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1.
Dematin is an actin binding protein from the junctional complex of the erythrocyte cytoskeleton. The protein has two actin binding sites and bundles actin filaments in vitro. This actin bundling activity is reversibly regulated by phosphorylation in the carboxyl terminal "headpiece" domain (DHP). DHP is a typical villin-type headpiece actin binding motif and contains a flexible N-terminal loop and an alpha-helical C-terminal subdomain that is phosphorylated at Ser74. The NMR structure of a Ser74-to-Glu mutant (DHPs74e) closely mimics the conformation of phosphorylated DHP. The negative charge at Ser74 does not alter the conformation of the C-terminal subdomain, but attracts the N-terminal loop toward the C terminus, changing the orientation of the N-terminal subdomain. NMR relaxation studies also indicate reduced mobility in the N-terminal loop in DHPs74e. Thus, phosphorylation in DHP serves as a switch controlling the conformational state of DHP and the actin bundling activity of dematin.  相似文献   

2.
Dematin is an actin‐binding protein originally identified in the junctional complex of the erythrocyte plasma membrane, and is present in many nonerythroid cells. Dematin headpiece knockout mice display a spherical red cell phenotype and develop a compensated anemia. Dematin has two domains: a 315‐residue, proline‐rich “core” domain and a 68‐residue carboxyl‐terminal villin‐type “headpiece” domain. Expression of full‐length dematin in E. coli as a GST recombinant protein results in truncation within a proline, glutamic acid, serine, threonine rich region (PEST). Therefore, we designed a mutant construct that replaces the PEST sequence. The modified dematin has high actin binding activity as determined by actin sedimentation assays. Negative stain electron microscopy demonstrates that the modified dematin also exhibits actin bundling activity like that of native dematin. Circular dichroism (CD) and NMR spectral analysis, however, show little secondary structure in the modified dematin. The lack of secondary structure is also observed in native dematin purified from human red blood cells. 15N‐HSQC NMR spectra of modified dematin indicate that the headpiece domain is fully folded whereas the core region is primarily unfolded. Our finding suggests that the core is natively unfolded and may serve as a scaffold to organize the components of the junctional complex.  相似文献   

3.
Dematin is an actin-binding protein abundant in red blood cells and other tissues. It contains a villin-type ‘headpiece’ F-actin-binding domain at its extreme C-terminus. The isolated dematin headpiece domain (DHP) undergoes a significant conformational change upon phosphorylation. The mutation of Ser74 to Glu closely mimics the phosphorylation of DHP. We investigated motions in the backbone of DHP and its mutant DHPS74E using several complementary NMR relaxation techniques: laboratory frame 15N NMR relaxation, which is sensitive primarily to the ps–ns time scale, cross-correlated chemical shift modulation NMR relaxation detecting correlated μs–ms time scale motions of neighboring 13C′ and 15N nuclei, and cross-correlated relaxation of two 15N–1H dipole–dipole interactions detecting slow motions of backbone NH vectors in successive amino acid residues. The results indicate a reduction in mobility upon the mutation in several regions of the protein. The additional salt bridge formed in DHPS74E that links the N- and C-terminal subdomains is likely to be responsible for these changes. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

4.
A growing family of F-actin-bundling proteins harbors a modular F-actin-binding headpiece domain at the C terminus. Headpiece provides one of the two F-actin-binding sites essential for filament bundling. Here, we report the first structure of a functional headpiece domain. The NMR structure of chicken villin headpiece (HP67) reveals two subdomains that share a tightly packed hydrophobic core. The N-terminal subdomain contains bends, turns, and a four-residue alpha-helix as well as a buried histidine residue that imparts a pH-dependent folding. The C-terminal subdomain is composed of three alpha-helices and its folding is pH-independent. Two residues previously implicated in F-actin-binding form a buried salt-bridge between the N and C-terminal subdomains. The rest of the identified actin-binding residues are solvent-exposed and map onto a unique F-actin-binding surface.  相似文献   

5.
Villin is an F-actin regulating, modular protein with a gelsolin-like core and a distinct C-terminal "headpiece" domain. Localized in the microvilli of the absorptive epithelium, villin can bundle F-actin and, at higher calcium concentrations, is capable of a gelsolin-like F-actin severing. The headpiece domain can, in isolation, bind F-actin and is crucial for F-actin bundling by villin. While the three-dimensional structure of the isolated headpiece is known, its conformation in the context of attachment to the villin core remains unexplored. Furthermore, the dynamics of the linkage of the headpiece to the core has not been determined. To address these issues, we employ a 208-residue modular fragment of villin, D6-HP, which consists of the sixth gelsolin-like domain of villin (D6) and the headpiece (HP). We demonstrate that this protein fragment requires calcium for structural stability and, surprisingly, is capable of Ca2+-dependent F-actin bundling, suggesting that D6 contains a cryptic F-actin binding site. NMR resonance assignments and 15N relaxation measurements of D6-HP in 5 mM Ca2+ demonstrate that D6-HP consists of two independent structural domains (D6 and HP) connected by an unfolded 40-residue linker sequence. The headpiece domain in D6-HP retains its structure and interacts with D6 only through the linker sequence without engaging in other interactions. Chemical shift values indicate essentially the same secondary structure elements for D6 in D6-HP as in the highly homologous gelsolin domain 6. Thus, the headpiece domain of villin is structurally and functionally independent of the core domain.  相似文献   

