Conformational Flexibility of Proteins Involved in Ribosome Biogenesis: Investigations via Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
The dynamism of proteins is central to their function, and several proteins have been
described as flexible, as consisting of multiple domains joined by flexible linkers, and even as
intrinsically disordered. Several techniques exist to study protein structures, but small angle X-ray
scattering (SAXS) has proven to be particularly powerful for the quantitative analysis of such flexible
systems. In the present report, we have used SAXS in combination with X-ray crystallography
to highlight their usefulness at characterizing flexible proteins, using as examples two proteins
involved in different steps of ribosome biogenesis. The yeast BRCA2 and CDKN1A-interactig protein,
Bcp1, is a chaperone for Rpl23 of unknown structure. We showed that it consists of a rigid, slightly
elongated protein, with a secondary structure comprising a mixture of alpha helices and beta sheets.
As an example of a flexible molecule, we studied the SBDS (Shwachman-Bodian-Diamond Syndrome)
protein that is involved in the cytoplasmic maturation of the 60S subunit and constitutes the mutated
target in the Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome. In solution, this protein coexists in an ensemble of
three main conformations, with the N- and C-terminal ends adopting different orientations with
respect to the central domain. The structure observed in the protein crystal corresponds to an average of those predicted by the SAXS flexibility analysis.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
SAXS; Bcp1; SBDS; flexibility
List of contributors:
Siliqi, Dritan; Altamura, Davide
Published in: