Protein activity is often regulated by altering the oligomerization state. One mechanism of multimerization involves domain swapping, wherein proteins exchange parts of their structures and thereby form long-lived dimers or multimers. Domain swapping has been specifically observed in amyloidogenic proteins, for example the cystatin superfamily of cysteine protease inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein function critically depends on structure. However, current analytical tools to monitor consistent higher-order structure with high sensitivity, as for instance required in the development of biopharmaceuticals, are limited. To complement existing assays, we present the analytical cascade of enzymes (ACE), a method based on enzymatic modifications of target proteins, which serve to exponentially amplify structural differences between them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMacrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) is a pro-inflammatory and tumor-promoting cytokine that occurs in two redox-dependent immunologically distinct conformational isoforms. The disease-related structural isoform of MIF (oxMIF) can be specifically and predominantly detected in the circulation of patients with inflammatory diseases and in tumor tissue, whereas the ubiquitously expressed isoform of MIF (redMIF) is abundantly expressed in healthy and diseased subjects. In this article, we report that cysteine 81 within MIF serves as a "switch cysteine" for the conversion of redMIF to oxMIF.
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