6.
The HeadPiece (HP) domain, present in several F-actin-binding multi-domain proteins, features a well-conserved, solvent-exposed PXWK motif in its C-terminal subdomain. The latter is an autonomously folding subunit comprised of three alpha-helices organised around a hydrophobic core, with the sequence motif preceding the last helix. We report the contributions of each conserved residue in the PXWK motif to human villin HP function and structure, as well as the structural implications of the naturally occurring Pro to Ala mutation in dematin HP. NMR shift perturbation mapping reveals that substitution of each residue by Ala induces only minor, local perturbations in the full villin HP structure. CD spectroscopic thermal analysis, however, shows that the Pro and Trp residues in the PXWK motif afford stabilising interactions. This indicates that, in addition to the residues in the hydrophobic core, the Trp-Pro stacking within the motif contributes to HP stability. This is reinforced by our data on isolated C-terminal HP subdomains where the Pro is also essential for structure formation, since the villin, but not the dematin, C-terminal subdomain is structured. Proper folding can be induced in the dematin C-terminal subdomain by exchanging the Ala for Pro. Conversely, the reverse substitution in the villin C-terminal subdomain leads to loss of structure. Thus, we demonstrate a crucial role for this proline residue in structural stability and folding potential of HP (sub)domains consistent with Pro-Trp stacking as a more general determinant of protein stability.  相似文献   

7.
Meng J  Vardar D  Wang Y  Guo HC  Head JF  McKnight CJ 《Biochemistry》2005,44(36):11963-11973
Villin-type headpiece domains are approximately 70 amino acid modular motifs found at the C terminus of a variety of actin cytoskeleton-associated proteins. The headpiece domain of villin, a protein found in the actin bundles of the brush border epithelium, is of interest both as a compact F-actin binding domain and as a model folded protein. We have determined the high-resolution crystal structures of chicken villin headpiece (HP67) at 1.4 A resolution as well as two mutants, R37A and W64Y, at 1.45 and 1.5 A resolution, respectively. Replacement of R37 causes a 5-fold reduction in F-actin binding affinity in sedimentation assays. Replacement of W64 results in a much more drastic reduction in F-actin binding affinity without significant changes in headpiece structure or stability. The detailed comparison of these crystal structures with each other and to our previously determined NMR structures of HP67 and the 35-residue autonomously folding subdomain in villin headpiece, HP35, provides the details of the headpiece fold and further defines the F-actin binding site of villin-type headpiece domains.  相似文献   

8.
Dematin (band 4.9) is an F-actin binding and bundling protein best known for its role within red blood cells, where it both stabilizes as well as attaches the spectrin/actin cytoskeleton to the erythrocytic membrane. Here, we investigate the structural consequences of phosphorylating serine 381, a covalent modification that turns off F-actin bundling activity. In contrast to the canonical doctrine, in which phosphorylation of an intrinsically disordered region/protein confers affinity for another domain/protein, we found the converse to be true of dematin: phosphorylation of the well folded C-terminal villin-type headpiece confers affinity for its intrinsically disordered N-terminal core domain. We employed analytical ultracentrifugation to demonstrate that dematin is monomeric, in contrast to the prevailing view that it is trimeric. Next, using a series of truncation mutants, we verified that dematin has two F-actin binding sites, one in the core domain and the other in the headpiece domain. Although the phosphorylation-mimicking mutant, S381E, was incapable of bundling microfilaments, it retains the ability to bind F-actin. We found that a phosphorylation-mimicking mutant, S381E, eliminated the ability to bundle, but not bind F-actin filaments. Lastly, we show that the S381E point mutant caused the headpiece domain to associate with the core domain, leading us to the mechanism for cAMP-dependent kinase control of dematin''s F-actin bundling activity: when unphosphorylated, dematin''s two F-actin binding domains move independent of one another permitting them to bind different F-actin filaments. Phosphorylation causes these two domains to associate, forming a compact structure, and sterically eliminating one of these F-actin binding sites.  相似文献   

