User:Glauco O. Gavioli Ferreira/Sandbox 1

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Further research is needed to understand if this phenomenon also happens in vivo conditions.
Further research is needed to understand if this phenomenon also happens in vivo conditions.
The RCL might be important for defining the protein subcellular localization. Modification of the Aspartate 346 (D346) by a glutamic acid (E) residue on the C-terminal portion of RCL in maspin leaded maspin to a dominant nuclear distribution and increased interaction with HDAC1 in multiple cancer cell lines (Identification of an intrinsic determinant critical for maspin subcellular localization and function).
The RCL might be important for defining the protein subcellular localization. Modification of the Aspartate 346 (D346) by a glutamic acid (E) residue on the C-terminal portion of RCL in maspin leaded maspin to a dominant nuclear distribution and increased interaction with HDAC1 in multiple cancer cell lines (Identification of an intrinsic determinant critical for maspin subcellular localization and function).
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====Bulge around D and E-helices====
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Maspin also contains a buried salt bridge on the periphery of the conserved region called ‘shutter’ which is located in the center of the serpin fold that is important for controlling conformational change in inhibitory molecules. This region, which is formed by residues from D-helix, B-helix and s2A, causes a prominent bulge at the N-terminal end of s1A and reveals a cavity beneath the D-helix (The High Resolution Crystal Structure of the Human Tumor Suppressor Maspin Reveals a Novel Conformational Switch in the G-helix).
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It suggests that the salt bridge region, as in other serpins, may have some relevance at the interaction with a binding partner. Furthermore, the distortion in secondary structure caused by the salt bridge introduces Lys114 into the center of a cluster of conserved positively charged waste. Once maspin is able to bind heparin, it is possible that these residues perform as a heparin binding site (The High Resolution Crystal Structure of the Human Tumor Suppressor Maspin Reveals a Novel Conformational Switch in the G-helix).
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====G-helix====
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Maspin is able to undergo conformational change in and around the G-helix, and has an open and closed form. This is a real putative cofactor binding site and may determine maspin’s function (The High Resolution Crystal Structure of the Human Tumor Suppressor Maspin Reveals a Novel Conformational Switch in the G-helix).
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As said before, the region at and around the G-helix has flexibility to undergo a conformational change and, as a consequence, its charged residues are reorganized on the G-helix and a central part of the helix structure becomes negative. The two structures, reflecting maspin in the open and closed conformation, show that rotation of the G-helix alters the local charge distribution, suggesting that this movement represents a conformational “switch”, what researchers have implied be a cofactor binding site under conformational control based on G-helix negative charged patch modulation (The High Resolution Crystal Structure of the Human Tumor Suppressor Maspin Reveals a Novel Conformational Switch in the G-helix).
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== Physical interactions ==
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It has been known that maspin interacts physically with a lot of different proteins. We will specifically discuss two of them below.
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====Histone Deacetylase 1 (HDAC1)====
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Maspin is able to bind to histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1), which is up-regulated in many types of cancers and is an important class I nuclear deacetylase (Identification of an Intrinsic Determinant Critical for Maspin Subcellular Localization and Function). Either purified or endogenously expressed maspin is bound to and inhibits HDAC1 (Li X, Yin S, Meng Y, Sakr W, Sheng S (2006) Endogenous inhibition of histone deacetylase 1 by tumor-suppressive maspin. Cancer Res 66: 9323–9329.). This interaction and, consequently, the inhibition of HDAC1, may allow maspin to control a small set of genes involved in epithelial differentiation (Bernardo MM, Meng Y, Lockett J, Dyson G, Dombkowski A, et al. (2011) Maspin reprograms the gene expression profile of prostate carcinoma cells for differentiation. Genes Cancer 2: 1009-1022.). The inhibition of HDAC1 by maspin lead to increased acetylation of HDAC1 target protein Ku70, which in turn, caused an increase in apoptosis (Lee SJ, Jang H, Park C (2012) Maspin increases Ku70 acetylation and Bax-mediated cell death in cancer. Int J Mol Med 29: 225–230.).
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Unfortunately, it is not known where the exact binding site of maspin to HDAC1 is until the date of creation of this page (07/20/2022) and more studies are still needed.
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Revision as of 01:41, 18 June 2022

SerpinB5 (Maspin)

Caption for this structure

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References

  1. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
  2. Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644

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Glauco O. Gavioli Ferreira

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