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Department of Pharmacology

 
Author(s): 
Itzhaki, L, Stigler, J, Perez-Riba, A, Bauer, D, Weißl, A, Hyvönen, M, Fischer, G, Rowling, P, Rief, M, Eapen, R
Abstract: 

Tandem-repeat proteins comprise small secondary structure motifs that stack to form one- dimensional arrays with distinctive mechanical properties that are proposed to direct their cellular functions. Here, we use single-molecule optical tweezers to study the folding of consensus-designed tetratricopeptide repeats (CTPRs) — superhelical arrays of short helix-turn-helix motifs. We find that CTPRs display a spring-like mechanical response in which individual repeats undergo rapid equilibrium fluctuations between partially folded and unfolded conformations. We rationalise the force response using Ising models and dissect the folding pathway of CTPRs under mechanical load, revealing how the repeat arrays form from the centre towards both termini simultaneously. Most strikingly, we also directly observe the protein’s superhelical tertiary structure in the force signal. Using protein engineering, crystallography and single- molecule experiments, we show that the superhelical geometry can be altered by carefully placed amino-acid substitutions and we examine how these sequence changes affect intrinsic repeat stability and inter-repeat coupling. Our findings provide the means to dissect and modulate repeat-protein stability and dynamics, which will be essential for researchers to understand the function of natural repeat proteins and to exploit artificial repeats proteins in nanotechnology and biomedical applications.

Publication ID: 
1366791
Published date: 
27 January 2022 (Accepted for publication)
Publication source: 
manual
Publication type: 
Journal articles
Journal name: 
ACS Nano
Publication volume: 
Publisher: 
American Chemical Society
Parent title: 
Edition: 
Publication number: