3trt
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of stabilised vimentin coil2 fragment
Structural highlights
Function[VIME_HUMAN] Vimentins are class-III intermediate filaments found in various non-epithelial cells, especially mesenchymal cells. Vimentin is attached to the nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria, either laterally or terminally.[1] Involved with LARP6 in the stabilization of type I collagen mRNAs for CO1A1 and CO1A2.[2] Publication Abstract from PubMedCytoskeletal intermediate filaments (IFs) assemble from the elementary dimers based on a segmented alpha-helical coiled-coil (CC) structure. Crystallographic studies of IF protein fragments remain the main route to access their atomic structure. To enable crystallization, such fragments must be sufficiently short. As a consequence, they often fail to assemble into the correct CC dimers. In particular, human vimentin fragment D3 corresponding to the first half of coil2 (residues 261-335) stays monomeric in solution. We have induced its dimerization via introducing a disulfide link between two cysteines engineered in the hydrophobic core of the CC close to its N-terminus. The 2.3A crystal structure of the D3st (stabilized) fragment reveals a mostly parallel alpha-helical bundle structure in its N-terminal half which smoothly continues into a left-handed CC towards the C-terminus. This provides a direct evidence for a continuously alpha-helical structure of the coil2 segment and disproves the previously suggested existence of linker L2 separating it into two left-handed CCs. The general principles of CC dimer stabilization by disulfide introduction are also discussed. Stabilization of vimentin coil2 fragment via an engineered disulfide.,Chernyatina AA, Strelkov SV J Struct Biol. 2012 Jan;177(1):46-53. Epub 2011 Nov 18. PMID:22119849[3] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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