4.0 Article

Structure of the lutein-binding domain of human StARD3 at 1.74 Å resolution and model of a complex with lutein

Publisher

INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
DOI: 10.1107/S2053230X16010694

Keywords

carotenoid-binding protein; START domain; StARD3; lutein; protein tunnels and cavities

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [EY11600, EY14600]
  2. UROP fellowship through Office of Undergraduate Research at University of Utah
  3. Bioscience Summer Research Program
  4. Department of Biology, University of Utah
  5. US Department of Energy (DOE) program Integrated Diffraction Analysis Technologies (IDAT)
  6. DOE program Molecular Assemblies Genes and Genomics Integrated Efficiently (MAGGIE) [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  7. Research to Prevent Blindness

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A crystal structure of the lutein-binding domain of human StARD3 (StAR-related lipid-transfer protein 3; also known as MLN64) has been refined to 1.74 angstrom resolution. A previous structure of the same protein determined to 2.2 angstrom resolution highlighted homology with StARD1 and shared cholesterol-binding character. StARD3 has since been recognized as a carotenoid-binding protein in the primate retina, where its biochemical function of binding lutein with specificity appears to be well suited to recruit this photoprotective molecule. The current and previous structures correspond closely to each other (r.m.s.d. of 0.25 angstrom), especially in terms of the helix-grip fold constructed around a solvent-filled cavity. Regions of interest were defined with alternate conformations in the current higher-resolution structure, including Arg351 found within the cavity and Omega 1, a loop of four residues found just outside the cavity entrance. Models of the complex with lutein generated by rigid-body docking indicate that one of the ionone rings must protrude outside the cavity, and this insight has implications for molecular interactions with transport proteins and enzymes that act on lutein. Interestingly, models with the epsilon-ionone ring characteristic of lutein pointing towards the bottom of the cavity were associated with fewer steric clashes, suggesting that steric complementarity and ligand asymmetry may play a role in discriminating lutein from the other ocular carotenoids zeaxanthin and meso-zeaxanthin, which only have beta-ionone rings.

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