| Literature DB >> 25866655 |
Guillaume A Schoch1, Massimo Sammito2, Claudia Millán2, Isabel Usón3, Markus G Rudolph1.
Abstract
Nuclear hormone receptors are cytoplasm-based transcription factors that bind a ligand, translate to the nucleus and initiate gene transcription in complex with a co-activator such as TIF2 (transcriptional intermediary factor 2). For structural studies the co-activator is usually mimicked by a peptide of circa 13 residues, which for the largest part forms an α-helix when bound to the receptor. The aim was to co-crystallize the glucocorticoid receptor in complex with a ligand and the TIF2 co-activator peptide. The 1.82 Å resolution diffraction data obtained from the crystal could not be phased by molecular replacement using the known receptor structures. HPLC analysis of the crystals revealed the absence of the receptor and indicated that only the co-activator peptide was present. The self-rotation function displayed 13-fold rotational symmetry, which initiated an exhaustive but unsuccessful molecular-replacement approach using motifs of 13-fold symmetry such as α- and β-barrels in various geometries. The structure was ultimately determined by using a single α-helix and the software ARCIMBOLDO, which assembles fragments placed by PHASER before using them as seeds for density modification model building in SHELXE. Systematic variation of the helix length revealed upper and lower size limits for successful structure determination. A beautiful but unanticipated structure was obtained that forms superhelices with left-handed twist throughout the crystal, stabilized by ligand interactions. Together with the increasing diversity of structural elements in the Protein Data Bank the results from TIF2 confirm the potential of fragment-based molecular replacement to significantly accelerate the phasing step for native diffraction data at around 2 Å resolution.Entities:
Keywords: ARCIMBOLDO; ARCIMBOLDO_LITE; fragment-based molecular replacement; glucocorticoid receptor co-activator peptide; left-handed twist; superhelix
Year: 2015 PMID: 25866655 PMCID: PMC4392412 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252515000238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 4.769
Figure 1Structure of GR. The receptor (PDB entry 3mnp, Seitz et al., 2010 ▶; grey ribbon) is an all-helical protein with a central solvent-excluded ligand-binding cavity and a lateral surface binding site for the co-activator. The steroid ligand and co-activator peptide TIF2 are coloured yellow and dark green, respectively. There are no direct contacts between the two molecules. The sequence of the co-activator peptide visible in this structure is NALLRYLLD.
Data collection and refinement statistics for 4wg0
Unless noted otherwise, values in parentheses correspond to the highest resolution shell.
| Data collection | |
| Wavelength () | 0.9722 |
| Resolution range () | 45.21.82 (1.891.82) |
| 100% criterion () | 1.85 |
| Range/increment () | 245/1.0 |
| Mosaicity () | 0.69 0.14 |
| Space group |
|
| Cell dimensions (,) |
|
| Total reflections | 131943 (11128) |
| Unique reflections | 32046 (3053) |
| Multiplicity | 4.1 (3.6) |
| Completeness (%) | 97.5 (93.1) |
|
| 0.05/0.06 |
| CC1/2/CC* | 0.999 (0.852)/1 (0.959) |
| Average | 15.1 (3.0) |
| Wilson | 25.4 |
| | | 0.784 (0.736/0.541) |
| Mean | 0.352 (0.333/0.200) |
| Refinement | |
| Resolution range () | 45.21.82 (1.891.82) |
| No. of work reflections | 32008 (2621) |
| No. of test reflections | 1605 (136) |
|
| 18.5 (25.5) |
|
| 21.8 (29.0) |
| No. atoms: non-H, peptide, ligands | 2177, 1491, 559 |
| No. residues: peptide, H2O, SO | 169, 127, 24, 13 |
| Coordinate/phase errors (/) | 0.18/23.3 |
| R.m.s.d. bonds/angles (/) | 0.012/1.52 |
| Ramachandran plot (%) | 98.2/1.2/0.6 |
| MolProbity/clashscore | 1.91/6.0 |
|
| 45, 42, 82, 50 |
The 100% criterion was calculated using SFTOOLS (Winn et al., 2011 ▶) and represents the resolution in of a 100% complete hypothetical data set with the same number of reflections as the measured data.
E values, L values (for acentric reflections) and R factors were calculated using PHENIX (Zwart et al., 2008 ▶). R values and the correlation coefficients CC1/2 and CC* are defined in Diederichs Karplus (1997 ▶) and Karplus Diederichs (2012 ▶), respectively.
Values in parentheses are the expected values for untwinned and perfectly twinned data, respectively.
R cryst = , where F o and F c are the structure-factor amplitudes from the data and the model, respectively. R free is R cryst with 5% of test set structure factors.
Ligands are sulfate and cholic acid.
Chains A and B have only one SO associated with them.
Calculated using PHENIX (Zwart et al., 2008 ▶).
Calculated using COOT (Emsley et al., 2010 ▶). Numbers reflect the percentage of amino-acid residues in the core, allowed and disallowed regions, respectively. The ill-fitting residue is Lys12 of chain K, which has poor electron density.
MolProbity score should approach the high resolution limit (Chen et al., 2010 ▶). Clashscore is defined as the number of unfavourable all-atom steric overlaps 0.4 per 1000 atoms (Word et al., 1999 ▶).
