4KA9 image
Deposition Date 2013-04-22
Release Date 2014-05-07
Last Version Date 2024-11-06
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
4KA9
Title:
Crystal structure analysis of single amino acid deletion mutations in EGFP
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Host Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
1.58 Å
R-Value Free:
0.21
R-Value Work:
0.17
R-Value Observed:
0.17
Space Group:
C 1 2 1
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Green fluorescent protein
Gene (Uniprot):GFP
Mutations:F64L, S65T
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:238
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Aequorea victoria
Modified Residue
Compound ID Chain ID Parent Comp ID Details 2D Image
CRO A THR ?
Primary Citation
Random single amino acid deletion sampling unveils structural tolerance and the benefits of helical registry shift on GFP folding and structure.
Structure 22 889 898 (2014)
PMID: 24856363 DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2014.03.014

Abstact

Altering a protein's backbone through amino acid deletion is a common evolutionary mutational mechanism, but is generally ignored during protein engineering primarily because its effect on the folding-structure-function relationship is difficult to predict. Using directed evolution, enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) was observed to tolerate residue deletion across the breadth of the protein, particularly within short and long loops, helical elements, and at the termini of strands. A variant with G4 removed from a helix (EGFP(G4Δ)) conferred significantly higher cellular fluorescence. Folding analysis revealed that EGFP(G4Δ) retained more structure upon unfolding and refolded with almost 100% efficiency but at the expense of thermodynamic stability. The EGFP(G4Δ) structure revealed that G4 deletion caused a beneficial helical registry shift resulting in a new polar interaction network, which potentially stabilizes a cis proline peptide bond and links secondary structure elements. Thus, deletion mutations and registry shifts can enhance proteins through structural rearrangements not possible by substitution mutations alone.

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Primary Citation of related structures