User:Isabela Fonseca de Oliveira Granha/Sandbox 1
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- | = | + | =Crystal Structure of a Full-Length Zebrafish Beta-Catenin= |
ß-catenin is an important element in cell-cell adherens junctions, called cadherins. Reported in all Eukaryota ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryote Eukaryota]) phylum, in humans the gene CTNNB1 ([https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/1499 CTNNB1]) transcribes a 95kDa protein that allows cadherins to anchor in cytoeskeleton (actin filaments) by connecting cytoplasmic proteins. Besides that, it is an essential regulator of the canonical Wnt pathway <ref name=logan&nusse2004> DOI : 10.1146/annurev.cellbio.20.010403.113126</ref> (related to embryonic development). Disturbance of this activity is associated with cancer and other diseases. Therefore, ß-catenin is an important target for developing medication for many diseases, with considerable interest in its structure. <ref name="xing2009">DOI 10.1016/j.str.2007.12.021</ref> | ß-catenin is an important element in cell-cell adherens junctions, called cadherins. Reported in all Eukaryota ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryote Eukaryota]) phylum, in humans the gene CTNNB1 ([https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/1499 CTNNB1]) transcribes a 95kDa protein that allows cadherins to anchor in cytoeskeleton (actin filaments) by connecting cytoplasmic proteins. Besides that, it is an essential regulator of the canonical Wnt pathway <ref name=logan&nusse2004> DOI : 10.1146/annurev.cellbio.20.010403.113126</ref> (related to embryonic development). Disturbance of this activity is associated with cancer and other diseases. Therefore, ß-catenin is an important target for developing medication for many diseases, with considerable interest in its structure. <ref name="xing2009">DOI 10.1016/j.str.2007.12.021</ref> | ||
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The zebrafish ([https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danio_rerio ''Danio rerio'']) <scene name='84/848919/Betacateninacoloridaartigo/2'>ß-catenin</scene> ([http://www.rcsb.org/structure/2Z6G 2Z6G]) contains residues 126-681 and a central core of <scene name='84/848919/Armrepeatsdomain/1'>12 armadillo repeats domain</scene> and an alpha helix, the <scene name='84/848919/C-helix3correta/1'>helix-C</scene>, at the ß-catenin C-terminal domain. | The zebrafish ([https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danio_rerio ''Danio rerio'']) <scene name='84/848919/Betacateninacoloridaartigo/2'>ß-catenin</scene> ([http://www.rcsb.org/structure/2Z6G 2Z6G]) contains residues 126-681 and a central core of <scene name='84/848919/Armrepeatsdomain/1'>12 armadillo repeats domain</scene> and an alpha helix, the <scene name='84/848919/C-helix3correta/1'>helix-C</scene>, at the ß-catenin C-terminal domain. | ||
- | The terminal domains sequences mediate some of the protein interactions and are negatively charged. It is observed that the | + | The terminal domains sequences mediate some of the protein interactions and are negatively charged (Figure 1). It is observed that the helix-C constitutes the C-terminal domain. The N terminus of the first armadillo repeat has an <scene name='84/848919/Correton-terminushelix/1'>extra alpha helix</scene>. Both N- and C-terminal domains do not interact specifically with the armadillo repeat domain. <ref name="xing2009" /> |
- | The armadillo domain is more conserved than the terminal domains. It is made of 12 armadillo repeats each one with <scene name='84/848919/Centerarm5_helices/1'>three alpha helices connected by loops</scene> (as shown in ARM repeat 5), except for the <scene name='84/848919/Centerarm_repeat_7/1'>ARM repeat 7, which has two helices</scene>. Furthermore, it has a particular site which is positively charged, constituting the binding surface for the majority of ß-catenin ligands. Because the armadillo domain is positively while the terminal tails are negatively charged, their interactions are nonspecific. It is proposed that both tails act like chaperones - they might avoid nonspecific protein interactions of the ARM repeat domain and its self-aggregation.<ref name="xing2009" /> | + | The armadillo domain is more conserved than the terminal domains. It is made of 12 armadillo repeats each one with <scene name='84/848919/Centerarm5_helices/1'>three alpha helices connected by loops</scene> (as shown in ARM repeat 5), except for the <scene name='84/848919/Centerarm_repeat_7/1'>ARM repeat 7, which has two helices</scene>. Furthermore, it has a particular site which is positively charged (Figure 1), constituting the binding surface for the majority of ß-catenin ligands. Because the armadillo domain is positively while the terminal tails are negatively charged (Figure 1), their interactions are nonspecific. It is proposed that both tails act like chaperones - they might avoid nonspecific protein interactions of the ARM repeat domain and its self-aggregation.<ref name="xing2009" /> |
