Biochim Biophys Acta Biomembr
October 2024
Septins are cytoskeletal proteins and their interaction with membranes is crucial for their role in various cellular processes. Septins have polybasic regions (PB1 and PB2) which are important for lipid interaction. Earlier, we and others have highlighted the role of the septin C-terminal domain (CTD) to membrane interaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe molecular basis for septin filament assembly has begun to emerge over recent years. These filaments are essential for many septin functions which depend on their association with biological membranes or components of the cytoskeleton. Much less is known about how septins specifically interact with their binding partners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeptins possess a conserved guanine nucleotide-binding (G) domain that participates in the stabilization of organized hetero-oligomeric complexes which assemble into filaments, rings and network-like structures. The fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, has five such septin genes encoding Sep1, Sep2, Sep4, Sep5 and Pnut. Here, we report the crystal structure of the heterodimer formed between the G-domains of Sep1 and Sep2, the first from an insect to be described to date.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to fully understand any complex biochemical system from a mechanistic point of view, it is necessary to have access to the three-dimensional structures of the molecular components involved. Septins and their oligomers, filaments and higher-order complexes are no exception. Indeed, the spontaneous recruitment of different septin monomers to specific positions along a filament represents a fascinating example of subtle molecular recognition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeptins are an example of subtle molecular recognition whereby different paralogues must correctly assemble into functional filaments important for essential cellular events such as cytokinesis. Most possess C-terminal domains capable of forming coiled coils which are believed to be involved in filament formation and bundling. Here, we report an integrated structural approach which aims to unravel their architectural diversity and in so doing provide direct structural information for the coiled-coil regions of five human septins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPressure can shift the polymer-monomer equilibrium of Aβ, increasing pressure first leads to a release of Aβ-monomers, surprisingly at pressures higher than 180 MPa repolymerization is induced. By high pressure NMR spectroscopy, differences of partial molar volumes ΔV0 and compressibility factors Δβ' of polymerization were determined at different temperatures. The d-enantiomeric peptides RD2 and RD2D3 bind to monomeric Aβ with affinities substantially higher than those determined for fibril formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe three-dimensional structure of canecystatin-1, a potent inhibitor of cysteine proteases from sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum), has been solved in two different crystal forms. In both cases, it is seen to exist as a domain-swapped dimer, the first such observation for a cystatin of plant origin. Size exclusion chromatography and multidimensional NMR spectroscopy show the dimer to be the dominant species in solution, despite the presence of a measurable quantity of monomer undergoing slow exchange.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCystatins are cysteine proteases inhibitors that are widely distributed among insects, mammalians and plants. Here we report the complete resonance assignment of canecystatin-1 from Saccharum officinarum obtained by heteronuclear multidimensional high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The consensus chemical shift index was calculated and showed the presence of one α-helix (residues 27-43) and three β-strands (residues 48-74, 78-89 and 94-104), a secondary structure pattern that suggests a domain-swapped structure as presented by stefin B and human cystatin C, opposed to the monomeric structure yet found in other phytocystatins like oryza and pineapple cystatin.
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