Figure 2HPLC analysis of the supposed GR/TIF2 complex crystals reveals the presence of TIF2 peptide only. The top panel establishes that TIF2 elutes at 1.3 min. The middle panel is a mixture of TIF2 peptide and GR as used for crystallization. The largest peak at 2.7 min is GR. The peak at 2.4 min is an unknown compound, probably a contaminant as it also appeared in the bottom panel and in blank runs (not shown). The bottom panel represents the washed crystals. As no GR is present, the crystals only contain TIF2 peptide. Other signals may belong to crystallization buffer components that have not been washed away.
Figure 3Self-rotation function analysis of the diffraction data. (a) The stereographic projection of the κ = 180° section of the self-rotation function calculated at 1.82 Å resolution in space group C2 was plotted at a contour level of 40% of the origin peak. The crystallographic twofold axis is at ω = 90°, ϕ = 90°. Six additional twofold axes are visible which form a crescent. (b) Signal of a recurrent peak at ω = 40°, ϕ = 0° as a function of κ that is not visible in (a). The peaks follow the term (n × 360°)/13 with the integer n ≤ 6, indicating 13-fold NCS. Combination of this axis with the crystallographic twofold axis leads to the twofold NCS axes visible in (a).
Figure 4Stereographic projections of the κ = 180° section of the self-rotation functions from (a) a 13-mer parallel β-barrel, (b) a tridecameric α-barrel from PDB entry 2x2v and (c) the refined superhelical TIF2 structure. The molecules in (a) and (b) were aligned with the NCS axis at ω = 40°, ϕ = 0° to facilitate comparison with the diffraction data (Fig. 3a) and the final model in (c). The regular barrels have more internal symmetry elements than the true structure. Of note is the presence of the 13-fold NCS axis in this κ section, but its absence in the correct structure in (c). Calculations were done as in Fig. 3(a) except that for the representations (a) and (b) the initial contour levels were raised to 90% and 70% of the C2 crystallographic peak in order to better visualize the twofold axes.
Figure 5Length requirements for the ideal polyalanine α-helix search model. Helices between five and 14 residues were used as models, and one to eight copies were searched for in PHASER, followed by three cycles of density modification and automated polyalanine chain tracing in SHELXE. All calculations were done at the maximum resolution of 1.82 Å. The solvent content was set to 0.65, slightly higher than expected in order to help solvent flattening, and in the auto-tracing α-helices were searched for in all cycles (-q option). The NCS option in SHELXE is available for substructures but not for tracing and hence was not applicable here. Helices between eight and 11 residues are suitable search models as judged by CC > 25%. The most extensive search performed was for nine fragments of a decamer helix, which yielded a final LLG of 576. For improved legibility the data points (black spheres) are projected onto the grey walls of the plot (blue and white dots).
Figure 6Superhelical TIF2 structure and packing in the C2 unit cell. (a) The C2 unit cell is shown in cross-eyed stereo as a grey box with the origin at the bottom right and its four asymmetric units. One asymmetric unit consists of 13 short helices of the TIF2 peptide (coloured cylinders) that are arranged around the NCS axis, which is shown as a red line. Another asymmetric unit centred on the NCS axis is shown in grey with space-filling models (green) of the cholic acid molecules that wedge between the helices. The asymmetric units combine to form a continuous left-handed superhelix that traverses the crystal, which is well visible through a surface representation of three individually coloured asymmetric units. The fourth asymmetric unit is coloured blue and the N-termini of the helices are marked by a sphere, showing that the arrangement of TIF2 helices is not all parallel as assumed in the models in Figs. 4 ▶(a) and 4 ▶(b). The SHELXE-derived electron density is contoured at 1 r.m.s.d. for the whole unit cell. (b) View of the asymmetric unit projected along the NCS axis with the individual chains labelled. The 14th helix A′ shown in dark blue serves to highlight the repeating pattern in the superhelix. The N-termini are marked by spheres and point to the outside of the superhelix. Leucine side chains that construct the hydrophobic core are drawn as grey stick models. (c) View 90° rotated relative to (b).
Figure 7TIF2 conformations in the superhelix and when bound to GR. (a) Superposition of all 13 protomers. The residues are numbered according to the sequence given at the bottom. The main-chain torsion angles of residues 12 and 13 deviate from α-helical geometry. Because of weak electron density, these residues were modelled with half occupancy. Clashes of these residues with the same residues of neighbouring helices indicate that the crystal actually contained a mixture of peptides. (b) The GR/dexamethasone/TIF2 complex (Seitz et al., 2010 ▶) is superimposed with one representative protomer (coloured yellow) from the superhelix. GR is coloured grey and the TIF2 peptide in complex with GR is shown in dark green. The N-termini of the peptides are marked by spheres. The N-terminal part of TIF2 cannot adopt an α-helical conformation when binding to GR due to clashes with the receptor.
Figure 8Sandwiching of cholic acid between protomers stabilizes the superhelix. The cross-eyed stereo image shows density-modified but unbiased (i.e. before building of the cholic acid) electron density at the 2 r.m.s.d. level as a grey mesh. The density for the two N-terminal residues Glu1 and Lys2 reveals the error in the sequence of the synthetic peptide (red labels). The hydrophobic concave surface into which cholic acid binds is lined by Glu1, Ala4, Leu5 and Tyr8.