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Aplysia temptin − the ‘glue’ in the water‐borne attractin pheromone complex
Author(s) -
Cummins Scott F.,
Xie Fang,
de Vries Melissa R.,
Annangudi Suresh P.,
Misra Milind,
Degnan Bernard M.,
Sweedler Jonathan V.,
Nagle Gregg T.,
Schein Catherine H.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2007.06070.x
Subject(s) - aplysia , pheromone , chemistry , biology , neuroscience , ecology
Temptin, a component of the complex of water‐borne protein pheromones that stimulate attraction and mating behavior in the marine mollusk Aplysia , has sequence homology to the epidermal growth factor (EGF)‐like domains of higher organisms that mediate protein–cell surface contact during fertilization and blood coagulation. In this work, recombinant temptin for structural and functional studies was produced in Escherichia coli using a cold shock promoter and purified by RP‐HPLC. CD spectra confirmed a predominantly β‐sheet structure. Two disulfide bonds were determined via limited proteolysis and MS. One internal disulfide (Cys57‐Cys77) was predicted from initial alignments with class I EGF‐like domains; the second, between Cys18 and Cys103, could protect temptin against proteolysis in seawater and stabilize its interacting surface. A three‐dimensional model of temptin was prepared with our MPACK suite, based on the Ca 2+ ‐binding, EGF‐like domain of the extracellular matrix protein fibrillin. Two temptin residues, Trp52 and Trp79, which align with cysteine residues conserved in fibrillins, lie adjacent to and could stabilize the disulfide bonds and a proposed metal‐binding loop. The water‐borne pheromone attractin in egg cordon eluates is complexed with other proteins. Docking results with our model and the NMR structure of attractin suggest that one face of temptin interacts with the pheromone, perhaps controlling its access to the cellular receptors. Gel shifts confirmed that temptin complexes with wild‐type attractin. These results indicate that temptin, analogous to the role of fibrillin in controlling transforming growth factor‐β concentration, modulates pheromone signaling by direct binding to attractin.

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