scholarly journals Role of coiled-coil registry shifts in activation of human Bicaudal D2 for dynein recruitment upon cargo-binding

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Crystal R. Noell ◽  
Jia Ying Loh ◽  
Erik W. Debler ◽  
Kyle M. Loftus ◽  
Heying Cui ◽  
...  

SUMMARYDynein adaptors such as Bicaudal D2 (BicD2) recognize cargo for dynein-dependent transport. BicD2-dependent transport pathways are important for brain and muscle development. Cargo-bound adaptors are required to activate dynein for processive transport, but the mechanism of action is elusive. Here, we report the structure of the cargo-binding domain of human BicD2 that forms a dimeric coiled-coil with homotypic registry, in which both helices are aligned. To investigate if BicD2 can switch to an asymmetric registry, where a portion of one helix is vertically shifted, we performed molecular dynamics simulations. Both registry types are stabilized by distinct conformations of F743. For the F743I variant, which increases dynein recruitment in the Drosophila homolog, and for the human R747C variant, which causes spinal muscular atrophy, spontaneous coiled-coil registry shifts are observed, which may cause the BicD2-hyperactivation phenotype and disease. We propose that a registry shift upon cargo-binding activates auto-inhibited BicD2 for dynein recruitment.HighlightsStable, bona fide BicD2 coiled-coils with distinct registries can be formed.We provide evidence that a human disease mutation causes a coiled-coil registry shift.A coiled-coil registry shift could relieve BicD2-autoinhibition upon cargo-binding.The ability to undergo registry shifts may be an inherent property of coiled-coils.In BriefOur results support that stable coiled-coils of BicD2 with distinct registries can be formed, and suggest a molecular mechanism for such registry switches. We provide evidence that disease-causing mutations in coiled-coils may alter the equilibrium between registry-shifted conformers, which we propose as a general mechanism of pathogenesis for coiled-coils.Graphical Abstract

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heying Cui ◽  
Kathleen M. Trybus ◽  
M. Yusuf Ali ◽  
Puja Goyal ◽  
Kaiqi Zhang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe dynein adaptor Drosophila Bicaudal D (BicD) is auto-inhibited and activates dynein motility only after cargo is bound, but the underlying mechanism is elusive. In contrast, we show that the full-length BicD/F684I mutant activates dynein processivity even in the absence of cargo. Our X-ray structure of the C-terminal domain of the BicD/F684I mutant reveals a coiled-coil registry shift; in the N-terminal region, the two helices of the homodimer are aligned, whereas they are vertically shifted in the wild-type. One chain is partially disordered and this structural flexibility is confirmed by computations, which reveal that the mutant transitions back and forth between the two registries. We propose that a coiled-coil registry shift upon cargo binding activates BicD for dynein recruitment. Moreover, the human homolog BicD2/F743I exhibits diminished binding of cargo adaptor Nup358, implying that a coiled-coil registry shift may be a mechanism to modulate cargo selection for BicD2–dependent transport pathways.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2217-2217
Author(s):  
Rustem I. Litvinov ◽  
Dzhigangir A. Faizullin ◽  
Yuriy F. Zuev ◽  
Artyom Zhmurov ◽  
Olga Kononova ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2217 A new field of biomedical research, biomechanics of hemostasis and thrombosis, has been quickly developing over the past few years. The mechanical properties of fibrin are essential in vivo for the ability of clots to stop bleeding in flowing blood but also determine the likelihood of obstructive thrombi that cause heart attack and stroke. Despite such critical importance, the structural basis of clot mechanics is not well understood. The structural changes underlying deformation of fibrin polymer occur at different spatial scales from macroscopic to submolecular, including molecular unfolding, about which relatively little is known. In this work, fibrin mechanics was studied with respect to molecular structural changes during fibrin deformation. The results of atomic force microscopy-induced unfolding of fibrinogen monomers and oligomers were correlated with force-extension curves obtained using Molecular Dynamics simulations. The mechanical unraveling of fibrin(ogen) was shown to be determined by molecular transitions that couple reversible extension-contraction of the α-helical coiled-coil regions with unfolding of the terminal γ-nodules. The coiled-coils act as molecular springs to buffer external mechanical perturbations, transmitting and distributing force as the γ-nodules unfold. Unfolding of the γ-nodules, stabilized by strong inter-domain interactions with the neighboring β-nodules, was characterized by an average force of ∼90 pN and peak-to-peak distance of ∼25 nm. All-atom Molecular Dynamics simulations further showed a transition from α-helix to β-sheet at higher extensions. To reveal the force-induced α-helix to β-sheet transition in fibrin experimentally, we used Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy of hydrated fibrin clots made from human blood plasma. When extended or compressed, fibrin showed a shift of absorbance intensity mainly in the amide I band but also in the amide II and III bands, demonstrating an increase of the β-sheets and a corresponding reduction of the α-helices. These structural conversions correlated directly with the strain or pressure and were partially reversible at the conditions applied. The spectra characteristic of the nascent inter-chain β-sheets were consistent with protein aggregation and fiber bundling during clot deformation observed using scanning electron microscopy. Additional information on the mechanically induced α-helix to β-sheet transition in fibrin was obtained from computational studies of the forced elongation of the entire fibrin molecule and its α-helical coiled-coil portions. We found that upon force application, the coiled-coils undergo ∼5–50 nm extension and 360-degree unwinding. The force-extension curves for the coiled-coils showed three distinct regimes: the linear elastic regime, the constant-force plastic regime, and the non-linear regime. In the linear regime, the coiled-coils unwind but not unfold. In the plastic regime, the triple α-helical segments rewind and re-unwind while undergoing a non-cooperative phase transition to form parallel β-sheets. We conclude that under extension and/or compression an α-helix to β-sheet conversion of the coiled-coils occurs in the fibrin clot as a part of forced protein unfolding. These regimes of forced elongation of fibrin provide important qualitative and quantitative characteristics of the molecular mechanisms underlying fibrin mechanical properties at the microscopic and macroscopic scales. Furthermore, these structural characteristics of the dynamic mechanical behavior of fibrin at the nanometer scale determine whether or not clots have the strength to stanch bleeding and if thrombi become obstructive or embolize. Finally, this knowledge of the functional significance of different domains of fibrin(ogen) suggests new approaches for modulation of these properties as potential therapeutic interventions. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon E. Hill ◽  
Elaine Nguyen ◽  
Rebecca K. Donegan ◽  
Anthony Hazel ◽  
James C. Gumbart ◽  
...  

