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1.
Myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) is a multidomain accessory protein of striated muscle sarcomeres. Three domains at the N-terminus of MyBP-C (C1-m-C2) play a crucial role in maintaining and modulating actomyosin interactions. The cardiac isoform has an additional N-terminal domain (C0) that is postulated to provide a greater level of regulatory control in cardiac muscle. We have used small-angle X-ray scattering, ab initio shape restoration, and rigid-body modeling to determine the average shape and spatial arrangement of the four N-terminal domains of cardiac MyBP-C (C0C2) and a three-domain variant that is analogous to the N-terminus of the skeletal isoform (C1C2). We found that the domains of both proteins are tandemly arranged in a highly extended configuration that is sufficiently long to span the interfilament cross-bridge distances in vivo and, hence, be poised to modulate these interactions. The average spatial organization of the C1, m, and C2 domains is not significantly perturbed by the removal of the cardiac-specific C0 domain, suggesting that the interdomain interfaces, while relatively small in area, have a degree of rigidity. Modeling the C0C2 and C1C2 scattering data reveals that the structures of the C0 and m domains (also referred to as the ‘MyBP motif’) are compact and have dimensions that are consistent with the immunoglobulin fold superfamily of proteins. Sequence analysis, homology modeling, and circular dichroism experiments support the conclusion that the previously undetermined structures of these domains can be characterized as having an immunoglobulin-like fold. Atomic models using the known NMR structures for C1 and C2 as well as homology models for the C0 and m domains provide insights into the placement of conserved serine residues of the m domain that are phosphorylated in vivo and cause a change in muscle fiber contraction by abolishing interactions with myosin.  相似文献   

2.
cMyBP-C [cardiac (MyBP-C) myosin-binding protein-C)] is a sarcomeric protein involved both in thick filament structure and in the regulation of contractility. It is composed of eight IgI-like and three fibronectin-3-like domains (termed C0-C10). Mutations in the gene encoding cMyBP-C are a principal cause of HCM (hypertrophic cardiomyopathy). cMyBP-C binds to the LMM (light meromyosin) portion of the myosin rod via its C-terminal domain, C10. We investigated this interaction in detail to determine whether HCM mutations in beta myosin heavy chain located within the LMM portion alter the binding of cMyBP-C, and to define the precise region of LMM that binds C10 to aid in developing models of the arrangement of MyBP-C on the thick filament. In co-sedimentation experiments recombinant C10 bound full-length LMM with a K(d) of 3.52 microM and at a stoichiometry of 1.14 C10 per LMM. C10 was also shown to bind with similar affinity to LMM containing either the HCM mutations A1379T or S1776G, suggesting that these HCM mutations do not perturb C10 binding. Using a range of N-terminally truncated LMM fragments, the cMyBP-C-binding site on LMM was shown to lie between residues 1554 and 1581. Since it had been reported previously that acidic residues on myosin mediate the C10 interaction, three clusters of acidic amino acids (Glu1554/Glu1555, Glu1571/Glu1573 and Glu1578/Asp1580/Glu1581/Glu1582) were mutated in full-length LMM and the proteins tested for C10 binding. No effect of these mutations on C10 binding was however detected. We interpret our results with respect to the localization of the proposed trimeric collar on the thick filament.  相似文献   

3.
The N-terminal domains of cardiac myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) play a regulatory role in modulating interactions between myosin and actin during heart muscle contraction. Using NMR spectroscopy and small-angle neutron scattering, we have determined specific details of the interaction between the two-module human C0C1 cMyBP-C fragment and F-actin. The small-angle neutron scattering data show that C0C1 spontaneously polymerizes monomeric actin (G-actin) to form regular assemblies composed of filamentous actin (F-actin) cores decorated by C0C1, similar to what was reported in our earlier four-module mouse cMyBP-C actin study. In addition, NMR titration analyses show large intensity changes for a subset of C0C1 peaks upon addition of G-actin, indicating that human C0C1 interacts specifically with actin and promotes its assembly into filaments. During the NMR titration, peaks corresponding to cardiac-specific C0 domain are the first to be affected, followed by those from the C1 domain. No peak intensity or position changes were detected for peaks arising from the disordered proline/alanine-rich (P/A) linker connecting C0 with C1, despite previous suggestions of its involvement in binding actin. Of considerable interest is the observation that the actin-interaction “hot-spots” within the C0 and C1 domains, revealed in our NMR study, overlap with regions previously identified as binding to the regulatory light chain of myosin and to myosin ΔS2. Our results suggest that C0 and C1 interact with myosin and actin using a common set of binding determinants and therefore support a cMyBP-C switching mechanism between myosin and actin.  相似文献   

4.
The folding properties of wild type and mutants of domain C5 from cardiac myosin binding protein C have been investigated via molecular dynamics simulations within the framework of a native-centric and coarse-grained model. The relevance of a mutation has been assessed through the shift in the unfolding temperature, the change in the unfolding rate it determines and Phi-values analysis. In a previous paper (Guardiani et al. Biophys J 94:1403-1411, 2008), we performed Kinetic simulations on native contact formation revealing an entropy-driven folding pathway originating near the FG and DE loops. This folding mechanism allowed also a possible interpretation of the molecular impact of the three mutations, Arg14His, Arg28His and Asn115Lys involved in the Familial Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. Here we extend that analysis by enriching the mutant pool and we identify a correlation between unfolding rates and the number of native contacts retained in the transition state.  相似文献   

5.
M Gruen  H Prinz  M Gautel 《FEBS letters》1999,453(3):254-259
Myosin binding protein C is a protein of the myosin filaments of striated muscle which is expressed in isoforms specific for cardiac and skeletal muscle. The cardiac isoform is phosphorylated rapidly upon adrenergic stimulation of myocardium by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and together with the phosphorylation of troponin-I and phospholamban contributes to the positive inotropy that results from adrenergic stimulation of the heart. Cardiac myosin binding protein C is phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase on three sites in a myosin binding protein C specific N-terminal domain which binds to myosin-S2. This interaction with myosin close to the motor domain is likely to mediate the regulatory function of the protein. Cardiac myosin binding protein C is a common target gene of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and most mutations encode N-terminal subfragments of myosin binding protein C. The understanding of the signalling interactions of the N-terminal region is therefore important for understanding the pathophysiology of myosin binding protein C associated cardiomyopathy. We demonstrate here by cosedimentation assays and isothermal titration calorimetry that the myosin-S2 binding properties of the myosin binding protein C motif are abolished by cAMP-dependent protein kinase-mediated tris-phosphorylation, decreasing the S2 affinity from a Kd of approximately 5 microM to undetectable levels. We show that the slow and fast skeletal muscle isoforms are no cAMP-dependent protein kinase substrates and that the S2 interaction of these myosin binding protein C isoforms is therefore constitutively on. The regulation of cardiac contractility by myosin binding protein C therefore appears to be a 'brake-off' mechanism that will free a specific subset of myosin heads from sterical constraints imposed by the binding to the myosin binding protein C motif.  相似文献   

6.
The cardiac isoform of myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C) is a key regulatory protein found in cardiac myofilaments that can control the activation state of both the actin-containing thin and myosin-containing thick filaments. However, in contrast to thin filament–based mechanisms of regulation, the mechanism of myosin-based regulation by cMyBP-C has yet to be defined in detail. To clarify its function in this process, we used microscale thermophoresis to build an extensive interaction map between cMyBP-C and isolated fragments of β-cardiac myosin. We show here that the regulatory N-terminal domains (C0C2) of cMyBP-C interact with both the myosin head (myosin S1) and tail domains (myosin S2) with micromolar affinity via phosphorylation-independent and phosphorylation-dependent interactions of domain C1 and the cardiac-specific m-motif, respectively. Moreover, we show that the interaction sites with the highest affinity between cMyBP-C and myosin S1 are localized to its central domains, which bind myosin with submicromolar affinity. We identified two separate interaction regions in the central C2C4 and C5C7 segments that compete for the same binding site on myosin S1, suggesting that cMyBP-C can crosslink the two myosin heads of a single myosin molecule and thereby stabilize it in the folded OFF state. Phosphorylation of the cardiac-specific m-motif by protein kinase A had no effect on the binding of either the N-terminal or the central segments to the myosin head domain, suggesting this might therefore represent a constitutively bound state of myosin associated with cMyBP-C. Based on our results, we propose a new model of regulation of cardiac myosin function by cMyBP-C.  相似文献   

