Rebuilding Ring-Type Assembly of Peroxiredoxin by Chemical Modification

30 September 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Direct control of protein quaternary structure (QS) is challenging owing to the complexity of protein structure. As a protein with a characteristic QS, peroxiredoxin from Aeropyrum pernix K1 (ApPrx) forms a decamer, wherein five dimers associate to form a ring. Here, we disrupted and reconstituted ApPrx QS via amino acid mutations and chemical modifications targeting hot spots for protein assembly. The decameric QS of an ApPrx* mutant, wherein all cysteine residues in wild-type ApPrx were mutated to serine, was destructed to dimers via an F80C mutation. The dimeric ApPrx*F80C mutant was then modified with a small molecule and successfully assembled as a decamer. Structural analysis confirmed that an artificially installed chemical moiety potentially facilitates suitable protein-protein interactions to rebuild a native structure. Rebuilding of dodecamer was also achieved through an additional amino acid mutation. This study describes a facile method to regulate protein assembly state.

Keywords

Peroxiredoxin
Protein Assembly
Chemical Modification
Quaternary Structure

Supplementary materials

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