| Literature DB >> 25945706 |
Keri L Barrack1, Paul K Fyfe1, William N Hunter1.
Abstract
Tubulin-binding cofactor A (TBCA) participates in microtubule formation, a key process in eukaryotic biology to create the cytoskeleton. There is little information on how TBCA might interact with β-tubulin en route to microtubule biogenesis. To address this, the protozoan Leishmania major was targeted as a model system. The crystal structure of TBCA and comparisons with three orthologous proteins are presented. The presence of conserved features infers that electrostatic interactions that are likely to involve the C-terminal tail of β-tubulin are key to association. This study provides a reagent and template to support further work in this area.Entities:
Keywords: chaperone; helical fold; protein–protein interactions; selenomethionine; tubulin-binding protein
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25945706 PMCID: PMC4427162 DOI: 10.1107/S2053230X15000990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr F Struct Biol Commun ISSN: 2053-230X Impact factor: 1.056
Crystallographic statistics
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| SeMet | Native | |
|---|---|---|
| Resolution range () | 39.02.3 (2.42.3) | 39.01.9 (2.01.9) |
| Space group |
|
|
| Unit-cell parameters (, ) |
|
|
| Wavelength () | 0.8726 | 0.8726 |
| No. of reflections | 73555 (10683) | 130402 (19204) |
| No. of unique reflections | 6205 (878) | 10821 (1549) |
|
| 13.8 (61.0) | 7.3 (44.8) |
|
| 5.9 (26.4) | 2.2 (13.2) |
| Completeness (%) | 100 (100) | 100 (100) |
|
| 19.5 (6.0) | 24.9 (6.8) |
| Multiplicity | 11.9 (12.2) | 12.1 (12.4) |
| Wilson | 35.3 | 20.9 |
|
| 18.5 | |
|
| 22.7 | |
| R.m.s.d., bonds () | 0.0134 | |
| R.m.s.d., angles () | 0.1586 | |
| Total protein residues | 107 | |
| Total protein atoms | 855 | |
| No. of solvent atoms | 90 | |
| No. of sulfates | 1 | |
| No. of glycerols | 1 | |
| Average | ||
| Protein | 27.3 | |
| Solvent | 35.0 | |
| Sulfate | 33.4 | |
| Glycerol | 39.6 | |
| DPI | 0.138 | |
| Ramachandran plot | ||
| Favoured (%) | 97.1 | |
| Allowed (%) | 2.9 | |
| Outliers (%) | 0.0 | |
R merge = , where I(hkl) is the intensity of the ith measurement of reflection hkl and I(hkl) is the mean value of I (hkl) for all i measurements.
R p.i.m., the precision-indicating merging R factor, is R merge adjusted bya factor of [1/(N 1)]1/2, where N is the number of times a given reflection is observed.
R work = , where F obs is the observed structure-factor amplitude and the F calc is the structure-factor amplitude calculated from the model.
R free is calculated with a subset of data that were excluded from refinement calculations (5%) using the same method as for R merge.
Diffraction-component precision index (Cruickshank, 1999 ▶).
Figure 1(a) Overall structure of LmTBCA. The helices are represented as red ribbons. Ala43 and Pro80 are labelled as the approximate positions of bends in α1 and α2. A sulfate is bound to the surface of α1. (b) A closer view of the anion interacting with Arg45 and Arg49 is shown as gold (S) and red (O) sticks. The arginine residues are coloured by element (C, grey; N, blue) and two water molecules are depicted as red spheres. Blue mesh represents electron density (2mF o − DF c contoured at 2σ) and magenta dotted lines indicate potential hydrogen bonds. (c) The LmTBCA monomer (red) and a symmetry-related molecule (orange) are linked by a disulfide bond between Cys58 residues with side-chain atoms shown as sticks (C, grey; S, gold). The OMIT F o − F c density for the side-chain atoms of Cys58 and the symmetry mate is depicted as chickenwire and contoured at 2σ. (d) Backbone hydrogen bonds on α2. The expanded area is a stereoview of α1 and α3 as purple ribbons. α2 is depicted as pale pink ribbons (left) or as sticks coloured by element (right). Black dashed lines represent standard α-helical hydrogen bonds. Pro80 disrupts this bonding pattern. The magenta line between Pro80 N and Gln76 O represents a distance of 4.20 Å.
Figure 2Superposition of four orthologous TBCA structures. The Cα atoms in the C-terminal segment of α2 were used for the superposition. The models and details of the least-squares superposition are LmTBCA (yellow; superimposed residues 83–98; PDB entry 4cqi), HsTBCA (orange; residues 68–83; PDB entry 1h7c), ScRbl2p (green; residues 66–81; PDB entry 1qsd) and AtTBCA (blue; residues 63–82; PDB entry 3mxz).
Figure 3(a) Electrostatic potential of LmTBCA. A van der Waals surface representation of LmTBCA is coloured according to electrostatic protein contact potential (from −5kT e−1 in red to 5kT e−1 in blue) created using the programs PDB2PQR (Dolinsky et al., 2004 ▶) and APBS (Baker et al., 2001 ▶). (b) A van der Waals surface of LmTBCA coloured by homology to related structures (HsTBCA, ScRbl2p and AtTBCA). Amino acids that are only present in LmTBCA are coloured red. Increasing similarity is represented by a darkening greyscale with residues identical in all four species shown in black.
Figure 4(a) Structure-based sequence alignment of LmTBCA and the published structures of AtTBCA, ScRbl2p and HsTBCA. Residues highlighted in coloured boxes (blue, yellow and purple) are implicated in binding β-tubulin. Amino acids in orange boxes are thought to affect β-tubulin binding but are also located at the ScRbl2p homodimer interface. Cys58 is shown in red text and the location of the conserved proline (Pro80) is marked with a red triangle. Sequences were aligned with MUSCLE (Edgar, 2004 ▶) and the figure was prepared using ALINE (Bond & Schüttelkopf, 2009 ▶). (b) Stereo-image of LmTBCA helices α1 and α2 (red ribbon) with Cα backbone traces of AtTBCA (blue), ScRbl2p (yellow) and HsTBCA (purple). Selected residues are shown as sticks of the same colours labelled according to LmTBCA sequence and numbering. Residues at the corresponding positions of Asp39, Ala43 and Glu74 in LmTBCA appear to be critical for β-tubulin binding in A. thaliana. His81 and Ser82 are also thought to play a functional role (see text). Structural alignments were calculated using secondary-structure matching (Krissinel & Henrick, 2004 ▶).