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An interdomain sector mediating allostery in Hsp70 molecular chaperones.


ABSTRACT: Allosteric coupling between protein domains is fundamental to many cellular processes. For example, Hsp70 molecular chaperones use ATP binding by their actin-like N-terminal ATPase domain to control substrate interactions in their C-terminal substrate-binding domain, a reaction that is critical for protein folding in cells. Here, we generalize the statistical coupling analysis to simultaneously evaluate co-evolution between protein residues and functional divergence between sequences in protein sub-families. Applying this method in the Hsp70/110 protein family, we identify a sparse but structurally contiguous group of co-evolving residues called a 'sector', which is an attribute of the allosteric Hsp70 sub-family that links the functional sites of the two domains across a specific interdomain interface. Mutagenesis of Escherichia coli DnaK supports the conclusion that this interdomain sector underlies the allosteric coupling in this protein family. The identification of the Hsp70 sector provides a basis for further experiments to understand the mechanism of allostery and introduces the idea that cooperativity between interacting proteins or protein domains can be mediated by shared sectors.

SUBMITTER: Smock RG 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2964120 | biostudies-literature | 2010 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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An interdomain sector mediating allostery in Hsp70 molecular chaperones.

Smock Robert G RG   Rivoire Olivier O   Russ William P WP   Swain Joanna F JF   Leibler Stanislas S   Ranganathan Rama R   Gierasch Lila M LM  

Molecular systems biology 20100901


Allosteric coupling between protein domains is fundamental to many cellular processes. For example, Hsp70 molecular chaperones use ATP binding by their actin-like N-terminal ATPase domain to control substrate interactions in their C-terminal substrate-binding domain, a reaction that is critical for protein folding in cells. Here, we generalize the statistical coupling analysis to simultaneously evaluate co-evolution between protein residues and functional divergence between sequences in protein  ...[more]

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