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Structural study of a small molecule receptor bound to dimethyllysine in lysozyme
- Source :
- 'Chemical Science ', vol: 6, pages: 442-449 (2015), Chemical Science
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2015.
-
Abstract
- X-ray crystallography reveals how a calixarene can bind to dimethyllysine to form a complex with features similar to the aromatic cage motif of a chromodomain bound to a histone tail.<br />Lysine is a ubiquitous residue on protein surfaces. Post translational modifications of lysine, including methylation to the mono-, di- or trimethylated amine result in chemical and structural alterations that have major consequences for protein interactions and signalling pathways. Small molecules that bind to methylated lysines are potential tools to modify such pathways. To make progress in this direction, detailed structural data of ligands in complex with methylated lysine is required. Here, we report a crystal structure of p-sulfonatocalix[4]arene (sclx4) bound to methylated lysozyme in which the lysine residues were chemically modified from Lys-NH3 + to Lys-NH(Me2)+. Of the six possible dimethyllysine sites, sclx4 selected Lys116-Me2 and the dimethylamino substituent was deeply buried in the calixarene cavity. This complex confirms the tendency for Lys-Me2 residues to form cation–π interactions, which have been shown to be important in protein recognition of histone tails bearing methylated lysines. Supporting data from NMR spectroscopy and MD simulations confirm the selectivity for Lys116-Me2 in solution. The structure presented here may serve as a stepping stone to the development of new biochemical reagents that target methylated lysines.
- Subjects :
- synthetic receptor
binding
Stereochemistry
Lysine
complex mixtures
cytochrome-c
Protein–protein interaction
Residue (chemistry)
macromolecular crystallography
Hydrolase
Calixarene
Chemistry
epigenetic reader protein
supramolecular hosts
food and beverages
General Chemistry
Methylation
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Small molecule
lysine methylation
modified histone tail
Biochemistry
egg-white lysozyme
bacteria
recognition
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20416539 and 20416520
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Chemical Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e88914bb107bb3d0472b0acdc22f9230