Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
1lli;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- transcription-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (2.1 Å)
- Summary
- The crystal structure of a mutant protein with altered
but improved hydrophobic core packing
- Reference
-
Lim WA, Hodel A, Sauer RT, Richards FM (1994): "The crystal
structure of a mutant protein with altered but improved
hydrophobic core packing."
Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA, 91,
423-427. doi: 10.1073/pnas.91.1.423.
- Abstract
- The dense packing observed in protein interiors appears
to be crucial for stabilizing the native structure--even
subtle internal substitutions are usually destabilizing.
Thus, steric complementarity of core residues is thought to
be an important criterion for "inverse folding" predictive
methods, which judge whether a newly determined sequence is
consistent with any known folds. A major problem in the
development of useful core packing evaluation algorithms,
however, is that there are occasional mutations that are
predicted to disrupt native packing but that yield an
equally or more stable protein. We have solved the crystal
structure of such a variant of lambda repressor, which,
despite having three larger core substitutions, is more
stable than the wild type. The structure reveals that the
protein accommodates the potentially disruptive residues
with shifts in its alpha-helical arrangement. The variant
is apparently more stable because its packing is
improved--the core has a higher packing density and little
geometric strain. These rearrangements, however, cause
repositioning of functional residues, which result in
reduced DNA binding activity. By comparing these results
with the predictions of two core packing algorithms, it is
clear that the protein possesses a relatively high degree
of main-chain flexibility that must be accounted for in
order to predict the full spectrum of compatible core
sequences. This study also shows how, in protein evolution,
a particular set of core residue identities might be
selected not because they provide optimal stability but
because they provide sufficient stability in addition to
the precise structure required for optimal activity.