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The C-terminal domain of the transcriptional corepressor CtBP is intrinsically unstructured.


ABSTRACT: C-terminal binding proteins (CtBPs) are moonlighting proteins involved in nuclear transcriptional corepression and in Golgi membrane tubule fission. Structural information on CtBPs is available for their substrate-binding domain, responsible for transcriptional repressor recognition/binding, and for the nucleotide-binding domain, involved in NAD(H)-binding and dimerization. On the contrary, little is known about the structure of CtBP C-terminal region ( approximately 90 residues), hosting sites for post-translational modifications. In the present communication we apply a combined approach based on bioinformatics, nuclear magnetic resonance, circular dichroism spectroscopy, and small-angle X-ray scattering, and we show that the CtBP C-terminal region is intrinsically unstructured in the full-length CtBP and in constructs lacking the substrate- and/or the nucleotide-binding domains. The flexible nature of this protein region, and its structural transitions, may be instrumental for CtBP recognition and binding to diverse molecular partners.

SUBMITTER: Nardini M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2242513 | biostudies-literature | 2006 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The C-terminal domain of the transcriptional corepressor CtBP is intrinsically unstructured.

Nardini Marco M   Svergun Dmitri D   Konarev Peter V PV   Spanò Stefania S   Fasano Mauro M   Bracco Chiara C   Pesce Alessandra A   Donadini Alessandra A   Cericola Claudia C   Secundo Francesco F   Luini Alberto A   Corda Daniela D   Bolognesi Martino M  

Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society 20060405 5


C-terminal binding proteins (CtBPs) are moonlighting proteins involved in nuclear transcriptional corepression and in Golgi membrane tubule fission. Structural information on CtBPs is available for their substrate-binding domain, responsible for transcriptional repressor recognition/binding, and for the nucleotide-binding domain, involved in NAD(H)-binding and dimerization. On the contrary, little is known about the structure of CtBP C-terminal region ( approximately 90 residues), hosting sites  ...[more]

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