9.
The villin headpiece (HP67) is a 67 residue, monomeric protein derived from the C-terminal domain of villin. Wild-type HP67 (WT HP67) is the smallest fragment of villin that retains strong in vitro actin-binding activity. WT HP67 is made up of two subdomains, which form a tightly packed interface. The C-terminal subdomain of WT HP67, denoted HP35, is rich in helical structure, folds in isolation, and has been widely used as a model system for folding studies. In contrast, very little is known about the folding of the intact villin headpiece domain. Here, NMR, CD and H/2H amide exchange measurements are used to follow the pH, thermal and urea-induced unfolding of WT HP67 and a mutant (HP67 H41Y) in which a buried conserved histidine in the N-terminal subdomain, His41, has been mutated to Tyr. Although most small proteins display two-state equilibrium unfolding, the results presented here demonstrate that unfolding of the villin headpiece is a multistate process. The presence of a folded N-terminal subdomain is shown to stabilize the C-terminal subdomain, increasing the midpoints of the thermal and urea-induced unfolding transitions and increasing protection factors for H/2H exchange. Histidine 41 has been shown to act as a pH-dependent switch in wild-type HP67: the N-terminal subdomain is unfolded when His41 is protonated, while the C-terminal subdomain remains folded irrespective of the protonation state of His41. Mutation of His41 to Tyr eliminates the segmental pH-dependent unfolding of the headpiece. The mutation stabilizes both domains, but folding is still multistate, indicating that His41 is not solely responsible for the unusual equilibrium unfolding behavior of villin headpiece domain.  相似文献   

10.
Villin-type headpiece domains are compact motifs that have been used extensively as model systems for protein folding. Although the majority of headpiece domains bind actin, there are some that lack this activity. Here, we present the first NMR solution structure and 15N-relaxation analysis of a villin-type headpiece domain natively devoid of F-actin binding activity, that of supervillin headpiece (SVHP). The structure was found to be similar to that of other headpiece domains that bind F-actin. Our NMR analysis demonstrates that SVHP lacks a conformationally flexible region (V-loop) present in all other villin-type headpiece domains and which is essential to the phosphoryl regulation of dematin headpiece. In comparing the electrostatic surface potential map of SVHP to that of other villin-type headpiece domains with significant affinity for F-actin, we identified a positive surface potential conserved among headpiece domains that bind F-actin but absent from SVHP. A single point mutation (L38K) in SVHP, which creates a similar positive surface potential, endowed SVHP with specific affinity for F-actin that is within an order of magnitude of the tightest binding headpiece domains. We propose that this effect is likely conferred by a specific buried salt bridge between headpiece and actin. As no high-resolution structural information exists for the villin-type headpiece F-actin complex, our results demonstrate that through positive mutagenesis, it is possible to design binding activity into homologous proteins without structural information of the counterpart's binding surface.  相似文献   

11.
Tang Y  Rigotti DJ  Fairman R  Raleigh DP 《Biochemistry》2004,43(11):3264-3272
The villin headpiece subdomain is a cooperatively folded 36-residue, three-alpha-helix protein. The domain is one of the smallest naturally occurring sequences which has been shown to fold. Recent experimental studies have shown that it folds on the 10-micros time scale. Its small size, simple topology, and very rapid folding have made it an attractive target for computational studies of protein folding. We present temperature-dependent NMR studies that provide evidence for significant structure in the denatured state of the headpiece subdomain. A set of peptide fragments derived from the headpiece were also characterized in order to determine if there is a significant tendency to form a locally stabilized structure in the denatured state. Peptides corresponding to each of the three isolated helices and to the connection between the first and second helices were largely unstructured. A longer peptide fragment which contains the first and second helices shows considerable structure, as judged by NMR and CD. Concentration-dependent CD measurements and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments indicate that the structure is not due to self-association. NMR studies indicate that the structure is stabilized by tertiary interactions involving phenylalanines and Val 50. A peptide in which two of the three phenylalanines are changed to leucine is considerably less structured, confirming the importance of the phenylalanines. This work indicates that there is significant structure in the denatured state of this rapidly folding protein.  相似文献   

12.
The actin binding site of thymosin beta 4 mapped by mutational analysis.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We characterized in detail the actin binding site of the small actin-sequestering protein thymosin beta 4 (T beta 4) using chemically synthesized full-length T beta 4 variants. The N-terminal part (residues 1-16) and a hexapeptide motif (residues 17-22) form separate structural entities. In both, we identified charged and hydrophobic residues that participate in the actin interaction using chemical cross-linking, complex formation in native gels and actin-sequestering experiments. Quantitative data on the activity of the variants and circular dichroism experiments allow to present a model in which the N-terminal part needs to adopt an alpha-helix for actin binding and interacts through a patch of hydrophobic residues (6M-I-F12) on one side of this helix. Also, electrostatic contacts between actin and lysine residues 18, in the motif, and 14, in the N-terminal alpha-helix, appear important for binding. The residues critical for contacting actin are conserved throughout the beta-thymosin family and in addition to this we identify a similar pattern in the C-terminal headpiece of villin and dematin.  相似文献   

