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A fine balance of hydrophobic-electrostatic communication pathways in a pH-switching protein

Authors :
Duncan W. S. MacKenzie
Anna Schaefer
Julia Steckner
Christopher A. Leo
Dalia Naser
Efrosini Artikis
Aron Broom
Travis Ko
Purnank Shah
Mikaela Q. Ney
Elisa Tran
Martin T. J. Smith
Brian Fuglestad
A. Joshua Wand
Charles L. Brooks
Elizabeth M. Meiering
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 119(26)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Allostery is the phenomenon of coupling between distal binding sites in a protein. Such coupling is at the crux of protein function and regulation in a myriad of scenarios, yet determining the molecular mechanisms of coupling networks in proteins remains a major challenge. Here, we report mechanisms governing pH-dependent myristoyl switching in monomeric hisactophilin, whereby the myristoyl moves between a sequestered state, i.e., buried within the core of the protein, to an accessible state, in which the myristoyl has increased accessibility for membrane binding. Measurements of the pH and temperature dependence of amide chemical shifts reveal protein local structural stability and conformational heterogeneity that accompany switching. An analysis of these measurements using a thermodynamic cycle framework shows that myristoyl-proton coupling at the single-residue level exists in a fine balance and extends throughout the protein. Strikingly, small changes in the stereochemistry or size of core and surface hydrophobic residues by point mutations readily break, restore, or tune myristoyl switch energetics. Synthesizing the experimental results with those of molecular dynamics simulations illuminates atomistic details of coupling throughout the protein, featuring a large network of hydrophobic interactions that work in concert with key electrostatic interactions. The simulations were critical for discerning which of the many ionizable residues in hisactophilin are important for switching and identifying the contributions of nonnative interactions in switching. The strategy of using temperature-dependent NMR presented here offers a powerful, widely applicable way to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of allostery in proteins at high resolution.

Details

ISSN :
10916490
Volume :
119
Issue :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f10fd9ff87b67f2d00a12c2f70002d74