4.6 Article

Perturbing dimer interactions and allosteric communication modulates the immunosuppressive activity of human galectin-7

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101308

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) of the NIH [R01GM105978]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN 2016-05557, RGPIN-2017-06091]
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante (FRQS) [287239]
  4. PROTEO undergraduate scholarship
  5. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique (F.R.S-FNRS) (Belgium)
  6. FRQ-S Research Scholar Junior 1 Career Award [251848]
  7. FRQ-S Research Scholar Senior Career Award [281993]

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This study successfully modulated the immunosuppressive protein GAL-7's activity through protein engineering and mutational techniques, demonstrating that perturbing the protein-protein interface can affect its biological function, highlighting new avenues for the design of galectin-specific modulators.
The design of allosteric modulators to control protein function is a key objective in drug discovery programs. Altering functionally essential allosteric residue networks provides unique protein family subtype specificity, minimizes unwanted off-target effects, and helps avert resistance acquisition typically plaguing drugs that target orthosteric sites. In this work, we used protein engineering and dimer interface mutations to positively and negatively modulate the immunosuppressive activity of the proapoptotic human galectin-7 (GAL-7). Using the PoPMuSiC and BeAtMuSiC algorithms, mutational sites and residue identity were computationally probed and predicted to either alter or stabilize the GAL-7 dimer interface. By designing a covalent disulfide bridge between protomers to control homodimer strength and stability, we demonstrate the importance of dimer interface perturbations on the allosteric network bridging the two opposite glycan-binding sites on GAL-7, resulting in control of induced apoptosis in Jurkat T cells. Molecular investigation of G16X GAL-7 variants using X-ray crystallography, biophysical, and computational characterization illuminates residues involved in dimer stability and allosteric communication, along with discrete long-range dynamic behaviors involving loops 1, 3, and 5. We show that perturbing the protein-protein interface between GAL-7 protomers can modulate its biological function, even when the overall structure and ligand-binding affinity remains unaltered. This study highlights new avenues for the design of galectin-specific modulators influencing both glycandependent and glycan-independent interactions.

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