Literature DB >> 29461832

Order, Disorder, and Temperature-Driven Compaction in a Designed Elastin Protein.

Kelly N Greenland1, Ma Faye Charmagne A Carvajal2, Jonathan M Preston1, Siri Ekblad1, William L Dean3, Jeff Y Chiang1, Ronald L Koder1,4, Richard J Wittebort2.   

Abstract

Artificial minielastin constructs have been designed that replicate the structure and function of natural elastins in a simpler context, allowing the NMR observation of structure and dynamics of elastin-like proteins with complete residue-specific resolution. We find that the alanine-rich cross-linking domains of elastin have a partially helical structure, but only when capped by proline-rich hydrophobic domains. We also find that the hydrophobic domains, composed of prominent 6-residue repeats VPGVGG and APGVGV found in natural elastins, appear random coil by both NMR chemical shift analysis and circular dichroism. However, these elastin hydrophobic domains exhibit structural bias for a dynamically disordered conformation that is neither helical nor β sheet with a degree of nonrandom structural bias which is dependent on residue type and position in the sequence. Another nonrandom-coil aspect of hydrophobic domain structure lies in the fact that, in contrast to other intrinsically disordered proteins, these hydrophobic domains retain a relatively condensed conformation whether attached to cross-linking domains or not. Importantly, these domains and the proteins containing them constrict with increasing temperature by up to 30% in volume without becoming more ordered. This property is often observed in nonbiological polymers and suggests that temperature-driven constriction is a new type of protein structural change that is linked to elastin's biological functions of coacervation-driven assembly and elastic recoil.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29461832      PMCID: PMC6588176          DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b11596

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  6 in total

1.  Liquid to solid transition of elastin condensates.

Authors:  Alfredo Vidal Ceballos; Jairo A Díaz A; Jonathan M Preston; Christo Vairamon; Christopher Shen; Ronald L Koder; Shana Elbaum-Garfinkle
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-09-06       Impact factor: 12.779

2.  Location of stimuli-responsive peptide sequences within silk-elastinlike protein-based polymers affects nanostructure assembly and drug-polymer interactions.

Authors:  Kyle J Isaacson; M Martin Jensen; Douglas B Steinhauff; James E Kirklow; Raziye Mohammadpour; Jason W Grunberger; Joseph Cappello; Hamidreza Ghandehari
Journal:  J Drug Target       Date:  2020-04-29       Impact factor: 5.121

3.  Freeze-dried multiscale porous nanofibrous three dimensional scaffolds for bone regenerations.

Authors:  Maryam Sadat Khoramgah; Javad Ranjbari; Hojjat-Allah Abbaszadeh; Fatemeh Sadat Tabatabaei Mirakabad; Shadie Hatami; Simzar Hosseinzadeh; Hossein Ghanbarian
Journal:  Bioimpacts       Date:  2020-02-08

4.  Phase separation driven by interchangeable properties in the intrinsically disordered regions of protein paralogs.

Authors:  Shih-Hui Chiu; Wen-Lin Ho; Yung-Chen Sun; Jean-Cheng Kuo; Jie-Rong Huang
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-04-29

5.  Impact of aromatic residues on the intrinsic disorder and transitional behaviour of model IDPs.

Authors:  C García-Arévalo; L Quintanilla-Sierra; M Santos; S Ferrero; S Acosta; J C Rodríguez-Cabello
Journal:  Mater Today Bio       Date:  2022-08-18

6.  Dynamics in natural and designed elastins and their relation to elastic fiber structure and recoil.

Authors:  Ma Faye Charmagne A Carvajal; Jonathan M Preston; Nour M Jamhawi; T Michael Sabo; Shibani Bhattacharya; James M Aramini; Richard J Wittebort; Ronald L Koder
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2021-07-31       Impact factor: 3.699

  6 in total

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