A Designed Conformational Shift To Control Protein Binding Specificity

2014 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​A Designed Conformational Shift To Control Protein Binding Specificity​
Michielssens, S.; Peters, J. H.; Ban, D. ; Pratihar, S. ; Seeliger, D.; Sharma, M. & Giller, K.  et al.​ (2014) 
Angewandte Chemie International Edition53(39) pp. 10367​-10371​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201403102 

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Authors
Michielssens, Servaas; Peters, Jan Henning; Ban, David ; Pratihar, Supriya ; Seeliger, Daniel; Sharma, Monika; Giller, Karin ; Sabo, Thomas Michael ; Becker, Stefan ; Lee, Donghan ; Griesinger, Christian ; Groot, Bert L. de 
Abstract
In a conformational selection scenario, manipulating the populations of binding-competent states should be expected to affect protein binding. We demonstrate how in silico designed point mutations within the core of ubiquitin, remote from the binding interface, change the binding specificity by shifting the conformational equilibrium of the ground-state ensemble between open and closed substates that have a similar population in the wild-type protein. Binding affinities determined by NMR titration experiments agree with the predictions, thereby showing that, indeed, a shift in the conformational equilibrium enables us to alter ubiquitin's binding specificity and hence its function. Thus, we present a novel route towards designing specific binding by a conformational shift through exploiting the fact that conformational selection depends on the concentration of binding-competent substates.
Issue Date
2014
Journal
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 
ISSN
1433-7851
eISSN
1521-3773

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