학술논문

Convergently-evolved structural anomalies in the coiled coil domains of insect silk proteins.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Structural Biology. Jun2014, Vol. 186 Issue 3, p402-411. 10p.
Subject
*FERROMAGNETIC materials
*MAGNETIC domain
*ALPHA helix structure (Proteins)
*SILK
*INSECT proteins
*HYMENOPTERA
*FABRICATION (Manufacturing)
*AMINO acid sequence
*X-ray scattering
Language
ISSN
1047-8477
Abstract
Abstract: The use of coiled coil proteins as the basis of silk materials is an engineering solution that has evolved convergently in at least five insect lineages—the stinging hymenopterans (ants, bees, hornets), argid sawflies, fleas, lacewings, and praying mantises—and persisted throughout large radiations of these insect families. These coiled coil silk proteins share a characteristic distinct from other coiled coil proteins, in that they are fabricated into solid materials after accumulating as highly concentrated solutions within dedicated glands. Here, we relate the amino acid sequences of these proteins to the secondary and tertiary structural information available from biophysical methods such as X-ray scattering, nuclear magnetic resonance and Raman spectroscopy. We investigate conserved and convergently evolved features within these proteins and compare these to the features of classic coiled coil proteins including tropomyosin and leucine zippers. Our analysis finds that the coiled coil domains of insect silk proteins have several common structural anomalies including a high prevalence of alanine residues in core positions. These atypical features of the coiled coil fibrous proteins – which likely produce deviations from canonical coiled-coil structure – likely exist due to selection pressures related to the process of silk fabrication and the final function of the proteins. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]