Lee Brian M, Buck-Koehntop Bethany A, Martinez-Yamout Maria A, Dyson H Jane, Wright Peter E
Department of Molecular Biology and Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
J Mol Biol. 2007 Aug 31;371(5):1274-89. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2007.06.021. Epub 2007 Jun 15.
Churchill is a zinc-containing protein that is involved in neural induction during embryogenesis. At the time of its discovery, it was thought on the basis of sequence alignment to contain two zinc fingers of the C4 type. Further, binding of an N-terminal GST-Churchill fusion protein to a particular DNA sequence was demonstrated by immunoprecipitation selection assay, suggesting that Churchill may function as a transcriptional regulator by sequence-specific DNA binding. We show by NMR solution structure determination that, far from containing canonical C4 zinc fingers, the protein contains three bound zinc ions in novel coordination sites, including an unusual binuclear zinc cluster. The secondary structure of Churchill is also unusual, consisting of a highly solvent-exposed single-layer beta-sheet. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange and backbone relaxation measurements reveal that Churchill is unusually dynamic on a number of time scales, with the exception of regions surrounding the zinc coordinating sites, which serve to stabilize the otherwise unstructured N terminus and the single-layer beta-sheet. No binding of Churchill to the previously identified DNA sequence could be detected, and extensive searches using DNA sequence selection techniques could find no other DNA sequence that was bound by Churchill. Since the N-terminal amino acids of Churchill form part of the zinc-binding motif, the addition of a fusion protein at the N terminus causes loss of zinc and unfolding of Churchill. This observation most likely explains the published DNA-binding results, which would arise due to non-specific interaction of the unfolded protein in the immunoprecipitation selection assay. Since Churchill does not appear to bind DNA, we suggest that it may function in embryogenesis as a protein-interaction factor.
丘吉尔蛋白是一种含锌蛋白,在胚胎发育过程中参与神经诱导。在其被发现时,基于序列比对认为它含有两个C4型锌指。此外,通过免疫沉淀选择试验证明了N端GST-丘吉尔融合蛋白与特定DNA序列的结合,这表明丘吉尔蛋白可能通过序列特异性DNA结合发挥转录调节因子的作用。我们通过核磁共振溶液结构测定表明,该蛋白远非含有典型的C4锌指,而是在新的配位位点含有三个结合的锌离子,包括一个不寻常的双核锌簇。丘吉尔蛋白的二级结构也不寻常,由高度暴露于溶剂中的单层β折叠组成。氢氘交换和主链弛豫测量表明,丘吉尔蛋白在多个时间尺度上具有异常的动态性,但锌配位位点周围的区域除外,这些区域用于稳定原本无结构的N端和单层β折叠。未检测到丘吉尔蛋白与先前鉴定的DNA序列的结合,并且使用DNA序列选择技术进行的广泛搜索也未发现其他被丘吉尔蛋白结合的DNA序列。由于丘吉尔蛋白的N端氨基酸构成锌结合基序的一部分,在N端添加融合蛋白会导致锌的丢失和丘吉尔蛋白的解折叠。这一观察结果很可能解释了已发表的DNA结合结果,这些结果可能是由于免疫沉淀选择试验中未折叠蛋白的非特异性相互作用引起的。由于丘吉尔蛋白似乎不结合DNA,我们认为它可能在胚胎发育中作为一种蛋白质相互作用因子发挥作用。