Intrinsically Disordered Bacterial Polar Organizing Protein Z, PopZ, Interacts with Protein Binding Partners Through an N-terminal Molecular Recognition Feature
[摘要] The polar organizing protein Z (PopZ) is necessary for the formation of three-dimensional microdomains at the cell poles in Caulobacter crescentus, where it functions as a hub protein that recruits multiple regulatory proteins from the cytoplasm. Although a large portion of the protein is predicted to be natively unstructured, in reconstituted systems PopZ can self-assemble into a macromolecular scaffold that directly binds to at least ten different proteins. Here we report the solution NMR structure of PopZ(Delta 134-177), a truncated form of PopZ that does not self-assemble but retains the ability to interact with heterologous proteins. We show that the unbound form of PopZ(Delta 134-177) is unstructured in solution, with the exception of a small amphipathic alpha-helix in residues M10-117, which is included within a highly conserved region near the N-terminal. In applying NMR techniques to map the interactions between PopZ(Delta 134-177) and one of its binding partners, RcdA, we find evidence that the alpha-helix and adjoining amino acids extending to position E23 serve as the core of the binding motif. Consistent with this, a point mutation at position 117 severely compromises binding. Our results show that a partially structured Molecular Recognition Feature (MoRF) within an intrinsically disordered domain of PopZ contributes to the assembly of polar microdomains, revealing a structural basis for complex network assembly in Alphaproteobacteria that is analogous to those formed by intrinsically disordered hub proteins in other kingdoms. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
[发布日期] 2020-11-20 [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类]
[关键词] NMR spectroscopy;PopZ;intrinsic disorder;molecular recognition feature;hub protein [时效性]