7.
G Walker  R Yabkowitz  D R Burgess 《Biochemistry》1991,30(42):10206-10210
The way in which actin and myosin II become localized to the contractile ring of dividing cells resulting in cleavage furrow formation and cytokinesis is unknown. While much is known about actin binding proteins and actin localization, little is known about myosin localization. A 53-kDa (53K) polypeptide present in the sea urchin egg binds to myosin II in a nucleotide-dependent manner and mediates its solubility in vitro [Yabkowitz, R., & Burgess, D.R. (1987) J. Cell Biol. 105, 927-936]. The binding site of 53K on the myosin molecule was examined in an effort to understand the mechanism of 53K-induced myosin solubility and its potential function in myosin regulation. Blot overlay and chemical cross-linking techniques utilizing myosin proteolytic fragments indicate that 53K binds to fragments proximal to the head-rod junction of myosin. Fragments distal to the head-rod junction do not bind 53K. In addition, the binding of 53K to myosin largely inhibits protease digestion that produces the head and rod fragments. The binding of 53K to the head-rod domain of myosin may be critical in regulation of myosin conformation, localization, assembly, and ATPase activity.  相似文献   

8.
The regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction involves a number of different molecules, including the thin-filament accessory proteins tropomyosin and troponin that provide Ca2+-dependent regulation by controlling access to myosin binding sites on actin. Cardiac myosin binding protein C (cMyBP-C) appears to modulate this Ca2+-dependent regulation and has attracted increasing interest due to links with inherited cardiac diseases. A number of single amino acid mutations linked to clinical diseases occur in the N-terminal region of cMyBP-C, including domains C0 and C1, which previously have been shown to bind to F-actin. This N-terminal region also has been shown to both inhibit and activate actomyosin interactions in vitro. Using electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstruction, we show that C0 and C1 can each bind to the same two distinctly different positions on F-actin. One position aligns well with the previously reported binding site that clashes with the binding of myosin to actin, but would force tropomyosin into an “on” position that exposes myosin binding sites along the filament. The second position identified here would not interfere with either myosin binding or tropomyosin positioning. It thus appears that the ability to bind to at least two distinctly different positions on F-actin, as observed for tropomyosin, may be more common than previously considered for other actin binding proteins. These observations help to explain many of the seemingly contradictory results obtained with cMyBP-C and show how cMyBP-C can provide an additional layer of regulation to actin-myosin interactions. They also suggest a redundancy of C0 and C1 that may explain the absence of C0 in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

9.
The 1,4-beta-glucanase CenC from Cellulomonas fimi contains two cellulose-binding domains, CBD(N1) and CBD(N2), arranged in tandem at its N-terminus. These homologous CBDs are distinct in their selectivity for binding amorphous and not crystalline cellulose. Multidimensional heteronuclear nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to determine the tertiary structure of CBD(N2) in the presence of saturating amounts of cellopentaose. A total of 1996 experimental restraints were used to calculate an ensemble of 21 final structures for the protein. CBD(Nu2) is composed of 11 beta-strands, folded into two antiparallel beta-sheets, with a topology of a jellyroll beta-sandwich. On the basis of patterns of chemical shift perturbations accompanying the addition of cellooligosaccharides, as well as the observation of intermolecular protein-sugar NOE interactions, the cellulose-binding site of CBD(N2) was identified as a cleft that lies across one face of the beta-sandwich. The thermodynamic basis for the binding of cellooligosaccharides was investigated using isothermal titration calorimetry and NMR spectroscopy. Binding is enthalpically driven and consistent with a structural model involving hydrogen bonding between the equatorial hydroxyls of the glucopyranosyl rings and polar amino acid side chains lining the CBD(N2) cleft. Affinity electrophoresis was used to determine that CBD(N2) also binds soluble beta-1,4-linked polymers of glucose, including hydroxyethylcellulose and beta-1,3-1,4-glucans. This study complements a previous analysis of CBD(N1) [Johnson, P. E., Joshi, M. D., Tomme, P., Kilburn, D. G., and McIntosh, L. P. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 14381-14394] and demonstrates that the homologous CBDs from CenC share very similar structures and sugar binding properties.  相似文献   

