Publication | Open Access
A seven-helix coiled coil
228
Citations
49
References
2006
Year
Coiled-coil ProteinsProtein AssemblyMagnetic ResonanceMolecular BiologyProtein FoldingProtein X-ray CrystallographyMulti-protein AssemblyBiophysicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryOverall Coiled-coil ArchitectureMacromolecular MachineStructural BiologyCoiled-coil Drug DeliveryNatural SciencesClassical Coiled CoilProtein EngineeringMolecular BiophysicsMedicine
Coiled-coil proteins contain a characteristic seven-residue sequence repeat whose positions are designated a to g. The interacting surface between alpha-helices in a classical coiled coil is formed by interspersing nonpolar side chains at the a and d positions with hydrophilic residues at the flanking e and g positions. To explore how the chemical nature of these core amino acids dictates the overall coiled-coil architecture, we replaced all eight e and g residues in the GCN4 leucine zipper with nonpolar alanine side chains. Surprisingly, the alanine-containing mutant forms a stable alpha-helical heptamer in aqueous solution. The 1.25-A resolution crystal structure of the heptamer reveals a parallel seven-stranded coiled coil enclosing a large tubular channel with an unusual heptad register shift between adjacent staggered helices. The overall geometry comprises two interleaved hydrophobic helical screws of interacting cross-sectional a and d layers that have not been seen before. Moreover, asparagines at the a positions play an essential role in heptamer formation by participating in a set of buried interhelix hydrogen bonds. These results demonstrate that heptad repeats containing four hydrophobic positions can direct assembly of complex, higher-order coiled-coil structures with rich diversity for close packing of alpha-helices.
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