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Simple yet functional phosphate-loop proteins

  • Maria Luisa Romero Romero
  • , Fan Yang
  • , Yu Ru Lin
  • , Agnes Toth-Petroczy
  • , Igor N. Berezovsky
  • , Alexander Goncearenco
  • , Wen Yang
  • , Alon Wellner
  • , Fanindra Kumar-Deshmukh
  • , Michal Sharon
  • , David Baker
  • , Gabriele Varani
  • , Dan S. Tawfik*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Weizmann Institute of Science
  • University of Washington
  • School of Life Science and Technology, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics
  • Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore
  • National University of Singapore
  • University of Bergen
  • National Institutes of Health

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Abundant and essential motifs, such as phosphate-binding loops (P-loops), are presumed to be the seeds of modern enzymes. The Walker-A P-loop is absolutely essential in modern NTPase enzymes, in mediating binding, and transfer of the terminal phosphate groups of NTPs. However, NTPase function depends on many additional active-site residues placed throughout the protein’s scaffold. Can motifs such as P-loops confer function in a simpler context? We applied a phylogenetic analysis that yielded a sequence logo of the putative ancestral Walker-A P-loop element: a β-strand connected to an α-helix via the P-loop. Computational design incorporated this element into de novo designed β-α repeat proteins with relatively few sequence modifications. We obtained soluble, stable proteins that unlike modern P-loop NTPases bound ATP in a magnesium-independent manner. Foremost, these simple P-loop proteins avidly bound polynucleotides, RNA, and single-strand DNA, and mutations in the P-loop’s key residues abolished binding. Binding appears to be facilitated by the structural plasticity of these proteins, including quaternary structure polymorphism that promotes a combined action of multiple P-loops. Accordingly, oligomerization enabled a 55-aa protein carrying a single P-loop to confer avid polynucleotide binding. Overall, our results show that the P-loop Walker-A motif can be implemented in small and simple β-α repeat proteins, primarily as a polynucleotide binding motif.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E11943-E11950
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume115
Issue number51
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Dec 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Conformational diversity
  • De novo protein design
  • Protein
  • Protein evolution
  • RNA binding
  • Walker-A

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