- | In contrast to the armadillo ligand-binding structural groove, the C-terminal tail is highly negatively charged. The C-helix caps the {{Template:ColorKey_Hydrophobic}} <scene name='84/848919/Centerhydrophilichelixc/1'>surface formed by the C-terminal end of the last armadillo repeats</scene>. However, the other side of the surface, exposed to solvent, is composed of {{Template:ColorKey_Polar}} residues. Thereby, this structure forms part of the superhelical structure core of ß-catenin together with armadillo repeat domain. <ref name="xing2009" /> | + | In contrast to the armadillo ligand-binding structural groove, the C-terminal tail is highly negatively charged (Figure 1). The C-helix caps the {{Template:ColorKey_Hydrophobic}} <scene name='84/848919/Centerhydrophilichelixc/1'>surface formed by the C-terminal end of the last armadillo repeats</scene>. However, the other side of the surface, exposed to solvent, is composed of {{Template:ColorKey_Polar}} residues (Figure 2). Thereby, this structure forms part of the superhelical structure core of ß-catenin together with armadillo repeat domain. It is possible that the C-helix is important for the transactivation of Wnt-responsive genes, but not for the cell adhesion through [[Cadherin|cadherins]]. Hence, this same β-catenin region is also the binding site of transcriptional inhibitors that compete directly with TCF for β-catenin binding.<ref name="xing2009" /> |
- | + | [[Image: Betacatenin eletrostatics white.png]] | |
+ | '''Figure 1''': Beta-catenin eletrostatic surface. The color blue indicates positively charged sites, and red, negative. The armadillo repeat domain has various positive sites and a particular one is an important binding area. The terminal tails are predominantly represented in red - and the C-helix is highly negatively charged. | ||
- | Finally, the ''Danio rerio'' ([http://www.rcsb.org/structure/2Z6G 2Z6G] full length structure, blue), ''Mus musculus'' ([https://www.rcsb.org/structure/2BCT] armadillo repeat region, green) and ''Homo sapiens'' ([https://www.rcsb.org/structure/2Z6H] full length structure, pink) beta-catenin alignment (Figure | + | [[Image: Whitebetacatenincartoonhidrophocity.png]] |
+ | '''Figure 2''': The beta-catenin polarity surface. The red color represents hidrophobic sites, and white, the hidrophilic areas. The protein does not have a partiular polar or apolar area. Polarity is well distributed through the molecule as well as the protein ligands. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Finally, the ''Danio rerio'' ([http://www.rcsb.org/structure/2Z6G 2Z6G] full length structure, blue), ''Mus musculus'' ([https://www.rcsb.org/structure/2BCT 2BCT] armadillo repeat region, green) and ''Homo sapiens'' ([https://www.rcsb.org/structure/2Z6H 2Z6H] full length structure, pink) beta-catenin alignment (Figure 3) shows that the protein structure is quite similar in these organisms. The three structures have 12 armadillo repeat group and the superposition indicates that the helix C in zebrafish and human beta-catenin conformation and orientation are essentially the same in both crystal structures. This great similarity between these proteins demonstrates that beta-catenin is evolutionary conserved and so are the pathways that it takes part. | ||
[[Image:II2z6g 2bct 2z6h white.png]] | [[Image:II2z6g 2bct 2z6h white.png]] | ||
- | '''Figure | + | '''Figure 3''': Superposition of a full length zebrafish (shown in blue), full length human (pink) and armadillo repeat region mouse (green) beta-catenin. |
==Cell Adhesion== | ==Cell Adhesion== | ||
- | In the absence of Wnt stimulus, ß-catenin is located at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane as a component of cadherin-based cell-cell connections (Figure | + | In the absence of Wnt stimulus, ß-catenin is located at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane as a component of cadherin-based cell-cell connections (Figure 4). [[Cadherin|Cadherins]] are transmembrane glycoproteins calcium-dependent that mediate cell-cell adhesion through link specially to ß-catenin by their cytoplasmic tails. The cadherin-catenin complex forms adherens junctions that polarize epithelial tissues and hold the cells together. However, in case of some tumor metastasis, that complex is reported as disrupted: in order to become more migratory, epithelial cells must loose their characteristic polarity, thus the complex might be affected (phenomenon described as 'cadherin switching' in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, EMT).<ref>Developmental Biology . Eleventh Edition. By Scott F. Gilbert and Michael J. F. Barresi. Sunderland (Massachusetts): Sinauer Associates. ISBN: 978-1-60535-470-5. 2016. </ref> |
