The membrane anchor of the transcriptional activator SREBP is characterized by intrinsic conformational flexibility

Archive ouverte

Linser, Rasmus | Salvi, Nicola | Briones, Rodolfo | Rovó, Petra | de Groot, Bert | Wagner, Gerhard

Edité par CCSD ; National Academy of Sciences -

International audience. Regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) is a conserved mechanism crucial for numerous cellular processes, including signaling, transcriptional regulation, axon guidance, cell adhesion, cellular stress responses, and transmembrane protein fragment degradation. Importantly, it is relevant in various diseases including Alzheimer’s disease, cardiovascular diseases, and cancers. Even though a number of structures of different intramembrane proteases have been solved recently, fundamental questions concerning mechanistic underpinnings of RIP and therapeutic interventions remain. In particular, this includes substrate recognition, what properties render a given substrate amenable for RIP, and how the lipid environment affects the substrate cleavage. Members of the sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP) family of transcription factors are critical regulators of genes involved in cholesterol/lipid homeostasis. After site-1 protease cleavage of the inactive SREBP transmembrane precursor protein, RIP of the anchor intermediate by site-2 protease generates the mature transcription factor. In this work, we have investigated the labile anchor intermediate of SREBP-1 using NMR spectroscopy. Surprisingly, NMR chemical shifts, site-resolved solvent exposure, and relaxation studies show that the cleavage site of the lipid-signaling protein intermediate bears rigid α-helical topology. An evolutionary conserved motif, by contrast, interrupts the secondary structure ∼9–10 residues C-terminal of the scissile bond and acts as an inducer of conformational flexibility within the carboxyl-terminal transmembrane region. These results are consistent with molecular dynamics simulations. Topology, stability, and site-resolved dynamics data suggest that the cleavage of the α-helical substrate in the case of RIP may be associated with a hinge motion triggered by the molecular environment.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Mechanistic Insights into Microsecond Time-Scale Motion of Solid Proteins Using Complementary 15 N and 1 H Relaxation Dispersion Techniques

Archive ouverte | Rovó, Petra | CCSD

International audience

Protein conformational dynamics studied by (15)N and (1)H R1ρ relaxation dispersion: Application to wild-type and G53A ubiquitin crystals.

Archive ouverte | Gauto, Diego | CCSD

International audience. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy can provide site-resolved information about protein dynamics over many time scales. Here we combine protein deuteration, fast magic-angle spinning (~45-60kHz) and...

The Role of Dynamics and Allostery in the Inhibition of the eIF4E/eIF4G Translation Initiation Factor Complex.

Archive ouverte | Salvi, Nicola | CCSD

International audience. Lack of regulation of the interaction between the eIF4E/eIF4G subunits of the translation initiation factor complex eIF4F is a hallmark of cancer. The inhibitor 4EGI-1 binds to eIF4E, thereby...

Chargement des enrichissements...