6jk5
From Proteopedia
Ca2+-dependent type II antifreeze protein (Ca2+-free form)
Structural highlights
FunctionPublication Abstract from PubMedHydration is crucial for a function and a ligand recognition of a protein. The hydration shell constructed on an antifreeze protein (AFP) contains many organized waters, through which AFP is thought to bind to specific ice crystal planes. For a Ca(2+)-dependent species of AFP, however, it has not been clarified how 1 mol of Ca(2+)-binding is related with the hydration and the ice-binding ability. Here we determined the X-ray crystal structure of a Ca(2+)-dependent AFP (jsAFP) from Japanese smelt, Hypomesus nipponensis, in both Ca(2+)-bound and -free states. Their overall structures were closely similar (Root mean square deviation (RMSD) of Calpha = 0.31 A), while they exhibited a significant difference around their Ca(2+)-binding site. Firstly, the side-chains of four of the five Ca(2+)-binding residues (Q92, D94 E99, D113, and D114) were oriented to be suitable for ice binding only in the Ca(2+)-bound state. Second, a Ca(2+)-binding loop consisting of a segment D94-E99 becomes less flexible by the Ca(2+)-binding. Third, the Ca(2+)-binding induces a generation of ice-like clathrate waters around the Ca(2+)-binding site, which show a perfect position-match to the waters constructing the first prism plane of a single ice crystal. These results suggest that generation of ice-like clathrate waters induced by Ca(2+)-binding enables the ice-binding of this protein. Calcium-Binding Generates the Semi-Clathrate Waters on a Type II Antifreeze Protein to Adsorb onto an Ice Crystal Surface.,Arai T, Nishimiya Y, Ohyama Y, Kondo H, Tsuda S Biomolecules. 2019 Apr 27;9(5). pii: biom9050162. doi: 10.3390/biom9050162. PMID:31035615[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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