| Literature DB >> 27761512 |
James C Campbell1, Alexander Tischer2, Venkata Machha2, Laurie Moon-Tasson2, Banumathi Sankaran3, Choel Kim4, Matthew Auton2.
Abstract
von Willebrand factor׳s (VWF) primary hemostatic responsibility is to deposit platelets at sites of vascular injury to prevent bleeding. This function is mediated by the interaction between the VWF A1 domain and the constitutively active platelet receptor, GPIbα. The crystal structure of the A1 domain harboring the von Willebrand disease (vWD) type 2M mutation p.Gly1324Ser has been recently published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry describing its effect on the function and structural stability of the A1 domain of VWF, "Mutational constraints on local unfolding inhibit the rheological adaptation of von Willebrand factor" [1]. The mutation introduces a side chain that thermodynamically stabilizes the domain by reducing the overall flexibility of the A1-GPIbα binding interface resulting in loss-of-function and bleeding due to the inability of A1 to adapt to a binding competent conformation under the rheological shear stress blood flow. In this data article we describe the production, quality control and crystallization of the p.Gly1324Ser vWD variant of the A1 domain of VWF. p.Gly1324Ser A1 was expressed in Escherichia coli as insoluble inclusion bodies. After the preparation of the inclusion bodies, the protein was solubilized, refolded, purified by affinity chromatography and crystallized. The crystal structure of the p.Gly1324Ser mutant of the A1 domain is deposited at the Protein Data Bank PDB: 5BV8.Entities:
Keywords: Platelet adhesion; Protein crystallization; von Willebrand disease; von Willebrand factor
Year: 2016 PMID: 27761512 PMCID: PMC5063811 DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2016.05.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Data Brief ISSN: 2352-3409
Fig. 1Analytical gel filtration and reverse phase HPLC of A1 p.Gly1324Ser. The upper panel shows a chromatogram of A1 p.Gly1324Ser obtained from analytical gel filtration. The inset shows a molecular weight calibration curve consisting of the retention times of Ferritin (440 kDa), Aldolase (158 kDa), BSA (67 kDa), Ovalbumin (43 kDa), Ribonuclease A (13.7 kDa) and Vitamin B12 (1.35 kDa) (●). The retention time of p.Gly1324Ser A1 is indicated by (o). The lower panel shows a reverse phase HPLC run (solid line) with a gradient (dotted line) of 2% B between 5 and 55 min.
Crystal data, collection data, and refinement parameters for VWF A1 p.Gly1324Ser (5BV8).
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.97741 | Resolution (Å) | 43.23–1.59 |
| Space group | P 61 | No. reflections | 38781 |
| Cell dimensions | 0.164/0.180 | ||
| 86.45, 86.45, 68.16 | No. atoms | ||
| 90, 90, 120 | Proteins | 1651 | |
| Resolution (Å) | 68.16–1.59 | Ligand/ion | 5 |
| 0.081 (0.986) | Water | 232 | |
| CC1/2 | 0.999 (0.651) | ||
| CC* | 0.999 (0.888) | Protein | 22.699 |
| 14 (1.5) | Ligand/ion | 55.408 | |
| Completeness (%) | 99.9 (98.9) | Water | 35.498 |
| Redundancy | 6.5 (5.7) | R.M.S. deviations | |
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.006 | ||
| Bond angles (deg) | 1.109 | ||
5% of data were used for validation and were excluded from refinement.
CC1/2is defined as the correlation coefficient between two random half data sets.
Fig. 2Photograph of the VWF A1 p.Gly1324Ser crystals taken with a polarized light microscope. VWF A1 p.Gly1324Ser grew as needle clusters in the presence of 30% (v/v) PEG 400, 100 mM CAPS/sodium hydroxide, pH 10.5 at 4 °C.
Fig. 3Overlay of VWF A1 domain structures available from the Protein Data Bank [8], [9], [10], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16], [17]; (G1324S=p.Gly1324Ser).
| Subject area | Biology |
| More specific subject area | Structural biology |
| Type of data | Figures, tables, graphs |
| How data was acquired | Analytical gel filtration and Reverse phase HPLC (both performed on Beckman System Gold Analytical HPLC Systems), X-ray diffraction was performed at the Advanced Light Source beamline 5.0.1 using a ADSC Q315R detector. X-ray data was processed using iMOSFILM. The model was refined using the PHENIX software package and build using Coot. |
| Data format | Processed and analyzed |
| Experimental factors | VWF A1-p.Gly1324Ser was expressed in |
| Experimental features | The crystal structure of p.Gly1324Ser was determined via X-ray crystallography. |
| Data source location | Advanced Light Source, Berkley, California |
| Data accessibility | Crystallographic data within this article were deposited in the Protein Data Bank, PDB: |