Glaucoma-associated myocilin is a member of the olfactomedins, a protein family broadly involved in neuronal development and human disease. Molecular studies of the myocilin N-terminal coiled coil demonstrate a unique tripartite architecture: a disulfide-linked, parallel dimer-of-dimers Y-shaped molecule, with distinct tetramer and dimer regions. The structure of the C-terminal 7-heptad dimer elucidates an unexpected repeat pattern involving electrostatic inter-strand stabilization. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal an alternate conformation in which the terminal inter-strand disulfide bond limits the extent of unfolding and results in a kinked configuration. Taken together, full-length myocilin is also branched, with two pairs of C- terminal olfactomedin domains. Selected variants within the N-terminal region alter the apparent quaternary structure of myocilin but do so without compromising stability or causing aggregation. In addition to increasing our structural knowledge of extracellular coiled coils for protein design and biomedically important olfactomedins, this work broadens the scope of protein misfolding in the pathogenesis of myocilin-associated glaucoma.


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (19) ◽  
pp. 3911-3922 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongqiang Wang ◽  
Xinlei Zhang ◽  
Hong Zhang ◽  
Yi Lu ◽  
Haolong Huang ◽  
...  

The highly abundant α-helical coiled-coil motif not only mediates crucial protein–protein interactions in the cell but is also an attractive scaffold in synthetic biology and material science and a potential target for disease intervention. Therefore a systematic understanding of the coiled-coil interactions (CCIs) at the organismal level would help unravel the full spectrum of the biological function of this interaction motif and facilitate its application in therapeutics. We report the first identified genome-wide CCI network in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which consists of 3495 pair-wise interactions among 598 predicted coiled-coil regions. Computational analysis revealed that the CCI network is specifically and functionally organized and extensively involved in the organization of cell machinery. We further show that CCIs play a critical role in the assembly of the kinetochore, and disruption of the CCI network leads to defects in kinetochore assembly and cell division. The CCI network identified in this study is a valuable resource for systematic characterization of coiled coils in the shaping and regulation of a host of cellular machineries and provides a basis for the utilization of coiled coils as domain-based probes for network perturbation and pharmacological applications.


2018 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 194-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iracema Caballero ◽  
Massimo Sammito ◽  
Claudia Millán ◽  
Andrey Lebedev ◽  
Nicolas Soler ◽  
...  

ARCIMBOLDOsolves the phase problem by combining the location of small model fragments usingPhaserwith density modification and autotracing usingSHELXE. Mainly helical structures constitute favourable cases, which can be solved using polyalanine helical fragments as search models. Nevertheless, the solution of coiled-coil structures is often complicated by their anisotropic diffraction and apparent translational noncrystallographic symmetry. Long, straight helices have internal translational symmetry and their alignment in preferential directions gives rise to systematic overlap of Patterson vectors. This situation has to be differentiated from the translational symmetry relating different monomers.ARCIMBOLDO_LITEhas been run on single workstations on a test pool of 150 coiled-coil structures with 15–635 amino acids per asymmetric unit and with diffraction data resolutions of between 0.9 and 3.0 Å. The results have been used to identify and address specific issues when solving this class of structures usingARCIMBOLDO. Features fromPhaserv.2.7 onwards are essential to correct anisotropy and produce translation solutions that will pass the packing filters. As the resolution becomes worse than 2.3 Å, the helix direction may be reversed in the placed fragments. Differentiation between true solutions and pseudo-solutions, in which helix fragments were correctly positioned but in a reverse orientation, was found to be problematic at resolutions worse than 2.3 Å. Therefore, after every new fragment-placement round, complete or sparse combinations of helices in alternative directions are generated and evaluated. The final solution is once again probed by helix reversal, refinement and extension. To conclude, density modification andSHELXEautotracing incorporating helical constraints is also exploited to extend the resolution limit in the case of coiled coils and to enhance the identification of correct solutions. This study resulted in a specialized mode withinARCIMBOLDOfor the solution of coiled-coil structures, which overrides the resolution limit and can be invoked from the command line (keyword coiled_coil) orARCIMBOLDO_LITEtask interface inCCP4i.


eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcus D Hartmann ◽  
Claudia T Mendler ◽  
Jens Bassler ◽  
Ioanna Karamichali ◽  
Oswin Ridderbusch ◽  
...  

