학술논문

Consolidating critical binding determinants by noncyclic rearrangement of protein secondary structure
Document Type
Author Abstract
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. Feb 15, 2005, Vol. 102 Issue 7, p2305, 5 p.
Subject
Proteins -- Research
Protein folding -- Research
Science and technology
Language
English
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
We designed a single-chain variant of the Arc repressor homodimer in which the [beta] strands that contact operator DNA are connected by a hairpin turn and the [alpha] helices that form the tetrahelical scaffold of the dimer are attached by a short linker. The designed protein represents a noncyclic permutation of secondary structural elements in another single-chain Arc molecule (Arc-L1-Arc), in which the two subunits are fused by a single linker. The permuted protein binds operator DNA with nanomolar affinity, refolds on the sub-millisecond time scale, and is as stable as Arc-L1-Arc. The crystal structure of the permuted protein reveals an essentially wild-type fold, demonstrating that crucial folding information is not encoded in the wild-type order of secondary structure. Noncyclic rearrangement of secondary structure may allow grouping of critical active-site residues in other proteins and could be a useful tool for protein design and minimization. circular permutation | protein folding | protein structure