Surface Exposed Free Cysteine Suppresses Crystallization of Human γD-Crystallin
[Display omitted] •The unpaired surface exposed cysteine 110 in HGD is required for long-term stability.•While protein mutants maintain a high refractive index, rapid nucleation can occur.•Pre-crystalline clusters are less stable in C110M mutant and crystallize more quickly. Human γD-crystallin (HGD...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of molecular biology 2021-11, Vol.433 (22), p.167252-167252, Article 167252 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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•The unpaired surface exposed cysteine 110 in HGD is required for long-term stability.•While protein mutants maintain a high refractive index, rapid nucleation can occur.•Pre-crystalline clusters are less stable in C110M mutant and crystallize more quickly.
Human γD-crystallin (HGD) has remarkable stability against condensation in the human lens, sometimes over a whole lifetime. The native protein has a surface exposed free cysteine that forms dimers (Benedek, 1997; Ramkumar et al., 1864)1,2 without specific biological function and leads to further protein association and/or aggregation, which creates a paradox for understanding its stability. Previous work has demonstrated that chemical modification of the protein at the free cysteine (C110), increases the temperature at which liquid–liquid phase separation occurs (LLPS), lowers protein solubility and suggests an important role for this amino acid in maintaining its long-term resistance to condensation. Here we demonstrate that mutation of the cysteine does not alter the structure or solubility (liquidus) line for the protein, but dramatically increases the protein crystal nucleation rate following LLPS, suggesting that the free cysteine has a vital role in suppressing crystallization in the human lens. |
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ISSN: | 0022-2836 1089-8638 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jmb.2021.167252 |