Journal:IUCrJ:S205225251901707X
From Proteopedia
Structural insights into conformational switching in latency-associated peptide between TGFβ-1 bound and unbound statesTimothy R. Stachowski, Mary E. Snell, and Edward H. Snell [1] Molecular Tour Because LAP binding reduces TGFβ-1 activity, recombinant LAP is a promising novel therapeutic approach, however a detailed understanding of how LAP binds TGFβ-1 is missing, which could reveal ways to improve the LAP-TGFβ-1 interaction or develop other anti-TGFβ-1 therapies. In a paper in IUCrJ, Stachowski et al. show that LAP adopts structurally distinct conformations between unbound and TGFβ-1 bound states. This was revealed by comparing the X-ray crystal structure of LAP in the unbound state (6p7j) solved by Stachowski et al. with the crystal structure of LAP bound to TGFβ-1 (3rjr) previously reported by Shi et al. 2011 [2]. This analysis combined with solution modelling showed that LAP transitions from an extended to compact conformation when binding TGFβ-1, simulating a type of hugging motion where LAP embraces TGFβ-1. Surprisingly, this conformational change includes rearranging two domains that are distant from one another and might be coordinated through the formation of an α-helix that is distant from the LAP-TGFβ-1 interaction site. Together, these results provide new spatial details about the TGFβ-1 binding mechanism, specifically how LAP reorients itself to develop the LAP-TGFβ-1 interface. This insight is important as it provides new avenues to engineer and improve LAP as a therapeutic that are focused beyond just the interaction site. Comparison of apo LAP and TGFβ-1 (LTGFβ-1) bound structures. Only residues modelled in the apo structure were included for comparison. The apo structure reported here (royalblue; PDB entry 6p7j) is aligned with pig TGFβ-1 bound LAP (yellow; PDB entry 3rjr, Shi et al., 2011[2]):
PDB reference: latency-associated peptide, 6p7j. References
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