Relationship of Thermostability and Binding Affinity in Metal‐binding WW‐Domain Minireceptors

Author:

Pham Truc Lam1ORCID,Conde González Marcos R.12ORCID,Fazliev Sunnatullo123ORCID,Kishore Agi124ORCID,Comba Peter45ORCID,Thomas Franziska1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Organic Chemistry Heidelberg University Im Neuenheimer Feld 270 69120 Heidelberg Germany

2. Max Planck School Matter to Life

3. Max Planck Institute for Medical Research Jahnstr. 29 69120 Heidelberg Germany

4. Institute of Inorganic Chemistry Heidelberg University Im Neuenheimer Feld 270 69120 Heidelberg Germany

5. Interdisciplinary Center for Scientific Computing (IWR) Heidelberg University Im Neuenheimer Feld 270 69120 Heidelberg Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe design of metallo‐miniproteins advances our understanding of the structural and functional roles of metals in proteins. We recently designed a metal‐binding WW domain, WW‐CA‐Nle, which displays three histidine residues on its surface for coordination of divalent metals Ni(II), Zn(II) and Cu(II). However, WW‐CA‐Nle is a molten globule in the apo state and thus showed only moderate binding affinities with Kd values in the μM regime. In this report, we hypothesize that improved thermal stability of the apo state of the metal binding WW‐domain scaffold should lead to improved preorganization of the metal‐binding site and consequently to higher metal‐binding affinities. By redesigning WW‐CA‐Nle, we obtained WW‐CA variants, WW‐CA‐min and WW‐CA‐ANG, which were fully folded in the apo states and displayed moderate to excellent thermostabilities in the apo and holo states. We were able to show that the improved thermal stabilities led to improved metal binding, which was reflected in Kd values that were at least one order of magnitude lower compared to WW‐CA‐Nle. EPR spectroscopy and ITC measurements revealed a better defined and predisposed metal binding site in WW‐CA‐ANG.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organic Chemistry,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine,Biochemistry

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