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Energetic Selection of Topology in Ferredoxins
Author(s) -
J. Dongun Kim,
Agustina Rodriguez-Granillo,
David A. Case,
Vikas Nanda,
Paul G. Falkowski
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos computational biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.628
H-Index - 182
eISSN - 1553-7358
pISSN - 1553-734X
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002463
Subject(s) - ferredoxin , peptide , topology (electrical circuits) , chemistry , cluster (spacecraft) , crystallography , protein structure , iron–sulfur cluster , sulfur , stereochemistry , biochemistry , enzyme , mathematics , combinatorics , computer science , programming language , organic chemistry
Models of early protein evolution posit the existence of short peptides that bound metals and ions and served as transporters, membranes or catalysts. The Cys-X-X-Cys-X-X-Cys heptapeptide located within bacterial ferredoxins, enclosing an Fe 4 S 4 metal center, is an attractive candidate for such an early peptide. Ferredoxins are ancient proteins and the simple α+β fold is found alone or as a domain in larger proteins throughout all three kingdoms of life. Previous analyses of the heptapeptide conformation in experimentally determined ferredoxin structures revealed a pervasive right-handed topology, despite the fact that the Fe 4 S 4 cluster is achiral. Conformational enumeration of a model CGGCGGC heptapeptide bound to a cubane iron-sulfur cluster indicates both left-handed and right-handed folds could exist and have comparable stabilities. However, only the natural ferredoxin topology provides a significant network of backbone-to-cluster hydrogen bonds that would stabilize the metal-peptide complex. The optimal peptide configuration (alternating α L ,α R ) is that of an α-sheet, providing an additional mechanism where oligomerization could stabilize the peptide and facilitate iron-sulfur cluster binding.

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