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    J Mol Biol. 1998 Jun 26;279(5):1053-9.

    Unusual domain pairing in a mutant of bovine lens gammaB-crystallin.

    Palme S, Jaenicke R, Slingsby C.

    Department of Crystallography, Birkbeck College, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX, UK.

    beta gamma-Crystallins from the eye lens are proteins consisting of two domains joined by a short linker. All 3D structures solved so far reveal a similar pseudo-2-fold pairing of the domains, reflecting their presumed ancient origin from a single-domain homodimer. Here we report the 2.2 A X-ray structure of the N-terminal domain of gammaB-crystallin, bearing a mutation of a residue involved in domain contacts in the native molecule (Phe56Ala). It forms a crystallographic homodimer, yet the domain orientation is different from native beta gamma-crystallins. It is considered that the new orientation derives from two structural features. (1) The replacement of the bulky phenylalanine 56 by an alanine results in a different optimal hydrophobic packing of interface residues between identical domains. (2) The paired domains have extensions derived from the domain linker, each containing a proline conserved in gamma-crystallins, and the resulting steric constraints preclude a native-like pairing but support the new arrangement. These data highlight the pivotal role of interface residues and sequence extensions in overall domain assembly. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.

    PMID: 9642083 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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