7f2d
From Proteopedia
Arabidopsis thaliana protease-associated domain of vacuolar-sorting receptor 1 in complex with cruciferin 1 C-terminal pentapeptide RVAAA (pH9)
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedIn Arabidopsis, vacuolar sorting receptor isoform 1 (VSR1) sorts 12S globulins to the protein storage vacuoles during seed development. Vacuolar sorting is mediated by specific protein-protein interactions between VSR1 and the vacuolar sorting determinant located at the C terminus (ctVSD) on the cargo proteins. Here, we determined the crystal structure of the protease-associated domain of VSR1 (VSR1-PA) in complex with the C-terminal pentapeptide ((468)RVAAA(472)) of cruciferin 1, an isoform of 12S globulins. The (468)RVA(470) motif forms a parallel beta-sheet with the switch III residues ((127)TMD(129)) of VSR1-PA, and the (471)AA(472) motif docks to a cradle formed by the cargo-binding loop ((95)RGDCYF(100)), making a hydrophobic interaction with Tyr99. The C-terminal carboxyl group of the ctVSD is recognized by forming salt bridges with Arg95. The C-terminal sequences of cruciferin 1 and vicilin-like storage protein 22 were sufficient to redirect the secretory red fluorescent protein (spRFP) to the vacuoles in Arabidopsis protoplasts. Adding a proline residue to the C terminus of the ctVSD and R95M substitution of VSR1 disrupted receptor-cargo interactions in vitro and led to increased secretion of spRFP in Arabidopsis protoplasts. How VSR1-PA recognizes ctVSDs of other storage proteins was modeled. The last three residues of ctVSD prefer hydrophobic residues because they form a hydrophobic cluster with Tyr99 of VSR1-PA. Due to charge-charge interactions, conserved acidic residues, Asp129 and Glu132, around the cargo-binding site should prefer basic residues over acidic ones in the ctVSD. The structural insights gained may be useful in targeting recombinant proteins to the protein storage vacuoles in seeds. Structural insights into how vacuolar sorting receptors recognize the sorting determinants of seed storage proteins.,Tsao HE, Lui SN, Lo AH, Chen S, Wong HY, Wong CK, Jiang L, Wong KB Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Jan 4;119(1):e2111281119. doi: , 10.1073/pnas.2111281119. PMID:34983843[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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