Controlling leucine zipper specificity with interfacial hydrophobic residues


Autoria(s): Bains, Naresh P. S.; Wilce, Jackie A.; Mackay, Lindsey G.; King, Glenn F.
Data(s)

01/01/1999

Resumo

Dimerisation of leucine zippers results from the parallel association of alpha-helices to form a coiled coil. Coiled coils comprise a heptad repeat, denoted as (abcdefg)(n), where residues at positions a and d are hydrophobic and constitute the core of the dimer interface. Charged amino acids at the e and g positions of the coiled coil are thought to be the major influence on dimerisation specificity through the formation of attractive and repulsive interhelical electrostatic interactions. However, the variability of a-position residues in leucine zipper transcription factors prompted us to investigate their influence on dimerisation specificity. We demonstrate that mutation of a single interfacial a-position Ala residue to either Val, Ile or Leu significantly alters the homo- and heterodimerisation specificities of the leucine zipper domain from the c-Jun transcription factor. These results illustrate the importance of a-position residues in controlling leucine zipper dimerisation specificity in addition to providing substantial contributions to dimer stability.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:35844

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Coiled Coil #Dimerisation Affinity #Dimerisation Specificity #Fos #Jun #Leucine Zipper #Protein-protein Interactions #Superzipper Peptides #Heterodimeric Coiled-coil #Rational Design #Dna-binding #Jun #Fos #Dimerization #Stability #Domain #Homodimer #Position #110106 Medical Biochemistry: Proteins and Peptides (incl. Medical Proteomics)
Tipo

Journal Article