Literature DB >> 20304108

A solution NMR investigation into the murine amelogenin splice-variant LRAP (Leucine-Rich Amelogenin Protein).

Garry W Buchko1, Barbara J Tarasevich, Jacky Roberts, Malcolm L Snead, Wendy J Shaw.   

Abstract

Amelogenins are the dominant proteins present in ameloblasts during the early stages of enamel biomineralization, making up >90% of the matrix protein. Along with the full-length protein there are several splice-variant isoforms of amelogenin present including LRAP (Leucine-Rich Amelogenin Protein), a protein that consists of the first 33 and the last 26 residues of full-length amelogenin. Using solution-state NMR spectroscopy we have assigned the (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectrum of murine LRAP (rp(H)LRAP) in 2% acetic acid at pH 3.0 by making extensive use of previous chemical shift assignments for full-length murine amelogenin (rp(H)M180). This correlation was possible because LRAP, like the full-length protein, is intrinsically disordered under these solution conditions. The major difference between the (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectra of rp(H)M180 and rp(H)LRAP was an additional set of amide resonances for each of the seven non-proline residues between S12 and Y12 near the N-terminus of rp(H)LRAP indicating that the N-terminal region of LRAP exists in two different conformations. Analysis of the proline carbon chemical shifts suggests that the molecular basis for the two states is not a cis-trans isomerization of one or more of the proline residues in the N-terminal region. Starting from 2% acetic acid, where rp(H)LRAP was monomeric in solution, NaCl addition effected residue specific changes in molecular dynamics manifested by the reduction in intensity and disappearance of (1)H-(15)N HSQC cross peaks. As observed for the full-length protein, these perturbations may signal early events governing supramolecular self-assembly of rp(H)LRAP into nanospheres. However, the different patterns of (1)H-(15)N HSQC cross peak perturbation between rp(H)LRAP and rp(H)M180 in high salt suggest that the termini may behave differently in their respective nanospheres, and perhaps, these differences contribute to the cell signaling properties attributable to LRAP but not to the full-length protein.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20304108      PMCID: PMC2910175          DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2010.03.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  48 in total

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3.  Partial high-resolution structure of phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated leucine-rich amelogenin protein adsorbed to hydroxyapatite.

Authors:  David L Masica; Jeffrey J Gray; Wendy J Shaw
Journal:  J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces       Date:  2011-07-21       Impact factor: 4.126

4.  Phosphorylation and ionic strength alter the LRAP-HAP interface in the N-terminus.

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5.  A solution NMR investigation into the impaired self-assembly properties of two murine amelogenins containing the point mutations T21→I or P41→T.

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6.  Controls of nature: Secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structure of the enamel protein amelogenin in solution and on hydroxyapatite.

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