13.
Dematin and adducin are actin-binding proteins of the erythrocyte "junctional complex." Individually, they exert modest effects on erythrocyte shape and membrane stability, and their homologues are expressed widely in non-erythroid cells. Here we report generation and characterization of double knock-out mice lacking beta-adducin and the headpiece domain of dematin. The combined mutations result in altered erythrocyte morphology, increased membrane instability, and severe hemolysis. Peripheral blood analysis shows evidence of severe hemolytic anemia with reduced number of erythrocytes/hematocrit/hemoglobin and an approximately 12-fold increase in the number of circulating reticulocytes. The presence of a variety of misshapen and fragmented erythrocytes correlates with increased osmotic fragility and reduced in vivo life span. Despite the apparently normal protein composition of the mutant erythrocyte membrane, the retention of the spectrin-actin complex in the membrane under low ionic strength conditions is significantly reduced by the double mutation. Atomic force microscopy reveals an increase in grain size and a decrease in filament number of the mutant membrane cytoskeleton, although the volume parameter is similar to wild type erythrocytes. Aggregated, disassembled, and irregular features are visualized in the mutant membrane, consistent with the presence of large protein aggregates. Importantly, purified dematin binds to the stripped inside-out vesicles in a saturable manner, and dematin-membrane binding is abolished upon pretreatment of membrane vesicles with trypsin. Together, these results reveal an essential role of dematin and adducin in the maintenance of erythrocyte shape and membrane stability, and they suggest that the dematin-membrane interaction could link the junctional complex to the plasma membrane in erythroid cells.  相似文献   

14.
Dematin is a broadly expressed membrane cytoskeletal protein that has been well characterized in erythrocytes and to a lesser extent in non-erythroid cells. However, dematin''s function in platelets is not known. Here, we show that dematin is abundantly expressed in both human and mouse platelets. Platelets harvested from the dematin headpiece knock-out (HPKO) mouse model exhibit a striking defect in the mobilization of calcium in response to multiple agonists of platelet activation. The reduced calcium mobilization in HPKO platelets is associated with concomitant inhibition of platelet aggregation and granule secretion. Integrin αIIbβ3 activation in response to agonists is attenuated in the HPKO platelets. The mutant platelets show nearly normal spreading on fibrinogen and an unaltered basal cAMP level; however, the clot retraction was compromised in the mutant mice. Immunofluorescence analysis indicated that dematin is present both at the dense tubular system and plasma membrane fractions of platelets. Proteomic analysis of dematin-associated proteins in human platelets identified inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 3-kinase isoform B (IP3KB) as a binding partner, which was confirmed by immunoprecipitation analysis. IP3KB, a dense tubular system protein, is a major regulator of calcium homeostasis. Loss of the dematin headpiece resulted in a decrease of IP3KB at the membrane and increased levels of IP3KB in the cytosol. Collectively, these findings unveil dematin as a novel regulator of internal calcium mobilization in platelets affecting multiple signaling and cytoskeletal functions. Implications of a conserved role of dematin in the regulation of calcium homeostasis in other cell types will be discussed.  相似文献   

15.
We report the backbone dynamics of monomeric phospholamban in dodecylphosphocholine micelles using (1)H/(15)N heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. Phospholamban is a 52-amino acid membrane protein that regulates Ca-ATPase in cardiac muscle. Phospholamban comprises three structural domains: a transmembrane domain from residues 22 to 52, a connecting loop from 17 to 21, and a cytoplasmic domain from 1 to 16 that is organized in an "L"-shaped structure where the transmembrane and the cytoplasmic domain form an angle of approximately 80 degrees (Zamoon et al., 2003; Mascioni et al., 2002). T(1), T(2), and (1)H/(15)N nuclear Overhauser effect values measured for the amide backbone resonances were interpreted using the model-free approach of Lipari and Szabo. The results point to the existence of four dynamic domains, revealing the overall plasticity of the cytoplasmic helix, the flexible loop, and part of the transmembrane domain (residues 22-30). In addition, using Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill-based experiments, we have characterized phospholamban dynamics in the micros-ms timescale. We found that the majority of the residues in the cytoplasmic domain, the flexible loop, and the first ten residues of the transmembrane domain undergo dynamics in the micros-ms range, whereas minimal dynamics were detected for the transmembrane domain. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange factors measured at different temperatures support the existence of slow motion in both the loop and the cytoplasmic helix. We propose that these dynamic properties are critical factors in the biomolecular recognition of phospholamban by Ca-ATPase and other interacting proteins such as protein kinase A and protein phosphatase 1.  相似文献   

