Cell motility is induced by many growth factors acting through cognate receptors with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity (RPTK). However, most of the links between receptor activation and the biophysical processes of cell motility remain undeciphered. We have focused on the mechanisms by which the E
Disulfide bond plasticity in epidermal growth factor
β Scribed by Benedetta A. Sampoli Benitez; Elizabeth A. Komives
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 234 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-3585
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) has a (1-3,2-4,5-6) disulfide-bonding pattern. This pattern is found in nearly all EGF-like domains, despite wide variation in sequences. Biological data from EGF and at least one EGF-like domain show that disulfide bond isomers have significant bioactivity and suggests that the EGF fold can accommodate alternate disulfidebonding patterns. The disulfide bonds in murine EGF were altered to seven different patterns and structures were calculated incorporating all the restraints from the highest resolution restraint set available (Tejero et al., 1996). Results showed that besides the native (1-3,2-4,5-6), two other disulfide-bonding patterns: (1-2,3-4,5-6) and (1-3,2-5,4-6) satisfied the restraints as well as the native. The results for these two patterns were indistinguishable from the native on the basis of distance and dihedral violations, XPLOR energies, Procheck statistics, and RMSDs of the final set of structures. Two other disulfide bond patterns, (1-2,3-5, 4-6) and (1-4,2-3,5-6) were able to satisfy all the distance restraints but had one or more cysteine dihedral violations. For all seven isomers, the final calculated structures were highly similar to EGF with all-atom RMSD's in the 1.5-2 Γ range. These results suggest that the EGF backbone fold has the unique property of accommodating several different disulfidebonding patterns.
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