2lew

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Structural Plasticity of Paneth cell alpha-Defensins: Characterization of Salt-Bridge Deficient Analogues of Mouse Cryptdin-4

Structural highlights

2lew is a 1 chain structure with sequence from Mus musculus. Full experimental information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Method:Solution NMR, 20 models
Resources:FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT

Function

DEFA4_MOUSE Probably contributes to the antimicrobial barrier function of the small bowel mucosa.

Publication Abstract from PubMed

Salt-bridge interactions between acidic and basic amino acids contribute to the structural stability of proteins and to protein-protein interactions. A conserved salt-bridge is a canonical feature of the alpha-defensin antimicrobial peptide family, but the role of this common structural element has not been fully elucidated. We have investigated mouse Paneth cell alpha-defensin cryptdin-4 (Crp4) and peptide variants with mutations at Arg(7) or Glu(15) residue positions to disrupt the salt-bridge and assess the consequences on Crp4 structure, function, and stability. NMR analyses showed that both (R7G)-Crp4 and (E15G)-Crp4 adopt native-like structures, evidence of fold plasticity that allows peptides to reshuffle side chains and stabilize the structure in the absence of the salt-bridge. In contrast, introduction of a large hydrophobic side chain at position 15, as in (E15L)-Crp4 cannot be accommodated in the context of the Crp4 primary structure. Regardless of which side of the salt-bridge was mutated, salt-bridge variants retained bactericidal peptide activity with differential microbicidal effects against certain bacterial cell targets, confirming that the salt-bridge does not determine bactericidal activity per se. The increased structural flexibility induced by salt-bridge disruption enhanced peptide sensitivity to proteolysis. Although sensitivity to proteolysis by MMP7 was unaffected by most Arg(7) and Glu(15) substitutions, every salt-bridge variant was degraded extensively by trypsin. Moreover, the salt-bridge facilitates adoption of the characteristic alpha-defensin fold as shown by the impaired in vitro refolding of (E15D)-proCrp4, the most conservative salt-bridge disrupting replacement. In Crp4, therefore, the canonical alpha-defensin salt-bridge facilitates adoption of the characteristic alpha-defensin fold, which decreases structural flexibility and confers resistance to degradation by proteinases.

The alpha-defensin salt-bridge induces backbone stability to facilitate folding and confer proteolytic resistance.,Andersson HS, Figueredo SM, Haugaard-Kedstrom LM, Bengtsson E, Daly NL, Qu X, Craik DJ, Ouellette AJ, Rosengren KJ Amino Acids. 2012 Jan 29. PMID:22286872[1]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

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References

  1. Andersson HS, Figueredo SM, Haugaard-Kedstrom LM, Bengtsson E, Daly NL, Qu X, Craik DJ, Ouellette AJ, Rosengren KJ. The alpha-defensin salt-bridge induces backbone stability to facilitate folding and confer proteolytic resistance. Amino Acids. 2012 Jan 29. PMID:22286872 doi:10.1007/s00726-012-1220-3

Contents


PDB ID 2lew

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