TY - JOUR
T1 - Nonnative interactions regulate folding and switching of myristoylated protein
AU - Shental-Bechor, Dalit
AU - Smith, Martin T. J.
AU - MacKenzie, Duncan
AU - Broom, Aron
AU - Marcovitz, Amir
AU - Ghashut, Fadila
AU - Go, Chris
AU - Bralha, Fernando
AU - Meiering, Elizabeth M.
AU - Levy, Yaakov
N1 - Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Kimmelman Center for Macromolecular Assemblies; Israel Science FoundationWe thank Cullen Myers and Dr. Jessica Rumfeldt for stimulating discussions and the University of Waterloo Mass Spectrometry Facility for timely mass-spectrometry analyses. This research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (E.M.M.) and by the Kimmelman Center for Macromolecular Assemblies and the Israel Science Foundation (Y.L.).
PY - 2012/10/30
Y1 - 2012/10/30
N2 - We present an integrated experimental and computational study of the molecular mechanisms by which myristoylation affects protein folding and function, which has been little characterized to date. Myristoylation, the covalent linkage of a hydrophobic C14 fatty acyl chain to the N-terminal glycine in a protein, is a common modification that plays a critical role in vital regulated cellular processes by undergoing reversible energetic and conformational switching. Coarse-grained folding simulations for the model pH-dependent actin- and membrane-binding protein hisactophilin reveal that nonnative hydrophobic interactions of the myristoyl with the protein as well as nonnative electrostatic interactions have a pronounced effect on folding rates and thermodynamic stability. Folding measurements for hydrophobic residue mutations of hisactophilin and atomistic simulations indicate that the nonnative interactions of the myristoyl group in the folding transition state are nonspecific and robust, and so smooth the energy landscape for folding. In contrast, myristoyl interactions in the native state are highly specific and tuned for sensitive control of switching functionality. Simulations and amide hydrogen exchange measurements provide evidence for increases as well as decreases in stability localized on one side of the myristoyl binding pocket in the protein, implicating strain and altered dynamics in switching. The effects of folding and function arising from myristoylation are profoundly different from the effects of other post-translational modifications.
AB - We present an integrated experimental and computational study of the molecular mechanisms by which myristoylation affects protein folding and function, which has been little characterized to date. Myristoylation, the covalent linkage of a hydrophobic C14 fatty acyl chain to the N-terminal glycine in a protein, is a common modification that plays a critical role in vital regulated cellular processes by undergoing reversible energetic and conformational switching. Coarse-grained folding simulations for the model pH-dependent actin- and membrane-binding protein hisactophilin reveal that nonnative hydrophobic interactions of the myristoyl with the protein as well as nonnative electrostatic interactions have a pronounced effect on folding rates and thermodynamic stability. Folding measurements for hydrophobic residue mutations of hisactophilin and atomistic simulations indicate that the nonnative interactions of the myristoyl group in the folding transition state are nonspecific and robust, and so smooth the energy landscape for folding. In contrast, myristoyl interactions in the native state are highly specific and tuned for sensitive control of switching functionality. Simulations and amide hydrogen exchange measurements provide evidence for increases as well as decreases in stability localized on one side of the myristoyl binding pocket in the protein, implicating strain and altered dynamics in switching. The effects of folding and function arising from myristoylation are profoundly different from the effects of other post-translational modifications.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84868136457&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1201803109
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1201803109
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 109
SP - 17839
EP - 17844
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 44
ER -