Back to Search
Start Over
Modular Switches in Protein Function: A Spectroscopic Approach
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Understanding the molecular basis of protein function is a challenging task that lays the foundation for the pharmacological intervention in many diseases originating in altered structural states of the involved proteins. Dissecting a complex functional machinery into modules is a promising approach to protein function. The motivation for this work was to identify minimal requirements for “local” switching processes in the function of multidomain proteins that can adopt a variety of structural substates of different biological activity or representing intermediates of a complex reaction path. For example, modular switches are involved in signal transduction, where receptors respond to ligand-activation by specific conformational changes that are allosterically transmitted to “effector recognition sites” distant from the actual ligand-binding site. Heptahelical receptors have attracted particular attention due to their ubiquitous role in a large variety of pharmacologically relevant processes. Although constituting switches in their own right, it has become clear through mutagenesis and functional studies that receptors exhibit substates of partial active/inactive structure that can explain biological phenotypes of different levels of activity. Here, the notion that microdomains undergo individual switching processes that are integrated in the overall response of structurally regulated proteins is addressed by studies on the molecular basis of proton-dependent (chemical) and force-dependent (mechanical) conformational transitions. A combination of peptide synthesis, biochemical analysis, and secondary structure sensitive spectroscopy (Infrared, Circular dichroism, Fluorescence) was used to prove the switching capability of putative functional modules derived from three selected proteins, in which conformational transitions determine their function in transmembrane signaling (rhodopsin), transmembrane transport (bacteriorhodopsin) and chemical force generation (kinesi
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1135775625
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource