4.6 Article

Folding of the nascent polypeptide chain of a histidine phosphocarrier protein in vitro

Journal

ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
Volume 736, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.abb.2023.109538

Keywords

Binding; Circular dichroism; Fluorescence; Nascent chain; NMR; Protein -protein interactions

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The phosphotransferase system (PTS), consisting of five proteins, regulates the use of sugars in bacteria. The second protein in the chain, HPr, plays a role in bacterial carbon sources utilization and can be phosphorylated at Ser46. Additionally, two other proteins, Rsd and HPrIVP, bind to HPr at His15. Fragments of HPr were designed and shown to be mainly disordered but still capable of binding to their respective protein partners. Binding was related to the presence of a weak native-like structure around His15.
The phosphotransferase system (PTS), a metabolic pathway formed by five proteins, modulates the use of sugars in bacteria. The second protein in the chain is the histidine phosphocarrier, HPr, with the binding site at His15. The HPr kinase/phosphorylase (HPrIC/P), involved in the bacterial use of carbon sources, phosphorylates HPr at Ser46, and it binds at its binding site. The regulator of sigma D protein (Rsd) also binds to HPr at His15. We have designed fragments of HPr, growing from its N-terminus and containing the His15. In this work, we obtained three fragments, HPr38, HPr58 and HPr70, comprising the first thirty-eight, fifty-eight and seventy residues of HPr, respectively. All fragments were mainly disordered, with evidence of a weak native-like, helical population around the binding site, as shown by fluorescence, far-ultraviolet circular dichroism, size exclusion chroma-tography and nuclear magnetic resonance. Although HPr38, HPr58 and HPr70 were disordered, they could bind to: (i) the N-terminal domain of first protein of the PTS, EIN; (ii) Rsd; and, (iii) HPrIVP, as shown by fluorescence and biolayer interferometry (BLI). The association constants for each protein to any of the fragments were in the low micromolar range, within the same range than those measured in the binding of HPr to each protein. Then, although acquisition of stable, native-like secondary and tertiary structures occurred at the last residues of the polypeptide, the ability to bind protein partners happened much earlier in the growing chain. Binding was related to the presence of the native-like structure around His15.

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