, Matthew J.
Bell, Gemma M.
Souness, Megan E.
Carhart, Anna H.
Cuibus, M. Adriana
Masoumzadeh, Elahe
Lantz, Benjamin J.
Adkins, Aaron J.
Latham, Michael P.
Ball, K. Aurelia
Stollar, Elliott J.
author_sort Jaramillo‐Martinez, Valeria
collection PubMed
description Charged residues on the surface of proteins are critical for both protein stability and interactions. However, many proteins contain binding regions with a high net charge that may destabilize the protein but are useful for binding to oppositely charged targets. We hypothesized that these domains would be marginally stable, as electrostatic repulsion would compete with favorable hydrophobic collapse during folding. Furthermore, by increasing the salt concentration, we predict that these protein folds would be stabilized by mimicking some of the favorable electrostatic interactions that take place during target binding. We varied the salt and urea concentrations to probe the contributions of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions for the folding of the yeast SH3 domain found in Abp1p. The SH3 domain was significantly stabilized with increased salt concentrations due to Debye–Huckel screening and a nonspecific territorial ion‐binding effect. Molecular dynamics and NMR show that sodium ions interact with all 15 acidic residues but do little to change backbone dynamics or overall structure. Folding kinetics experiments show that the addition of urea or salt primarily affects the folding rate, indicating that almost all the hydrophobic collapse and electrostatic repulsion occur in the transition state. After the transition state formation, modest yet favorable short‐range salt bridges are formed along with hydrogen bonds, as the native state fully folds. Thus, hydrophobic collapse offsets electrostatic repulsion to ensure this highly charged binding domain can still fold and be ready to bind to its charged peptide targets, a property that is likely evolutionarily conserved over 1 billion years.
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spelling pubmed-101084342023-05-01 How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target Jaramillo‐Martinez, Valeria Dominguez, Matthew J. Bell, Gemma M. Souness, Megan E. Carhart, Anna H. Cuibus, M. Adriana Masoumzadeh, Elahe Lantz, Benjamin J. Adkins, Aaron J. Latham, Michael P. Ball, K. Aurelia Stollar, Elliott J. Protein Sci Full‐length Papers Charged residues on the surface of proteins are critical for both protein stability and interactions. However, many proteins contain binding regions with a high net charge that may destabilize the protein but are useful for binding to oppositely charged targets. We hypothesized that these domains would be marginally stable, as electrostatic repulsion would compete with favorable hydrophobic collapse during folding. Furthermore, by increasing the salt concentration, we predict that these protein folds would be stabilized by mimicking some of the favorable electrostatic interactions that take place during target binding. We varied the salt and urea concentrations to probe the contributions of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions for the folding of the yeast SH3 domain found in Abp1p. The SH3 domain was significantly stabilized with increased salt concentrations due to Debye–Huckel screening and a nonspecific territorial ion‐binding effect. Molecular dynamics and NMR show that sodium ions interact with all 15 acidic residues but do little to change backbone dynamics or overall structure. Folding kinetics experiments show that the addition of urea or salt primarily affects the folding rate, indicating that almost all the hydrophobic collapse and electrostatic repulsion occur in the transition state. After the transition state formation, modest yet favorable short‐range salt bridges are formed along with hydrogen bonds, as the native state fully folds. Thus, hydrophobic collapse offsets electrostatic repulsion to ensure this highly charged binding domain can still fold and be ready to bind to its charged peptide targets, a property that is likely evolutionarily conserved over 1 billion years. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2023-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10108434/ /pubmed/36992534 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4635 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Protein Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Protein Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Full‐length Papers
Jaramillo‐Martinez, Valeria
Dominguez, Matthew J.
Bell, Gemma M.
Souness, Megan E.
Carhart, Anna H.
Cuibus, M. Adriana
Masoumzadeh, Elahe
Lantz, Benjamin J.
Adkins, Aaron J.
Latham, Michael P.
Ball, K. Aurelia
Stollar, Elliott J.
How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
title How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
title_full How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
title_fullStr How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
title_full_unstemmed How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
title_short How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
title_sort how a highly acidic sh3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target
topic Full‐length Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10108434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36992534
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.4635
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