10.
Guardiani C  Cecconi F  Livi R 《Proteins》2008,70(4):1313-1322
Thermal folding molecular dynamics simulations of the domain C5 of Myosin binding protein C were performed using a native-centric model to study the role of three mutations related to Familial Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. Mutation of Asn755 causes the largest shift of the folding temperature, and the residue is located in the CFGA' beta-sheet featuring the highest phi-values. The mutation thus appears to reduce the thermodynamic stability in agreement with experimental data. The mutations on Arg654 and Arg668, conversely, cause little change in the folding temperature and they reside in the low phi-value BDE beta-sheet, so that their pathological role cannot be related to impairment of the folding process but possibly to the binding with target molecules. As the typical signature of Domain C5 is the presence of a longer and destibilizing CD-loop with respect to the other Ig-like domains, we completed the work with a bioinformatic analysis of this loop showing a high density of negative charge and low hydrophobicity. This indicates the CD-loop as a natively unfolded sequence with a likely coupling between folding and ligand binding.  相似文献   

11.
The large multidomain muscle protein myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) has been implicated for some time in cardiac disease while until recently little was known about its structure and function. Here we present a detailed study of the central domain C5 of the cardiac isoform of MyBP-C. This domain is unusual in several aspects. Firstly it contains two sizeable insertions compared to the non-cardiac isoforms. The first insertion comprises the linker between domains cC4 and cC5 that is elongated by ten amino acid residues, the second insertion comprises an elongation of the CD-loop in the middle of the domain by approximately 30 amino acid residues. Secondly two point mutations linked to familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) have been identified in this domain. This work shows that the general fold of cC5 is in agreement with the IgI family of beta-sandwich structures. The long cardiac-specific linker between cC4 and cC5 is not a linker at all but an integral part of the fold of cC5, as evidenced by an unfolded mutant in which this segment was removed. The second insertion is shown to be unstructured, highly dynamic and mostly extended according to NMR relaxation measurements and analytical ultracentrifugation. The loss of several key interactions conserved in the CD-loop of the IgI fold is assumed to be responsible for the low stability of cC5 compared to other IgI domains from titin and MyBP-C itself. The low thermodynamic stability of cC5 is most evident in one of the two FHC-linked mutations, N755K (Asn115 in this construct) which is mainly unfolded with a small proportion of a native-like folded species. In contrast, the second FHC-linked mutation, R654H (Arg14 in this construct) is as well folded and stable as the wild-type. This residue is located in the extended beta-bulge at the N terminus of the protein, pointing towards the surface of the CFGA' beta-sheet. This position is in agreement with recent data pointing to a function of Arg654 in an intermolecular interaction with MyBP-C domain cC8.  相似文献   

12.
Ezrin is a membrane-cytoskeletal linking protein that is concentrated in actin-rich surface structures. It is closely related to the microvillar proteins radixin and moesin and to the tumor suppressor merlin/schwannomin. Cell extracts contain ezrin dimers and ezrin-moesin heterodimers in addition to monomers. Truncated ezrin fusion proteins were assayed by blot overlay to determine which regions mediate self-association. Here we report that ezrin self-association occurs by head-to-tail joining of distinct N-terminal and C-terminal domains. It is likely that these domains, termed N- and C-ERMADs (ezrin-radixin-moesin association domain), are responsible for homotypic and heterotypic associations among ERM family members. The N-ERMAD of ezrin resided within amino acids 1-296; deletion of 10 additional residues resulted in loss of activity. The C-ERMAD was mapped to the last 107 amino acids of ezrin, residues 479-585. The two residues at the C-terminus were required for activity, and the region from 530-585 was insufficient. The C-ERMAD was masked in the native monomer. Exposure of this domain required unfolding ezrin with sodium dodecyl sulfate or expressing the domain as part of a truncated protein. Intermolecular association could not occur unless the C-ERMAD had been made accessible to its N-terminal partner. It can be inferred that dimerization in vivo requires an activation step that exposes this masked domain. The conformationally inaccessible C-terminal region included the F-actin binding site, suggesting that this activity is likewise regulated by masking.  相似文献   

13.
We raised murine mAb against human C protein C2. The representative mAb 3A3.3 (IgG1 kappa) recognized an epitope on the C2b domain of C2, as determined by binding and inhibition of binding radioassays. The hemolytic activity of purified human C2 and of C2 in normal human serum was inhibited by the mAb. The rate of decay of the C3-convertase at 30 degrees C was not affected by the mAb. C2 binding to EAC4b was inhibited by intact IgG and the Fab fragment of the mAb; 50% inhibition required 1 microgram/ml of either. The data suggest the presence of a C4b-binding site on the C2b domain of C2 and that the mAb recognizes an epitope at, or adjacent to, this site. The C2b portion of the C2 molecule may be important in assembly of the classical pathway C3-convertase.  相似文献   

