Abstract

Collagen triple helices fold slowly and inefficiently, often requiring adjacent globular domains to assist this process. In the Streptococcus pyogenes collagen-like protein Scl2, a V domain predicted to be largely α-helical, occurs N-terminal to the collagen triple helix (CL). Here, we replace this natural trimerization domain with a de novo designed, hyperstable, parallel, three-stranded, α-helical coiled coil (CC), either at the N terminus (CC-CL) or the C terminus (CL-CC) of the collagen domain. CD spectra of the constructs are consistent with additivity of independently and fully folded CC and CL domains, and the proteins retain their distinctive thermal stabilities, CL at ∼37 °C and CC at >90 °C. Heating the hybrid proteins to 50 °C unfolds CL, leaving CC intact, and upon cooling, the rate of CL refolding is somewhat faster for CL-CC than for CC-CL. A construct with coiled coils on both ends, CC-CL-CC, retains the ∼37 °C thermal stability for CL but shows less triple helix at low temperature and less denaturation at 50 °C. Most strikingly however, in CC-CL-CC, the CL refolds slower than in either CC-CL or CL-CC by almost two orders of magnitude. We propose that a single CC promotes folding of the CL domain via nucleation and in-register growth from one end, whereas initiation and growth from both ends in CC-CL-CC results in mismatched registers that frustrate folding. Bioinformatics analysis of natural collagens lends support to this because, where present, there is generally only one coiled-coil domain close to the triple helix, and it is nearly always N-terminal to the collagen repeat.

Highlights

  • The collagen triple helix comprises three polyproline II-like helical chains supercoiled about a common axis, with hydrogen bonding between adjacent chains

  • The study presented here for constructs containing both the trimeric ␣-helical coiled-coil and the collagen triple helix motif suggests little influence of one domain on the conformation of the other, which may not be surprising for these rod-like, linear motifs

  • These results largely concur with those reported by McAlinden et al [6] but highlight that when only proteins containing adjacent (Ͻ15 residues apart) coiledcoil and collagen domains are considered (as opposed to a more general case), there is a clear preference for architectures that place trimeric coiled coils N-terminal to their respective collagen domain

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The constructs containing a coiled-coil domain on either end showed substantial refolding of the collagen triple helix, reaching a final value close to 100% after 5 days (Fig. 5). The protein with coiled-coil domains at both ends of the collagen triple helix, CC-CL-CC, showed a markedly slower folding rate and lower percent recovery than CC-CL and CL-CC (Fig. 5).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call