4.2 Article

Super Secondary Structure Consisting of a Polyproline II Helix and a β-Turn in Leucine Rich Repeats in Bacterial Type III Secretion System Effectors

Journal

PROTEIN JOURNAL
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 223-236

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10930-018-9767-9

Keywords

Bacterial leucine rich repeat family; Polyproline II helix; Type I beta-turn; Super secondary structure; Helical parameters; Helix axis; Vector analysis

Funding

  1. National University of Mongolia [P2016-1173]

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Leucine rich repeats (LRRs) are present in over 100,000 proteins from viruses to eukaryotes. The LRRs are 20-30 residues long and occur in tandem. LRRs form parallel stacks of short beta-strands and then assume a super helical arrangement called a solenoid structure. Individual LRRs are separated into highly conserved segment (HCS) with the consensus of LxxLxLxxNxL and variable segment (VS). Eight classes have been recognized. Bacterial LRRs are short and characterized by two prolines in the VS; the consensus is xxLPxLPxx with Nine residues (N-subtype) and xxLPxxLPxx with Ten residues (T-subtype). Bacterial LRRs are contained in type III secretion system effectors such as YopM, IpaH3/9.8, SspH1/2, and SlrP from bacteria. Some LRRs in decorin, fribromodulin, TLR8/9, and FLRT2/3 from vertebrate also contain the motifs. In order to understand structural features of bacterial LRRs, we performed both secondary structures assignments using four programs-DSSP-PPII, PROSS, SEGNO, and XTLSSTR-and HELFIT analyses (calculating helix axis, pitch, radius, residues per turn, and handedness), based on the atomic coordinates of their crystal structures. The N-subtype VS adopts a left handed polyproline II helix (PPII) with four, five or six residues and a type I beta-turn at the C-terminal side. Thus, the N-subtype is characterized by a super secondary structure consisting of a PPII and a beta-turn. In contrast, the T-subtype VS prefers two separate PPIIs with two or three and two residues. The HELFIT analysis indicates that the type I beta-turn is a right handed helix. The HELFIT analysis determines three unit vectors of the helix axes of PPII (P), beta-turn (B), and LRR domain (A). Three structural parameters using these three helix axes are suggested to characterize the super secondary structure and the LRR domain.

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