1XX8 image
Deposition Date 2004-11-04
Release Date 2005-02-08
Last Version Date 2024-05-22
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
1XX8
Title:
NMR Structure of the W24A Mutant of the Hyperthermophile Sac7d Protein
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Host Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Conformers Calculated:
100
Conformers Submitted:
11
Selection Criteria:
structures with the least restraint violations
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Sac7d
Gene (Uniprot):Saci_0064
Mutations:W24A
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:66
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Sulfolobus acidocaldarius
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
Role of a surface tryptophan in defining the structure, stability, and DNA binding of the hyperthermophile protein sac7d
Biochemistry 44 915 925 (2005)
PMID: 15654747 DOI: 10.1021/bi047823b

Abstact

Sac7d is a small, chromatin protein from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius which induces a sharp kink in DNA with intercalation of valine and methionine side chains. The crystal structure of the protein-DNA complex indicates that a surface tryptophan (W24) plays a key role in DNA binding by hydrogen bonding to the DNA at the kink site. We show here that substitution of the solvent-exposed tryptophan with alanine (W24A) led to a significant loss in not only DNA binding affinity but also protein stability. The W24A substitution proved to be one of the most destabilizing surface substitutions in Sac7d. A global linkage analysis of the pH and salt dependence of stability indicated that the protein stability surface (DeltaG vs temperature, pH, and salt concentration) was lowered overall by 2 kcal/mol (from 0 to 100 degrees C, pH 0 to 7, and 0 to 0.3 M KCl). The lower free energy of unfolding could not be attributed to significant structural perturbations of surface electrostatic interactions. Residual dipolar coupling of partially aligned protein and the NMR solution structure of W24A confirmed that the surface substitution resulted in no significant change in structure. Stabilization of this hyperthermophile protein and its DNA complex by a surface cluster of hydrophobic residues involving W24 and the two intercalating side chains is discussed.

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Primary Citation of related structures