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Tighter Ligand Binding Can Compensate for Impaired Stability of an RNA-Binding Protein

Authors :
Tara R. Richman
Christopher P Wallis
Aleksandra Filipovska
Oliver Rackham
Source :
ACS chemical biology. 13(6)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

It has been widely shown that ligand-binding residues, by virtue of their orientation, charge, and solvent exposure, often have a net destabilizing effect on proteins that is offset by stability conferring residues elsewhere in the protein. This structure–function trade-off can constrain possible adaptive evolutionary changes of function and may hamper protein engineering efforts to design proteins with new functions. Here, we present evidence from a large randomized mutant library screen that, in the case of PUF RNA-binding proteins, this structural relationship may be inverted and that active-site mutations that increase protein activity are also able to compensate for impaired stability. We show that certain mutations in RNA–protein binding residues are not necessarily destabilizing and that increased ligand-binding can rescue an insoluble, unstable PUF protein. We hypothesize that these mutations restabilize the protein via thermodynamic coupling of protein folding and RNA binding.

Details

ISSN :
15548937
Volume :
13
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS chemical biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e4642054746052cb602f5cf36f44568