The ligand-binding domains (LBDs) of the NR5A subfamily of nuclear receptors activate transcription via ligand-dependent and ligand-independent mechanisms. The Drosophila Ftz-F1 receptor (NR5A3) belongs to the latter category, and its ligand independence is attributed to a short helical segment (α6) within the protein that resides in the canonical ligand-binding pocket (LBP) in the crystalline state. Here, we show that the α6 helix is dynamic in solution when Ftz-F1 is bound to the LxxLL motif of its cofactor Ftz, undergoing motions on the fast (picosecond to nanosecond) as well as slow (microsecond to millisecond) time scales. Motions on the slow time scale (∼10 s) appear to pervade throughout the domain, most prominently in the LBP and residues at or near the cofactor-binding site. We ascribe the fast time scale motions to a solvent-accessible conformation for the α6 helix akin to those described for its orthologs in higher organisms. We assign this conformation where the LBP is "open" to a lowly populated species, while the major conformer bears the properties of the crystal structure where the LBP is "closed". We propose that these conformational transitions could allow binding to small molecule ligands and/or play a role in dissociation of the cofactor from the binding site. Indeed, we show that the Ftz-F1 LBD can bind phospholipids, not unlike its orthologs. Our studies provide the first detailed insights into intrinsic motions occurring on a variety of time scales in a nuclear receptor LBD and reveal that potentially functionally significant motions pervade throughout the domain in solution, despite evidence to the contrary implied by the crystal structure.
Chromatin-modifying complexes containing histone deacetylase (HDAC) activities play critical roles in the regulation of gene transcription in eukaryotes. These complexes are thought to lack intrinsic DNA-binding activity, but according to a well-established paradigm, they are recruited via protein–protein interactions by gene-specific transcription factors and posttranslational histone modifications to their sites of action on the genome. The mammalian Sin3L/Rpd3L complex, comprising more than a dozen different polypeptides, is an ancient HDAC complex found in diverse eukaryotes. The subunits of this complex harbor conserved domains and motifs of unknown structure and function. Here, we show that Sds3, a constitutively-associated subunit critical for the proper functioning of the Sin3L/Rpd3L complex, harbors a type of Tudor domain that we designate the capped Tudor domain. Unlike canonical Tudor domains that bind modified histones, the Sds3 capped Tudor domain binds to nucleic acids that can form higher-order structures such as G-quadruplexes and shares similarities with the knotted Tudor domain of the Esa1 histone acetyltransferase that was previously shown to bind single-stranded RNA. Our findings expand the range of macromolecules capable of recruiting the Sin3L/Rpd3L complex and draw attention to potentially new biological roles for this HDAC complex.
Chemical exchange line broadening is an important phenomenon in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, in which a nuclear spin experiences more than one magnetic environment as a result of chemical or conformational changes of a molecule. The dynamic process of chemical exchange strongly affects the sensitivity and resolution of NMR experiments and increasingly provides a powerful probe of the interconversion between chemical and conformational states of proteins, nucleic acids, and other biologic macromolecules. A simple and often used theoretic description of chemical exchange in NMR spectroscopy is based on an idealized 2-state jump model (the random phase or telegraph signal). However, chemical exchange can also be represented as a barrier crossing event that can be modeled by using chemical reaction rate theory. The timescale of crossing is determined by the barrier height, the temperature, and the dissipation modeled as collisional or frictional damping. This tutorial explores the connection between the NMR theory of chemical exchange line broadening and strong collision models for chemical kinetics in statistical mechanics. Theoretic modeling and numeric simulation are used to map the rate of barrier crossing dynamics of a particle on a potential energy surface to the chemical exchange relaxation rate constant. By developing explicit models for the exchange dynamics, the tutorial aims to elucidate the underlying dynamical processes that give rise to the rich phenomenology of chemical exchange observed in NMR spectroscopy. Software for generating and analyzing the numeric simulations is provided in the form of Python and Fortran source codes.
Protocols for the construction of large, deeply mutagenized protein encoding libraries via Golden Gate assembly of synthetic DNA cassettes employ disparate, system specific methodology. Here we benchmark a broadly applicable Golden Gate method for building user-defined libraries. We demonstrate that a 25 μl reaction, using 40 fmol of input DNA, can generate a library on the order of 1x106members and that reaction volume or input DNA concentration can be scaled up with no losses in transformation efficiency. Such libraries can be constructed from dsDNA cassettes generated either by degenerate oligonucleotides or oligo pools. We demonstrate its real-world effectiveness by building custom, user-defined libraries on the order of 104to 107unique protein encoding variants for two orthogonal protein engineering systems. We include a detailed protocol and provide several general-use destination vectors.
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