Structural consequences of cutting a binding loop: two circularly permuted variants of streptavidin

The crystal structures of two circularly permuted streptavidins probe the role of a flexible loop in the tight binding of biotin. Molecular-dynamics calculations for one of the mutants suggests that increased fluctuations in a hydrogen bond between the protein and biotin are associated with cleavage...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography. Biological crystallography., 2013-06, Vol.69 (Pt 6)
Hauptverfasser: Le Trong, Isolde, University of Washington, Box 357742, Seattle, WA 98195-7742, Chu, Vano, Xing, Yi, Lybrand, Terry P., Stayton, Patrick S., Stenkamp, Ronald E., University of Washington, Box 357430, Seattle, WA 98195-7430
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The crystal structures of two circularly permuted streptavidins probe the role of a flexible loop in the tight binding of biotin. Molecular-dynamics calculations for one of the mutants suggests that increased fluctuations in a hydrogen bond between the protein and biotin are associated with cleavage of the binding loop. Circular permutation of streptavidin was carried out in order to investigate the role of a main-chain amide in stabilizing the high-affinity complex of the protein and biotin. Mutant proteins CP49/48 and CP50/49 were constructed to place new N-termini at residues 49 and 50 in a flexible loop involved in stabilizing the biotin complex. Crystal structures of the two mutants show that half of each loop closes over the binding site, as observed in wild-type streptavidin, while the other half adopts the open conformation found in the unliganded state. The structures are consistent with kinetic and thermodynamic data and indicate that the loop plays a role in enthalpic stabilization of the bound state via the Asn49 amide–biotin hydrogen bond. In wild-type streptavidin, the entropic penalties of immobilizing a flexible portion of the protein to enhance binding are kept to a manageable level by using a contiguous loop of medium length (six residues) which is already constrained by its anchorage to strands of the β-barrel protein. A molecular-dynamics simulation for CP50/49 shows that cleavage of the binding loop results in increased structural fluctuations for Ser45 and that these fluctuations destabilize the streptavidin–biotin complex.
ISSN:0907-4449
1399-0047
DOI:10.1107/S0907444913003855