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Role of salt bridges in homeodomains investigated by structural analyses and molecular dynamics simulations

✍ Scribed by Gabriela Iurcu-Mustata; Daniel Van Belle; René Wintjens; Martine Prévost; Marianne Rooman


Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
573 KB
Volume
59
Category
Article
ISSN
0006-3525

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✦ Synopsis


Homeodomains are a class of helix-turn-helix DNA-binding protein motifs that play an important role in the control of cellular development in eukaryotes. They fold in a three ␣-helix structural module, where the third helix is the recognition helix that fits into the major groove of DNA. Structural analysis of the members of the homeodomain family led to the identification of interactions likely to stabilize the protein domains. Linking the helices pairwise, three salt bridges were found to be well preserved within the family. Also well conserved were two cationinteractions between aromatic and positively charged side chains. To analyze the structural role of the salt bridges, molecular dynamics simulations (MD) were carried out on the wild-type homeodomain from the Drosophila paired protein (1fjl) and on three mutants, which lack one or two salt bridges and mimic natural mutations in other homeodomains. Analysis of the trajectories revealed only small structural rearrangements of the three helices in all MD simulations, thereby suggesting that the salt bridges have no essential stabilizing role at room temperature, but rather might be important for improving thermostability. The latter hypothesis is supported by a good correlation between the melting midpoint temperatures of several homeodomains and the number of salt bridges


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