| Literature DB >> 30468271 |
Dominique Mias-Lucquin1, Angélique Chéron1, Elisabeth Le Rumeur1, Jean-François Hubert1, Olivier Delalande1.
Abstract
Coiled-coil domain is a structural motif found in proteins crucial for achievement of central biological processes, such as cellular cohesion or neuro-transmission. The coiled-coil fold consists of alpha-helices bundle that can be repeated to form larger filament. Hydrophobic residues, distributed following a regular seven-residues' pattern, named heptad pattern, are commonly admitted to be essential for the formation and the stability of canonical coiled-coil repeats. Here we investigated the first three coiled-coil repeats (R1-R3) of the central domain of dystrophin, a scaffolding protein in muscle cells whose deficiency leads to Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophies. By an atomic description of the hydrophobic interactions, we highlighted (i) that coiled-coil filament conformational changes are associated to specific patterns of inter-helices hydrophobic contacts, (ii) that inter-repeat hydrophobic interactions determine the behavior of linker regions including filament kinks, and (iii) that a non-strict conservation of the heptad patterns is leading to a relative plasticity of the dystrophin coiled-coil repeats. These structural features and modulations of the coiled-coil fold could better explain the mechanical properties of the central domain of dystrophin. This contribution to the understanding of the structure-function relationship of dystrophin, and especially of the R1-R3 fragment frequently used in the design of protein for gene therapies, should help in the improvement of the strategies for the cure of muscular dystrophies.Entities:
Keywords: Dystrophin; coiled-coil fold; gene therapy; molecular hydrophobicity potential; muscular dystrophies
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30468271 PMCID: PMC6371207 DOI: 10.1002/pro.3557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Sci ISSN: 0961-8368 Impact factor: 6.725