Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.

To gain insight into the relationship between protein structure and mechanical stability, single molecule force spectroscopy experiments on proteins with diverse structure and topology are needed. Here, we measured the mechanical stability of extender domains of two bacterial adhesins MpAFP and MhLa...

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Main Authors: Anneloes S Oude Vrielink, Tyler D R Vance, Arthur M de Jong, Peter L Davies, Ilja K Voets
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5380327?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d143bbc676674d0ab9c62593e9d60f192020-11-25T01:48:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01124e017468210.1371/journal.pone.0174682Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.Anneloes S Oude VrielinkTyler D R VanceArthur M de JongPeter L DaviesIlja K VoetsTo gain insight into the relationship between protein structure and mechanical stability, single molecule force spectroscopy experiments on proteins with diverse structure and topology are needed. Here, we measured the mechanical stability of extender domains of two bacterial adhesins MpAFP and MhLap, in an atomic force microscope. We find that both proteins are remarkably stable to pulling forces between their N- and C- terminal ends. At a pulling speed of 1 μm/s, the MpAFP extender domain fails at an unfolding force Fu = 348 ± 37 pN and MhLap at Fu = 306 ± 51 pN in buffer with 10 mM Ca2+. These forces place both extender domains well above the mechanical stability of many other β-sandwich domains in mechanostable proteins. We propose that the increased stability of MpAFP and MhLap is due to a combination of both hydrogen bonding between parallel terminal strands and intra-molecular coordination of calcium ions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5380327?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anneloes S Oude Vrielink
Tyler D R Vance
Arthur M de Jong
Peter L Davies
Ilja K Voets
spellingShingle Anneloes S Oude Vrielink
Tyler D R Vance
Arthur M de Jong
Peter L Davies
Ilja K Voets
Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anneloes S Oude Vrielink
Tyler D R Vance
Arthur M de Jong
Peter L Davies
Ilja K Voets
author_sort Anneloes S Oude Vrielink
title Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
title_short Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
title_full Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
title_fullStr Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
title_full_unstemmed Unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
title_sort unusually high mechanical stability of bacterial adhesin extender domains having calcium clamps.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description To gain insight into the relationship between protein structure and mechanical stability, single molecule force spectroscopy experiments on proteins with diverse structure and topology are needed. Here, we measured the mechanical stability of extender domains of two bacterial adhesins MpAFP and MhLap, in an atomic force microscope. We find that both proteins are remarkably stable to pulling forces between their N- and C- terminal ends. At a pulling speed of 1 μm/s, the MpAFP extender domain fails at an unfolding force Fu = 348 ± 37 pN and MhLap at Fu = 306 ± 51 pN in buffer with 10 mM Ca2+. These forces place both extender domains well above the mechanical stability of many other β-sandwich domains in mechanostable proteins. We propose that the increased stability of MpAFP and MhLap is due to a combination of both hydrogen bonding between parallel terminal strands and intra-molecular coordination of calcium ions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5380327?pdf=render
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