16.
Cell motility, adhesion and actin cytoskeletal rearrangements occur upon integrin-engagement to the extracellular matrix and activation of the small family of Rho GTPases, RhoA, Rac1 and Cdc42. The activity of the GTPases is regulated through associations with guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs), GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) and guanine dissociation inhibitors (GDIs). Recent studies have demonstrated a critical role for actin-binding proteins, such as ezrin, radixin and moesin (ERM), in modulating the activity of small GTPases through their direct associations with GEFs, GAPs and GDI''s. Dematin, an actin binding and bundling phospho-protein was first identified and characterized from the erythrocyte membrane, and has recently been implicated in regulating cell motility, adhesion and morphology by suppressing RhoA activation in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Although the precise mechanism of RhoA suppression by dematin is unclear, several plausible and hypothetical models can be invoked. Dematin may bind and inhibit GEF activity, form an inactive complex with GDI-RhoA-GDP, or enhance GAP function. Dematin is the first actin-binding protein identified from the erythrocyte membrane that participates in GTPase signaling, and its broad expression suggests a conserved function in multiple tissues.Key words: dematin, RhoA, actin, GTPase, signalingCell adhesion and motility are mediated through activation of integrin receptors and the family of small Rho GTPases.1 Engagement of integrin receptors to the extracellular matrix leads to the activation of multiple kinase pathways (i.e., FAK, Src), inducing the assembly of the focal adhesion complex and actin/myosin contraction. Furthermore, activation of the receptor tyrosine kinases (i.e., insulin receptor) or G-protein coupled receptors (i.e., LPA receptor), leads to downstream signaling events that also trigger multiple kinase pathways that regulate the protrusive and contractile actin/myosin dynamics. These adhesion-dependent or receptor-driven signaling cascades ultimately result in the activation of the small family of Rho GTPases: Cdc42, Rac1 and RhoA, key regulators of actin cytoskeleton assembly. The activation of these GTPases induces lamellipodia (Rac1), filopodia (Cdc42), actin stress fiber formation (RhoA) and focal adhesion complex formation (Rac1 and RhoA). Nascent focal adhesion complex formation within the lamellipodia is a result of Rac1 activation;2 however, mature focal adhesions and actin cytoskeletal rearrangements are a direct consequence of RhoA activation.3The regulation of RhoA activity occurs through its interactions with guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs), GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) and guanine dissociation inhibitors (GDIs) (reviewed in refs. 46). The regulatory intricacies that govern RhoA association with GEFs, GAPs and GDIs remain poorly understood. However, it is now well accepted that actin-binding proteins participate and play a significant role in regulating the functional activity of RhoA GTPase through their direct association with RhoGEFs, GDI''s and RhoGAPs (7

