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Capping motifs stabilize the leucine‐rich repeat protein PP32 and rigidify adjacent repeats
Authors:Thuy P. Dao  Ananya Majumdar  Doug Barrick
Affiliation:1. T.C. Jenkins Department of Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, , Baltimore, Maryland, 21218;2. The Johns Hopkins University Biomolecular NMR Center, Johns Hopkins University, , Baltimore, Maryland, 21218
Abstract:Capping motifs are found to flank most β‐strand‐containing repeat proteins. To better understand the roles of these capping motifs in organizing structure and stability, we carried out folding and solution NMR studies on the leucine‐rich repeat (LRR) domain of PP32, which is composed of five tandem LRR, capped by α‐helical and β‐hairpin motifs on the N‐ and C‐termini. We were able to purify PP32 constructs lacking either cap and containing destabilizing substitutions. Removing the C‐cap results in complete unfolding of PP32. Removing the N‐cap has a much less severe effect, decreasing stability but retaining much of its secondary structure. In contrast, the dynamics and tertiary structure of the first two repeats are significantly perturbed, based on 1H‐15N relaxation studies, chemical shift perturbations, and residual dipolar couplings. However, more distal repeats (3 to C‐cap) retain their native tertiary structure. In this regard, the N‐cap drives the folding of adjacent repeats from what appears to be a molten‐globule‐like state. This interpretation is supported by extensive analysis using core packing substitutions in the full‐length and N‐cap‐truncated PP32. This work highlights the importance of caps to the stability and structural integrity of β‐strand‐containing LRR proteins, and emphasizes the different contributions of the N‐ and C‐terminal caps.
Keywords:leucine‐rich repeat  β  ‐strand‐containing repeat proteins  capping motifs  folding  stability  packing
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