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Non-native fold of the putative VPS39 zinc finger domain


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Authors

Butt, Benjamin G 
Scourfield, Edward J 
Graham, Stephen C 

Abstract

ns4:pns4:boldBackground:</ns4:bold> The multi-subunit homotypic fusion and vacuole protein sorting (HOPS) membrane-tethering complex is involved in regulating the fusion of late endosomes and autophagosomes with lysosomes in eukaryotes. The C-terminal regions of several HOPS components have been shown to be required for correct complex assembly, including the C-terminal really interesting new gene (RING) zinc finger domains of HOPS components VPS18 and VPS41. We sought to structurally characterise the putative C-terminal zinc finger domain of VPS39, which we hypothesised may be important for binding of VPS39 to cellular partners or to other HOPS components.</ns4:p>ns4:p ns4:boldMethods: </ns4:bold>We recombinantly expressed, purified and solved the crystal structure of the proposed zinc-binding region of VPS39.</ns4:p>ns4:p ns4:boldResults:</ns4:bold> In the structure, this region forms an anti-parallel β-hairpin that is incorporated into a homotetrameric eight-stranded β-barrel. However, the fold is stabilised by coordination of zinc ions by residues from the purification tag and an intramolecular disulphide bond between two predicted zinc ligands.</ns4:p>ns4:p ns4:boldConclusions: </ns4:bold>We solved the structure of the VPS39 C-terminal domain adopting a non-native fold. Our work highlights the risk of non-native folds when purifying small zinc-containing domains with hexahistidine tags. However, the non-native structure we observe may have implications for rational protein design.</ns4:p>

Description

Keywords

CORVET, class C core, membrane trafficking, zinc finger domain

Journal Title

Wellcome Open Research

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2398-502X
2398-502X

Volume Title

5

Publisher

F1000 Research Ltd
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (098406/Z/12/Z)
Wellcome Trust (098406/Z/12/B)
This work was supported by a Sir Henry Dale Fellowship (098406), jointly funded by the Wellcome Trust and the Royal Society (to SCG). BGB is a Wellcome Trust PhD student. Remote synchrotron access was supported in part by the EU FP7 infrastructure grant BIOSTRUCT-X (Contract No. 283570)
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