Abstract

BackgroundCoiled-coils are described as stable structural motifs, where two or more helices wind around each other. However, coiled-coils are associated with local mobility and intrinsic disorder. Intrinsically disordered regions in proteins are characterized by lack of stable secondary and tertiary structure under physiological conditions in vitro. They are increasingly recognized as important for protein function. However, characterizing their behaviour in solution and determining precisely the extent of disorder of a protein region remains challenging, both experimentally and computationally.ResultsIn this work, we propose a computational framework to quantify the extent of disorder within a coiled-coil in solution and to help design substitutions modulating such disorder. Our method relies on the analysis of conformational ensembles generated by relatively short all-atom Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations. We apply it to the phosphoprotein multimerisation domains (PMD) of Measles virus (MeV) and Nipah virus (NiV), both forming tetrameric left-handed coiled-coils. We show that our method can help quantify the extent of disorder of the C-terminus region of MeV and NiV PMDs from MD simulations of a few tens of nanoseconds, and without requiring an extensive exploration of the conformational space. Moreover, this study provided a conceptual framework for the rational design of substitutions aimed at modulating the stability of the coiled-coils. By assessing the impact of four substitutions known to destabilize coiled-coils, we derive a set of rules to control MeV PMD structural stability and cohesiveness. We therefore design two contrasting substitutions, one increasing the stability of the tetramer and the other increasing its flexibility.ConclusionsOur method can be considered as a platform to reason about how to design substitutions aimed at regulating flexibility and stability.

Highlights

  • Coiled-coils are described as stable structural motifs, where two or more helices wind around each other

  • Proteins studied We studied three homo-tetrameric coiled-coils whose structures were resolved by X-ray crystallography: (1) Measles virus (MeV) phosphoprotein multimerisation domains (PMD) (PDB id: 3ZDO, residues 308–373, 2.07 Å resolution), (2) Nipah virus (NiV) PMD (PDB id: 4N5B, residues 475–578, 2.2 Å resolution) and RhcC (PDB id: 1YBK, residues 1–52, 1.45 Å resolution)

  • This study revealed that COMMA2 is able to detect a region known to be structurally ambiguous, i.e. well-ordered in a Protein Data Bank (PDB) structure and unresolved in another one, in the coiled-coil tetramer of the MeV PMD

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Coiled-coils are described as stable structural motifs, where two or more helices wind around each other. Disordered regions in proteins are characterized by lack of stable secondary and tertiary structure under physiological conditions in vitro. They are increasingly recognized as important for protein function. Coiled-coils are ubiquitous oligomerisation motifs in proteins, where two or more amphiphatic α-helices intertwine together to the strings of a rope. They account for approximately 5–10% of all protein-encoding sequences across all genomes [1]. In the case of heptad repeats, it reduces to 3.5 residues per turn, which leads to the left-handing [3]. In this work we study the phosphoprotein multimerisation domains (PMD) of Measles virus (MeV) and Nipah virus (NiV) [4, 5], which both form tetrameric left-handed coiled-coils, and we compare their dynamical behaviour to that of the right-handed tetrameric coiled-coil of the RhcC protein (Staphylothermus marinus) [6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.