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Engineering protein stability with atomic precision in a monomeric miniprotein.

Emily G BakerChristopher WilliamsKieran L HudsonGail J BartlettJack W HealKathryn L Porter GoffRichard B SessionsMatthew P CrumpDerek N Woolfson
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2017)
Miniproteins simplify the protein-folding problem, allowing the dissection of forces that stabilize protein structures. Here we describe PPα-Tyr, a designed peptide comprising an α-helix buttressed by a polyproline II helix. PPα-Tyr is water soluble and monomeric, and it unfolds cooperatively with a midpoint unfolding temperature (TM) of 39 °C. NMR structures of PPα-Tyr reveal proline residues docked between tyrosine side chains, as designed. The stability of PPα is sensitive to modifications in the aromatic residues: replacing tyrosine with phenylalanine, i.e., changing three solvent-exposed hydroxyl groups to protons, reduces the TM to 20 °C. We attribute this result to the loss of CH-π interactions between the aromatic and proline rings, which we probe by substituting the aromatic residues with nonproteinogenic side chains. In analyses of natural protein structures, we find a preference for proline-tyrosine interactions over other proline-containing pairs, and observe abundant CH-π interactions in biologically important complexes between proline-rich ligands and SH3 and similar domains.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • high resolution
  • protein protein
  • water soluble
  • binding protein
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • transcription factor
  • dna binding
  • single cell
  • quantum dots
  • fluorescent probe