Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin

abstract: The small mitogenic cytokine Pleiotrophin (PTN) is well-known for its roles in tissue growth, development, and repair. First isolated from neuronal tissues, much interest in this protein resides in development of the central nervous system and neuronal regeneration. Owning to its role in...

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Other Authors: Ryan, Eathen (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57436
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-574362020-06-02T03:01:32Z Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin abstract: The small mitogenic cytokine Pleiotrophin (PTN) is well-known for its roles in tissue growth, development, and repair. First isolated from neuronal tissues, much interest in this protein resides in development of the central nervous system and neuronal regeneration. Owning to its role in growth, development and its ability to promote angiogenesis and metastasis, PTN’s overexpression in cancers such as glioblastoma, has become the focal point of much research. Many of the receptors through which PTN acts contain glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), through which PTN binds. Thus, understanding the atomistic detail of PTN’s architecture and interaction with GAG chains is of significant importance in elucidating its functional role in growth and malignancy of biological tissues, as well as in neural development and progression of other diseases. Herein the first solution state structure of PTN was solved via nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), with extensive characterization of its ability to bind GAG. Structurally, PTN consists of two -sheet domains connected by a short flexible linker, and flanked by long flexible termini. Broad distribution of positively charged amino acids in the protein’s sequence yields highly basic surfaces on the -sheet domains as well as highly cationic termini. With GAG chains themselves being linear anionic polymers, all interactions between these sugars and PTN are most exclusively driven through the electrostatic interactions between them, with no discernable specificity for GAG types. Moreover, this binding event is coordinated mostly through basic patches located in the C-Terminal domain (CTD). Although the flexible C- terminus has been shown to play a significant role in receptor binding, data here also reveal an adaptability of PTN to maintain high affinity interactions through its structured domains when termini are removed. Additionally, analysis of binding information revealed for the first time the presence of a secondary GAG binding site within PTN. It is shown that PTN’s CTD constitutes the major binding site, while the N-terminal domain (NTD) contains the much weaker secondary site. Finally, compilation of high-resolution data containing the atomistic detail of PTN’s interaction with GAG provided the information necessary to produce the highest accuracy model to date of the PTN-GAG complex. Taken together, these findings provide means for specific targeting of this mitogenic cytokine in a wide array of biological applications. Dissertation/Thesis Ryan, Eathen (Author) Wang, Xu (Advisor) Yarger, Jeffery (Committee member) Liu, Wei (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Molecular biology Biochemistry eng 138 pages Doctoral Dissertation Molecular and Cellular Biology 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57436 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Molecular biology
Biochemistry
spellingShingle Molecular biology
Biochemistry
Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin
description abstract: The small mitogenic cytokine Pleiotrophin (PTN) is well-known for its roles in tissue growth, development, and repair. First isolated from neuronal tissues, much interest in this protein resides in development of the central nervous system and neuronal regeneration. Owning to its role in growth, development and its ability to promote angiogenesis and metastasis, PTN’s overexpression in cancers such as glioblastoma, has become the focal point of much research. Many of the receptors through which PTN acts contain glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), through which PTN binds. Thus, understanding the atomistic detail of PTN’s architecture and interaction with GAG chains is of significant importance in elucidating its functional role in growth and malignancy of biological tissues, as well as in neural development and progression of other diseases. Herein the first solution state structure of PTN was solved via nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), with extensive characterization of its ability to bind GAG. Structurally, PTN consists of two -sheet domains connected by a short flexible linker, and flanked by long flexible termini. Broad distribution of positively charged amino acids in the protein’s sequence yields highly basic surfaces on the -sheet domains as well as highly cationic termini. With GAG chains themselves being linear anionic polymers, all interactions between these sugars and PTN are most exclusively driven through the electrostatic interactions between them, with no discernable specificity for GAG types. Moreover, this binding event is coordinated mostly through basic patches located in the C-Terminal domain (CTD). Although the flexible C- terminus has been shown to play a significant role in receptor binding, data here also reveal an adaptability of PTN to maintain high affinity interactions through its structured domains when termini are removed. Additionally, analysis of binding information revealed for the first time the presence of a secondary GAG binding site within PTN. It is shown that PTN’s CTD constitutes the major binding site, while the N-terminal domain (NTD) contains the much weaker secondary site. Finally, compilation of high-resolution data containing the atomistic detail of PTN’s interaction with GAG provided the information necessary to produce the highest accuracy model to date of the PTN-GAG complex. Taken together, these findings provide means for specific targeting of this mitogenic cytokine in a wide array of biological applications. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Molecular and Cellular Biology 2020
author2 Ryan, Eathen (Author)
author_facet Ryan, Eathen (Author)
title Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin
title_short Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin
title_full Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin
title_fullStr Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin
title_full_unstemmed Structural Characterization & Glycosaminoglycan Binding of the Small Cytokine Pleiotrophin
title_sort structural characterization & glycosaminoglycan binding of the small cytokine pleiotrophin
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57436
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