The most known interaction occurs between <scene name='84/848919/Beta-catenin_e-cadherin/3'> ß-catenin and E-cadherin</scene>, epithelial cadherin (the ß-catenin residues 134–671 are represented in green and the residues 577–728 of the mature E-cadherin sequence are colored in rose. The proteins are from ''Mus musculus'') ([https://www.rcsb.org/structure/1i7x 1I7X]). They are associated while still in the endoplasmic reticulum and interfering with the binding of these proteins results in proteasomal degradation of the cadherin. First, alpha-catenin binds to ß-catenin at the first ARM repeat, amino acids <scene name='84/848919/Corretoam118-149/1'>118-149</scene>, resulting in an alpha-catenin/ß-catenin heterodimer. This binding stabilizes ß-catenin in the hinged form, and E-cadherin can connect simultaneously. The <scene name='84/848919/Surfacebeta-catenin_e-cadherin/2'>interaction surface is extensive</scene>, covering the entire length of the ß-catenin ARM repeat domain and involving the C-terminal 100 residues of the cadherin cytoplasmic domain. <ref name="valenta2012">DOI 10.1038/emboj.2012.150</ref> <ref name="huber2001">Huber, A. H., & Weis, W. I. (2001). The structure of the β-catenin/E-cadherin complex and the molecular basis of diverse ligand recognition by β-catenin. Cell, 105(3), 391-402.</ref> | The most known interaction occurs between <scene name='84/848919/Beta-catenin_e-cadherin/3'> ß-catenin and E-cadherin</scene>, epithelial cadherin (the ß-catenin residues 134–671 are represented in green and the residues 577–728 of the mature E-cadherin sequence are colored in rose. The proteins are from ''Mus musculus'') ([https://www.rcsb.org/structure/1i7x 1I7X]). They are associated while still in the endoplasmic reticulum and interfering with the binding of these proteins results in proteasomal degradation of the cadherin. First, alpha-catenin binds to ß-catenin at the first ARM repeat, amino acids <scene name='84/848919/Corretoam118-149/1'>118-149</scene>, resulting in an alpha-catenin/ß-catenin heterodimer. This binding stabilizes ß-catenin in the hinged form, and E-cadherin can connect simultaneously. The <scene name='84/848919/Surfacebeta-catenin_e-cadherin/2'>interaction surface is extensive</scene>, covering the entire length of the ß-catenin ARM repeat domain and involving the C-terminal 100 residues of the cadherin cytoplasmic domain. <ref name="valenta2012">DOI 10.1038/emboj.2012.150</ref> <ref name="huber2001">Huber, A. H., & Weis, W. I. (2001). The structure of the β-catenin/E-cadherin complex and the molecular basis of diverse ligand recognition by β-catenin. Cell, 105(3), 391-402.</ref> | ||
[[Image:Beta-catenin-moonlighting.png]] | [[Image:Beta-catenin-moonlighting.png]] | ||
- | '''Figure | + | '''Figure 4''': Cadherin-based cell adhesion. Alpha-catenin/ß-catenin forms a heterodimer that can connects to E-cadherin promoting the adherens junctions. As a homodimer, alpha-catenin interacts with actin. Adapted from: Bubus12/CC BY [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Beta-catenin-moonlighting.png] |
==The ß-catenin destruction complex== | ==The ß-catenin destruction complex== | ||
- | In baseline conditions without Wnt signaling, ß-catenin concentrations are low in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Then, the destruction complex (Figure | + | In baseline conditions without Wnt signaling, ß-catenin concentrations are low in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Then, the destruction complex (Figure 5), formed by APC, [[Axin]], CK1ɑ and [[Glycogen synthase kinase 3|GSK]], is active and causes the degradation of the protein through proteasome. Initially it is recognized by APC and [[Axin]] that promote the phosphorylation of Ser45 by CK1ɑ. This facilitates the phosphorylation by [[Cyclin-dependent kinase|GSK]] in the residues of the amino acids Thr41, Ser37 and Ser33. The last two, when phosphorylated, leads to recognition by ß-TrCP and consequently ubiquitination by an [[Ubiquitin protein ligase|E3 ligase]] and degradation by [[Proteasome|26S proteasome]]. <ref name="valenta2012" /> Furthermore, the relation Wnt/ß-catenin pathway usually are reported by 'canonical' and 'non-canonical', whose meaning remotes to the components of the cascate. The first leads to accumulation and stabilization of cytosolic (unphosphorylated) ß-catenin and the second promotes the increase in intracellular calcium or mediate cell polarity, but both are established in embryonic development of normal tissue and organs. <ref name=Arend ''et al''2013> Arend ''et al,''2013. The Wnt/β-catenin pathway in ovarian cancer: A review. Gynecologic Oncology. Volume 131, Issue 3, December 2013, Pages 772-779.</ref> <ref name=Takayama ''et al''1996>Takayama ''et al,'' 1996. ß-Catenin Expression in Human Cancers. American journal of Pathology, Vol. 148, No. 1, January. </ref> |
