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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 22(9)2021 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34066339

ABSTRACT

Trefoil factor family peptides (TFF1, TFF2, TFF3), together with mucins, are typical exocrine products of mucous epithelia. Here, they act as a gastric tumor suppressor (TFF1) or they play different roles in mucosal innate immune defense (TFF2, TFF3). Minute amounts are also secreted as endocrine, e.g., by the immune and central nervous systems. As a hallmark, TFF peptides have different lectin activities, best characterized for TFF2, but also TFF1. Pathologically, ectopic expression occurs during inflammation and in various tumors. In this review, the role of TFF peptides during inflammation is discussed on two levels. On the one hand, the expression of TFF1-3 is regulated by inflammatory signals in different ways (upstream links). On the other hand, TFF peptides influence inflammatory processes (downstream links). The latter are recognized best in various Tff-deficient mice, which have completely different phenotypes. In particular, TFF2 is secreted by myeloid cells (e.g., macrophages) and lymphocytes (e.g., memory T cells), where it modulates immune reactions triggering inflammation. As a new concept, in addition to lectin-triggered activation, a hypothetical lectin-triggered inhibition of glycosylated transmembrane receptors by TFF peptides is discussed. Thus, TFFs are promising players in the field of glycoimmunology, such as galectins and C-type lectins.


Subject(s)
Inflammation/metabolism , Inflammation/pathology , Trefoil Factors/metabolism , Animals , Colon/pathology , Humans , Inflammation Mediators/metabolism , Models, Biological , Neoplasms/metabolism , Neoplasms/pathology , Trefoil Factors/chemistry
2.
Protein Sci ; 29(7): 1629-1640, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32362013

ABSTRACT

Gene duplication and fusion events in protein evolution are postulated to be responsible for the common protein folds exhibiting internal rotational symmetry. Such evolutionary processes can also potentially yield regions of repetitive primary structure. Repetitive primary structure offers the potential for alternative definitions of critical regions, such as the folding nucleus (FN). In principle, more than one instance of the FN potentially enables an alternative folding pathway in the face of a subsequent deleterious mutation. We describe the targeted mutation of the carboxyl-terminal region of the (internally located) FN of the de novo designed purely-symmetric ß-trefoil protein Symfoil-4P. This mutation involves wholesale replacement of a repeating trefoil-fold motif with a "blade" motif from a ß-propeller protein, and postulated to trap that region of the Symfoil-4P FN in a nonproductive folding intermediate. The resulting protein (termed "Bladefoil") is shown to be cooperatively folding, but as a trimeric oligomer. The results illustrate how symmetric protein architectures have potentially diverse folding alternatives available to them, including oligomerization, when preferred pathways are perturbed.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Protein Folding , Protein Multimerization , Trefoil Factors/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Duplication , Protein Structure, Quaternary , Trefoil Factors/genetics
3.
BMC Mol Cell Biol ; 21(1): 28, 2020 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32295515

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The details of the folding mechanisms have not yet been fully understood for many proteins, and it is believed that the information on the folding mechanism of a protein is encoded in its amino acid sequence. ß-trefoil proteins are known to have the same 3D scaffold, namely, a three-fold symmetric scaffold, despite the proteins' low sequence identity among superfamilies. In this study, we extract an initial folding unit from the amino acid sequences of irregular ß-trefoil proteins by constructing an average distance map (ADM) and utilizing inter-residue average distance statistics to determine the relative contact frequencies for residue pairs in terms of F values. We compare our sequence-based prediction results with the packing between hydrophobic residues in native 3D structures and a Go-model simulation. RESULTS: The ADM and F-value analyses predict that the N-terminal and C-terminal regions are compact and that the hydrophobic residues at the central region can be regarded as an interaction center with other residues. These results correspond well to those of the Go-model simulations. Moreover, our results indicate that the irregular parts in the ß-trefoil proteins do not hinder the protein formation. Conserved hydrophobic residues on the ß5 strand are always the interaction center of packing between the conserved hydrophobic residues in both regular and irregular ß-trefoil proteins. CONCLUSIONS: We revealed that the ß5 strand plays an important role in ß-trefoil protein structure construction. The sequence-based methods used in this study can extract the protein folding information from only amino acid sequence data, and well corresponded to 3D structure-based Go-model simulation and available experimental results.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Protein Folding , Trefoil Factors/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Computer Simulation
4.
Protein Sci ; 29(5): 1172-1185, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32142181

ABSTRACT

Many protein architectures exhibit evidence of internal rotational symmetry postulated to be the result of gene duplication/fusion events involving a primordial polypeptide motif. A common feature of such structures is a domain-swapped arrangement at the interface of the N- and C-termini motifs and postulated to provide cooperative interactions that promote folding and stability. De novo designed symmetric protein architectures have demonstrated an ability to accommodate circular permutation of the N- and C-termini in the overall architecture; however, the folding requirement of the primordial motif is poorly understood, and tolerance to circular permutation is essentially unknown. The ß-trefoil protein fold is a threefold-symmetric architecture where the repeating ~42-mer "trefoil-fold" motif assembles via a domain-swapped arrangement. The trefoil-fold structure in isolation exposes considerable hydrophobic area that is otherwise buried in the intact ß-trefoil trimeric assembly. The trefoil-fold sequence is not predicted to adopt the trefoil-fold architecture in ab initio folding studies; rather, the predicted fold is closely related to a compact "blade" motif from the ß-propeller architecture. Expression of a trefoil-fold sequence and circular permutants shows that only the wild-type N-terminal motif definition yields an intact ß-trefoil trimeric assembly, while permutants yield monomers. The results elucidate the folding requirements of the primordial trefoil-fold motif, and also suggest that this motif may sample a compact conformation that limits hydrophobic residue exposure, contains key trefoil-fold structural features, but is more structurally homologous to a ß-propeller blade motif.


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Motifs , Density Functional Theory , Protein Folding , Trefoil Factors/chemistry , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Trefoil Factors/genetics , Trefoil Factors/isolation & purification
5.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 5943, 2017 07 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28724971

ABSTRACT

Computational protein design has advanced very rapidly over the last decade, but there remain few examples of artificial proteins with direct medical applications. This study describes a new artificial ß-trefoil lectin that recognises Burkitt's lymphoma cells, and which was designed with the intention of finding a basis for novel cancer treatments or diagnostics. The new protein, called "Mitsuba", is based on the structure of the natural shellfish lectin MytiLec-1, a member of a small lectin family that uses unique sequence motifs to bind α-D-galactose. The three subdomains of MytiLec-1 each carry one galactose binding site, and the 149-residue protein forms a tight dimer in solution. Mitsuba (meaning "three-leaf" in Japanese) was created by symmetry constraining the structure of a MytiLec-1 subunit, resulting in a 150-residue sequence that contains three identical tandem repeats. Mitsuba-1 was expressed and crystallised to confirm the X-ray structure matches the predicted model. Mitsuba-1 recognises cancer cells that express globotriose (Galα(1,4)Galß(1,4)Glc) on the surface, but the cytotoxicity is abolished.


Subject(s)
Lectins/chemistry , Neoplasms/metabolism , Neoplasms/pathology , Trefoil Factors/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Binding Sites , Cell Death , Cell Line, Tumor , Computational Biology , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hemagglutination , Humans , Lectins/metabolism , Molecular Weight , Protein Domains , Protein Multimerization , Rabbits , Sugars/metabolism
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