APS March Meeting 2017
Volume 62, Number 4
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2017;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session X14: Knotted Biomolecules
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 17, 2017
Room: 273
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBIO
Chair: Jaynath Banavar, University of Maryland
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.MAR.X14.4
Abstract: X14.00004 : Pierced Lasso Proteins
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Patricia Jennings
(Univ of California - San Diego)
Entanglement and knots are naturally occurring, where, in the microscopic
world, knots in DNA and homopolymers are well characterized. The most
complex knots are observed in proteins which are harder to investigate, as
proteins are heteropolymers composed of a combination of 20 different amino
acids with different individual biophysical properties. As new-knotted
topologies and new proteins containing knots continue to be discovered and
characterized, the investigation of knots in proteins has gained intense
interest. Thus far, the principle focus has been on the evolutionary origin
of tying a knot, with questions of how a protein chain `self-ties' into a
knot, what the mechanism(s) are that contribute to threading, and the
biological relevance and functional implication of a knotted topology in
vivo gaining the most insight. Efforts to study the fully untied and
unfolded chain indicate that the knot is highly stable, remaining intact in
the unfolded state orders of magnitude longer than first anticipated. The
persistence of ``stable'' knots in the unfolded state, together with the
challenge of defining an unfolded and untied chain from an unfolded and
knotted chain, complicates the study of fully untied protein in vitro. Our
discovery of a new class of knotted proteins, the Pierced Lassos (PL) loop
topology, simplifies the knotting approach. While PLs are not easily
recognizable by the naked eye, they have now been identified in many
proteins in the PDB through the use of computation tools. PL topologies are
diverse proteins found in all kingdoms of life, performing a large variety
of biological responses such as cell signaling, immune responses,
transporters and inhibitors (http://lassoprot.cent.uw.edu.pl/). Many of
these PL topologies are secreted proteins, extracellular proteins, as well
as, redox sensors, enzymes and metal and co-factor binding proteins; all of
which provide a favorable environment for the formation of the disulphide
bridge. In the PL topologies, the threaded topology is formed by a covalent
loop where part of the polypeptide chain is threaded through, forming what
we term a PL. The advantage of a PL topology for fundamental studies,
compared to other knotted proteins, is that the threaded topology can easily
be manipulated to yield an unknotted state. Exploiting the oxidative state
of the cysteines, the building blocks that form the disulphide bridge
generating the covalent loop, through altering the chemical environment, and
thereby controlling the formation of the covalent loop, easily generates
unknotted protein. The biological advantage, we have found, is that the PL
can exert allosteric control through this on/off mechanism in a target
protein. Most significantly, as the disulphide bridge acts as an on/off
switch in knotting, the biophysical investigation of PL topologies can
provide a new tool to steer folding and function in proteins, as disulphide
bridges are commonly used in protein engineering and therapeutics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.MAR.X14.4