[[Image:Axindestructioncomplex.png]] | [[Image:Axindestructioncomplex.png]] | ||
- | '''Figure | + | '''Figure 5''': A simplified diagram of the ß-catenin destruction complex. The destruction complex proteins promote the ß-catenin proteolysis in cytoplasm. Source: JWSchmidt at the English language Wikipedia/CC BY-SA [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Axindestructioncomplex.png] |
==DNA binding and transcription== | ==DNA binding and transcription== | ||
- | The inhibition of ß-catenin destruction complex through activation of the Wnt pathway (Figure | + | The inhibition of ß-catenin destruction complex through activation of the Wnt pathway (Figure 6) leads to increased levels of the protein in cytoplasm and its translocation into the nucleus. ß-catenin interacts with different nuclear pore complex components and ARM repeats <scene name='84/848919/R10-12/1'>R10-R12</scene> are critical for its import and export. [[Forkhead box protein|FoxM1]] also facilitates its nuclear translocation directly interacting with ARM repeats <scene name='84/848919/R11-12/2'>R11-R12</scene>. [[Forkhead box protein|FoxM1]] forms a complex with ß-catenin/TCF on the promoters of Wnt target genes. Once in the nucleus, ß-catenin and its DNA binding partners can activate transcription of Wnt/ß-catenin target genes. Therefore, ß-catenin can only initiates transcription in a multimeric complex, as its central transcriptional activator. <ref name="valenta2012" /> |
TCF transcription factors works as the principal nuclear member of ß-catenin multimeric complex. TCFs bind to DNA enhancers and ß-catenin acts as a link in a chain between them and others transcriptional coactivators. This interaction can be modulated to enhance, repress os switch off ß-catenin-mediated transcription. The majority of these transcription coactivators binds to <scene name='84/848919/R12andhelix-c/1'>the last ARM repeat and interacts with Helix-C</scene> and many of them can affect chromatin structure. Indeed, it seems that the C-terminus region of ß-catenin coordinates the recruitment and sequential exchange of these proteins. Binding of ß-catenin to TCF is blocked by some proteins such as <scene name='84/848919/Icat_bcat/3'>ICAT</scene> (here ICAT is represented in orange and is a full length structure from ''Homo sapiens''; ß-catenin is shown in green and is from ''Mus musculus''). ([http://www.rcsb.org/structure/1M1E 1M1E]) <ref name="valenta2012" /> | TCF transcription factors works as the principal nuclear member of ß-catenin multimeric complex. TCFs bind to DNA enhancers and ß-catenin acts as a link in a chain between them and others transcriptional coactivators. This interaction can be modulated to enhance, repress os switch off ß-catenin-mediated transcription. The majority of these transcription coactivators binds to <scene name='84/848919/R12andhelix-c/1'>the last ARM repeat and interacts with Helix-C</scene> and many of them can affect chromatin structure. Indeed, it seems that the C-terminus region of ß-catenin coordinates the recruitment and sequential exchange of these proteins. Binding of ß-catenin to TCF is blocked by some proteins such as <scene name='84/848919/Icat_bcat/3'>ICAT</scene> (here ICAT is represented in orange and is a full length structure from ''Homo sapiens''; ß-catenin is shown in green and is from ''Mus musculus''). ([http://www.rcsb.org/structure/1M1E 1M1E]) <ref name="valenta2012" /> | ||
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[[Image:Canonical Wnt pathway with Wnt..jpg]] | [[Image:Canonical Wnt pathway with Wnt..jpg]] | ||
- | '''Figure | + | '''Figure 6''': The canonical Wnt pathway when Wnt is present. The inhibition of the destruction complex allows ß-catenin translocation from cytoplasm to nucleus. Source: Gpruett2/CC BY-SA [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Canonical_Wnt_pathway_with_Wnt..jpg] |
== References == | == References == | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Current revision
Crystal Structure of a Full-Length Zebrafish Beta-Catenin
ß-catenin is an important element in cell-cell adherens junctions, called cadherins. Reported in all Eukaryota (Eukaryota) phylum, in humans the gene CTNNB1 (CTNNB1) transcribes a 95kDa protein that allows cadherins to anchor in cytoeskeleton (actin filaments) by connecting cytoplasmic proteins. Besides that, it is an essential regulator of the canonical Wnt pathway [1] (related to embryonic development). Disturbance of this activity is associated with cancer and other diseases. Therefore, ß-catenin is an important target for developing medication for many diseases, with considerable interest in its structure. [2]
|