TY - JOUR
T1 - Tuning the Mechanical Stability of Fibronectin Type III Modules through Sequence Variations
AU - Craig, David
AU - Gao, Mu
AU - Schulten, Klaus
AU - Vogel, Viola
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH PHS5P41RR05969 and I-ROIGM60946 [K.S.], 8-R01EB00249-09 [V.V.], and 5T32GM08268 [D.C.]), a graduate award through a University of Washington Initiative Fund (UIF [D.C.]), and the National Science Foundation (NRAC MCA93S028 [K.S.]).
PY - 2004/1
Y1 - 2004/1
N2 - Cells can switch the functional states of extracellular matrix proteins by stretching them while exerting mechanical force. Using steered molecular dynamics, we investigated how the mechanical stability of FnIII modules from the cell adhesion protein fibronectin is affected by natural variations in their amino acid sequences. Despite remarkably similar tertiary structures, FnIII modules share low sequence homology. Conversely, the sequence homology for the same FnIII module across multiple species is notably higher, suggesting that sequence variability is functionally significant. Our studies find that the mechanical stability of FnIII modules can be tuned through substitutions of just a few key amino acids by altering access of water molecules to hydrogen bonds that break early in the unfolding pathway. Furthermore, the FnIII hierarchy of mechanical unfolding can be changed by environmental conditions, such as pH for FnIII10, or by forming complexes with other molecules, such as heparin binding to FnIII13.
AB - Cells can switch the functional states of extracellular matrix proteins by stretching them while exerting mechanical force. Using steered molecular dynamics, we investigated how the mechanical stability of FnIII modules from the cell adhesion protein fibronectin is affected by natural variations in their amino acid sequences. Despite remarkably similar tertiary structures, FnIII modules share low sequence homology. Conversely, the sequence homology for the same FnIII module across multiple species is notably higher, suggesting that sequence variability is functionally significant. Our studies find that the mechanical stability of FnIII modules can be tuned through substitutions of just a few key amino acids by altering access of water molecules to hydrogen bonds that break early in the unfolding pathway. Furthermore, the FnIII hierarchy of mechanical unfolding can be changed by environmental conditions, such as pH for FnIII10, or by forming complexes with other molecules, such as heparin binding to FnIII13.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.str.2003.11.024
DO - 10.1016/j.str.2003.11.024
M3 - Article
C2 - 14725762
AN - SCOPUS:1642493664
SN - 0969-2126
VL - 12
SP - 21
EP - 30
JO - Structure
JF - Structure
IS - 1
ER -