학술논문

Many dissimilar NusG protein domains switch between α-helix and β-sheet folds
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Communications. 13(1)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biological Sciences
Biotechnology
Genetics
Generic health relevance
Amino Acid Sequence
Protein Conformation
alpha-Helical
Protein Conformation
beta-Strand
Protein Domains
Transcription Factors
Language
Abstract
Folded proteins are assumed to be built upon fixed scaffolds of secondary structure, α-helices and β-sheets. Experimentally determined structures of >58,000 non-redundant proteins support this assumption, though it has recently been challenged by ~100 fold-switching proteins. Though ostensibly rare, these proteins raise the question of how many uncharacterized proteins have shapeshifting-rather than fixed-secondary structures. Here, we use a comparative sequence-based approach to predict fold switching in the universally conserved NusG transcription factor family, one member of which has a 50-residue regulatory subunit experimentally shown to switch between α-helical and β-sheet folds. Our approach predicts that 24% of sequences in this family undergo similar α-helix ⇌ β-sheet transitions. While these predictions cannot be reproduced by other state-of-the-art computational methods, they are confirmed by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for 10 out of 10 sequence-diverse variants. This work suggests that fold switching may be a pervasive mechanism of transcriptional regulation in all kingdoms of life.