1. Structures of single‐layer β‐sheet proteins evolved from β‐hairpin repeats
- Author
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Xu, Qingping, Biancalana, Matthew, Grant, Joanna C, Chiu, Hsiu‐Ju, Jaroszewski, Lukasz, Knuth, Mark W, Lesley, Scott A, Godzik, Adam, Elsliger, Marc‐André, Deacon, Ashley M, and Wilson, Ian A
- Subjects
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Bacteria ,Bacterial Proteins ,Crystallography ,X-Ray ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Hydrogen Bonding ,Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions ,Models ,Molecular ,Protein Conformation ,beta-Strand ,Protein Folding ,Tyrosine ,human gut microbiome ,protein folding ,secreted proteins ,single-layer beta-sheet proteins ,structural genomics ,beta-hairpin repeats ,single-layer β-sheet proteins ,β-hairpin repeats ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Computation Theory and Mathematics ,Other Information and Computing Sciences ,Biophysics - Abstract
Free-standing single-layer β-sheets are extremely rare in naturally occurring proteins, even though β-sheet motifs are ubiquitous. Here we report the crystal structures of three homologous, single-layer, anti-parallel β-sheet proteins, comprised of three or four twisted β-hairpin repeats. The structures reveal that, in addition to the hydrogen bond network characteristic of β-sheets, additional hydrophobic interactions mediated by small clusters of residues adjacent to the turns likely play a significant role in the structural stability and compensate for the lack of a compact hydrophobic core. These structures enabled identification of a family of secreted proteins that are broadly distributed in bacteria from the human gut microbiome and are putatively involved in the metabolism of complex carbohydrates. A conserved surface patch, rich in solvent-exposed tyrosine residues, was identified on the concave surface of the β-sheet. These new modular single-layer β-sheet proteins may serve as a new model system for studying folding and design of β-rich proteins.
- Published
- 2019