Coiled coils are the best-understood protein fold, as their backbone structure can uniquely be described by parametric equations. This level of understanding has allowed their manipulation in unprecedented detail. They do not seem a likely source of surprises, yet we describe here the unexpected formation of a new type of fiber by the simple insertion of two or six residues into the underlying heptad repeat of a parallel, trimeric coiled coil. These insertions strain the supercoil to the breaking point, causing the local formation of short β-strands, which move the path of the chain by 120° around the trimer axis. The result is an α/β coiled coil, which retains only one backbone hydrogen bond per repeat unit from the parent coiled coil. Our results show that a substantially novel backbone structure is possible within the allowed regions of the Ramachandran space with only minor mutations to a known fold.


2007 ◽  
Vol 189 (16) ◽  
pp. 6048-6056 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Gao ◽  
David G. Lynn

ABSTRACT A coordinated response to a complex and dynamic environment requires an organism to simultaneously monitor and interpret multiple signaling cues. In bacteria and some eukaryotes, environmental responses depend on the histidine autokinases (HKs). For example, VirA, a large integral membrane HK from Agrobacterium tumefaciens, regulates the expression of virulence genes in response to signals from multiple molecular classes (phenol, pH, and sugar). The ability of this pathogen to perceive inputs from different known host signals within a single protein receptor provides an opportunity to understand the mechanisms of signal integration. Here we exploited the conserved domain organization of the HKs and engineered chimeric kinases to explore the signaling mechanisms of phenol sensing and pH/sugar integration. Our data implicate a piston-assisted rotation of coiled coils for integration of multiple inputs and regulation of critical responses during pathogenesis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 3584 ◽  
Author(s):  
Won Min Park

Coiled-coils, the bundles of intertwined helical protein motifs, have drawn much attention as versatile molecular toolkits. Because of programmable interaction specificity and affinity as well as well-established sequence-to-structure relationships, coiled-coils have been used as subunits that self-assemble various molecular complexes in a range of fields. In this review, I describe recent advances in the field of protein nanotechnology, with a focus on programming assembly of protein nanostructures using coiled-coil modules. Modular design approaches to converting the helical motifs into self-assembling building blocks are described, followed by a discussion on the molecular basis and principles underlying the modular designs. This review also provides a summary of recently developed nanostructures with a variety of structural features, which are in categories of unbounded nanostructures, discrete nanoparticles, and well-defined origami nanostructures. Challenges existing in current design strategies, as well as desired improvements for controls over material properties and functionalities for applications, are also provided.


2016 ◽  
Vol 213 (5) ◽  
pp. 513-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holly A. Ping ◽  
Lauren M. Kraft ◽  
WeiTing Chen ◽  
Amy E. Nilles ◽  
Laura L. Lackner

The mitochondria–ER cortex anchor (MECA) is required for proper mitochondrial distribution and functions by tethering mitochondria to the plasma membrane. The core component of MECA is the multidomain protein Num1, which assembles into clusters at the cell cortex. We show Num1 adopts an extended, polarized conformation. Its N-terminal coiled-coil domain (Num1CC) is proximal to mitochondria, and the C-terminal pleckstrin homology domain is associated with the plasma membrane. We find that Num1CC interacts directly with phospholipid membranes and displays a strong preference for the mitochondria-specific phospholipid cardiolipin. This direct membrane interaction is critical for MECA function. Thus, mitochondrial anchoring is mediated by a protein that interacts directly with two different membranes through lipid-specific binding domains, suggesting a general mechanism for interorganelle tethering.


2006 ◽  
Vol 978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theodor Ackbarow ◽  
Markus J. Buehler

AbstractCoiled-coil alpha-helical dimers are the elementary building blocks of intermediate filaments (IFs), an important component of the cell's cytoskeleton. Therefore, IFs play a leading role in the mechanical integrity of the cells. Here we use atomistic simulation to carry out tensile tests on coiled-coils as well as on single alpha-helices of the 2B segment of the vimentin dimer that has been shown to control the large-deformation behavior of cells. We compare the characteristic force-strain curves of both structures and suggest explanations for the differences on this fundamental level of hierarchical assembly. We further systematically explore the strain rate dependence of the mechanical properties of the vimentin coiled-coil protein. We develop a simple continuum model capable of reproducing the atomistic modeling results. The model enables us to extrapolate to much lower deformation rates approaching those used in experiment.


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