Journal
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 115, Issue 9, Pages 1666-1672Publisher
CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2018.08.027
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Funding
- National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [DE-015347]
- US Department of Energy Biological and Environmental Research program
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Biomineralization processes govern the formation of hierarchical hard tissues such as bone and teeth in living organisms, and mimicking these processes could lead to the design of new materials with specialized properties. However, such advances require structural characterization of the proteins guiding biomineral formation to understand and mimic their impact. In their active form, biomineralization proteins are bound to a solid surface, severely limiting our ability to use many conventional structure characterization techniques. Here, solid-state NMR spectroscopy was applied to study the intermolecular interactions of amelogenin, the most abundant protein present during the early stages of enamel formation, in self-assembled oligomers bound to hydroxyapatite. Intermolecular dipolar couplings were identified that support amelogenin dimer formation stabilized by residues toward the C-termini. These dipolar interactions were corroborated by molecular dynamics simulations. A beta-sheet structure was identified in multiple regions of the protein, which is otherwise intrinsically disordered in the absence of hydroxyapatite. To our knowledge, this is the first intermolecular protein-protein interaction reported for a biomineralization protein, representing an advancement in understanding enamel development and a new general strategy toward investigating biomineralization proteins.
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