Annelid erythrocruorins are highly cooperative extracellular respiratory proteins with molecular masses on the order of 3.6 million Daltons. We report here the 3.5 A crystal structure of erythrocruorin from the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris. This structure reveals details of symmetrical and quasi-symmetrical interactions that dictate the self-limited assembly of 144 hemoglobin and 36 linker subunits. The linker subunits assemble into a core complex with D(6) symmetry onto which 12 hemoglobin dodecamers bind to form the entire complex. Although the three unique linker subunits share structural similarity, their interactions with each other and the hemoglobin subunits display striking diversity. The observed diversity includes design features that have been incorporated into the linker subunits and may be critical for efficient assembly of large quantities of this complex respiratory protein.
Previous x-ray studies (2.8-A resolution) on crystals of tobacco mosaic virus coat protein grown from solutions containing high salt have characterized the structure of the protein aggregate as a dimer of a bilayered cylindrical disk formed by 34 chemically identical subunits. We have determined the crystal structure of the disk aggregate at 2.4-A resolution using x-ray diffraction from crystals maintained at cryogenic temperatures. Two regions of interest have been extensively refined. First, residues of the low-radius loop region, which were not modeled previously, have been traced completely in our electron density maps. Similar to the structure observed in the virus, the right radial helix in each protomer ends around residue 87, after which the protein chain forms an extended chain that extends to the left radial helix. The left radial helix appears as a long alpha-helix with high temperature factors for the main-chain atoms in the inner portion. The side-chain atoms in this region (residues 90-110) are not visible in the electron density maps and are assumed to be disordered. Second, interactions between subunits in the symmetry-related central A pair have been determined. No direct protein-protein interactions are observed in the major overlap region between these subunits; all interactions are mediated by two layers of ordered solvent molecules. The current structure emphasizes the importance of water in biological macromolecular assemblies.
Protease mediated peptide synthesis (PMPS) was first described in the 1930s but remains underexploited today. In most PMPS, the reaction equilibrium is shifted toward synthesis by the aqueous insolubility of product generated. Substrates and proteases are selected by trial and error, yields are modest, and reaction times are slow. Once implemented, however, PMPS reactions can be simple, environmentally benign, and readily scalable to a commercial level. We examined the PMPS of a precursor of the artificial sweetener aspartame, a multiton peptide synthesis catalyzed by the enzyme thermolysin. X-ray structures of thermolysin in complex with aspartame substrates separately, and after PMPS in a crystal, rationalize the reaction's substrate preferences and reveal an unexpected form of substrate inhibition that explains its sluggishness. Structure guided optimization of this and other PMPS reactions could expand the economic viability of commercial peptides beyond current high-potency, low-volume therapeutics, with substantial green chemistry advantages.
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