| Literature DB >> 15123641 |
Elena Pokidysheva1, Alexander G Milbradt, Sebastian Meier, Christian Renner, Daniel Häussinger, Hans Peter Bächinger, Luis Moroder, Stephan Grzesiek, Thomas W Holstein, Suat Ozbek, Jürgen Engel.
Abstract
The minicollagens found in the nematocysts of Hydra constitute a family of invertebrate collagens with unusual properties. They share a common modular architecture with a central collagen sequence ranging from 14 to 16 Gly-X-Y repeats flanked by polyproline/hydroxyproline stretches and short terminal domains that show a conserved cysteine pattern (CXXXCXXXCXXX-CXXXCC). The minicollagen cysteine-rich domains are believed to function in a switch of the disulfide connectivity from intra- to intermolecular bonds during maturation of the capsule wall. The solution structure of the C-terminal fragment including a minicollagen cysteine-rich domain of minicollagen-1 was determined in two independent groups by 1H NMR. The corresponding peptide comprising the last 24 residues of the molecule was produced synthetically and refolded by oxidation under low protein concentrations. Both presented structures are identical in their fold and disulfide connections (Cys2-Cys18, Cys6-Cys14, and Cys10-Cys19) revealing a robust structural motif that is supposed to serve as the polymerization module of the nematocyst capsule.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15123641 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M403734200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157