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Structure and Dynamics of the Fish Eye Lens Protein, γM7-Crystallin.

Authors :
Mahler, Bryon
Yingwei Chen
Ford, Jason
Thiel, Caleb
Wistow, Graeme
Zhengrong Wu
Source :
Biochemistry. 5/21/2013, Vol. 52 Issue 20, p3579-3587. 9p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The vertebrate eye lens contains high concentrations of crystallins. The dense lenses of fish are particularly abundant in a class called γM-crystallin whose members are characterized by an unusually high methionine content and partial loss of the four tryptophan residues conserved in all γ-crystallins from mammals which are proposed to contribute to protection from UV-damage. Here, we present the structure and dynamics of γM7-crystallin from zebrafish (Danio rerio). The solution structure shares the typical two-domain, four-Greek-key motif arrangement of other γ-crystallins, with the major difference noted in the final loop of the N-terminal domain, spanning residues 65-72. This is likely due to the absence of the conserved tryptophans. Many of the methionine residues are exposed on the surface but are mostly well-ordered and frequently have contacts with aromatic side chains. This may contribute to the specialized surface properties of these proteins that exist under high molecular crowding in the fish lens. NMR relaxation data show increased backbone conformational motions in the loop regions of γM7 compared to those of mouse γS-crystallin and show that fast internal motion of the interdomain linker in γ-crystallins correlates with linker length. Unfolding studies monitored by tryptophan fluorescence confirm results from mutant mouse γS-crystallin and show that unfolding of a βγ-crystallin domain likely starts from unfolding of the variable loop containing the more fluorescently quenched tryptophan residue, resulting in a native-like unfolding intermediate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00062960
Volume :
52
Issue :
20
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
87993039
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi400151c