Table 1

List of actin-binding proteins that are known to directly bind to GEFs, GAPs or GDIs and regulate RhoA activation
GEF/GAP/GDIActin binding proteinRef.
GEFsdblRadixin31
TrioTARA32
LfcSpinophilin33
LfcNeurobin33
GAPsCdGAPActopaxin19
Rgd1Vrp120
GDIsRhoGDIEzrin/Radixin/Moesin21
RhoGDIMerlin34
Open in a separate windowDematin, previously known as erythrocyte membrane protein band 4.9, is a member of the villin family of headpiece-containing actin-binding proteins. It contains a c-terminal actin-binding domain, and an N-terminal “core-domain” of unknown function.8,9 Dematin was first isolated and characterized from the mature erythrocyte membrane,10,11 where it functions to maintain erythrocyte shape and membrane structural integrity via a novel linkage at the actin-spectrin junctional complex through glucose transporter-1 (GLUT1) in a species specific manner.12 Despite its wide-spread expression, relatively little is known about the biological function of this actin-binding protein in non-erythroid cells. Previous studies have shown that the human dematin gene (EPB4.9) maps to 8p21.1,9 a chromosomal region that is frequently deleted in prostate cancers. Interestingly, it was demonstrated that a sub-set of metastatic prostate tumors show a loss of heterozygosity of the dematin gene. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that in PC-3 cells, a prostate cancer cell line, the overexpression of the dematin gene was able to revert the oncogenic morphology (cell rounding) to a normal prostate epithelial morphology (microvillar and cytoplasmic extensions), thus suggesting a possible role for dematin in modulating these cellular processes.13 To determine the in vivo function of dematin, a dematin headpiece-null mouse (HPKO) model was generated in our laboratory, lacking the c-terminal actin binding headpiece domain. Consequently, the HPKO model expresses a truncated variant of dematin containing the N-terminal “core-domain.” Hematological analysis of the HPKO erythrocytes revealed evidence of membrane fragility, spherocytosis and mild hemolytic anemia.14 Since the loss of the dematin actin-binding headpiece resulted in morphological defects in the erythrocyte, we extended these studies to investigate if these defects would manifest in non-erythroid cells. Isolated mouse embryonic fibroblasts from HPKO mice display abnormal cell morphology, motility and adhesion, presumably resulting from RhoA hyperactivation and subsequent phosphorylation of downstream signaling molecules, such as focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and myosin light chain (MLC).7 These data suggest that dematin acts upstream of RhoA perhaps by associating with one of the known regulators of RhoA activation: GEFs, GAPs and GDIs (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1Hypothetical models of dematin mediated regulation of RhoA signaling. (A) Dematin has been shown to bind the DH domain of RasGRF2, but does not modulate Rac1 or Ras activation through RasGRF2. In several yeast-2-hybrid RasGRF2 clones, an insert from the GEFD2 domain of the RhoA GEF, Trio, was identified. It is possible that dematin may bind to and inhibits the RhoA GEF activity on Trio. (B) Dematin may complex with GDI and inactive RhoA-GDP, by tethering GDI to the actin cytoskeleton. The release of dematin from the cytoskeleton results in RhoA-GDP release and activation. (C) Dematin may also act to spatially localize RhoGAP to enhance the activity on RhoA-GTP, which in turn results in RhoA suppression.Previous evidence has shown that dematin binds to calcium activated Ras-guanine nucleotide-releasing factor 2 (RasGRF2).15 RasGRF2 is a bifunctional guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) that can modulate the activation of Ras through its Cdc25 domain and Rac1 through its DH-PH domains (Dbl and Plekstrin homology domains).16 Although dematin binds to the DH domain of RasGRF2, dematin was unable to modulate the activation of Rac1 or Ras. Moreover, the yeast-2 hybrid results revealed that several of the isolated RasGRF2 clones contained an insert from the GEFD2 domain of Trio, a RhoA GEF.17 It is therefore plausible, that in vivo, dematin associates with Trio, and inhibits RhoA activation, similar to TRIPalpha, the first known inhibitor of a RhoA GEF, which specifically blocks the Trio GEFD2-exchange activity of RhoA.18 The significance of the postulated in vivo dematin interactions with Ras-GRF2 and TrioRhoGEF has not been established, but taken together; this model may provide a mechanistic link between dematin and RhoA (Fig. 1).RhoGAPs catalyze the hydrolysis of the active GTP-bound state of RhoA to the inactive GDP-bound form through intrinsic GTPase activity. Although there is no indication that dematin binds to a RhoGAP, it is possible that dematin behaves similarly to actopaxin19 and VRP1,20 actin-binding proteins that provide spatial and temporal regulation of RhoGAP function, and consequently RhoA inhibition. In addition to the regulation of RhoA through GEFs and GAPs, the actin-binding proteins, ezrin, radixin and moesin (ERMs) are known to sequester the guanine dissociation inhibitor, GDI, from RhoGDP.21 The tethering of GDI to the actin cytoskeleton reduces GDI activity, resulting in an increase in RhoA activation. Furthermore, recent studies have shown that PKA phosphorylation of GDI results in an increase in the association between GDI and RhoA-GDP, thus resulting in a decrease in RhoA activity.22 Interestingly, PKA phosphorylates and inhibits dematin''s actin-bundling activity by inducing a conformational change in the dematin actin-binding headpiece domain.10,23 It is possible that in the absence of PKA, dematin robustly interacts with GDI resulting in a stronger and tighter linkage to the actin cytoskeleton; thus in turn resulting in an increase in RhoA activation. Phosphorylation of dematin by PKA may result in the release of GDI from dematin and the actin cytoskeleton and causing subsequent suppression of RhoA activity. It is also possible that dematin retains inactive Rho-GDP in the cytosol, through an association with RhoGDI and the actin cytoskeleton. RhoA activation would occur when the dematin-RhoGDI-RhoA-GDP complex disassociates from the cytoskeleton via intracellular signaling events (Fig. 1).In addition to the aforementioned mechanisms of RhoA regulation through GEFs, GAPs and GDIs, it is also possible that dematin participates in the signaling cascade several steps upstream of RhoA activation. Dematin''s interaction with GLUT1,12 and with the scaffolding protein 14-3-3ζ may provide alternative models to investigate the mechanism of dematin-mediated suppression of RhoA. Since dematin interacts with GLUT1, it is possible that dematin mediates GLUT1 trafficking to the plasma membrane. In the absence of dematin, GLUT1 trafficking may be altered, thus resulting in abnormal glucose uptake. Metabolic defects have significant effects on intracellular signaling, which manifest itself in a variety of phenotypes, such as altered cell morphology, motility and adhesion.25 Proteomic analysis, as well as seven consensus 14-3-3 binding motifs, suggests that dematin may interact in vivo with the scaffolding protein, 14-3-3ζ.24 Recent evidence has shown that PI3-Kinase/Akt activation induces the association of an ankyrin repeat domain-containing protein, KANK, with 14-3-3ζ, which in turn results in RhoA activation.26 The mechanism by which KANK negatively regulates 14-3-3ζ-activation of RhoA is unknown. However, it has been reported that the RhoGEF, AKAP-Lbc, is inhibited by anchoring PKA to 14-3-3ζ.27 It is thus possible that dematin exists in a similar complex to suppress RhoA activation.The unexpected finding that dematin functions as a suppressor of RhoA activity has its significance as being the first protein isolated from the erythrocyte that has been functionally linked to a small GTPase and regulates its activity. There is a significant amount of RhoA in the human erythrocytes,28 and it is possible that other cytoskeletal components of the erythrocyte membrane are also able to modulate small Rho-GTPases in vivo. Recent evidence has implicated the small GTPase, Rac1 and Rac2 in modulating the deformability of the erythrocyte membrane29 and Rac GTPases together with mDia2 regulate enucleation in mammalian erythroblasts.30 Although the precise mechanism of these processes is not yet clear, it raises the possibility that the erythrocyte membrane yet again serves as a paradigm for elucidating fundamental biochemical processes beyond the field of red cell biology. Future studies on the dematin-RhoA signaling pathway will be directed toward elucidating the mechanism by which dematin is able to suppress RhoA activation in relevant cell types.  相似文献   

