| Literature DB >> 31623284 |
Anikó Mentes1, Csaba Magyar2, Erzsébet Fichó3, István Simon4.
Abstract
Several intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are capable to adopt stable structures without interacting with a folded partner. When the folding of all interacting partners happens at the same time, coupled with the interaction in a synergistic manner, the process is called Mutual Synergistic Folding (MSF). These complexes represent a discrete subset of IDPs. Recently, we collected information on their complexes and created the MFIB (Mutual Folding Induced by Binding) database. In a previous study, we compared homodimeric MSF complexes with homodimeric and monomeric globular proteins with similar amino acid sequence lengths. We concluded that MSF homodimers, compared to globular homodimeric proteins, have a greater solvent accessible main-chain surface area on the contact surface of the subunits, which becomes buried during dimerization. The main driving force of the folding is the mutual shielding of the water-accessible backbones, but the formation of further intermolecular interactions can also be relevant. In this paper, we will report analyses of heterodimeric MSF complexes. Our results indicate that the amino acid composition of the heterodimeric MSF monomer subunits slightly diverges from globular monomer proteins, while after dimerization, the amino acid composition of the overall MSF complexes becomes more similar to overall amino acid compositions of globular complexes. We found that inter-subunit interactions are strengthened, and additionally to the shielding of the solvent accessible backbone, other factors might play an important role in the stabilization of the heterodimeric structures, likewise energy gain resulting from the interaction of the two subunits with different amino acid compositions. We suggest that the shielding of the β-sheet backbones and the formation of a buried structural core along with the general strengthening of inter-subunit interactions together could be the driving forces of MSF protein structural ordering upon dimerization.Entities:
Keywords: dehydrons; inter-subunit interactions; intrinsically disordered proteins; ion-pairs; mutual synergistic folding; solvent accessible surface area; stabilization centers
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31623284 PMCID: PMC6829572 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20205136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Comparison of the subunit lengths of the Mutual Synergistic Folding (MSF) (MFHE—blue triangles) and globular (globular heterodimeric GLHE—yellow dots) heterodimeric complexes.
Figure 2Amino acid composition of the heterodimer datasets, where the types of amino acids were grouped by Mészáros et al. [8] (A). The MFHE (triangles) and GLHE (dot) amino acid composition were compared using an indirect gradient analysis method, called Nonmetric Multidimensional Scaling (NMDS), which creates an ordination based on Bray-Curtis distances. In the plot, the objects are protein subunits (B) considered separately and complexes (C).
Figure 3The number of burial residues in MFHE (A) and GLHE (B) complexes (black: number of all residues in a complex, red: number of buried residues in a heterodimeric complex, blue: sum of numbers of buried residues in the two monomeric subunits. See Figure S1 for the number of buried residues for the homodimeric MFHO and GLHO datasets.
Figure 4Amino acid composition of the interface (A) and the residues with solvent accessible main-chain patches (RSAMPs; (B)) of MFHE (blue) and GLHE (yellow) complexes.
Figure 5The number of total and buried residues of SGP (grey), GLHE (yellow) and MFHE (blue). For the number of total and buried residues of homodimeric MSF see Figure S2.