2kha
From Proteopedia
Solution Structure of a Pathogen Recognition Domain from a Lepidopteran Insect, Plodia interpunctella
Structural highlights
Evolutionary ConservationCheck, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedIn response to invading microorganisms, insect beta-1,3-glucan recognition protein (betaGRP), a soluble receptor in the hemolymph, binds to the surfaces of bacteria and fungi and activates serine protease cascades that promote destruction of pathogens by means of melanization or expression of antimicrobial peptides. Here we report on the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) solution structure of the N-terminal domain of betaGRP (N-betaGRP) from Indian meal moth (Plodia interpunctella), which is sufficient to activate the prophenoloxidase (proPO) pathway resulting in melanin formation. NMR and isothermal calorimetric titrations of N-betaGRP with laminarihexaose, a glucose hexamer containing beta-1,3 links, suggest a weak binding of the ligand. However, addition of laminarin, a glucose polysaccharide ( approximately 6 kDa) containing beta-1,3 and beta-1,6 links that activates the proPO pathway, to N-betaGRP results in the loss of NMR cross-peaks from the backbone (15)N-(1)H groups of the protein, suggesting the formation of a large complex. Analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC) studies of formation of the N-betaGRP-laminarin complex show that ligand binding induces self-association of the protein-carbohydrate complex into a macro structure, likely containing six protein and three laminarin molecules ( approximately 102 kDa). The macro complex is quite stable, as it does not undergo dissociation upon dilution to submicromolar concentrations. The structural model thus derived from this study for the N-betaGRP-laminarin complex in solution differs from the one in which a single N-betaGRP molecule has been proposed to bind to a triple-helical form of laminarin on the basis of an X-ray crystallographic structure of the N-betaGRP-laminarihexaose complex [Kanagawa, M., Satoh, T., Ikeda, A., Adachi, Y., Ohno, N., and Yamaguchi, Y. (2011) J. Biol. Chem. 286, 29158-29165]. AUC studies and phenoloxidase activation measurements conducted with the designed mutants of N-betaGRP indicate that electrostatic interactions involving Asp45, Arg54, and Asp68 between the ligand-bound protein molecules contribute in part to the stability of the N-betaGRP-laminarin macro complex and that a decreased stability is accompanied by a reduced level of activation of the proPO pathway. An increased level of beta-1,6 branching in laminarin also results in destabilization of the macro complex. These novel findings suggest that ligand-induced self-association of the betaGRP-beta-1,3-glucan complex may form a platform on a microbial surface for recruitment of downstream proteases, as a means of amplification of the initial signal of pathogen recognition for the activation of the proPO pathway. An Initial Event in the Insect Innate Immune Response: Structural and Biological Studies of Interactions between beta-1,3-Glucan and the N-Terminal Domain of beta-1,3-Glucan Recognition Protein.,Dai H, Hiromasa Y, Takahashi D, Vandervelde D, Fabrick JA, Kanost MR, Krishnamoorthi R Biochemistry. 2012 Dec 20. PMID:23237493[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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