14.
E A Nalefski  A C Newton 《Biochemistry》2001,40(44):13216-13229
Conventional isoforms of protein kinase C (PKC) are activated when their two membrane-targeting modules, the C1 and C2 domains, bind the second messengers diacylglycerol (DG) and Ca2+, respectively. This study investigates the mechanism of Ca2+-induced binding of PKC betaII to anionic membranes mediated by the C2 domain. Stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy reveals that Ca2+-induced binding of the isolated C2 domain to anionic vesicles proceeds via at least two steps: (1) rapid binding of two or more Ca2+ ions to the free domain with relatively low affinity and (2) diffusion-controlled association of the Ca2+-occupied domain with vesicles. Ca2+ increases the affinity of the C2 domain for anionic membranes by both decreasing the dissociation rate constant (k(off)) and increasing the association rate constant (k(on)) for membrane binding. For binding to vesicles containing 40 mol % anionic lipid in the presence of 200 microM Ca2+, k(off) and k(on) are 8.9 s(-1) and 1.2 x 10(10) M(-1) x s(-1), respectively. The k(off) value increases to 150 s(-1) when free Ca2+ levels are rapidly reduced, decreasing the average lifetime of the membrane-bound C2 domain (tau = k(off)(-1)) from 110 ms in the presence of Ca2+ to 6.7 ms when Ca2+ is rapidly removed. Experiments addressing the role of electrostatic interactions reveal that they stabilize either the initial C2 domain-membrane encounter complex or the high-affinity membrane-bound complex. Specifically, lowering the phosphatidylserine mole fraction or including MgCl2 in the binding reaction decreases the affinity of the C2 domain for anionic vesicles by both reducing k(on) and increasing k(off) measured in the presence of 200 microM Ca2+. These species do not affect the k(off) value when Ca2+ is rapidly removed. Studies with PKC betaII reveal that Ca2+-induced binding to membranes by the full-length protein proceeds minimally via two kinetically resolvable steps: (1) a rapid bimolecular association of the enzyme with vesicles near the diffusion-controlled limit and, most likely, (2) subsequent conformational changes of the membrane-bound enzyme. As is the case for the C2 domain, k(off) for full-length PKC betaII increases when Ca2+ is rapidly removed, reducing tau from 11 s in the presence of Ca2+ to 48 ms in its absence. Thus, both the C2 domain and the slow conformational change prolong the lifetime of the PKC betaII-membrane ternary complex in the presence of Ca2+, with rapid membrane release triggered by removal of Ca2+. These results provide a molecular basis for cofactor regulation of PKC whereby the C2 domain searches three-dimensional space at the diffusion-controlled limit to target PKC to relatively common anionic phospholipids, whereupon a two-dimensional search is initiated by the C1 domain for the more rare, membrane-partitioned DG.  相似文献   

15.

Background  

Cardiac contractility is regulated by dynamic phosphorylation of sarcomeric proteins by kinases such as cAMP-activated protein kinase A (PKA). Efficient phosphorylation requires that PKA be anchored close to its targets by A-kinase anchoring proteins (AKAPs). Cardiac Myosin Binding Protein-C (cMyBPC) and cardiac troponin I (cTNI) are hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)-causing sarcomeric proteins which regulate contractility in response to PKA phosphorylation.  相似文献   

16.
C-protein is a major component of skeletal and cardiac muscle thick filaments. Mutations in the gene encoding cardiac C-protein [cardiac myosin binding protein-C (cMyBP-C)] are one of the principal causes of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. cMyBP-C is a string of globular domains including eight immunoglobulin-like and three fibronectin-like domains termed C0-C10. It binds to myosin and titin, and probably to actin, and may have both a structural and a regulatory role in muscle function. To help to understand the pathology of the known mutations, we have solved the structure of the immunoglobulin-like C1 domain of MyBP-C by X-ray crystallography to a resolution of 1.55 Å. Mutations associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are clustered at one end towards the C-terminus, close to the important C1C2 linker, where they alter the structural integrity of this region and its interactions.  相似文献   

17.
The N-terminal domain of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) comprising residues 33-80 and lacking the cardiac-specific amino terminus forms a stable binary complex with the C-terminal domain of cardiac troponin C (cTnC) comprising residues 81-161. We have utilized heteronuclear multidimensional NMR to assign the backbone and side-chain resonances of Ca2+-saturated cTnC(81-161) both free and bound to cTnI(33-80). No significant differences were observed between secondary structural elements determined for free and cTnI(33-80)-bound cTnC(81-161). We have determined solution structures of Ca2+-saturated cTnC(81-161) free and bound to cTnI(33-80). While the tertiary structure of cTnC(81-161) is qualitatively similar to that observed free in solution, the binding of cTnI(33-80) results mainly in an opening of the structure and movement of the loop region between helices F and G. Together, these movements provide the binding site for the N-terminal domain of cTnI. The putative binding site for cTnI(33-80) was determined by mapping amide proton and nitrogen chemical shift changes, induced by the binding of cTnI(33-80), onto the C-terminal cTnC structure. The binding interface for cTnI(33-80), as suggested from chemical shift changes, involves predominantly hydrophobic interactions located in the expanded hydrophobic pocket. The largest chemical shift changes were observed in the loop region connecting helices F and G. Inspection of available TnC sequences reveals that these residues are highly conserved, suggesting a common binding motif for the Ca2+/Mg2+-dependent interaction site in the TnC/TnI complex.  相似文献   

18.
Ca ions can influence the contraction of cardiac muscle by activating kinases that specifically phosphorylate the myofibrillar proteins myosin-binding protein C (MyBP-C) and the regulatory light chain of myosin (RLC). To investigate the possible role of Ca-regulated phosphorylation of MyBP-C on contraction, isolated quiescent and rhythmically contracting cardiac trabeculae were exposed to different concentrations of extracellular Ca and then chemically skinned to clamp the contractile system. Maximum Ca-activated force (F(max)) was measured in quiescent cells soaking in 1) 2.5 mM Ca for 120 min, 2) 1.25 mM for 120 min, or 3) 1.25 mM for 120 min followed by 10 min in 7.5 mM, and 4) cells rhythmically contracting in 2.5 mM for 20 min. F(max) was, respectively, 21.5, 10.5, 24.7, and 32.6 mN/mm(2). Changes in F(max) were closely associated with changes in the degree of phosphorylation of MyBP-C and occurred at intracellular concentrations of Ca below levels associated with phosphorylation of RLC. Monophosphorylation of MyBP-C by a Ca-regulated kinase is necessary before beta-adrenergic stimulation can produce additional phosphorylation. These results suggest that Ca-dependent phosphorylation of MyBP-C modulates contractility by changing thick filament structure.  相似文献   

19.
The contribution to the free energy of binding of each of the residues forming the binding site for a human IgG Fc fragment on the surface of the B1 domain of protein G was determined by alanine-scanning mutagenesis. The interface between these two proteins is atypical in that it is smaller than usual, polar in character, and involves two well-defined "knobs-into-holes" interactions. The bulk of the free energy of binding is contributed by three central residues, which make hydrogen bonds across the interface. Of these, the most critical interaction is formed by Glu27, which acts as a charged knob on the surface of the B1 domain, inserting into a polar hole on the Fc fragment. A single alanine mutation of this residue virtually abolishes stable complex formation. Formation of a stable interface between these two proteins is therefore dominated by a small, polar "hot spot."  相似文献   

20.
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) integrase protein (IN) catalyzes two reactions required to integrate HIV DNA into the human genome: 3' processing of the viral DNA ends and integration. IN has three domains, the N-terminal zinc-binding domain, the catalytic core, and the C-terminal SH3 domain. Previously, it was shown that IN proteins mutated in different domains could complement each other. We now report that this does not require any overlap between the two complementing proteins; an N-terminal domain, provided in trans, can restore IN activity of a mutant lacking this domain. Only the zinc-coordinating form of the N-terminal domain can efficiently restore IN activity of an N-terminal deletion mutant. This suggests that interaction between different domains of IN is needed for functional multimerization. We find that the N-terminal domain of feline immunodeficiency virus IN can support IN activity of an N-terminal deletion mutant of HIV type 2 IN. These cross-complementation experiments indicate that the N-terminal domain contributes to the recognition of specific viral DNA ends.  相似文献   

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