How a highly acidic SH3 domain folds in the absence of its charged peptide target

Author:

Jaramillo‐Martinez Valeria12ORCID,Dominguez Matthew J.12ORCID,Bell Gemma M.3,Souness Megan E.3,Carhart Anna H.4,Cuibus M. Adriana4,Masoumzadeh Elahe1,Lantz Benjamin J.2,Adkins Aaron J.4,Latham Michael P.56ORCID,Ball K. Aurelia4ORCID,Stollar Elliott J.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center Lubbock Texas 79430 USA

2. Eastern New Mexico University Portales New Mexico USA

3. Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology University of Liverpool Liverpool L69 7ZB UK

4. Department of Chemistry Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs New York 12866 USA

5. Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Biophysics University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

6. Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry Texas Tech University Lubbock Texas 79409 USA

Abstract

AbstractCharged residues on the surface of proteins are critical for both protein stability and interactions. However, many proteins contain binding regions with a high net charge that may destabilize the protein but are useful for binding to oppositely charged targets. We hypothesized that these domains would be marginally stable, as electrostatic repulsion would compete with favorable hydrophobic collapse during folding. Furthermore, by increasing the salt concentration, we predict that these protein folds would be stabilized by mimicking some of the favorable electrostatic interactions that take place during target binding. We varied the salt and urea concentrations to probe the contributions of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions for the folding of the yeast SH3 domain found in Abp1p. The SH3 domain was significantly stabilized with increased salt concentrations due to Debye–Huckel screening and a nonspecific territorial ion‐binding effect. Molecular dynamics and NMR show that sodium ions interact with all 15 acidic residues but do little to change backbone dynamics or overall structure. Folding kinetics experiments show that the addition of urea or salt primarily affects the folding rate, indicating that almost all the hydrophobic collapse and electrostatic repulsion occur in the transition state. After the transition state formation, modest yet favorable short‐range salt bridges are formed along with hydrogen bonds, as the native state fully folds. Thus, hydrophobic collapse offsets electrostatic repulsion to ensure this highly charged binding domain can still fold and be ready to bind to its charged peptide targets, a property that is likely evolutionarily conserved over 1 billion years.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

Reference43 articles.

1. How Hofmeister ion interactions affect protein stability

2. Studying salt effects on protein stability using ribonuclease t1 as a model system

3. Most yeast SH3 domains bind peptide targets with high intrinsic specificity

4. Cognate DNA recognition by engrailed homeodomain involves a conformational change controlled via an electrostatic‐spring‐loaded latch;D'Amelio N;Int J Mol Sci,2022

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