17.
Transfected CV1 cells were used to compare the in vivo effects of various domains of villin and gelsolin. These two homologous actin modulating proteins both contain a duplicated severin-like sequence. Villin has in addition a carboxy-terminal domain, the headpiece, which accounts for its bundling activity. The effects of the villin-deleted mutants were compared with those of native villin. Our results show that essential domains of villin required to induce the growth of microvilli and F-actin redistribution are present in the first half of the core and in the headpiece. We also show that the second half of the villin core cannot be exchanged by its homolog in gelsolin. When expressed at high levels of CV1 cells, full length gelsolin completely disrupted stress fibers without change of the cell shape. Addition of the villin headpiece to gelsolin had no effect on the phenotype induced by gelsolin alone. Expression of the first half of gelsolin induced similar modifications as capping proteins and rapid cell mortality; this deleterious effect on the cell structure was also observed when the headpiece was linked to the first half of gelsolin. In cells expressing the second half of gelsolin, a dotted F-actin staining was often seen. Moreover elongated dorsal F-actin structures were observed when the headpiece was linked to the second gelsolin domain. These studies illustrate the patent in vivo severing activity of gelsolin as well as the distinct functional properties of villin core in contrast to gelsolin.  相似文献   

18.
Kozlov G  Gehring K  Ekiel I 《Biochemistry》2000,39(10):2572-2580
The solution structure of the second PDZ domain (PDZ2) from human phosphatase hPTP1E has been determined using 2D and 3D heteronuclear NMR experiments. The binding of peptides derived from the C-terminus of the Fas receptor to PDZ2 was studied via changes in backbone peptide and protein resonances. The structure is based on a total of 1387 nonredundant experimental NMR restraints including 1261 interproton distance restraints, 45 backbone hydrogen bonds, and 81 torsion angle restraints. Analysis of 30 lowest-energy structures resulted in rmsd values of 0.41 +/- 0.09 A for backbone atoms (N, Calpha, C') and 1.08 +/- 0.10 A for all heavy atoms, excluding the disordered N- and C-termini. The hPTP1E PDZ2 structure is similar to known PDZ domain structures but contains two unique structural features. In the peptide binding domain, the first glycine of the GLGF motif is replaced by a serine. This serine appears to replace a bound water observed in PDZ crystal structures that hydrogen bonds to the bound peptide's C-terminus. The hPTP1E PDZ2 structure also contains an unusually large loop following strand beta2 and proximal to the peptide binding site. This well-ordered loop folds back against the PDZ domain and contains several residues that undergo large amide chemical shift changes upon peptide binding. Direct observation of peptide resonances demonstrates that as many as six Fas peptide residues interact with the PDZ2 domain.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the structure, equilibria, and folding kinetics of an engineered 35-residue subdomain of the chicken villin headpiece, an ultrafast-folding protein. Substitution of two buried lysine residues by norleucine residues stabilizes the protein by 1 kcal/mol and increases the folding rate sixfold, as measured by nanosecond laser T-jump. The folding rate at 300 K is (0.7 micros)(-1) with little or no temperature dependence, making this protein the first sub-microsecond folder, with a rate only twofold slower than the theoretically predicted speed limit. Using the 70 ns process to obtain the effective diffusion coefficient, the free energy barrier height is estimated from Kramers theory to be less than approximately 1 kcal/mol. X-ray crystallographic determination at 1A resolution shows no significant change in structure compared to the single-norleucine-substituted molecule and suggests that the increased stability is electrostatic in origin. The ultrafast folding rate, very accurate X-ray structure, and small size make this engineered villin subdomain an ideal system for simulation by atomistic molecular dynamics with explicit solvent.  相似文献   

