| Literature DB >> 23519666 |
Marta Orlikowska1, Aneta Szymańska, Dominika Borek, Zbyszek Otwinowski, Piotr Skowron, Elżbieta Jankowska.
Abstract
Wild-type human cystatin C (hCC wt) is a low-molecular-mass protein (120 amino-acid residues, 13,343 Da) that is found in all nucleated cells. Physiologically, it functions as a potent regulator of cysteine protease activity. While the biologically active hCC wt is a monomeric protein, all crystallization efforts to date have resulted in a three-dimensional domain-swapped dimeric structure. In the recently published structure of a mutated hCC, the monomeric fold was preserved by a stabilization of the conformationally constrained loop L1 caused by a single amino-acid substitution: Val57Asn. Additional hCC mutants were obtained in order to elucidate the relationship between the stability of the L1 loop and the propensity of human cystatin C to dimerize. In one mutant Val57 was substituted by an aspartic acid residue, which is favoured in β-turns, and in the second mutant proline, a residue known for broadening turns, was substituted for the same Val57. Here, 2.26 and 3.0 Å resolution crystal structures of the V57D andV57P mutants of hCC are reported and their dimeric architecture is discussed in terms of the stabilization and destabilization effects of the introduced mutations.Entities:
Keywords: amyloid; cysteine protease inhibitors; human cystatin C; single-point mutations
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23519666 PMCID: PMC3976269 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444912051657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449