Abstract
Dynamics are often critical for biomolecular function. Herein we explore the role of motion in driving the maturation process of pro-IL-18, a potent pro-inflammatory cytokine that is cleaved by caspases-1 and -4 to generate the mature form of the protein. An NMR dynamics study of pro-IL-18, probing time scales over 12 orders of magnitude and focusing on 1H, 13C, and 15N spin probes along the protein backbone and amino-acid side chains, reveals a plastic structure, with millisecond time scale dynamics occurring in a pair of β-strands, β1 and β*, that show large structural variations in a comparison of caspase-free and bound pro-IL-18 states. Fits of the relaxation data to a three-site model of exchange showed that the ground state secondary structure is maintained in the excited conformers, with the side chain of I48 that undergoes a buried-to-exposed conformational change in the caspase-free to -bound transition of pro-IL-18, sampling a more extensive range of torsion angles in one of the excited states characterized, suggesting partial unpacking in this region. Hydrogen exchange measurements establish the occurrence of an additional process, whereby strands β1 and β* locally unfold. Our data are consistent with a hierarchy of dynamic events that likely prime pro-IL-18 for facile caspase binding.
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