With over 60,000 protein structures available in the Protein Data Bank, it is frequently possible use one of them to obtain starting phase information and to solve new crystal structures. Molecular replacement1–4 procedures, which search for placements of a starting model within the crystallographic unit cell that best account for the measured diffraction amplitudes, followed by automatic chain tracing methods5–8, have allowed the rapid solution of large numbers of protein structures. Despite extensive work9–14, molecular replacement or the subsequent rebuilding usually fail with more divergent starting models based on remote homologues with less than 30% sequence identity. Here we show that this limitation can be substantially reduced by combining algorithms for protein structure modeling with those developed for crystallographic structure determination. An approach integrating Rosetta structure modeling with Autobuild chain tracing yielded high-resolution structures for 8 of 13 X-ray diffraction datasets that could not be solved in the laboratories of expert crystallographers and that remained unsolved after application of an extensive array of alternative approaches. We estimate the new method should allow rapid structure determination without experimental phase information for over half the cases where current methods fail, given diffraction datasets of better than 3.2Å resolution, four or fewer copies in the asymmetric unit, and the availability of structures of homologous proteins with >20% sequence identity.
Just add water: Structurally, cyanobacterial aldehyde decarbonylases are members of the non‐heme diiron oxygenase family of enzymes. However, the enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of aliphatic aldehydes to alkanes and formate (see scheme), in an oxygen‐independent reaction. This unusual and chemically difficult reaction most likely involves free radical intermediates.
The signaling phosphatidylinositol lipids PI(4,5)P 2 (PIP 2 ) and PI (3,4,5)P 3 (PIP 3 ) bind nuclear receptor 5A family (NR5As), but their regulatory mechanisms remain unknown. Here, the crystal structures of human NR5A1 (steroidogenic factor-1, SF-1) ligand binding domain (LBD) bound to PIP 2 and PIP 3 show the lipid hydrophobic tails sequestered in the hormone pocket, as predicted. However, unlike classic nuclear receptor hormones, the phosphoinositide head groups are fully solvent-exposed and complete the LBD fold by organizing the receptor architecture at the hormone pocket entrance. The highest affinity phosphoinositide ligand PIP 3 stabilizes the coactivator binding groove and increases coactivator peptide recruitment. This receptor-ligand topology defines a previously unidentified regulatory protein-lipid surface on SF-1 with the phosphoinositide head group at its nexus and poised to interact with other proteins. This surface on SF-1 coincides with the predicted binding site of the corepressor DAX-1 (dosage-sensitive sex reversal, adrenal hypoplasia critical region on chromosome X), and importantly harbors missense mutations associated with human endocrine disorders. Our data provide the structural basis for this poorly understood cluster of human SF-1 mutations and demonstrates how signaling phosphoinositides function as regulatory ligands for NR5As.T he existence of nuclear, nonmembrane pools of signaling phosphorylated derivatives of phosphatidylinositols or phosphoinositides (PIP n ) was reported over two decades ago (1-3). Consistent with these early reports, lipid-modifying enzymes responsible for phosphoinositide metabolism were also found in the nucleus (4-7); however, the function of PIP n in this cellular compartment remains poorly defined. The nuclear receptors (NRs) steroidogenic factor 1 (SF-1, NR5A1) and liver receptor homolog 1 (LRH-1, NR5A2) bind phosphoinositides as well as other phospholipids in their large hydrophobic pockets (8-13). The ability of NR5As to interact with PIP n is well-conserved with the Caenorhabditis elegans ortholog nhr-25 able to bind both PIP 2 and PIP 3 (14). That phosphoinositides might serve as endogenous NR5A ligands is suggested by the fact that elevating cellular pools of PIP 3 increases SF-1 activity (15) and that impairing PIP 3 uptake decreases SF-1 activity (12). Further, when purified from mammalian cells, the phosphoinositide PIP 2 is found associated with SF-1 and can be modified by the lipid kinase, IPMK, as well as the lipid phosphatase, PTEN (13). Taken together, these data suggest that signaling phosphoinositides are biologically relevant ligands for SF-1.Phosphoinositide ligands diverge chemically from classic NR hormones in that they contain a long, extended hydrophobic moiety and a prominent hydrophilic head group, which is inherently incompatible with the hydrophobic core of the NR5A ligand-binding pocket. Our previous structural analyses of SF-1 bound to phosphatidylcholine suggest that the acyl tails of phosphoinositides should be sequestered...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.