Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) populate an ensemble of dynamic conformations, making their structural characterization by experiments challenging. Many IDPs undergo liquid-liquid phase separation into dense membraneless organelles with myriad cellular functions. Multivalent interactions in low-complexity IDPs promote the formation of these subcellular coacervates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrystallin aggregation is characterized by light scattering of large molecular aggregates due to their phase separation in the lens. Low-resolution biophysical studies using multiple techniques have characterized the folding, stability, binding, and aggregation of crystallins in the past but with limited access to their structure, dynamics, and interactions. In this Viewpoint, three schools of experimental structural biology, that is, X-ray crystallography, solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopy, and cryo-electron microscopy, combine to provide atomic resolution details of native crystallins, soluble oligomers, and insoluble amyloid fibrils and amorphous aggregates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLens crystallins are subject to various types of damage during their lifetime which triggers protein misfolding and aggregation, ultimately causing cataracts. There are several models for crystallin aggregation, but a comprehensive picture of the mechanism of cataract is still underway. The complex biomolecular interactions underlying crystallin aggregation have motivated major efforts to resolve the structural details and mechanism of aggregation using multiple biophysical techniques at different resolutions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite the increasing health risk from infantile cataracts, identifying the mechanism of this disease remains a challenge due to a lack of structural investigations using experimental and computational approaches. Mutations in human γS-crystallin are contingent with childhood cataracts. Our recent high-resolution structural studies using solution NMR spectroscopy established the key role of the G57W mutation in human γS-crystallin (abbreviated hereafter as γS-G57W), promoting structural instability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInter-domain interactions tune the exceptional stability of human γS-crystallin (γS-WT) in the eye lens, which lasts a lifetime with no protein turnover. Our recent NMR studies revealed the key role of G57W mutation in γS-WT, as the familial determinate of childhood cataracts. As the unusually exposed W57 is near the inter-domain interface, a recurring theme of this study is the upsetting of inter-domain contacts exposing hydrophobic patches, which may initiate aggregation at crystallin concentrations not so surprising in the eye lens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransient excited states in proteins can be accurately probed from temperature dependence of amide proton (H) chemical shifts displaying significant curvatures. Characterizing these near-native alternative states is of high therapeutic relevance in conformational diseases wherein missense mutations promote structural instability that leads to conformational heterogeneity. Extending the structure-function paradigm from physiology to pathology, we recently reported the solution NMR structure and dynamics of a severe congenital cataract variant, G57W of human γS-crystallin (abbreviated as γS-G57W) which is resistant towards crystallization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOur two recent reports on the high resolution NMR structure and conformational dynamics of G57W variant of human γS-crystallin (abbreviated as γS-G57W) causing severe infantile cataracts, revealed slackening of its N-terminal domain with enhanced local conformational dynamics attributed to mutation. Exploring the biochemistry of infantile cataracts in detail, here we studied structural unfolding in both human γS-WT and γS-G57W at residue level resolution using solution NMR spectroscopy and chemical kinetics and characterized the molecular intermediates with functional consequences. We report, for the first time, that human γS-crystallin unfolds sequentially under H/D exchange.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
April 2019
Single point mutants of human γS-crystallin cause dominant congenital cataracts, a recent one of which involves the substitution of highly conserved glycine at 57th position with a bulkier tryptophan. Our high-resolution 3D structure of this G57W mutant (abbreviated hereafter as γS-G57W), reported recently revealed site-specific structural perturbations with higher aggregation and lower stability compared to its wild-type; a structural feature associated with important functional and therapeutic consequences. In this communication, we report for the first time, residue resolved conformational dynamics in both γS-WT and γS-G57W using solution NMR spectroscopy, and suggest how these differences could crucially affect the biochemistry of the mutant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA recently identified mutant of human γS-crystallin, G57W is associated with dominant congenital cataracts, the familial determinate of childhood blindness worldwide. To investigate the structural and functional changes that mediate the effect of this cataract-related mutant to compromise eye lens transparency and cause lens opacification in children, we recently reported complete sequence-specific resonance assignments of γS-G57W using a suite of heteronuclear NMR experiments. As a follow up, we have determined the 3D structure of γS-G57W and studied its conformational dynamics by solution NMR spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfantile cataracts constitute one of the most important causes of childhood blindness worldwide. Human γS-crystallin is the most abundant protein in the eye lens cortex. A missense mutant of human γS-crystallin, Y67N (abbreviated hereafter as γS-Y67N) is recently reported to be associated with dominant infantile cataracts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe high solubility and stability of crystallins present in the human eye lens maintains its transparency and refractive index with negligible protein turnover. Monomeric γ-crystallins and oligomeric β-crystallins are made up of highly homologous double Greek key domains. These domains are symmetric and possess higher stability as a result of the complex topology of individual Greek key motifs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFγS-crystallin is a major structural component of the human eye lens, which maintains its stability over the lifetime of an organism with negligible turnover. The G57W mutant of human γS-crystallin (abbreviated hereafter as γS-G57W) is associated with dominant congenital cataracts. In order to provide a structural basis for the ability of γS-G57W causing cataract, we have cloned, overexpressed, isolated and purified the protein.
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