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DIP/Dpr interactions and the evolutionary design of specificity in protein families.

Alina P SergeevaPhinikoula S KatsambaFilip CosmanescuJoshua J BrewerGoran AhlsenSeetha MannepalliLawrence ShapiroBarry Honig
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Differential binding affinities among closely related protein family members underlie many biological phenomena, including cell-cell recognition. Drosophila DIP and Dpr proteins mediate neuronal targeting in the fly through highly specific protein-protein interactions. We show here that DIPs/Dprs segregate into seven specificity subgroups defined by binding preferences between their DIP and Dpr members. We then describe a sequence-, structure- and energy-based computational approach, combined with experimental binding affinity measurements, to reveal how specificity is coded on the canonical DIP/Dpr interface. We show that binding specificity of DIP/Dpr subgroups is controlled by "negative constraints", which interfere with binding. To achieve specificity, each subgroup utilizes a different combination of negative constraints, which are broadly distributed and cover the majority of the protein-protein interface. We discuss the structural origins of negative constraints, and potential general implications for the evolutionary origins of binding specificity in multi-protein families.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • structural basis
  • single cell
  • small molecule
  • dna binding
  • genome wide
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • amino acid
  • randomized controlled trial
  • blood brain barrier
  • phase iii
  • neural network