20.
Villin and gelsolin consist of six homologous domains of the gelsolin/cofilin fold (V1–V6 and G1–G6, respectively). Villin differs from gelsolin in possessing at its C terminus an unrelated seventh domain, the villin headpiece. Here, we present the crystal structure of villin domain V6 in an environment in which intact villin would be inactive, in the absence of bound Ca2+ or phosphorylation. The structure of V6 more closely resembles that of the activated form of G6, which contains one bound Ca2+, rather than that of the calcium ion-free form of G6 within intact inactive gelsolin. Strikingly apparent is that the long helix in V6 is straight, as found in the activated form of G6, as opposed to the kinked version in inactive gelsolin. Molecular dynamics calculations suggest that the preferable conformation for this helix in the isolated G6 domain is also straight in the absence of Ca2+ and other gelsolin domains. However, the G6 helix bends in intact calcium ion-free gelsolin to allow interaction with G2 and G4. We suggest that a similar situation exists in villin. Within the intact protein, a bent V6 helix, when triggered by Ca2+, straightens and helps push apart adjacent domains to expose actin-binding sites within the protein. The sixth domain in this superfamily of proteins serves as a keystone that locks together a compact ensemble of domains in an inactive state. Perturbing the keystone initiates reorganization of the structure to reveal previously buried actin-binding sites.Actin is crucial to such processes as cell movement, cell division, and apoptosis, which are regulated by numerous actin-binding proteins, including gelsolin, Arp2/3, and profilin (for review, see Ref. 1). Gelsolin, the most potent actin filament-severing protein known, can bind to, sever, cap, and nucleate actin filaments in a calcium-, pH-, ATP-, and phospholipid-dependent manner (for review, see Ref. 2). Villin, found in microvilli of absorptive epithelium, is a second member of the gelsolin family of actin-binding proteins. In addition to standard gelsolin-type activities, villin is able to bundle actin filaments and is subject to regulation by tyrosine phosphorylation as well as by Ca2+ and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (for review, see Ref. 3). Many comparisons have been made between gelsolin and villin. The two share 50% amino acid sequence identity and show similar proteolytic cleavage patterns (4). Both contain six similarly folded domains, but villin possesses a seventh domain at its C terminus, the headpiece (HP)2 domain, which folds into a compact structure that introduces a second F-actin-binding site into the protein. Recent studies indicate that villin uses the HP F-actin-binding sites to achieve bundling (5). In an environment devoid of free Ca2+, gelsolin and villin assume inactive conformations. After binding Ca2+, both undergo conformational rearrangements that expose their binding sites for F-actin. In villin, this includes revealing the HP actin-binding site through a “hinge mechanism” (6).Biochemical and structural studies have revealed eight Ca2+-binding sites of two types in gelsolin (for review, see Ref. 7). Each of the six domains contains a complete and evolutionarily conserved site, termed type 2, whereas G1 and G4 provide partial Ca2+ coordination at interfaces with actin through sites termed type 1. Sequential mutagenesis of these sites in villin has identified six functional Ca2+-binding sites (8): two major sites, one each of type 1 and type 2, in V1, plus four type 2 sites in V2–V6. The type 1 site in V1 regulates F-actin-capping and F-actin-severing activities, whereas the lower affinity type 2 site in V1 only affects severing (9). The other four sites are involved in stabilizing villin conformation, but they do not directly influence actin-severing activity. NMR studies of a fragment of villin that consists of V6 and the HP domain have implicated V6 residues Asn647, Asp648, and Glu670 in binding Ca2+ (10). These experiments also revealed the first 80 residues of V6 to undergo significant conformational change as a result of Ca2+ binding.Nanomolar to micromolar concentrations of free Ca2+ govern the actin-binding activities of gelsolin. In contrast, micromolar and millimolar concentrations of calcium ions are required for villin to exhibit capping and severing, respectively. However, after tyrosine phosphorylation, villin can sever actin filaments even at nanomolar Ca2+ concentrations (11). Furthermore, although the actin-severing ability of the N-terminal half of villin is calcium-dependent, that by the N-terminal half of gelsolin is not. In contrast, the binding of G-actin of the C-terminal half of both villin and gelsolin requires Ca2+. Creation of hybrid proteins demonstrated that the domains of villin and gelsolin are not interchangeable (12).Abundant x-ray crystallographic structural information exists for gelsolin, including the calcium ion-free (Ca2+-free), inactive structure of the intact protein (13), the activated N- and C-terminal halves, each in a bimolecular complex with actin (7, 14), and the activated C-terminal half on its own (15, 16). Structural data for intact villin are unavailable and are limited to fragment V1 (17), solved using NMR methods, and the HP domain, solved by NMR and x-ray crystallography (18, 19). NMR experiments also indicate that HP is connected to V6 by a 40-residue disordered linker. As a result, HP has been proposed to bind actin independently of the remainder of the protein (10).In this report, we present the structure of Ca2+-free, isolated villin V6, which exhibits a typical gelsolin domain fold. The long helix in V6 in this structure is straight, unlike the corresponding helix in G6 of intact Ca2+-free gelsolin, which is bent, and only straightens on calcium activation of the intact protein. Hence, V6 appears to be in an active conformation in the absence of Ca2+. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the preferred state of the long helix is also straight for isolated G6 in the absence of Ca2+. Furthermore, they suggest a bistable mechanism of helix conformational change regulated by the presence of the remaining domains, by calcium ions, and by other interactants. We therefore propose a mechanism for the gelsolin family proteins whereby Ca2+ triggers the straightening of the domain 6 helix in the native conformation of the inactive proteins to propagate more widespread conformational changes.  相似文献   

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