1FKK image
Deposition Date 1995-08-18
Release Date 1995-12-07
Last Version Date 2024-02-07
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
1FKK
Keywords:
Title:
ATOMIC STRUCTURE OF FKBP12, AN IMMUNOPHILIN BINDING PROTEIN
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Bos taurus (Taxon ID: 9913)
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
2.20 Å
R-Value Work:
0.15
R-Value Observed:
0.15
Space Group:
P 43 21 2
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:FK506 BINDING PROTEIN
Gene (Uniprot):FKBP1A
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:107
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Bos taurus
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation

Abstact

FK506 (tacrolimus) is a natural product now approved in the US and Japan for organ transplantation. FK506, in complex with its 12 kDa cytosolic receptor (FKBP12), is a potent agonist of immunosuppression through the inhibition of the phosphatase activity of calcineurin. Rapamycin (sirolimus), which is itself an immunosuppressant by a different mechanism, completes with FK506 for binding to FKBP12 and thereby acts as an antagonist of calcineurin inhibition. We have solved the X-ray structure of unliganded FKBP12 and of FKBP12 in complex with FK506 and with rapamycin; these structures show localized differences in conformation and mobility in those regions of the protein that are known, by site-directed mutagenesis, to be involved in calcineurin inhibition. A comparison of 16 additional X-ray structures of FKBP12 in complex with FKBP12-binding ligands, where those structures were determined from different crystal forms with distinct packing arrangements, lends significance to the observed structural variability and suggests that it represents an intrinsic functional characteristic of the protein. Similar differences have been observed for FKBP12 before, but were considered artifacts of crystal-packing interactions. We suggest that immunosuppressive ligands express their differential effects in part by modulating the conformation of FKBP12, in agreement with mutagenesis experiments on the protein, and not simply through differences in the ligand structures themselves.

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Primary Citation of related structures