4.6 Article

An alternative N-terminal fold of the intestine-specific annexin A13a induces dimerization and regulates membrane-binding

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 294, Issue 10, Pages 3454-3463

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.004571

Keywords

annexin; protein structure; protein folding; membrane fusion; oligomerization; calcium regulation; intestinal microvilli; membrane curvature; structure-function

Funding

  1. Vanderbilt University Medical Center's Digestive Disease Research Center - National Institutes of Health [P30DK058404]
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM095633, DK075555, DK095811, DK111949]
  3. National Institutes of Health Training Grant in Molecular Biophysics [T32GM008320]
  4. National Institutes of Health Training Grant in Mechanisms of Vascular Disease [T32 HL007751]

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Annexin proteins function as Ca2+-dependent regulators of membrane trafficking and repair that may also modulate membrane curvature. Here, using high-resolution confocal imaging, we report that the intestine-specific annexin A13 (ANX A13) localizes to the tips of intestinal microvilli and determined the crystal structure of the ANX A13a isoform to 2.6 resolution. The structure revealed that the N terminus exhibits an alternative fold that converts the first two helices and the associated helix-loop-helix motif into a continuous -helix, as stabilized by a domain-swapped dimer. We also found that the dimer is present in solution and partially occludes the membrane-binding surfaces of annexin, suggesting that dimerization may function as a means for regulating membrane binding. Accordingly, as revealed by in vitro binding and cellular localization assays, ANX A13a variants that favor a monomeric state exhibited increased membrane association relative to variants that favor the dimeric form. Together, our findings support a mechanism for how the association of the ANX A13a isoform with the membrane is regulated.

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