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Helix Straightening as an Activation Mechanism in the Gelsolin Superfamily of Actin Regulatory Proteins
Authors:Hui Wang  Sakesit Chumnarnsilpa  Anantasak Loonchanta  Qiang Li  Yang-Mei Kuan  Sylvie Robine  M?rten Larsson  Ivana Mihalek  Leslie D. Burtnick  Robert C. Robinson
Abstract: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.
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