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4KVU

Crystal structure of a 6-helix coiled coil CC-Hex-L17C-W224BF

Summary for 4KVU
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb4kvu/pdb
Related4KVT 4KVV
Descriptor6-helix coiled coil CC-Hex-L17C-W224BF, GLYCEROL (3 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsde novo coiled-coil assembly, de novo protein
Total number of polymer chains3
Total formula weight10276.61
Authors
Burton, A.J.,Agnew, C.,Brady, R.L.,Woolfson, D.N. (deposition date: 2013-05-23, release date: 2013-08-21, Last modification date: 2025-03-26)
Primary citationBurton, A.J.,Thomas, F.,Agnew, C.,Hudson, K.L.,Halford, S.E.,Brady, R.L.,Woolfson, D.N.
Accessibility, Reactivity, and Selectivity of Side Chains within a Channel of de Novo Peptide Assembly.
J.Am.Chem.Soc., 135:12524-12527, 2013
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Ab initio design of enzymes requires precise and predictable positioning of reactive functional groups within accessible and controlled environments of de novo protein scaffolds. Here we show that multiple thiol moieties can be placed within a central channel, with approximate dimensions 6 × 42 Å, of a de novo, six-helix peptide assembly (CC-Hex). Layers of six cysteine residues are introduced at two different sites ~6 (the "L24C" mutant) and ~17 Å (L17C) from the C-terminal opening of the channel. X-ray crystal structures confirm the mutant structures as hexamers with internal free thiol, rather than disulfide-linked cysteine residues. Both mutants are hexa-alkylated upon addition of iodoacetamide, demonstrating accessibility and full reactivity of the thiol groups. Comparison of the alkylation and unfolding rates of the hexamers indicates that access is directly through the channel and not via dissociation and unfolding of the assembly. Moreover, neither mutant reacts with iodoacetic acid, demonstrating selectivity of the largely hydrophobic channel. These studies show that it is possible to engineer reactive side chains with both precision and control into a de novo scaffold to produce protein-like structures with chemoselective reactivity.
PubMed: 23924058
DOI: 10.1021/ja4053027
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.8 Å)
Structure validation

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