Structural highlights
Function
GCN4_YEAST Is a transcription factor that is responsible for the activation of more than 30 genes required for amino acid or for purine biosynthesis in response to amino acid or purine starvation. Binds and recognize the DNA sequence: 5'-TGA[CG]TCA-3'.
Publication Abstract from PubMed
Tropomyosin is a coiled-coil actin binding protein that stabilizes the filament, protects it from severing, and cooperatively regulates actin's interaction with myosin. Depending on the first coding exon, tropomyosins are low molecular weight (LMW), found in the cytoskeleton and predominant in transformed cells, or high molecular weight (HMW), found in muscle and nonmuscle cells. The N- and C-terminal ends form a complex that allows tropomyosin to associate N terminus-to-C terminus along the actin filament. We determined the structure of a LMW tropomyosin N-terminal model peptide complexed with a smooth/nonmuscle tropomyosin C-terminal peptide. Using NMR and circular dichroism we showed that both ends become more helical upon complex formation but that the C-terminal peptide is partially unfolded at 20 degrees C. The first five residues of the N terminus that are disordered in the free peptide are more helical and are part of the overlap complex. NMR data indicate residues 2-17 bind to the C terminus in the complex. The data support a model for the LMW overlap complex that is homologous to the striated muscle tropomyosin complex in which the ends are oriented in parallel N terminus-to-C terminus with the plane of the N-terminal coiled coil perpendicular to the plane of the C terminus. The main difference is that the overlap spans 16 residues in the LMW tropomyosin complex compared to 11 residues in the HMW striated muscle overlap complex. We discuss the relevance of a stable but dynamic intermolecular junction for high-affinity binding to actin.
Structure of the N Terminus of a Nonmuscle alpha-Tropomyosin in Complex with the C Terminus: Implications for Actin Binding (dagger) (double dagger).,Greenfield NJ, Kotlyanskaya L, Hitchcock-Degregori SE Biochemistry. 2009 Jan 26. PMID:19170537[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
References
- ↑ Greenfield NJ, Kotlyanskaya L, Hitchcock-Degregori SE. Structure of the N Terminus of a Nonmuscle alpha-Tropomyosin in Complex with the C Terminus: Implications for Actin Binding (dagger) (double dagger). Biochemistry. 2009 Jan 26. PMID:19170537 doi:10.1021/bi801861k