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Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding

GTP hydrolysis by GTPases requires crucial residues embedded in a conserved G-domain as sequence motifs G1–G5. However, in some of the recently identified GTPases, the motif order is circularly permuted. All possible circular permutations were identified after artificially permuting the classical GT...

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Autores principales: Anand, Baskaran, Verma, Sunil Kumar, Prakash, Balaji
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1450330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16648363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl178
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author Anand, Baskaran
Verma, Sunil Kumar
Prakash, Balaji
author_facet Anand, Baskaran
Verma, Sunil Kumar
Prakash, Balaji
author_sort Anand, Baskaran
collection PubMed
description GTP hydrolysis by GTPases requires crucial residues embedded in a conserved G-domain as sequence motifs G1–G5. However, in some of the recently identified GTPases, the motif order is circularly permuted. All possible circular permutations were identified after artificially permuting the classical GTPases and subjecting them to profile Hidden Markov Model searches. This revealed G4–G5–G1–G2–G3 as the only possible circular permutation that can exist in nature. It was also possible to recognize a structural rationale for the absence of other permutations, which either destabilize the invariant GTPase fold or disrupt regions that provide critical residues for GTP binding and hydrolysis, such as Switch-I and Switch-II. The circular permutation relocates Switch-II to the C-terminus and leaves it unfastened, thus affecting GTP binding and hydrolysis. Stabilizing this region would require the presence of an additional domain following Switch-II. Circularly permuted GTPases (cpGTPases) conform to such a requirement and always possess an ‘anchoring’ C-terminal domain. There are four sub-families of cpGTPases, of which three possess an additional domain N-terminal to the G-domain. The biochemical function of these domains, based on available experimental reports and domain recognition analysis carried out here, are suggestive of RNA binding. The features that dictate RNA binding are unique to each subfamily. It is possible that RNA-binding modulates GTP binding or vice versa. In addition, phylogenetic analysis indicates a closer evolutionary relationship between cpGTPases and a set of universally conserved bacterial GTPases that bind the ribosome. It appears that cpGTPases are RNA-binding proteins possessing a means to relate GTP binding to RNA binding.
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spelling pubmed-14503302006-05-12 Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding Anand, Baskaran Verma, Sunil Kumar Prakash, Balaji Nucleic Acids Res Article GTP hydrolysis by GTPases requires crucial residues embedded in a conserved G-domain as sequence motifs G1–G5. However, in some of the recently identified GTPases, the motif order is circularly permuted. All possible circular permutations were identified after artificially permuting the classical GTPases and subjecting them to profile Hidden Markov Model searches. This revealed G4–G5–G1–G2–G3 as the only possible circular permutation that can exist in nature. It was also possible to recognize a structural rationale for the absence of other permutations, which either destabilize the invariant GTPase fold or disrupt regions that provide critical residues for GTP binding and hydrolysis, such as Switch-I and Switch-II. The circular permutation relocates Switch-II to the C-terminus and leaves it unfastened, thus affecting GTP binding and hydrolysis. Stabilizing this region would require the presence of an additional domain following Switch-II. Circularly permuted GTPases (cpGTPases) conform to such a requirement and always possess an ‘anchoring’ C-terminal domain. There are four sub-families of cpGTPases, of which three possess an additional domain N-terminal to the G-domain. The biochemical function of these domains, based on available experimental reports and domain recognition analysis carried out here, are suggestive of RNA binding. The features that dictate RNA binding are unique to each subfamily. It is possible that RNA-binding modulates GTP binding or vice versa. In addition, phylogenetic analysis indicates a closer evolutionary relationship between cpGTPases and a set of universally conserved bacterial GTPases that bind the ribosome. It appears that cpGTPases are RNA-binding proteins possessing a means to relate GTP binding to RNA binding. Oxford University Press 2006 2006-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC1450330/ /pubmed/16648363 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl178 Text en © The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Article
Anand, Baskaran
Verma, Sunil Kumar
Prakash, Balaji
Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding
title Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding
title_full Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding
title_fullStr Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding
title_full_unstemmed Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding
title_short Structural stabilization of GTP-binding domains in circularly permuted GTPases: Implications for RNA binding
title_sort structural stabilization of gtp-binding domains in circularly permuted gtpases: implications for rna binding
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1450330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16648363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl178
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