4.7 Article

Compensatory and long-range changes in picosecond-nanosecond main-chain dynamics upon complex formation:: 15N relaxation analysis of the free and bound states of the ubiquitin-like domain of human plexin-B1 and the small GTPase Rac1

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 377, Issue 5, Pages 1474-1487

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2008.01.081

Keywords

protein-protein interactions; cell signaling; allostery; NMR; spin relaxation

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [K02 HL084384, K02 HL084384-02, K02 HL084384-03] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM073071-03, R01GM73071, R01 GM073071-04, R01 GM073071] Funding Source: Medline

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The formation of a complex between Rac1 and the cytoplasmic domain of plexin-B1 is one of the first documented cases of a direct interaction between a small guanosine 5'-triphosphatase (GTPase) and a transmembrane receptor. Structural studies have begun to elucidate the role of this interaction for the signal transduction mechanism of plexins. Mapping of the Rac1 GTPase surface that contacts the Rho GTPase binding domain of plexin-B1 by solution NMR spectroscopy confirms the plexin domain as a GTPase effector protein. Regions neighboring the GTPase switch I and II regions are also involved in the interaction and there is considerable interest to examine the changes in protein dynamics that take place upon complex formation. Here we present main-chain nitrogen-15 relaxation measurements for the unbound proteins as well as for the Rho GTPase binding domain and Rac1 proteins in their complexed state. Derived order parameters, S-2, show that considerable motions are maintained in the bound state of plexin. In fact, some of the changes in S-2 on binding appear compensatory, exhibiting decreased as well as increased dynamics. Fluctuations in Rac1, already a largely rigid protein on the picosecond-nanosecond timescale, are overall diminished, but isomerization dynamics in the switch I and 11 regions of the GTPase are retained in the complex and appear to be propagated to the bound plexin domain. Remarkably, fluctuations in the GTPase are attenuated at sites, including helices alpha 6 (the Rho-specific insert helix), alpha 7 and alpha 8, that are spatially distant from the interaction region with plexin. This effect of binding on long-range dynamics appears to be communicated by hinge sites and by subtle conformational changes in the protein. Similar to recent studies on other systems, we suggest that dynamical protein features are affected by allosteric mechanisms. Altered protein fluctuations are likely to prime the Rho GTPase-plexin complex for interactions with additional binding partners. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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