6ON8
Crystal Structure of the Reduced Form of Apo Domain-Swapped Dimer Q108K:T51D:A28C:L36C:F57H Mutant of Human Cellular Retinol Binding Protein II
Summary for 6ON8
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb6on8/pdb |
Descriptor | Retinol-binding protein 2 (2 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | retinol, ilbp, protein switch, cytosolic protein, lipid binding protein |
Biological source | Homo sapiens (Human) |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 15625.51 |
Authors | Ghanbarpour, A.,Geiger, J. (deposition date: 2019-04-20, release date: 2019-10-16, Last modification date: 2023-10-11) |
Primary citation | Ghanbarpour, A.,Pinger, C.,Esmatpour Salmani, R.,Assar, Z.,Santos, E.M.,Nosrati, M.,Pawlowski, K.,Spence, D.,Vasileiou, C.,Jin, X.,Borhan, B.,Geiger, J.H. Engineering the hCRBPII Domain-Swapped Dimer into a New Class of Protein Switches. J.Am.Chem.Soc., 141:17125-17132, 2019 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Protein conformational switches or allosteric proteins play a key role in the regulation of many essential biological pathways. Nonetheless, the implementation of protein conformational switches in protein design applications has proven challenging, with only a few known examples that are not derivatives of naturally occurring allosteric systems. We have discovered that the domain-swapped (DS) dimer of hCRBPII undergoes a large and robust conformational change upon retinal binding, making it a potentially powerful template for the design of protein conformational switches. Atomic resolution structures of the apo- and holo-forms illuminate a simple, mechanical movement involving sterically driven torsion angle flipping of two residues that drive the motion. We further demonstrate that the conformational "readout" can be altered by addition of cross-domain disulfide bonds, also visualized at atomic resolution. Finally, as a proof of principle, we have created an allosteric metal binding site in the DS dimer, where ligand binding results in a reversible 5-fold loss of metal binding affinity. The high resolution structure of the metal-bound variant illustrates a well-formed metal binding site at the interface of the two domains of the DS dimer and confirms the design strategy for allosteric regulation. PubMed: 31557439DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b04664 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.395 Å) |
Structure validation
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